Senior Sergeant Moiseev. “They shouted to the photographer: “Don’t shoot the child!” - they thought he was aiming at me...": five poignant stories of children from famous war photographs. One day I found my husband and lost my daughter

I picked up several heart-tugging photographs of Soviet children during the Great Patriotic War on the website waralbum.ru. Oh, and these prematurely matured children drank to the fullest!


Children are hiding from bombing German planes in a shelter on the outskirts of Chisinau. 06/29/1941


Tatyana Onishchenko with her daughter in her arms, mortally wounded by German bomb fragments during an enemy air raid. 1941



Photojournalist of the Pravda newspaper Alexander Vasilyevich Ustinov (1909-1995) talks with the commander of a foot reconnaissance platoon of the 1069th Infantry Regiment of the 311th rifle division Dmitry Pavlovich Petrov (1908-1941) in the village of Tuhan Leningrad region. In the frame is Petrov’s pupil Sasha Popov (1929-1942). September 1941


A resident of the village of Serbolovo with children against the backdrop of a burnt hut. The villagers were forced to leave their homes after the German punitive operation and go into the forests. Serbolovo, Pskov region, USSR. Time taken: 1942


Residents leave the village of Brody in the Pskov region, which was set on fire by the Nazis. 1942


A young six-year-old soldier of the 142nd Guards Rifle Regiment, Seryozha Aleshkin.



Belarusian children near destroyed German Pz.Kpfw VI "Tiger" tanks near Minsk. July-August 1944



13-year-old Lenya Fedorov and collective farmer of the Borets collective farm I.V. Grishin, who joined the partisan detachment, despite his advanced age. July 1943


A group of Soviet prisoners of war with the son of the regiment.


Children wounded during artillery shelling of Leningrad are being treated at the Leningrad State Pediatric Institute. July 1943


Evacuation of nurseries and kindergartens from Stalingrad. 1942



Son of the regiment with a 7.62 mm submachine gun model 1943 of the Sudaev system (PPS-43) on the street of Budapest. 1945



Group photo Soviet teenagers who worked at the Siegel factory on the territory of the Köln-Braunsfeld concentration camp. 1942



Children near the ruins of a house in the Belarusian village of Lozovatka. 1944



A teenager cleans the boots of a wounded German soldier at an occupied railway station in the USSR. 1943



Schoolchildren of the village of Novaya Ivanovka during the Romanian occupation. In the center of the photo are representatives of the Romanian administration. Novaya Ivanovka, Odessa region, Ukraine, USSR.



Soviet refugees on the outskirts of a village in the vicinity of Kharkov. February-March 1943.


An unknown Red Army soldier talks with ten-year-old Volodya Lukin, whose parents were driven to Germany by the Germans. Having lost his home, the boy froze his feet. 2nd Baltic Front. 1944


Children of besieged Leningrad near the garden beds on Mytninskaya embankment. 1942



Schoolchildren from liberated Gzhatsk (now the city of Gagarin) show German “ersatz felt boots” to the Red Army soldiers. March 1943



Soviet refugees preparing food at the entrance to the dugout. Belarus. 1944



Soviet women and children return home. 1943



Soviet partisans - father and son. 1943



Olga Shcherbatsevich, hanged by the Germans in Aleksandrovsky Square in Minsk. Olga Fedorovna Shcherbatsevich, an employee of the 3rd Soviet Hospital, who cared for captured wounded soldiers and officers of the Red Army. Hanged by the Germans in Aleksandrovsky Square in Minsk on October 26, 1941. The inscription on the shield, in Russian and German languages- “We are partisans who shot at German soldiers.” October 26, 1941


Young partisan Volodya Bebekh from the Chernigov detachment named after Stalin. 1943



Children on a Soviet T-34-76 tank abandoned near the bridge. The photo is not earlier than the autumn of 1942, since the tank is equipped with a “nut” turret, which began to be installed from that time.



