THE QUIET THAT REMAINS
SURVIVAL, SILENCE, AND THE STORY OF A UKRAINIAN FAMILY
What remains of a nation when its history is silenced?
As war once again engulfs Ukraine, The Quiet That Remains offers a powerful and timely portrait of how everyday lives endured a century of occupation, repression, and exile. This true, first-hand account of one family ? psalmists, villagers, refugees ? traces the lived experience of Ukraine's turbulent twentieth century through ordinary lives.
Drawing on parish records, Soviet archives, and personal papers from early twentieth-century Ukraine, it reveals how Ukrainian identity survived through ritual, memory, and silence. From the fall of the Cossack Hetmanate to the Holodomor, Nazi occupation, and Cold War exile in Britain, this book reflects the quiet resilience of millions.
Rigorous, lyrical, and deeply humane, The Quiet That Remains is a landmark work of history ? a rare glimpse into the cost of survival when nations are silenced and the past must be pieced together from fragments.
About the Author:
Ben Skliar-Ward is a writer and researcher with a longstanding interest in political history and the silences left by conflict. With family roots in Ukraine and a background in archival research, he brings a reflective, grounded perspective to questions of identity, survival, and historical memory. The Quiet That Remains is his first book.