wait me 07.05.2001 (2001)

Telecast №82562, 1 part, duration: 0:40:06
Production: VID
Availability:Film hasn't been digitized
Anchor:Igorj Kvasha, Mariya Shukshina

Reel №1

Switching on from GUM.

Antonina Mikhailovna Savalskaya is looking for a front-line friend: nurse Alexandra Ivanovna Sorokina, born in 1923, in 1942 they worked together in the ambulance train No. 232.

Vera Spiridonovna Kazakova (Shemetova) is looking for a front-line friend: the commander of the unit, Leonid Georgievich Pilipenko, served together in Dorogobuzh and in the village of Usvyatye, parted in 1943 in the Smolensk region, in 1945 the address was lost.

Dmitry Ivanovich Vlasov is looking for a friend: Nikolai Petrovich Nabatchikov, at the end of the war they served together in Moldova, after the war they met twice in Moscow, then lost contact.

Vera Tikhonovna is looking for colleagues: Anton Mikhailovich Bespyatko and Gennady Alexandrovich Maslennikov, who served together in Iran in 1942-1945.

Pyotr Vladimirovich Oleynikov is looking for a friend: Igor Igorevich Zimin, together they served in the 10th Guards Corps, took part in the fighting in the area of Ordzhonikidze, Grozny, Novorossiysk, liberated the Kuban and Ukraine.

Lydia Ivanovna Tryapitsyna is looking for fellow soldiers: Vera Ivanovna Karpukhina and other veterans of the 1st Air Defense Corps, the 25th battery, the 57th Division, defended Moscow.

Tatyana Fyodorovna Okunkova (Pavlova) is looking for a front-line friend: radio operator Valentina Maksimova, together they served in the 82nd separate battalion "Air Surveillance and Communication Notification", went from Tula to Poland, where they met the victory, the last time they saw each other in 1951 in Moscow.

Atelier.

Elizaveta Ignatyevna Gordeeva is looking for her father: Vilat Palmer, date of birth 29.12.1919, was born in Chico, California, participated in mine clearance on the Elbe River.

The parents met in Germany, where Elizabeth's mother had been since 1942 (she was taken to work), and married on June 11, 1945. When Elizabeth was already born, she and her mother were taken away by the Soviet troops, a friend of her father only managed to give his mother his gold watch.

They shouted at the woman, did not listen to any explanations, and threatened her with Kolyma.

When everyone left, the mother gave the watch to an unknown major in exchange for taking her outside, putting her on a train, and sending her home to her parents in Ukraine.

James Connell of the US Embassy in Moscow, with the help of the Russian-American commission for the search for prisoners of war and missing persons, found the real birth certificate.

Valentina Taburyanskaya from Germany helped me find my parents ' marriage certificate in the archives.

Gennady is looking for classmates at boarding school No. 3 for orphans in Syzran, class of 1980, and invites them to a meeting on June 2, 2001.

Albert Stepanovich Repin is looking for a front-line friend: Yevgeny Afanasyev, born in 1925, fought together in 1943-1945 as part of the Trans-Baikal Front, in the 292nd Rifle Corps.

Elena Gorbatovskaya is looking for a friend: Lyubov Platonova (Guzenko), they were brought up together in an orphanage, studied together, after technical school, Lyubov and her husband were sent to Smela, and Elena - to Moscow.

Valentina Alexandrovna Belomaz (Mukhina) is looking for a brother: Yevgeny Alexandrovich Mukhin, born in 1923, served in the 137th Rifle Division in the Baltic States, went missing in 1943; from the Podolsk archive they learned that he graduated from the courses of cryptographers, was an assistant chief of staff.

A reference video with hotline phones.

Continue searching for applications from previous programs:

Nikolai Andreevich Savin is looking for Klavdia Panchenko, with whom they escaped from the camp near Mirgorod in 1942.

The participant of the Battle of Stalingrad Semyon Semyonovich Poluektov is looking for a girl-a policeman Valentina Shvetsova, whom he met in a hospital in Moscow.

Yuri Korotkov is looking for the Yugoslav Zvonimir Gretic, born in 1930, at the end of November 1944, he participated in the landing across the Danube in Vukovar.

Evgeny Vladimirovich Tarasov is looking for the crew of the submarine Shch-307.

Video with front-line photos:

Viktor Ivanovich Kvartikov served as an assistant platoon commander in 1944, went to Moldova for reconnaissance and did not return.

Elena Fedorovna Krasnikova (Borovaya) worked on the military ambulance train No. 1151 as a nurse, looking for colleagues.

Alexander Yakovlevich Abramov went missing in 1944.

Tamara Yakovlevna Vyatkina from Sverdlovsk is looking for a front-line friend Nadezhda Konstantinovna Kurnosova from Moscow, last seen in 1945.

From the history of the photo of the unknown soldier: "In 1945, my father brought a lot of photos of front-line friends, in 1949 he left and took all the photos, and this remains, I want to return the photo to the family of this person."

Sofia Abramovna Livshits was evacuated together with her sister in 1941 from Dnepropetrovsk, lost in Mozdok, where the children were divided into different age groups.

Sigismund Dmitrievich Lisovich was taken to Germany in 1942, and is wanted by his sister.

Search for the wounded: "In August 1942, the commissar of the hospital where I worked as a nurse gave the order to take with them the wounded who can go, and move in the direction of Nalchik.

At Suvorovskaya-Tovarnaya we met Russian train drivers who drove German freight trains.

They promised to take the wounded home.

I want to know the fate of these fighters."

Lyubov Dmitrievna Bovarskaya (Shatalova) worked as a nurse in August 1942 (the last letter from the video).

When the German troops broke through the defenses in the Caucasus, she was in Yessentuki, in hospital No. 2455.

On the way to Nalchik, they met people who said that a German landing party had landed there, Pyatigorsk was also occupied by the Germans, so they decided to go back to Yessentuki, to Lyubov Dmitrievna's mother.

The wounded were fed, civilian clothes were found for them, and gradually sent out of the city, but many patients were delayed.

Lyuba and her mother took 6 people to their home: Mukho from Sverdlovsk, Boltushkin from Kostroma, Grisha from Mariupol, Alexander Kumskoy from Krasnodar, Vladimir from Rzhev, Ivan from Bila Tserkva and other pilots who soon left.

When the Germans came to the city, they announced on the radio that all the wounded were to come to the commandant's office, for refusal and concealment-execution.

Once a young German came into the yard and saw the soldiers, but did not give anyone away, instead he passed letters to relatives in Mariupol and Krasnodar.

Gradually, Lyuba sent everyone home by train, but the fate of Ivan from Belaya Tserkva and Volodya from Rzhev is still unknown.

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