Soviet children among a destroyed village. 1942



Boys help a Red Army soldier equip machine gun belts. Front-line village. 1942


Senior Sergeant Moiseev feeds a child in a liberated village. Author's title of the photograph: “The Nazis stole everyone away.” Senior Sergeant Moiseev, commander of a separate artillery reconnaissance unit of the 2nd division of the 4th battery of the 308th regiment, feeds the two-year-old girl Valya, whom he found in one of the empty huts in the village of Izvekovo. Smolensk region, Vyazemsky district, Izvekovo village. 03/14/1943



Soviet child prisoners of the 6th Finnish concentration camp in Petrozavodsk. During the occupation of Soviet Karelia by the Finns, six concentration camps were created in Petrozavodsk to house local Russian-speaking residents. Camp No. 6 was located in the Transshipment Exchange area and held 7,000 people. The photo was taken after the liberation of Petrozavodsk by Soviet troops on June 28, 1944.
This photograph was presented as part of the evidence at Nuremberg trials over war criminals.
The girl who is second from the post on the right in the photo - Klavdia Nyuppieva - published her memories many years later.
“I remember how people fainted from the heat in the so-called bathhouse, and then they were doused cold water. I remember the disinfection of the barracks, after which there was a noise in my ears, and many had nosebleeds, and that steam room, where all our rags were processed with great “diligence.” One day the steam room burned down, depriving many people of their last clothes.”
Petrozavodsk. July 1944



A family of refugees carrying their belongings to escape the advancing Germans. The author's title of the photo is “In the bitter days of retreat. Dnepropetrovsk region." 1941


Young partisan reconnaissance Pyotr Gurko (born 1928) from the detachment “For Soviet Power” (4th partisan regiment of the 2nd partisan brigade) before being awarded the medal “For Courage”.
The young partisan was awarded the Medal “For Courage” on July 30, 1942 for the valor and courage shown in two military operations against German punitive expeditions. On June 13, 1942, under heavy enemy fire, Pyotr Gurko carried two seriously wounded partisans with weapons from the battlefield and delivered them to a dressing station located 2 kilometers away.
07/30/1942


Leningrad schoolgirls Valya Ivanova (left) and Valya Ignatovich, who extinguished two incendiary bombs that fell into the attic of their house. 09/13/1941



Soviet children playing on an abandoned German Panther tank in Kharkov. September 1943



A Soviet child next to his murdered mother. Concentration camp for civilians "Ozarichi". Belarus, town of Ozarichi, Domanovichi district, Polesie region. March 1944



Children of the liberated city of Zhizdra - Raya and Gena Shcheglova. August 1943
Zhizdra is a small ancient town on the banks of the river of the same name in the south of the Kaluga region; the first mention of Zhizdra dates back to 1146. On October 5, 1941, the city came under German occupation. From February to August 1943, fierce fighting again took place on the approaches to the city. Before retreating, the invaders systematically destroyed the city for two weeks, burning it quarterly. Stone churches and houses exploded. As a result, the city was completely destroyed. Wells were also poisoned, roads, sidewalks and vegetable gardens were mined. Able-bodied urban youth were forcibly sent to Germany.



Soviet refugee children from the village of Yagodnaya, Oryol region. The original title of the photo is “The Dispossessed Villages of Yagodnaya.” July 22, 1943
The village was liberated by Soviet troops from the German occupiers during the Oryol offensive operation.



