Monument to the pioneer hero Volodya Dubinin - military monuments - catalog of articles - monuments of Kerch. Kerch in Persons: Volodya Dubinin is a pioneer hero! Volodya Dubinin pioneer hero feat

Municipal cultural institution

"Centralized Library System"

Kanavinsky district

Library named after V. Dubinina

VOLODYA DUBININ -

little hero

great war

library portrait

Nizhny Novgorod

Always forward, never take a step back!

Remember this forever

And keep courage in your soul,

Never lose heart...

To the reader!

Library portrait "Volodya Dubinin - a small hero of a big war"- a recommendatory bibliographical guide dedicated to the 60th anniversary of the Great Victory over the Nazi invaders and dedicated to the feat of Volodya Dubinin, whose name our library proudly bears.

The materials used in the manual are available in the collections of the children's library named after. V. Dubinina.

The biblioportrait is addressed to students in grades 3-8 for an in-depth study of materials on the Great Patriotic War (1st year).

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Photo of the school

If you find yourself in Kerch, the city of two seas - the Black and Azov, you will certainly come out onto a straight and bright street leading from Mount Mithridates to the sea. This street and the school on it are named after Volodya Dubinina.

Holiday camps" href="/text/category/lagerya_otdiha/" rel="bookmark">rest camp "Artek", but the war began.

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Volodya died on January 4, 1942. The young hero was buried in a partisan grave, not far from the quarries. Posthumously Volodya Dubinin was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

This order was awarded for special feats performed in a combat situation, with obvious danger to life, for courage, bravery, bravery shown during the successful completion of a special task.

Order of the Red Banner

This is whose name the school in the city of Kerch and the street leading from Mount Mithridates to the sea bear. In front of the school where Volodya studied, there is a bronze bust of the young hero.

Photo of the bust near the school

https://pandia.ru/text/78/076/images/image010_33.jpg" align="left" width="249" height="324 src=">July 12, 1964 in the center of Kerch, in a park on the street , bearing the name of the young hero, the grand opening of the monument took place. On the monument there is the inscription: “To the pioneer hero V. Dubinin from the pioneers and Komsomol members of Kerch.”

The full-length sculpture of Volodya Dubinin on a pedestal is carved from a large monolithic block of gray Crimean diorite. Volodya has an open coat and a hat with earflaps on his head. The young scout is captured in motion, as if he is emerging from a rock. The right hand is slightly bent and rests on the rock, the left is lowered and clenched into a fist. The serious face that is not childish expresses composure, firmness, and determination.

Many pioneer detachments and squads in various cities and villages of our country and abroad were named after V. Dubinin. For example, one of the schools in the city of Brno in the Czech Republic bears his name.

Interest in the short but glorious life of the Kerch pioneer does not fade over the years.

Our library has been named after Volodya Dubinina.

Nizhny Novgorod poet Gennady Vasilievich Bednyaev

donated his poem to our library "Volodya Dubinin":

The wind cried near the autumn poplars.

The enemy rushed into the attack more and more furiously.

Under flags with spider swastikas

Kerchan shot, tortured in dungeons.

And the mother kissed her teenage son

Near the house that was destroyed, near the basement.

“I will remember your tears, mommy,” -

He said, leaving for the quarry.

And he became a brave, daring scout.

He loved his native Kerch with the heart of a child.

We read about him near the bright Volga

And we know: mines are enemy fragments

Harsh times of war

They took the life of a young hero.

Dubinin - the partisan went into immortality...

Scarlet banners are burning over Kerch.


WE RECOMMEND READING:

1. Balyasin of the Red Banner /

//, Kazakevich famous awards of Russia. - M.: Veche, 2000. - S.

2. Volodya Dubinin // Feat of the people: monuments to the Great

Patriotic War, 1/ comp. and general ed. . - M.: Politizdat, 1980. - P. 193: ill.

3. Kassil L. Volodya Dubinin / L. Kassil, M.

Polyanovsky // Stories about young heroes: collection / comp. , . - Magadan, 1957. - S.: ill.

