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Her name was Nadia... The work was prepared by students of class 7 "B" Head Anastasia Eduardovna Davydova

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20-30 years ago, schoolchildren learned the names of pioneer heroes by heart. They named pioneer detachments and squads in their honor, composed songs and poems about them, drew wall newspapers with descriptions of their exploits. These were the children of legends, role models that anyone needs an ordinary child. They were not fictional characters and were not the fruit of someone's imagination. Their lives were cut short, mutilated by a war that spared no one.

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ON THE 70TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE VICTORY IN THE GREAT PATRIOTIC WAR, WE, GUYS OF THE 7th CLASS, DECIDED TO FIND OUT DO THE STUDENTS OF OUR SCHOOL KNOW WHO THE PIONEER HEROES ARE?

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When asked who the pioneer heroes were, the following answers were received: These are the children of war who have accomplished some feat! These are Zina Portnova, Marat Kazei, Volodya Dubinin, Lenya Golikov, Valya Kotik!

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We were very pleased that the students of our school know and remember the exploits of their peers during the war years, they keep in memory how they, boys and girls of our age, were ready to give everything for their Motherland!

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They went to school the same way as we did, And wrote with the same chalk, And loved to play in the gym, And were always busy with work. They were cheerful, inquisitive, But with adults on an equal footing They got into the ranks and quite consciously Fought in that war. They died in battles as heroes, Partisans through the forests, And they were not broken by the enemy, The enemy was seriously afraid of them himself!

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In order to form patriotic feelings and develop civil liability, we want to tell about one more hero! Or rather, the heroine - HOPE BOGDANOVA. Her fate is very interesting and we would like everyone to know about her!

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Nadia Bogdanova was a simple Belarusian girl who was not even 10 years old when the war began. In 1941, the orphanage in which she lived was evacuated in Frunze. Nadia, with several children, got off the train during one of the stops to go to the front.

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With her comrades, Nadia joined the Belarusian partisans, who could not even refuse such help. Surprisingly, she not only did not become a burden for them - together with her young friends she managed to destroy dozens of trucks with ammunition and several hundred Nazis. And this is a 10 year old girl.

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It was autumn 1941. Nadya and her friend Vanya (he was 12) went on a mission together. They were ordered to return alive. It was snowy that day. The children were dragging sledges laden with brooms. Among a dozen identical brooms lay three special ones, in the rods of which red panels were imperceptibly inserted. Vanya hobbled along funny, trying to save energy (the road was not close - about 10 km), and Nadia laughed and walked easily and freely. But my heart was worried. In the city, no one interfered with them, no one stopped them. Vanya was shaking out of habit, while Nadia boldly led their "sally". They managed to hang all the flags without attracting attention. On the way back, the girl decided to get a cigarette, because the partisans suffered so much without tobacco ... This was their mistake. Already at the exit from Vitebsk, the children were stopped by a policeman. He discovered tobacco and understood everything. Children were interrogated, threatened with execution and shot over their heads. They demanded to extradite the partisans. Both were silent, only shuddering after the next shot. The next morning after the interrogation, the young scouts were taken to be shot. Have pity on the children, beasts! - the prisoners shouted to the executioners, but they could not do anything, falling from the bullets into the common pit. Vanya fell after another shot. Nadia lost consciousness a second before the bullet was supposed to pierce her chest. In the pit with the dead, Nadya was found alive by a partisan post.

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Nadia Bogdanova was a simple Belarusian girl who was not even 10 years old when the war began. In 1941, the orphanage in which she lived was evacuated in Frunze.


Nadia, with several children, got off the train during one of the stops to go to the front. With her comrades (and these were children under 14), Nadia joined the Belarusian partisans, who could not even refuse such help. Surprisingly, not only did she not become a burden for them. At the age of 9, Nadia became a scout in the partisan detachment of "Uncle Vanya" Dyachkov. Small, thin, she, pretending to be a beggar, wandered among the Nazis, noticing everything, remembering everything, and brought the most valuable information to the detachment. And then, together with partisan fighters, she blew up the fascist headquarters, derailed a train with military equipment, and mined objects.

On the eve of the upcoming holiday October revolution at a meeting of the partisan detachment, they discussed who would go to Vitebsk and hang out red flags on the buildings in which the Nazis lived in honor of the holiday. According to the commander of the detachment, Mikhail Ivanovich Dyachkov, the red flags hung in honor of the holiday were supposed to serve as a sign to the residents of the city that the war against fascist german invaders continues to raise the morale of Vitebsk residents. The Nazis carefully guarded the approaches to the city, searched everyone and even sniffed. If a suspect's hat smelled of smoke or gunpowder, they considered him a partisan and shot him on the spot.

