tv [untitled] May 13, 2022 8:00pm-8:30pm MSK
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and then one day they went to reconnaissance at night and ran into a minefield, and he was wounded there. basically, his eyes were badly damaged and he went blind, and he was sent to a hospital in sestroretsk and there he met his future wife and khromirov. polina romanovna, she worked there as a doctor. well, while he was being treated, they somehow fell in love with each other and after recovery they were born. here the first was a girl of the fortieth year of birth, the girl's name was galya, and then they were born in the forty-first month of august. they named their son valery. well, here the war has begun. yes, who met, there was a blockade, his father told how they lived there, how they were starving there was nothing to eat, cold, hunger, everything that could be
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burned wooden even told the case. i'm proud odile overcoat tied up went to the market. i think at least they found something for this. i’ll change some food, i say i go, well, they didn’t put the products on the counter, they approached people and asked bread to eat bread to eat. here, he always told this incident, tears always came up to him, he says, the man’s room says. what will you give swamped, and i say, well, the overcoat and the belt, there is nothing else. he says, he put such a small bun of bread in my bosom and said, go and nothing, he says he didn’t take it, he told me, the berries flew home, he says in general. well, then the road of life opened. the
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first evacuation wanted to say to evacuate, so that the children could somehow be saved from hunger. from the cold. from this. well, my mother-in-law resisted and said, i was born here in leningrad and i’ll die here and didn’t go. well, then , at the council, they nevertheless decided that it was good for the father there is no. it's an extra mouth. only. that is, i understand correctly that your dad was evacuated in the first place, because dad had health problems. yes, with health he did not see, he did not see. yes and so, when the first road opened to life, my father evacuated. well, then we agreed to contact somehow, but it happened. so they lived on warriors, 36 houses near the finnish railway station, a shell hit their house, then one child died. galya, this is nastya, already when she started looking, she discovered that when the house was bombed, here is her mother, uh,
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agreed to evacuate. so they evacuated everything, then we found only documents on the evacuation, that they nevertheless got out and dacquured. still, it is known when polina romanovna left in the forty-first year. yes, almost behind him, but for some reason to the perm territory and that's it. the trace is already lost there. we couldn’t find anything else, father, in general, while there was a stomach all day with his friends, he agreed to look for them, so the story ended. so they never found each other. and polina romanovna knew where her husband was evacuated. oh well, here in tatarstan she was supposed to come to him. he is from tatarstan. here is the address, of course, she knew what happened next. we don't know how your dad's life turned out. well, he returned to his homeland, he is from
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tatarstan yes, the bugulma region, he returned to the village there. and there he met my mother. here they were already married, when he did not find any traces, he lost everything. and just like that, you can't hear anything anymore. i think i'm that old. i'm still alive, i want to see you. and here is the father last wish to be fulfilled. nastya, you told our editors that you yourself were doing searches on the internet, looking by your first name, patronymic, last name, that you could only find two documents where they were registered. grandma says, uh, warrior street. and here are the documents in the evacuation. nothing else at all uh-huh well, this is already important, at least you already know that they were evacuated, and we already know for sure that the son. you
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may be alive, god willing. here he is forty-first year of birth, maybe he is still alive, maybe he has children i want to know this, we hope that this story will be watched. and that we will definitely get feedback. if you know anything about valery veniaminovich lukyanov, born in 1941, or his relatives, call our hotline immediately or leave your feedback on the program website. we are looking forward to it. we want to congratulate you on victory day, we really hope that we can help you? well we also hope that with your help, finally. maybe i'll get my brother. welcome to the land of talent
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can't do it every day. i shouted lyuba, i sang this song with them from beginning to end. just a wave covered me, as if we were soaring the stage. your culture breaks through all the walls and penetrates. right all your nature writes strength and courage. and today at 20:50 on ntv you are super 60 plus a new season on sunday at 20:30 on ntv for liberation from the german fascist invaders the soviet
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people paid a monstrous price millions of soldiers the officers who approached victory day never returned home, they didn’t see it, just from their children and grandchildren. the natural desire of the descendants of dead soldiers to find out the places of their burial is not uncommon. this is not an easy task, but indifferent people can come to the rescue for whom, as they say, there is no gratitude for the feat of other people's graves, and not with love and awe care for the burials. it would seem that they are completely strangers to them, look. now this village does not exist, and the cemetery was carried away. my family is buried here when i visit them at the grave, i visit another
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burial. here it is buried nikolai mikhailovich bogomolov, my grandmother told me after the end of the war, military equipment, together with the military, was going to the zhabinka railway station. they were going to go to moscow, but on the way nikolai mikhailovich was badly wounded and the doctors were afraid that they would not take him home , and so they left him. uh, our villages are with the people who looked after him and then he was buried when he died. i take care of this grave since my father was also a participant in the war, he went to the front in 43, and returned. e after the victory of the forty- fifth year. therefore, i have such a
