Milana Terloeva

Milana Terloeva
Milana Bakhaeva
Born December 30, 1979 (1979-12-30) (age 31)
Orekhovo, Chechen-Ingush ASSR, Soviet Union
Pen name Milana Terloeva
Occupation Journalist, Author
Period 2006–present
Genres Nonfiction
Subjects First and Second Chechen Wars

Milana Bakhaeva (Russian: Милана Бахаева) (born December 30, 1979 in Orekhovo, Chechnya), also known by the pen name Milana Terloeva, is a Chechen journalist and author of the 2006 French language bestseller Danser sur les ruines. Une jeunesse tchétchène (Dancing on ruins. A Chechen youth).

A refugee during the Second Chechen War, Milana was one of eight Chechen students at the University of Grozny selected to study abroad by the human rights organization Études Sans Frontières in 2003, and she graduated with a Masters degree in journalism from the prestigious Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris in 2006.[1]

Biography

Milana was born in the village of Orekhovo, sixty kilometers west of the Chechen capital Grozny and near the border of Ingushetia, and she lived with her parents and grandmother, who had survived the forced deportations of most Chechens to Central Asia on February 23, 1944.[2]

As a child growing up in the Soviet Union, the family was relatively well-off, but suffered due to the spiraling increase in crime after the dissolution of the Soviet Union: One night in January 1993, someone left a large iron case outside the family doorstep. Inside was the body of Milana's father, assassinated.[3]

After the beginning of the First Chechen War on December 11, 1994, Milana and her family first took refuge in their cellar, and lived without running water or electricity. As the situation in her village worsened further, her family took refuge in Grozny, which had already been ruined. The family returned to Orekhovo at the end of the war in 1996, and they found that their homes had been extensively looted, and Russian soldiers living in her house had soiled everything with their excrement, including her prized ball gown, in an effort to humiliate them.[4]

With the start of the Second Chechen War, Milana and her family sought refuge in Ingushetia along with hundreds of thousands of other refugees. She returned to Grozny six months later, and enrolled in the heavily-damaged University of Grozny, studying the French language with dreams of continuing her education in Europe. She aspired to become a journalist, so that she would be able to bring justice to Chechen victims of the wars.

French students opposed to the new war in Chechnya started the organization Etudes Sans Frontières in March 2003 as a means for rescuing Chechen students from the warzone and providing them with a French education. (In 1997, Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov appealed to Western nations to allow Chechen students into their universities, as he dreamed of liberally oriented leaders who would be capable of rebuilding a society that had been destroyed by war. The call fell on deaf ears, and at the time only madrassas from Saudi Arabia and Pakistan opened their doors to Chechens). By that September, the organization had sponsored eight Chechen students, including Milana, to study in Paris.[5]

As a journalism student at Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris, Milana excelled academically, graduating as the salutatorian in her graduating class in 2006. She also worked at the internationally-circulated French newspapers Le Monde and Courrier International in August 2004.[6] She also befriended the late journalist Anna Politkovskaya.[7]

Hachette Livre, the largest publishing house in France, contacted Milana to write about her experiences during the First and Second Chechen Wars, and she wrote her autobiography, Danser sur les ruines. Une jeunesse tchétchène (Dancing on ruins. A Chechen youth), which describes the raids in which many of her family members were captured, her journey from Grozny to Paris, and of her experiences as a student at Sciences Po.

Despite numerous job offers in Paris, Milana decided to return to Grozny, to open up an independent newspaper, but realized that she would be unable to because of current censorship and death threats. She is currently working on creating a European cultural center in Chechnya, and is currently working on a second book, on Chechen women.[8]

Milana is fluent in Chechen, French, English, and Russian, and she can read Arabic.[9] Her interests include drawing and Russian literature.[citation needed]

External links

References


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