Reconstruction "Nadya Bogdanova distracts the Nazis"


There was less attention to children, so we decided to entrust this task to 10-year-old Nadia Bogdanova and 12-year-old Vanya Zvontsov. At dawn on November 7, 1941, the partisans brought the children closer to Vitebsk. They gave me a sled in which brooms were neatly stowed. Among them are three brooms with red flags wrapped around their bases and twigs on top. According to the idea of ​​​​the partisans, children should sell brooms to avert the eyes of the Nazis.

Nadia and Vanya entered the city without any problems. On small children with sleds, none of the Nazis special attention did not pay. To relieve herself of the suspicions of the Germans looking in their direction, Nadia approached a group of Nazis with a sled and offered them to buy brooms. They began to laugh and poke the muzzles of machine guns in her direction, after which one of them drove her away in broken Russian.

All day they walked around the city and looked at the buildings in the city center where they could put up red flags. When evening came and it became dark, they set to work. During the night, the guys set flags on Train Station, a trade school and a cigarette factory. When dawn came, red flags were already flying on these buildings. Having completed the work, the children hurried to the partisan detachment to report on the completed task. Along the way, they took with them cigarettes for the partisans. And it became a fatal mistake.

When they, having already left the city, went out onto the main road, the Nazis caught up with them and searched them. Having found the cigarettes, they guessed to whom the children were carrying them and began to interrogate, after which they took them back to the city. The kids cried all the way. At the headquarters they were interrogated by one of the Nazis. After interrogation, he ordered the children to be shot. They were placed in the basement, where there were many Soviet prisoners of war. The next day they were all taken outside the city to be shot.

Nadya and Vanya stood at the moat under the guns of the Nazis. The children held hands and cried. A fraction of a second before the shot, Nadia lost consciousness. Some time later, Nadya woke up among the dead, including Vanya Zvontsov...

After capture settlements In the Byelorussian SSR, the Nazis set up firing points there, mined roads, dug tanks into the ground. In one of these settlements - in the village of Balbeki - it was necessary to conduct reconnaissance and establish where the Germans had cannons, machine guns disguised, where sentries were stationed, from which side it was better to attack the village.

The command decided to send the partisan intelligence chief Ferapont Slesarenko and Nadya Bogdanova to this task. Nadia, dressed as a beggar, was supposed to bypass the village, and Slesarenko - to cover her departure in a forest near the village. The Nazis easily let the girl into the village, believing that she was one of the homeless children who walk around the villages in the cold, collect food in order to somehow feed themselves. Nadia went around all the yards, collected alms, and remembered everything that was needed. By evening, she returned to the woods to Slesarenko. There, a partisan detachment was waiting for her, to which she reported information.

At night, the partisans fired machine-gun fire at the Nazis from both sides of the village. Then Nadia first participated in a night battle, although Slesarenko did not let her go a single step. In this battle, Slesarenko was wounded, Nadya bandaged his wound. A green rocket soared into the sky, which was a signal from the commander for all partisans to retreat to the forest. Slesarenko ordered Nadia to leave him and go to the detachment for help.

On a frosty night, Nadia ran through the snowdrifts to the partisan detachment, which was about 10 kilometers away. Along the way, she wandered into a small farm. Near one of the houses where the police were having dinner, there was a horse with a sleigh. Creeping up to the house, Nadia got into the sleigh and returned to the wounded Slesarenko. Sitting on the sled, they returned together to the detachment.


In February 1942 (according to other sources - 1943), Nadia, along with demolition partisans, was ordered to destroy the railway bridge in Karasevo. When the girl mined it and returned to the detachment, she was stopped by the police. Nadia pretended to be a beggar, then they searched her and found a piece of explosives in her bag. When they began to interrogate her, at that moment there was an explosion and the bridge flew into the air right in front of the policemen. The policemen realized that it was Nadya who mined him. The girl was seized and taken to the Gestapo. There they tortured her for a long time, burned a star on her back, doused her with ice water in the cold, threw her on a red-hot stove. Failing to get information from her, the Nazis threw the tormented, bloodied girl out into the cold, deciding that she would not survive. Nadya was picked up by the inhabitants of the village of Zanaluchki, who were leaving her. Nadya could no longer participate in the war; after torture, she practically lost her sight.

After the end of the Great Patriotic War Nadia was sent to Odessa for treatment. In Odessa, Academician Vladimir Petrovich Filatov restored her sight. Returning to Vitebsk, Nadya got a job at a factory. For a long time, Nadia did not tell anyone that she fought with the Nazis.

And she did not even know that a monument was erected to her. Posthumously, as her comrades thought.

15 years later, she heard on the radio how the head of intelligence of the 6th partisan detachment Ferapont Slesarenko - her commander - said that the soldiers of their dead comrades would never forget, and named Nadya Bogdanova among them, who saved his life, wounded. Only then did the people who worked with her learn about what an amazing fate she was, Nadia Bogdanova, who was awarded the Order of the Red Banner, the Order of the Patriotic War of the 1st degree, and medals.

