i myself am a native penchanin, i was born in this city, my mother, a russian from the city of yazma, polyushok, as it was, is small. they were loaded into wagons and... it happened that, together with the partisans, my grandmother and my mother ended up in minsk. my grandmother worked in an orphanage, well, my mother was naturally with her, so they ended up in this destroyed minsk, their whole life, in fact , began anew in belarus, and my father was a native penchanin, polish, and even after that he directly participated in hostilities did not accept, the territory was under... occupation, when my father was liberated , in forty-four he turned 17 years old, well, he was drafted into the army as a reserve, well, of course, in order to be sent, you need to somehow prepare, in other words, when they were brought there, the war, fortunately, had already ended, but since those who fought were sent home for the most part, those who had just arrived continued to serve, and after the end of the service... my father returned, graduated from a medical school in pinsk, then went to enroll in mi