val, where she continued to provide assistance, and from there they were captured.hen there was no medical care, she, as a doctor, really wanted to help, at least morally support the prisoners and... she always said this phrase: gloomy people don’t live to see one hundred, so then could she thought that these words would be prophetic in relation to herself. surprisingly, incredibly, but true: in captivity , valentina met her future husband, surgeon nikolai kokorev. they had a daughter in the camp, and after the war two more. former prisoners of war were not allowed to return to leningrad, so the family settled in the town of murino. at the murino hospital, died in 2017, she was 104 years old. ivan groshchenkov was called up for military service as a far from eighteen-year-old boy; he left the army as a head teacher of a school and was a married man, served in the brest fortress. the junior political instructor died in the first hours of the war. and his relatives for a long time did not know where and how their son, brother and husband died. the starting point in es