4. Kassil L. Our Volodya / L. Kassil, M. Polyanovsky //

Children-heroes: collection / comp. , . - K.: Glad. school, 1984. - S.

5. Kassil L. Street of the youngest son / L. Kassil, M.

Polyanovsky. - M.: Det. lit., 19 p.: ill. - (Schoolchild’s military library. Library series).

Compiled by:

Chief Librarian Ivanova E. M.

Computer typing, design

Head of the library

Volodya Dubinin - a small hero of a big war: biblioportrait - bibliographic manual / MU Central Library of the Kanavinsky district. Library named after V. Dubinin; comp. . – N. Novgorod, 2005. – 9 p.: ill.

Booker Igor 06/09/2019 at 23:48

All children in the Soviet Union have heard the name of the pioneer hero Volodya Dubinin. But amazingly, the grown-up and old former members of the pioneer organization, for the most part, no longer remember how this young hero died. As a rule, they say that the partisan was tortured by the Nazis. But this is not so: the boy died while clearing mines in the Kerch quarries.

This kind of confusion is associated with the literary Malchish-Kibalchish and the widespread opinion that pioneer heroes had to die at the hands of executioners. However, teenager Volodya Dubinin died while clearing mines in the Kerch quarries, where he repeatedly visited the partisans during the fascist occupation of the peninsula.

If you get into the underground quarries of Old Karantina (Kamysh Burun) near Kerch, you will probably still be able to read on one of the stone walls under a scratched red star the inscription: “Here in 1919 the red partisans of the Starokarantin detachment Nikifor Dubinin lived and fought for Soviet power and Ivan Gritsenko." Eight years later, on August 29, 1927, one of the former Red Army soldiers, Nikifor Dubinin, gave birth to a son, Vovka. The boy will not be destined to live to the age when he would be called by his first name and patronymic, Vladimir Nikiforovich. But the name of Volodya Dubinin will be written in golden letters in the chronicle of the young heroes of our country. The boy died at the age of 14, and the streets of our cities are named after him and monuments are erected on them.

Since childhood, Vovka played with friends in the quarries, where his father and his comrades fought in the Civil War. The boy's small stature made it possible to penetrate into holes where his larger peer could not fit. And the disadvantage that the taller guys made fun of will become an advantage during the war years and will provide invaluable help to other people.

The summer of 1941 has arrived. One day Volodya saw cars and carts at the entrance to the dungeon. The depths of the quarry endlessly consumed boxes, bags, and barrels. It is no wonder that they are trying to make a warehouse here and hide food from the advancing enemy. Few people were privy to the secret of the Old Quarantine, but among those initiated was Dubinin’s cousin, a seasoned partisan Ivan Zakharovich Gritsenko. On his recommendation, the commander of the partisan detachment, former sailor Alexander Fedorovich Zyabrev, enrolled Vova Dubinin in the detachment. And time has shown how far-sighted this commander's decision was.

On the eve of the 24th anniversary of the October Revolution, partisan detachments went into the underground quarries of Kerch to remain in almost pitch darkness for fifty days and nights and hold back the attacks of the Nazis. Unable to smoke out the partisans with poisonous gases and knock them out with bombs and grenades, the Germans surrounded with barbed wire and mined all approaches to the quarry area. All entrances and manholes were filled with concrete and sentries were posted everywhere. Only teenagers could get into the cracks left unfilled with cement. At first, there were three guys, like musketeers: Volodya Dubinin, Vanya Gritsenko and Tolya Kovalev.

But the Wehrmacht command did not sleep and daily ordered to seal the slightest cracks through which a person could squeeze. This is where Volodka’s short stature turned out to be a big plus. Communication between the fighters of the partisan detachment and those remaining at the top was carried out through the pioneer Dubinin. One morning Volodya Dubinin went on reconnaissance, and when he returned, the hole was tightly sealed with a thick layer of cement mortar. A few hundred meters from the sentries, the boy crawled among mined stones for several hours before he found another loophole. The timely information he delivered saved the partisans from death. Volodya found out that the enemies were planning to flood the quarries with sea water, and reported this to the command of the detachment. If Volodya had only hesitated a little, nothing would have saved the ninety of our guys who remained in the dungeon.

