A member of an ice swimming club holds a Soviet flag as he attends a winter swimming event dedicated to the 76th anniversary since the Leningrad siege was lifted during the World War Two, iat the Moskovsky Park in St. Petersburg. The Russian city of St. Petersburg, then called Leningrad, marked the 76th anniversary of the end of the devastating World War Two siege by Nazi forces, lasted 872 days until the Soviet Army drove the Nazis away on January 27, 1944.26.01.2020#6146749
Member of an ice swimming club Boris Ratushny, center, who lived in besieged Leningrad, attends a winter swimming event dedicated to the 76th anniversary since the Leningrad siege was lifted during the World War Two, at the Moskovsky Park in St. Petersburg. The Russian city of St. Petersburg, then called Leningrad, marked the 76th anniversary of the end of the devastating World War Two siege by Nazi forces, lasted 872 days until the Soviet Army drove the Nazis away on January 27, 1944.26.01.2020#6146746
Member of an ice swimming club Boris Ratushny, who lived in besieged Leningrad, attends a winter swimming event dedicated to the 76th anniversary since the Leningrad siege was lifted during the World War Two, iat the Moskovsky Park in St. Petersburg. The Russian city of St. Petersburg, then called Leningrad, marked the 76th anniversary of the end of the devastating World War Two siege by Nazi forces, lasted 872 days until the Soviet Army drove the Nazis away on January 27, 1944.26.01.2020#6146740
Members of an ice swimming club attend a winter swimming event dedicated to the 76th anniversary since the Leningrad siege was lifted during the World War Two, at the Moskovsky Park in St. Petersburg. The Russian city of St. Petersburg, then called Leningrad, marked the 76th anniversary of the end of the devastating World War Two siege by Nazi forces, lasted 872 days until the Soviet Army drove the Nazis away on January 27, 1944.26.01.2020#6146715
Member of an ice swimming club Boris Ratushny, right, who lived in besieged Leningrad, attends a winter swimming event dedicated to the 76th anniversary since the Leningrad siege was lifted during the World War Two, at the Moskovsky Park in St. Petersburg. The Russian city of St. Petersburg, then called Leningrad, marked the 76th anniversary of the end of the devastating World War Two siege by Nazi forces, lasted 872 days until the Soviet Army drove the Nazis away on January 27, 1944.26.01.2020#6146712
Member of an ice swimming club Boris Ratushny, who lived in besieged Leningrad, attends a winter swimming event dedicated to the 76th anniversary since the Leningrad siege was lifted during the World War Two, at the Moskovsky Park in St. Petersburg. The Russian city of St. Petersburg, then called Leningrad, marked the 76th anniversary of the end of the devastating World War Two siege by Nazi forces, lasted 872 days until the Soviet Army drove the Nazis away on January 27, 1944.26.01.2020#6146706