Soldiers of the 51st separate motorcycle battalion of the 22nd tank corps 38th Army of the Southwestern Front with Soviet children. 1942



The son of the regiment, Volodya Tarnovsky, signs an autograph on a Reichstag column. He wrote: “Seversky Donets - Berlin,” and signed for himself, the regiment commander and his fellow soldier who supported him from below: “Artillerymen Doroshenko, Tarnovsky and Sumtsov.” May 1945


The famous photo depicting the young defenders of Leningrad on Palace Square, accepted into the Suvorov Military School. Leningrad, 1944
From left to right: junior sergeant Nikolai Koliverdov (b. 1930), a graduate of the 14th Guards Rifle Brigade and the 20th front-line reserve automobile regiment of the Leningrad Front Guard, guard junior sergeant, awarded the medals “For the Defense of Stalingrad” and “For the Defense of Leningrad”, Evgeniy Bilindinov, Yuri Ivanov, graduate of the 935th Artillery Regiment of the 381st Infantry Division and the 919th Artillery Regiment of the 358th Infantry Division, Corporal Afanasy Shkuratov (b. 1930), awarded two medals “For Courage”, participant in the 1945 Victory Parade. , Yuri Stepenko, awarded the medal “Partisan Patriotic War"and the medal "For the Defense of Leningrad".

Children's faces of the non-childish war August 20th, 2015

Children in Stalingrad are hiding from bombing German planes. 1942

War, as you know, has a face that is not at all childish. But the war spares no one, not adults, no children. Let's look at the faces of the children on whom the war has walked with its heavy tread. There is something in their eyes that usually only happens in adults who have seen a lot in their lives. The lives of these children, children of war, were not easy. Their faces from old photographs speak without words.



The commander of the rifle battalion, Major V. Romanenko (in the center), tells the Yugoslav partisans and residents of the village of Starchevo (in the Belgrade region) about the military affairs of the young intelligence officer - Corporal Vitya Zhaivoronka. October 1944 Yugoslavia.


Commander of the torpedo boat brigade of the Northern Fleet A.V. Kuzmin presents the cabin boy Sasha Kovalev (01/04/1927 - 05/09/1944) with the Order of the Red Star. 05/01/1944.

A group of officers of the 8th Guards Mechanized Brigade of the 3rd Stalingrad Mechanized Corps with the son of the regiment.

13-year-old partisan intelligence officer Fedya Moshchev. October 1942

Young of the guards cruiser of the Black Sea Fleet of project 815 “Red Caucasus”.

The son of the regiment, Volodya Tarnovsky, with his comrades in Berlin.

Son of the regiment Pyotr Korolev (1930-1998). 1945

Young partisan Vladimir Ivanovich Bebekh from the Chernigov detachment named after Stalin, commander Nikolai Popudrenko. 1943 Chernigov region, Ukraine.

Son of the regiment. On the chest are the insignia “Guard” and “Excellent Mortarman”.


Soviet teenage partisan Kolya Lyubichev from the partisan unit A.F. Fedorov with a captured German 9-mm MP-38 submachine gun in a winter forest. 1943

Portrait of 15-year-old partisan reconnaissance Misha Petrov from the Stalin detachment with a captured German 9-mm MP-38 submachine gun. The fighter is belted with a Wehrmacht soldier's belt, and behind his boot is a Soviet anti-personnel grenade RGD-33. Belarus, 1943

Young partisan reconnaissance Tolya Gorokhovsky. 1943

Two partisans from the Bryansk region. 1943



Partisan reconnaissance officer of the Chernigov formation “For the Motherland” Vasily Borovik against a background of trees.


Liberated children from the Auschwitz concentration camp. January 1945


Soviet soldiers communicate with children liberated from Auschwitz. Poland. January 1945


Liberated children, prisoners of the Auschwitz concentration camp (Auschwitz) show camp numbers tattooed on their arms. Brzezinka, Poland. February 1945

Pupils orphanage, orphans who lost their parents in the war. Some of these children were prisoners themselves fascist concentration camps. Malaya Lepetikha village, Velikolepetikha district, Kherson region. 1949.

Liberated children of Salaspils. 1944


A boy of about seven years old at the site of the last battle, near the exploded Soviet T-34-85 tank. Two more of the same tanks are visible behind.


Children on a Soviet T-34-76 tank abandoned near the bridge. The photo was not taken earlier than the fall of 1942, since the tank is equipped with a “nut” turret, which began to be installed from that time on.