She became the youngest pioneer hero, her name is listed in the Book of Honor of the Belarusian Republican Pioneer Organization named after V. I. Lenin.

Nadezhda Alexandrovna Bogdanova lived all her life in Vitebsk, in the marriage of Kravtsova. She raised 4 children alone, her husband died early.

When you once again read the written evidence of human heroism or cowardice, courage or insignificance, shown during the Second World War, you begin to suffocate from overwhelming feelings - so many of them, different, are bubbling inside. But some stories are more striking than others.

Are children awarded for heroism in our country today? Yes, joyful news is heard from time to time: a nine-year-old girl brought four children out of a fire, but a ten-year-old boy pulled out kids stuck in arable land during the flood; A 16-year-old teenager saved a little girl who fell off a bridge into an icy spring river.

These news warm the soul. After all, they mean that, despite the total decline of culture and the progressive ailments of society, we are still able to educate a Human. And, perhaps, these were the children who helped us survive in the most brutal bloodshed of the 20th century?

Her name was Nadia

20-30 years ago, schoolchildren learned the names of pioneer heroes by heart. They named pioneer detachments and squads in their honor, composed songs and poems about them, drew wall newspapers with descriptions of their exploits. They were legendary children, role models that any ordinary child needs. They were not fictional characters and were not the fruit of someone's imagination. Their lives were cut short, mutilated by a war that spared no one.

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Nadia Bogdanova was a simple Belarusian girl who was not even 10 years old when the war began. In 1941, the orphanage in which she lived was evacuated in Frunze. Nadia, with several children, got off the train during one of the stops to go to the front.

Children forced to live in orphanages grow up early. There you need to survive and rely only on yourself: there are no loving parents nearby who could make their life carefree. The front for many of them at that time seemed the personification of freedom, heroism, feat. And also - adult life without strict supervision. Of course, it wasn't really like that. But what to take from children, if some adults went to the front with similar thoughts, hovering in romantic fantasies of glory and beautiful battle scenes?

With her comrades, Nadia joined the Belarusian partisans, who could not even refuse such help. Surprisingly, she not only did not become a burden for them - together with her young friends she managed to destroy dozens of trucks with ammunition and several hundred Nazis. And this is a 10 year old girl.

Sometimes you look at a ten-year-old child and are horrified at the very thought that he can hold a grenade in his hands, fearlessly dismantle an anti-tank mine, skillfully pretend to be a beggar who wanders among the Nazis, and at that time he notices and remembers everything, so that later he can bring valuable information his. And here - one little fragile girl among the animals that have already tortured hundreds of thousands of children to death.

Why did she have so much courage? Maybe it's just in itself such a fearless child who in his orphanage life has never seen anything good? And why is he so brave that he was not given maternal affection and tenderness?

No. Children do not become gentle/cowardly/courageous just depending on whether they were raised by parents or strangers. Children may or may not be brave depending on their innate vectors and how these vectors develop.

Nadia Bogdanova was a girl with visual and skin vectors. Skin-like flexible, nimble, she went on such tasks, where it was impossible to do without her innate dexterity. Nadia grasped everything on the fly, learning the partisan "craft", was the leader of a teenage detachment.

And she was also visually very scared. It is unbearably scary to be in a crowd of fascists, where in which case no one would have helped her - neither the commander of the partisan detachment, nor the legendary Marshal Zhukov, nor the leader of the proletariat. Nadia was trembling autumn leaf, but she went there because she understood that the partisans could not do without her. Without her, one cannot defeat the enemy in this small, but such an important part of her homeland.

First execution

It was autumn 1941. The celebration of the October Revolution was approaching. The command of the partisan detachment decided to hang red flags in Vitebsk to raise morale local residents suffering from the actions of the enemy garrison. The partisans could not hit the enemy yet. But also do nothing.

However, there was a plan, but there was no one who could go to the city to carry out the plan. The Nazis did not let the partisans near the city, and there they searched everyone who could arouse suspicion. The only ones who did not call him were children dressed in beggarly rags, holding dirty toys in their hands and whimpering truthfully as soon as the eyes of the policemen turned to them.

Nadia and her friend Vanya (he was 12) went on a mission together. They were ordered to return alive.

It was snowy that day. The children were dragging sledges laden with brooms. Among a dozen identical brooms lay three special ones, in the rods of which red panels were imperceptibly inserted. Vanya hobbled along funny, trying to save energy (the road was not close - about 10 km), and Nadia laughed and walked easily and freely. But my heart was worried.

In the city, no one interfered with them, no one stopped them. Vanya was shaking out of habit, while Nadia boldly led their "sally". They managed to hang all the flags without attracting attention.

