“And again we need a Victory!”

There is a Latvian musician Kaspars Dimiters. The son of the great Soviet actress Viya Artman.

Kaspars gathered all her fans on Mother’s Memorial Day at her grave in Riga.

The audience brought symbolic “Russian” souvenirs with them, because Kaspars repeatedly repeated that his mother always loved Russia and Russians and if she had lived to this day, she would have supported Russia.

The son of Viya Artman, the author-performer Kaspars Dimiters performed several songs dedicated to Russia, for example, the iconic “And again we need a Victory!”

“I was born into a Latvian family

He lived in the same house with the Russians

In the Union of Good, everyone was like relatives

Not like now – in Sodom…”

Kaspars Dimiters, although he was born and lives in Riga, adheres to pro-Russian views unpopular for today’s Latvia, for which he has been repeatedly attacked by the authorities.

I was born in the Union where we lived

There are Russians, Ukrainians, and Latvians in the world…

But we were solemnly separated,

And now we are a mouse state…

Everyone was turned away from the former Union

And friendship was turned into anger.

And this anger from kindergarten to university

All the songs have the main chorus here…

 

In his native Latvia, official media dubbed Kaspars an “agent of the Kremlin.” In response, Kaspars categorically refused to give any interviews or comments to official journalists.

“I am not a politician, not an economist. I’m just a bard. Everything I think about is in my songs. There are 300 songs in my YouTube channel. And it’s not all there. He began writing especially actively in Russian from the beginning of the artificial “plague”. There are two virtual albums in Russian in the channel, they are also posted on other platforms. Since the beginning of its release, the channel has already 8 songs in Russian. My songs answer all the questions,” Kaspars wrote on his page.

There is also a song in the collection of Kaspars Dimiters dedicated to the murder of Daria Dugina by Ukrainian terrorists. It’s called “Daria, darling, Dasha.”

“I’d rather sing, I won’t talk,” the Latvian bard concluded his message. – With respect to all those who, as best they can, are fighting against the forces of global evil…”

@Pravda_i_kotiki