Soviet children playing on an abandoned German Pz.Kpfw tank. V Ausf. D "Panther" in Kharkov. September 1943.


A Soviet teenager sits near the barrel of an artillery piece abandoned during the German retreat.


Soviet soldiers with a teenager (possibly the “son of the regiment”) in the liberated Czech village of Tsotkitla. 1945

Son of a partisan. Belarus. 1944


Schoolchildren from liberated Gzhatsk (now the city of Gagarin) show German “ersatz felt boots” to the Red Army soldiers. Smolensk region. March 1943


Soviet children in the middle of a destroyed village. 1942

Kitten on the ashes of the city of Zhizdra, Kaluga region, August 1943. Before the retreat, the invaders systematically destroyed the city for two weeks, burning it quarterly. Stone churches and houses were blown up. As a result, the city was completely destroyed. Wells were also poisoned, roads, sidewalks and vegetable gardens were mined. Able-bodied urban youth were forcibly sent to Germany. From the memoirs of the author of the photograph, M. Savin: “In this small town of Zhizdra after the fighting, I did not find anyone alive except this wounded cat.”

Civilians with children at a rally in liberated German troops Smolensk. September 1943

“The Nazis kidnapped everyone.” Senior Sergeant Moiseev, commander of a separate artillery reconnaissance unit of the 2nd division of the 4th battery of the 308th regiment, feeds the two-year-old girl Valya, whom he found in one of the empty huts in the village of Izvekovo. Smolensk region, Vyazemsky district, 1.

Poet E.A. Dolmatovsky and Soviet children.

An unknown Red Army soldier talks with ten-year-old Volodya Lukin, whose parents were driven to Germany by the Germans. Having lost his home, the boy froze his feet. 2nd Baltic Front. 1944

Leningrad schoolboy Andrei Novikov gives an air raid signal.


Children from Leningrad orphanage No. 38.

A crippled teenager in besieged Leningrad.


Ten-year-old Polish girl Kazimiera Mika mourns her sister, who was killed by German machine gun fire in a field outside Warsaw.


Pskov priest Fyodor Puzanov with his parishioners at the church. 1943


Hero of the Soviet Union Guard Major Nikolai Pinchuk on his native collective farm. July-August 1945


Red Army soldier Ivan Kuznetsov arrived in his native village of Beldyashki, Oryol region. 1945


Pioneers Tanya Kostrova and Manya Mikheeva look after a mass grave in a village liberated from the Germans. 1942

FROM THE NEWSPAPER OF THE NOVODUGINSKY DISTRICT “RURAL DAWNS” 02/23/1984

April 14, 1983 at "Working Path" A photograph of front-line correspondent Viktor Kinelovsky was published - a Soviet machine gunner in an army sheepskin coat feeding a girl wrapped in a blanket from a soldier's bowler.

"Help me find it"- that was the title of G. Ivanov’s note, briefly telling about the photograph. The photograph was taken in March 1943 in the village of Izvekovo (now Novoduginsky district), liberated from the fascist invaders.

And now we can tell the story of the heroes of this photograph. First - about the events of that time, and then - about the history of the double search.

It was the spring of 1943, on March 2, the Rzhev-Vyazemsky offensive operation of the troops of the Kalinin and Western Fronts began with the goal of destroying the enemy group on the Rzhev-Vyazemsky bridgehead.

On the same day, from the area of ​​​​the village of Khlepen, from a bridgehead on the western bank of Vazuza in the southwestern Sychevsky direction and further to Lipetsy - Izvekovo - Grigorievskoye - Khmelita, they went on the offensive troops of the 31st Army , commanded by Major General V.A. Gluzdovsky, and included the 308th Artillery Regiment.