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serious attitude to this earlier on the old pedestal. there was an asterisk and villagers. they even painted it red and constantly updated it. this is not the nameless soldier. uh, apparently, his relatives were looking for, but did not find, and therefore i turned to the wait for me program. nikolai mikhailovich gave his life for our happy future. i hope that there will be relatives and find out his place burial. i want them to tell their children and grandchildren about his feat, so that they preserve the memory of him for their descendants. what a wonderful woman, of course we really wanted to please her with good news of their great joy, all our editorials we got a response. my grandfather
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nikolai mikhailovich bogomolov before the war, he graduated from a technical institute and was already working as an engineer even at the time when the war began. he had a reservation, they didn’t want to let him go anywhere, so he volunteered for the war. as far as i understand from the documents, he arranged the delivery. uh, and sending weapons. followed this. he repeatedly took part in some serious operations himself, one of the awards that he had, it was connected precisely with the operation near stalingrad, when he personally
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saved two wagons, as it is said, in a report of especially valuable weapons. for this, in general, he received his first medal. he made it to the end of the war without a single scratch. that's how it happens in life, that he, uh, returned home, and unfortunately, and you are already killed on the way home. i tried later to find out where it is hmm i looked for different sites, at least some uh heads, maybe some information. and by chance, i found a photo of a soberisk already almost destroyed and, uh, there was an inscription on it, on which their names and u years of birth clearly stood. and i realized that i, uh, came out, just in time for the program
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wait for me. uh, that's exactly where, uh, the woman sent in these photos, looking for possible remaining relatives of the person who was buried when i read the application. i was probably touched by the fact that uh man was going through and uh, even used everything opportunities to find us find. hello hello this is my grandfather.
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i wanted to keep you busy to say thank you very much. that, as it were, i’m leaving to go, that they saved it, because, well, we didn’t really know very much, what do you know we have such a difficult age now, when, unfortunately, people forget about each other, even relatives. i think that if all her people showed such solidarity in a different way. i would like to show you what he was like this can be. when i came here, but now it's kind of quiet
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peace of mind that there is an opportunity to visit him already. let not so often, but nevertheless, anyway, there is where to come and to whom i want to bow , i want to say e to those whose relatives went missing during the great patriotic war. hope always remains. therefore, look for. and so i think that you will definitely find telestochki from there from the distant past , i am very grateful to the program wait for me, who installed this monument and did it. we have a very pleasant meeting with the relatives of nikolai mikhailovich during the great patriotic war to give birth to a child was a kind of feat, every woman who decided to take this step understood that
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she would probably raise a baby without a father in hunger and poverty, and yet, even the war could not take away from a woman the joy of motherhood and the desire for whatever no matter what, save the child from a loved one. during the war, pregnancy became one of the most difficult experiences for women. in the most difficult conditions of those years, it was far from possible for everyone to give birth and leave a child to help women in labor; there was no one, almost all doctors and nurses worked in military hospitals. often, women who lost children during childbirth gave their milk to other babies, becoming their milk mother. united by the goal to save the children, they found comfort in them and the meaning to fight for life further. however, in the conditions of war, many women
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had to forget about their maternal vocation and get used to the completely alien role of the defender of the motherland. front-line nurse raisa utochkina chose the latter between maternal happiness and duty. and now the fourth generation of her descendants trying to restore the lost connection. today our guest is the right for the ukrainian duck yuriy stepanenko yuriy to pass to us. yuri, tell us what brought you to us. they are looking for relatives of your great-grandmother, a military nurse utochkina raisa iosifovna. the fact is that during the war in the forty-fifth year on january 3, passing through the city of pavlograd, she gave birth to a daughter there and named
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her olga, as the military was obliged to. she had to give her away until the war was over. so she gave it to the woman maria alekseevna blockages, who was also about to give birth to a son, and he died in childbirth. passed on my daughter. and she went, that is, she, perhaps, saved the child, she did not say, she went to fight. yes, she could not give it to a woman who would save the life of a child, of course, all the more so, they also said they were looking for who has milk. and she is like a son, only now he died. and well, you can say they gave birth at the same time. here and there, this transfer was a dairy mother. they said that, probably, she fed this child to a girl. this woman changed her daughter's name from olivier by people and did not give her away again. that is, there were
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attempts by raisa iosifovna to return, she came three times, she came in forty-seven forty-ninth and fifty-one in forty-seven, and in forty- ninth it turns out that maria was hiding hiding, and in the fifty-first, already at the farm they said that well, they left for another city, like everything, do not look, of course, i think that she really wanted to find her daughter. i think that it was incredibly hard for her to give up the child, realizing that she was saving her life. well, giving the child to mom is, of course, yes. well, just like it’s somehow hard to keep it on your conscience, and it was incredibly hard to live like that in a foster mother fed him . yes, that is, it turns out that this girl, who was first named olya and then given the name lyudmila. this is your own, grandmother. i know that you sent a photo to us, let's see.