During the Great Patriotic War, the city of Kerch became the scene of brutal and bloody battles. The front line passed through it four times, and the fighting was so fierce that less than 15 percent of the city's buildings survived.

There were many heroes in the battles for Kerch, but the city still remembers the youngest of them - 14 years old Volodya Dubinina.

Volodya was born on August 29, 1927 into a family Nikifor Semenovich And Evdokia Timofeevna Dubinin. Volodya's father, Nikifor Dubinin, fought against the whites in a partisan detachment during the Civil War, and later became a sailor. He worked both on the Black Sea and in the Arctic, so the family managed to travel around the country.

Volodya grew up as an active, inquisitive, slightly hooligan guy. He loved to read, was interested in aircraft modeling, photography...

When the war began, Nikifor Dubinin was drafted into the army. Evdokia Timofeevna with Volodya and his sister moved to her relatives in the Old Quarantine area.

The closer the advancing Nazis were to Kerch, the more actively the city’s leadership prepared for guerrilla warfare in the event of its occupation. The Adzhimushkay and Starokarantinsky quarries, which were real fortresses, were to become the bases of the partisan detachments.

Elusive scouts

Volodya and his friends learned about the partisan detachment in the Starokarantinsky quarries. The boys began to ask adults to take them into partisans. After some hesitation, the squad leader Alexander Zyabrev gave the go-ahead. Boys who were able to exit quarries through narrow crevices were indispensable as scouts.

Vladimir Dubinin. The photo was taken before 1942. Photo: Public Domain

Once at home, Volodya found a medal “For Labor Valor” and pinned it on his shirt, remarking: “Beautiful.” Sister Valya, who was two years older than Volodya, reasoned:

But this is not your reward. You have to deserve such a medal. And you are still small!

Volodya blushed, took off his medal and answered:

You'll see what I'll become.

After the occupation of Kerch, Volodya went with his detachment to the quarries.

The partisans in the quarries of Old Quarantine very soon began to harass the German command. However, the Nazis could not knock them out of there. Then they began a siege, blocking all exits and diligently filling the cracks with cement.

This is where the boys came in handy. Volodya Dubinin, Vanya Gritsenko, Tolya Korolev they came out of the quarries where adults could not get out, and brought valuable information about the enemy.

When the Nazis blocked all the large holes, only the small and nimble Volodya could crawl into the remaining ones. Then other boys began to work as a “cover group” - they distracted the soldiers blocking the entrances, giving them the opportunity to get out. Also at the agreed time, the guys met Volodya returning from reconnaissance.

Racing with death

Volodya and the other guys were not only engaged in reconnaissance. During battles, they brought ammunition, provided assistance to the wounded, and carried out other instructions from the commander.

In December 1941, the Nazis decided to flood the Starokarantinsky quarries and put an end to the partisans. Volodya, who was in reconnaissance, found out about this when there were only a few hours left before the start of the punitive action.

Risking his life during the day, practically in full view of German patrols, Volodya managed to penetrate the catacombs and warn the partisans of the danger. The commander raised the alarm, and people began hastily building dams in order to thwart the plans of the Nazis.

It was a race against death. At some point, the water in the quarries rose almost to the waist. Nevertheless, in two days the partisans managed to create a system of dams that prevented the Nazis from destroying the detachment.

The scout Volodya Dubinin played a major role in saving the partisans.

Hero forever

On the eve of the new year, 1942, the command set the task for scout Dubinin to get to the Adzhimushkai quarries and contact the partisan detachment based there.

But when Volodya went to carry out the order, he came across... Soviet soldiers. These were naval landing soldiers who liberated Kerch during the Kerch-Feodosia operation.