Severe spring thaw and difficult conditions in the wooded and swampy terrain, the enemy's widespread use of various obstacles and the use of pre-prepared positions slowed down the pace of the offensive. Fulfilling Hitler's orders, the enemy turned the abandoned bridgehead into " desert zone»: settlements They were burned, residents were driven away, bridges were blown up, roads were mined, food and fuel supplies were destroyed.

However, Soviet troops, overcoming stubborn enemy resistance, shot down enemy rearguard units, preempted the enemy in occupying advantageous defensive lines and interfered with the theft Soviet people to Germany.

Having liberated the city of Sychevka on March 8 and Novodugino on March 10, the troops of the 31st Army, including the 308th Artillery Regiment, cleared the half-broken, half-burnt, and plundered villages of Babniki, Makariki, Tyukhovo, Pustoshka, Kuzhnino, Ivaniki, Kulementyevo from the enemy, Zhukovo, Novoduginsky district and went to the village of Izvekovo, where, out of 53 houses, only a few huts and a small church remained. The Germans either killed the villagers or drove them into slavery, and some may have taken refuge in the forests. Empty.

Here, the commander of the reconnaissance department of the 2nd division of the 308th artillery regiment, senior sergeant Valentin Aleksandrovich Moiseev, dropped into one of the surviving houses after the enemy was expelled. There were no adults in the house, things were scattered. But, looking around, he saw a very tiny girl at the table leg in the corner, and at the first moment he mistook her for a doll. But it turned out to be a miraculously surviving little girl of about two years. He wrapped her in something that came to his hand like a blanket. Frightened by the battle, dumbfounded, at first she could not utter a word. The soldiers surrounding them said:

Come on, Valentin, let's call her by your name - Valya.

And then she babbled the name. Maybe it's a coincidence, maybe it's her real name that she remembered.

The sergeant carried her out of the house into the March sun, and at that moment a front-line photojournalist appeared here. Izvestia“Viktor Kinelovsky, who could not pass by such a scene moving the soul and heart and took several photographs of Sergeant V.A. Moiseev and Valya, including a photograph of the moment when he feeds her near the house from a soldier’s cauldron, sitting on a charred bed. On the back of the photographs he noted: “ Izvekovo, northwest of Vyazma - Sergeant Moiseev, 308th artillery regiment" With this mark they ended up in the archive of film and photo documents.

There was not a single living soul in Izvekovo, there was no one to hand over the girl, so the artillerymen sheltered Valya in their battery, where she stayed for about 3 days. She began to get used to " father", smile, everyone at the battery was worried about her, even the stern commander Captain Zharikov (is he somewhere?). But war is war. Front roads led the fighters to the west. Valya was handed over first to doctors, and then to the Smolensk (front-line) evacuation point, which was engaged in the evacuation of children left homeless and parents, lonely old people, as well as wounded civilians from the front line and liberated areas to the east.

At this point, their connection was interrupted... But wherever the front-line soldier was, he remembered the girl for the rest of his life, thinking about her often both during the war and after: how did her fate turn out?

Valentin Aleksandrovich fought the Patriotic War from Moscow to Nazi Germany. At the front he joined the party. For feats of arms awarded the order Red Star, medal " For courage"and other medals. Wounded twice. Before the Patriotic War, he already had combat experience - he participated in the battles at Khalkhin Gol, in the Finnish campaign, and the liberation of Bessarabia. He himself is from Novosibirsk. But, having been demobilized, he came to live in Kaluga, where one day, after being seriously wounded, he was in the hospital, where he left his beloved Masha. He got married, worked as a mechanic at the Kaluga Turbine Plant, had a son, Sasha, but the thought of Valya did not leave him. He tried several times to look for his own “ goddaughter", but in vain...

And then one day in June 1961, his sixteen-year-old son Sasha came home with the newspaper “ News" in his hands and says to his father:

Isn't it you, dad, they're looking for?