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10-30 years older here, of course, yes, and my grandmother was probably shocked when she found out that she was not native. i think she was then told that it was not true. it seems to me that she somehow talked about it in such a way that, well, as if she were a nuance never learned. simply, and already convinced that this is true. this is in the ninety-fifth year before the death of baba maria. here she told the whole detailed story. yes, after death. a little time passed, in her closet they found documents from the maternity hospital, where it was written that utochkina raisa iosifovna gave birth in 1945, on the third of january, a girl. tell me what you know about your great-grandmother. it was with the help of military websites that i managed to find military cards, where i
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found out that she was born in moscow and was drafted into city of kalinin pervomaisky district. now this one, tver in what parts? here 381 sd and 827 gap are indicated, of course, it is not so easy to get a holistic view of the combat path of a particular soldier or officer by these numbers and letters, but our editors are great specialists in this matter. let's see the story that they prepared. 1943 raisa utochkina dropped out in 381 st, which means the rifle division at the moment when
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raisa iosifovna turned out to be there. 381 division participated in the smolensk offensive operation. where did you get the name of the turning point when the soviet army began to seize the initiative? in the rear, they learned how to quickly build and deliver military equipment. and the troops mastered new battle tactics, inspired by success. the soviet people were in tune. resolutely only forward only towards victory, but the enemy did not give up so easily fighting fierce and bloody local sambats and hospitals were constantly replenished with wounded soldiers raisa iosifovna utochkina also worked in the hospital one can only guess. what a load fell on her fragile shoulders at that time. in the field bandages, amputations and operations were performed with little or no anesthesia. as a result of the smolensk
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operation, soviet troops managed to liberate over 7.5 thousand settlements and push german troops 250 km to the west. where they sent raisa josephan. after that, unknown new data about her date back to 1944, on august 27, raisa utochkina arrived at the location of 827 gb, that is, a howitzer artillery regiment. an infectious diseases hospital was assigned to him, 42-66, where raisa iosifovna worked. attack hospital everywhere followed the 827 howitzer artillery regiment , you can map the movement of raisa iosifov. veliky novgorod rzhev ozerny velikie luki nevel then latvia and estonia after the end of the war, the 827
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howitzer artillery regiment became part of the fifty-first army, which was redeployed to the eastern borders of the soviet union to ensure the defense of sakhalin and the kuril islands from the army. rais utochkin is unknown. it's amazing how much dry cards can tell, in which just numbers are just letters? true course yur i i think that now you have an idea of \u200b\u200bwhat path your great-grandmother went through, of course. i would really like, well, to find relatives, because that's from our side. we have a lot of them, i would like to know if we have someone here. let's hope that after this broadcast there will be
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responses, and we will have much more information. i am with her and will invite you again, let's hope for the war, were captured , tortured and died along with adults. and often we had to to stand up for the defense of the motherland, they went to reconnaissance. they organized sabotage and hid with the partisans in the forests. see wars. they stood up on a par with adults and, despite the fear, went to perform the most difficult combat missions, according to the approximate honors of historians of the battle of stalingrad, more than two and a half thousand
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underage fighters fought. one and a half thousand children took part in the defense of the kursk bulge, and about three thousand took part in the belarusian operation. and this is far from a definitive list of frontline kids. it turned out for various reasons, someone added imagine a few years to get to the fronts to help an adult. deaths that grew up under the roar of shells and wounds, children who survived the death of their parents stood up to defend their homeland and did everything possible to bring victory closer, data on young heroes and their exploits continue to be systematized to this day and that's it. this has yet to be studied by future generations of russians. unfortunately, not many participants in the war survived. even those who
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made her a child today are people of a very advanced age. therefore, meetings with such people are a real gift to us. after all, no one will talk about the war. truer than they are. today we have a guest who, as a little boy, found himself in the epicenter of the battle of stalingrad . valery petrovich come to us. please go through how old you were when the war began i was born in 1935 on october 11 in the city of stalingrad and with whom did you live in kaliningrad
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