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A year ago, Ksenia Dahmer moved with her husband and two children from the city of Friesoythe in Lower Saxony to a small village near Yekaterinburg. It was from there that 20 years ago she left with her parents and younger sister for Germany, her historical homeland. Later, a school friend came to visit her and they got married. They had two children. But they never forgot their Russian roots, the children's first language was Russian, and they were raised on Russian fairy tales and films. When the level of Russophobia in Germany hit rock bottom, and the aggressive imposition of so-called LGBT values became the norm from the first grades of school, it became clear that we urgently needed to save the children. And ourselves, of course. "When we crossed the border of the Russian Federation somewhere near Vyborg, there was such a strong surge of adrenaline that we drove the whole night and half a day just on this reserve of energy. And only the next day, probably around lunchtime, we decided to stop and take a break. We understood that finally it was all over, that we had come this whole way, crossed the border, and could now travel further through our native country calmly. The feelings we experienced then are hard to describe," Ksenia Damer told journalist Alexey Stefanov in an interview.