My grandmother plants Tulips in the garden while our hometown Kharkiv is constantly being bombed. She is complaining that the bees don't pollinate her flowers, so there will be no fruits in summer.
In 1960s Tajikistan, a skydiver gets a call from her granddaughter in 2022 Ukraine, sparking an intergenerational journey through trauma, memory and identity.
"My Grandmother is a Skydiver" is a poetic animated documentary that journeys through time, geography, generations, and cultures to explore themes of life, the sky, knowledge, loss, and war.
Research for this project began in early 2022, sparked by my interest in my grandmother's life as a young, progressive woman from a Muslim background in Central Asia, as well as the broader development of feminism in the region. After the full-scale Russian invasion, which directly impacted my hometown in eastern Ukraine and my family, the story took on a deeper subtext. The colonial legacy of the aggressor country stretches back centuries, affecting Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, Central, and North Asia. Countless cultures, languages, and ethnic groups have faced and continue to face oppression. These issues remain largely undiscussed; our stories are often overlooked by the international community.
This film serves as a form of media therapy, providing a space for reflection, healing, and resilience for those directly impacted by conflict. It promotes cultural visibility and advocates for ethical approaches to marginalized narratives. It calls for decolonizing perspectives, unlearning biases, and making space for stories long kept on the margins to emerge into global consciousness and solidarity.
In its essence, the film is a political statement conveyed through the personal story of my family.
Polina Piddubna