The joy of Volodya and his comrades knew no bounds. But the Nazis surrounded the Starokarantinsky quarries with a network of minefields, and the partisans could not leave them. The adults were physically unable to leave where Volodya was leaving.

And then Volodya volunteered to be a guide for the sappers. The first day of demining was successful, but on January 4, 1942, at about 10 a.m., a powerful explosion occurred at the entrance to the quarries. Four sappers and Volodya Dubinin were blown up by a mine.

The dead sappers and Volodya were buried in a mass partisan grave in the Youth Park of Kerch.

Posthumously, Vladimir Nikiforovich Dubinin was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

The city of Kerch still faced fierce fighting, a second occupation and the long-awaited final liberation on April 11, 1944.

In 1973, Kerch was awarded the title “Hero City”.

In the battles for Kerch, thousands of Soviet soldiers showed courage and heroism, but the feat of Volodya Dubinin was not lost among them.

One of the streets of his native city is named after him, and in 1964 a monument to Volodya was unveiled on it.

In 1949, writers Lev Kassil And Max Polyanovsky published the book “Street of the Youngest Son”, dedicated to Volodya Dubinin. From that moment on, the young partisan gained all-Union fame.

Decades later, during the years of perestroika, some will think that this glory is undeserved, like the medal that little Volodya pinned on his shirt.

But history itself put everything in its place. The feat of Volodya Dubinin and the memory of him are still alive.

Very soon many countries of the world and, of course, Russia will be celebrating the “holiday with tears in our eyes”Victory Day.

On the pages of the blog I began to talk about the exploits of children, pioneer heroes (in the first message you can read about the exploit of Marat Kazei).

http://stat.mil.ru/index.htm
When I was at school, I read books about pioneer heroes with great interest. As pioneers, my classmates and I discussed these books and talked a lot about the exploits of our peers. Probably, then our teachers and librarians did a lot of work to instill patriotism in us.

Today, turning to the heroic pages of the history of our Fatherland, I would like my students = our children to admire the Personalities, Heroes, Great Creators.

At the age of 12, I read Lev Kassil’s story “The Street of the Youngest Son”, and later watched the film of the same name (directed by Lev Golub, produced by “Belarusfilm”, 1962). The hero of the book is Volodya Dubinin, a 14-year-old pioneer who became a scout during the Great Patriotic War.

On the Crimean Peninsula there is the city of Kerch, a hero city.


Here, on August 29, 1927, a son, Volodya, was born into the family of Nikifor Semyonovich and Evdokia Timofeevna Dubinin. Nikifor Dubinin fought against the whites in a partisan detachment during the Civil War, and later became a sailor. He worked both on the Black Sea and in the Arctic, so the family managed to travel around the country.
In 1936, Volodya went to school. Volodya was interested in sports, drawing, and amateur performances. At the House of Pioneers he was involved in an aircraft modeling club and his models were always the best. For his active social work and good studies, he was sent to rest at Artek.

The Great Patriotic War broke out. His father, sailor Nikifor Semyonovich, went to the front, and Volodya, his mother and sister Valya moved temporarily to their relatives in the village of Old Karantin, located six kilometers from Kerch (inDuring the first months of the war, fascist troops were already approaching Kerch. Residents of the city were actively preparing for the underground struggle).

Volodya Dubinin also dreamed of fighting the occupiers. With the capture of Kerch, the partisans went to the Starokarantinsky underground quarries near the city. Already on November 7, 1941, an underground partisan fortress appeared in the deep depths. It was from here that the partisans made their forays.


The partisans loved 12-year-old Volodya; for them he was their common son. Volodya Dubinin went on reconnaissance missions with his friends Tolya Kovalev and Vanya Gritsenko. Young scouts provided valuable information about the location of enemy units and the number of German troops. The partisans, relying on this data, planned their combat operations. Intelligence helped the detachment in December 1941 to give a worthy rebuff to the punitive forces. In the adits during the battle, Volodya Dubinin brought ammunition to the soldiers, and then replaced the seriously wounded soldier.