The veteran looked at the photo and read the text of the note: “ Where are you, Senior Sergeant Moiseev?", which said: " Where are you, the soldier who saved the girl Valya, good Russian man? Respond if the war spared you and you survived!" Tears involuntarily appeared in my eyes. My memory immediately came back: the spring of 1943, the Smolensk region, front-line friends from the artillery regiment, the battles for Izvekovo and a tiny child - alone in an empty house...

And this note and photo appeared in “ Izvestia” like this: while sorting through the war relics dear to his heart, photojournalist V. Kinelovsky stopped at a photograph of a sergeant and a girl. He wanted to know where the soldier who saved the baby was now. This is how the first note appeared. Two months later in Izvestia"A second correspondence appeared - " It was near Vyazma”, which reported that Valentin Aleksandrovich Moiseev was alive, well, and working in the city of Kaluga. But Vali’s fate remained unknown.

Editors of the newspaper " News" and magazine " Soviet Union "turned to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the RSFSR for help. Passport department workers led by Major Valentina Fedorovna Yudaeva joined the search. Criminologists also got involved:

The search lasted five years. After all, more than 1,800 girls named Valya were evacuated from the Western Front, having lost their parents. Those most similar in age, time and circumstances of evacuation were photographed. When in Moscow V. A. Moiseev was shown photographs of two young girls, he immediately recognized Valya. That's how they found her.

What happened to her after the evacuation? After she was transferred to the evacuation point, she was transported to the Urals, to the Perm region, where she was raised first in Okhansky and then in other orphanages, where she was given the surname Zhukova and patronymic Georgievna in honor of Marshal of the Soviet Union G.K. Zhukov.

When she grew up, she graduated from school, then from the Kungur Art Stone-Cutting School, and worked as a foreman at the famous Perm plant “ Russian gems”, and in 1965 she moved to Donetsk, where she still works in one of the city’s organizations. In August 1966, the first post-war meeting of V. A. Moiseev and his rescued daughter V. G. Zhukova took place in Kaluga. Yes, yes, during meetings and telephone conversations Valentin Aleksandrovich told everyone this: “ My daughter has arrived" She then spent several days with the Moiseev family. Then there were more meetings.

They were going to visit the Smolensk region, but circumstances did not allow it.

Now Valya has two children. She really wants to know if any of her relatives are still alive. Maybe someone will recognize themselves by her facial features. We need to help her with this.

When I saw in " Working way"a photograph of a soldier with a bowler hat and a little girl on his lap, then I began to strain my memory and, in the end, I remembered that I had seen such a photograph in one of the military history books, found it, and then in my archive I found a clipping from " Izvestia", which is mentioned above. The thread stretched further, but not as quickly as this tale says. That's how I ended up in Kaluga. I found, not without difficulty, the address of the Moiseevs I needed. I met with Maria Ivanovna, the wife of Valentin Alexandrovich. She told me, showed me Required documents and materials on which this essay is based. Unfortunately, I did not have the opportunity to meet with V. A. Moiseev - he died in 1978.

This is Short story a photograph from forty years ago, a story of two people.

* * * * *

Additional Information:

Kinelovsky Viktor Sergeevich (1899-1979)

Born in 1899. Soviet photojournalist. In the mid-1920s he graduated from the workers' faculty. He worked as a typesetter in a printing house. Having mastered photography, he began publishing photographs in newspapers. In 1931 he was hired as a photojournalist for the magazine " USSR at a construction site", later worked for a magazine" Soviet Union"During the Great Patriotic War he became a newspaper correspondent." Frontline illustration", at the same time a correspondent for the Sovinformburo. He photographed the battles near Moscow, in the Kalinin and Kursk directions. In post-war period worked in the TASS photo chronicle. Laureate and prize-winner of all-Union art photography exhibitions. Died in 1979. He was buried at the Vagankovskoye cemetery in Moscow (Closed columbarium, section 4, row 2).

It is impossible to look at these images with a cold heart... Today, when the topic of war has become more relevant than ever, we want to present photographs that once again prove: in war it is always the most innocent who suffer...

