hyuk helped wounded partisans, from simple bandaging to removing a bullet from a wound and applying stitches. unfortunately, she died in 1943, and no photographs survived, but the memory of those heroic deeds for a woman her son, yana’s grandfather, carefully kept it, and today she, a future physician, by the way, like a great-grandmother, passes on this story to other generations. despite the fact that the war found her when she was a mother of many children and her husband went to the front, she decided to devote herself... not only to caring for her children, but also to caring for her homeland. she had the medical education of a younger sister; in addition to treating patients and military personnel, she transferred important information from one partisan detachment to another. it was quite dangerous because despite the fact that she was a woman, the nazis did not spare women. if at the beginning of the war there were only six doctors, 12 nurses and orderlies, then in forty-four they were already for the life and health of people. medical posts in partisan zones helped evacuate the sick