Volodya was short, so he could get out through very narrow manholes. Thanks to Volodya’s data, Soviet artillery suppressed the points of the German division that were rushing to Stalingrad. For this he was awarded the Order of the Red Star.


The Nazis tried to destroy the partisans: they walled up and mined all the entrances to the quarry. During these terrible days, Volodya Dubinin showed great courage and resourcefulness. The boy organized a group of young pioneer scouts. The guys climbed to the surface through secret passages and collected the information the partisans needed. One day Volodya learned that the Germans had decided to flood the quarries with water. The partisans managed to build dams from stone.


The young intelligence officer helped track down signal saboteurs, was on duty on rooftops during air raid raids, and helped build bomb shelters. A serious test for Volodya was the day when a fascist bomb hit his home school. He saw books and teaching aids burning, and on that day he understood with particular force what war was...


http://popovskaya-musey.blogspot.ru/

At the end of December 1941, paratroopers liberated Kerch. The partisans knew about this, but they could not reach the surface, there were mines all around. Military units began clearing mine passages. And here again the pioneers came to the aid of the elders. Volodya Dubinin climbed to the surface through a familiar hole and showed the sappers where the mines were installed.


On the eve of 1942, the command assigned the task of scout Dubinin to get to the Adzhimushkai quarries and contact the partisan detachment based there.


http://vseprootpusk.ru/kerch

http://ru.visitua.info/

But when Volodya went to carry out the order, he came across... Soviet soldiers. These were naval landing soldiers who liberated Kerch during the Kerch-Feodosia operation.

Artist V.A. Print.
Landing in Feodosia
http://www.zorich.ru/index.asp

The joy of Volodya and his comrades knew no bounds. But the Nazis surrounded the Starokarantinsky quarries with a network of minefields, and the partisans could not leave them. The adults were physically unable to leave where Volodya was leaving.

And then Volodya volunteered to be a guide for the sappers. The first day of demining was successful, but on January 4, 1942, at about 10 a.m., a powerful explosion occurred at the entrance to the quarries. Four sappers and Volodya Dubinin were blown up by a mine.

The dead sappers and Volodya were buried in a mass partisan grave in the Youth Park of Kerch.

Posthumously, Vladimir Dubinin was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

The city of Kerch still faced fierce fighting, a second occupation and the long-awaited final liberation on April 11, 1944.

In 1973, Kerch was awarded the title “Hero City”.

In the battles for Kerch, thousands of Soviet soldiers showed courage and heroism, but the feat of Volodya Dubinin was not lost among them.

One of the streets of his native city was named after him, and on July 12, 1964, a monument to the young partisan was erected - the work of sculptor L.S. Smerchinsky. On it Volodya is depicted leaving the quarry on a reconnaissance mission.

http://deti.mail.ru/

Sources:

When I was at school, I read books about pioneer heroes with great interest. As pioneers, my classmates and I discussed these books and talked a lot about the exploits of our peers. Probably, then our librarians did a lot of work to instill patriotism in us.

Today, turning to the heroic pages of the history of our Fatherland, I would like my students = our children to admire the Personalities, Heroes, Great Creators.

At the age of 12, I read Lev Kassil’s story “The Street of the Youngest Son”, and later watched the film of the same name (directed by Lev Golub, produced by “Belarusfilm”, 1962). The hero of the book is Volodya Dubinin, a 14-year-old pioneer who became a scout during the Great Patriotic War.

On there is the city of Kerch, a hero city.


Here, on August 29, 1927, a son, Volodya, was born into the family of Nikifor Semyonovich and Evdokia Timofeevna Dubinin. Nikifor Dubinin fought against the whites in a partisan detachment during the Civil War, and later became a sailor. He worked both on the Black Sea and in the Arctic, so the family managed to travel around the country.
In 1936, Volodya went to school. Volodya was interested in sports, drawing, and amateur performances. At the House of Pioneers he was involved in an aircraft modeling club and his models were always the best. For his active social work and good studies, he was sent to rest at Artek.