Students of the 3rd grade of girls' school No. 216 in the Kuibyshevsky district of Leningrad are preparing pouches as gifts for front-line soldiers. 1943.

Boys collecting trophies from the Sineokovsky farm (Stalingrad Region). From left to right: Serezha Zemlyansky, Shura Velichenko, Shura Ivashchenko and Volodya Polomarshchuk. Stalingrad region. February 1943, Budapest, Hungary. Author: Evgeny Khaldey. Source of information about the photo: tos-sineok.livejournal.com" src="http://www.rosphoto.com/images/u/articles/1405/897.had0k1y2rmgc8w4ogkk8so0s.ejcuplo1l0oo0sk8c40s8osc4.th.jpg" style="height:530px ; width:740px" title="Boys collecting trophies from the Sineokovsky farm (Stalingrad Region). From left to right: Seryozha Zemlyansky, Shura Velichenko, Shura Ivashchenko and Volodya Polomarshchuk. Stalingrad Region. February 1943, Budapest, Hungary.

A Soviet boy in a liberated village shows a comrade the German Iron Cross found during field work. Southwestern Front. June-July 1942. Author: Natalya Bode" src="http://www.rosphoto.com/images/u/articles/1405/bode_gk_deti_1942_2.78je66iomuwww8owc80goc4s8.ejcuplo1l0oo0sk8c40s8osc4.th.jpg" style="height:490px; width:740px" title="A Soviet boy in a liberated village shows a comrade the German Iron Cross found during field work. Southwestern Front. June-July 1942.

A German soldier treated a Russian boy to bread. Somewhere in the forests near Volkhov during the Volkhov Cauldron. Photo from the album of German photographer Georg Gundlach “Battle of Volkhov. Documents of Horror: 1941–1942." Time taken: 1942

Jewish, Polish and Ukrainian women and children locked in a greenhouse awaiting their fate. They were shot by the Germans the next day. In total, at the end of August 1941, 700 civilians, including women and children, were shot near the House of the Red Army in Novograd-Volynsk. " src="http://www.rosphoto.com/images/u/articles/1405/swiahel_negativ22.e4djgbco0bsosc0ks4ocw84gg.ejcuplo1l0oo0sk8c40s8osc4.th.jpg" style="height:488px; width:740px" title="Jewish, Polish and Ukrainian women and children locked in a greenhouse awaiting their fate. They were shot by the Germans the next day. Just at the end of August 1941 at the House of the Red Army Novograd-Volynsk they were shot 700 civilians, including women and children.">!}

Children on a Soviet T-34-76 tank abandoned near the bridge. The photo was not taken earlier than the fall of 1942, since the tank is equipped with a “nut” turret, which began to be installed from that time on.

Senior Sergeant Moiseev feeds a child in a liberated village. Author's title of the photograph: “The Nazis stole everyone away.” Senior Sergeant Moiseev, commander of a separate artillery reconnaissance unit of the 2nd division of the 4th battery of the 308th regiment, feeds the two-year-old girl Valya, whom he found in one of the empty huts in the village of Izvekovo. Source of information about the photo: ursa-tm.ru

Sergeant S. Weinshenker and Technical Sergeant William Topps with the son of the 169th Special Purpose Air Base Regiment. Name unknown, age - 10 years old, served as an assistant weapons technician. Poltava airfield." src="http://www.rosphoto.com/images/u/articles/1405/20090704_son1.3b6og7970lescgck08gk8ckwo.ejcuplo1l0oo0sk8c40s8osc4.th.jpg" style="height:512px; width:740px" title="Sergeant S. Weinshenker and Technical Sergeant William Topps with the son of the 169th Special Purpose Air Base Regiment. Name unknown, age - 10 years old, served as an assistant weapons technician. Poltava airfield.">!}

Similar articles

2024 my-cross.ru. Cats and dogs. Small animals. Health. Medicine.