The Great Patriotic War broke out. His father, sailor Nikifor Semyonovich, went to the front, and Volodya, his mother and sister Valya moved temporarily to their relatives in the village of Old Karantin, located six kilometers from Kerch (inDuring the first months of the war, fascist troops were already approaching Kerch. Residents of the city were actively preparing for the underground struggle).

Volodya Dubinin also dreamed of fighting the occupiers. With the capture of Kerch, the partisans went to the Starokarantinsky underground quarries near the city. Already on November 7, 1941, an underground partisan fortress appeared in the deep depths. It was from here that the partisans made their forays.


The partisans loved 12-year-old Volodya; for them he was their common son. Volodya Dubinin went on reconnaissance missions with his friends Tolya Kovalev and Vanya Gritsenko. Young scouts provided valuable information about the location of enemy units and the number of German troops. The partisans, relying on this data, planned their combat operations. Intelligence helped the detachment in December 1941 to give a worthy rebuff to the punitive forces. In the adits during the battle, Volodya Dubinin brought ammunition to the soldiers, and then replaced the seriously wounded soldier.


Volodya was short, so he could get out through very narrow manholes. Thanks to Volodya’s data, Soviet artillery suppressed the points of the German division that were rushing to Stalingrad. For this he was awarded the Order of the Red Star.


The Nazis tried to destroy the partisans: they walled up and mined all the entrances to the quarry. During these terrible days, Volodya Dubinin showed great courage and resourcefulness. The boy organized a group of young pioneer scouts. The guys climbed to the surface through secret passages and collected the information the partisans needed. One day Volodya learned that the Germans had decided to flood the quarries with water. The partisans managed to build dams from stone.


The young intelligence officer helped track down signal saboteurs, was on duty on rooftops during air raid raids, and helped build bomb shelters. A serious test for Volodya was the day when a fascist bomb hit his home school. He saw books and teaching aids burning, and on that day he understood with particular force what war was...


http://popovskaya-musey.blogspot.ru/

At the end of December 1941, paratroopers liberated Kerch. The partisans knew about this, but they could not reach the surface, there were mines all around. Military units began clearing mine passages. And here again the pioneers came to the aid of the elders. Volodya Dubinin climbed to the surface through a familiar hole and showed the sappers where the mines were installed.


On the eve of 1942, the command assigned the task of scout Dubinin to get to the Adzhimushkai quarries and contact the partisan detachment based there.


http://vseprootpusk.ru/kerch

http://ru.visitua.info/

But when Volodya went to carry out the order, he came across... Soviet soldiers. These were naval landing soldiers who liberated Kerch during the Kerch-Feodosia operation.

Artist V.A. Print.
Landing in Feodosia
http://www.zorich.ru/index.asp

The joy of Volodya and his comrades knew no bounds. But the Nazis surrounded the Starokarantinsky quarries with a network of minefields, and the partisans could not leave them. The adults were physically unable to leave where Volodya was leaving.

And then Volodya volunteered to be a guide for the sappers. The first day of demining was successful, but on January 4, 1942, at about 10 a.m., a powerful explosion occurred at the entrance to the quarries. Four sappers and Volodya Dubinin were blown up by a mine.

The dead sappers and Volodya were buried in a mass partisan grave in the Youth Park of Kerch.

Posthumously, Vladimir Dubinin was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

The city of Kerch still faced fierce fighting, a second occupation and the long-awaited final liberation on April 11, 1944.

In 1973, Kerch was awarded the title “Hero City”.

In the battles for Kerch, thousands of Soviet soldiers showed courage and heroism, but the feat of Volodya Dubinin was not lost among them.

One of the streets of his native city was named after him, and on July 12, 1964, a monument to the young partisan was erected - the work of sculptor L.S. Smerchinsky. On it Volodya is depicted leaving the quarry on a reconnaissance mission.

http://deti.mail.ru/

Sources:

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