On the way back, the girl decided to get a cigarette, because the partisans suffered so much without tobacco ... This was their mistake. Already at the exit from Vitebsk, the children were stopped by a policeman. He discovered tobacco and understood everything.

Children were interrogated, threatened with execution and shot over their heads. They demanded to extradite the partisans. Both were silent, only shuddering after the next shot. The next morning after the interrogation, the young scouts were taken to be shot.

Have pity on the children, beasts! - the prisoners shouted to the executioners, but they could not do anything, falling from the bullets into the common pit. Vanya fell after another shot. Nadia lost consciousness a second before the bullet was supposed to pierce her chest.

In the pit with the dead, Nadya was found alive by a partisan post.

One more chance

Who will not be broken by such an event that happened to Nadia? Where can a simple little girl get strength, who does not even have parents who could console her? Where to get the strength to continue the fight?

It seems normal to us that a girl might want to evacuate and live in the rear in order to heal a wounded soul. However, Nadia did not do this: moreover, the brave girl demanded to be taught how to shoot at targets and throw grenades at the enemy. And when the time came, she rushed into reconnaissance, participated in the battles and saved the life of the intelligence chief Slesarenko, who was wounded during the operation.

There is nothing surprising in Nadia's actions for a person who has the knowledge of Yuri Burlan. A girl with a visual vector is born with a feeling of fear - for herself and her life. We do not know how Nadia lived in the orphanage, how her visual vector developed. But the general grief, the powerful unity of the people, the idea of ​​sacrificing oneself for the sake of the happy future of the Motherland, which is possible only in a country with a urethral mentality - all this contributed to the fact that fear was supplanted by the desire to give without taking care of oneself.

Caring for the wounded, seeing the death and suffering of thousands of people, a simple girl with a visual vector managed to put common goal above your own fears. She pushed him out in boundless compassion and became steadfast as a flint, not saying a word about the partisans during inhuman torture ...

A very expensive fee for the development of the visual vector - so it seems to us. But THEM, these children-heroes, were not afraid to die.

In February 1942, Nadia went to blow up a railway bridge. On the way back, she was stopped by the police. After searching the girl, they found a tiny piece of explosives in the jacket. At the same moment, in front of the policemen, the bridge flew into the air.

The girl was brutally tortured: they burned a five-pointed star on her back, doused her with ice water in the cold, threw her on hot coals. Never having achieved a confession, they threw the tormented child into a snowdrift, believing that the girl was dead. Nadia was found by partisans who were sent to help her. Dying, brought to the village. Zanaluchki and left the local peasant women. A powerful desire to live won, and the girl, who was near death, survived again. True, she could no longer fight further - Nadya practically lost her sight (after the war, Academician V.P. Filatov restored her sight).

For military exploits, Nadezhda Alexandrovna Bogdanova was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of War, the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, and medals.

War and peace in a single organism

We can admire the courage and bravery of heroic children who helped our grandfathers and great-grandfathers win. To marvel at their resilience, to sympathize with their grief and short broken lives. And continue to live as it was lived - with your fears and views directed inward.

Bogdanova, Nadezhda Alexandrovna

Nadezhda Alexandrovna Bogdanova (married - Kravtsova) (December 28, 1931 - August 21, 1991) - pioneer hero. The youngest participant of the Great Patriotic War, awarded the title of pioneer hero.

Nadezhda Bogdanova was born in the Byelorussian SSR on December 28, 1931. In 1941, after the start of World War II, the orphanage in which she lived was evacuated to the city of Frunze, Kirghiz SSR. Nadia with several children from Vitebsk and Mogilev orphanages got off the train during one of the stops to go to the front.

She was executed twice by the Nazis, and her comrades long years considered her dead and even erected a monument. When she became a scout in the partisan detachment of the 2nd Belarusian brigade, she was not yet ten years old. Small, thin, she, pretending to be a beggar, wandered among the Nazis, noticing and remembering everything, and brought valuable information to the detachment. And then, together with partisan fighters, she blew up the fascist headquarters, derailed a train with military equipment, and mined objects. In subsequent operations, she was entrusted with weapons - she went with a pistol and a grenade in her belt. In one of the night battles, she saved the wounded commander of the reconnaissance unit Ferapont Slesarenko.


Attempted sabotage in Vitebsk


After getting off the train in Vitebsk, the orphans tried to take part in the defense of the city on their own. They freely moved around Vitebsk captured by the Nazis, knowing that the Germans did not attach importance to children. The children planned to blow up a German ammunition depot located in Vitebsk. They found explosives but did not know how to use them. The guys did not have time to reach their destination: there was an explosion, as a result of which the children died. Only Nadia survived. Later she was accepted into the partisan detachment of the 2nd Belarusian brigade.


Red flags in Vitebsk


On the eve of the upcoming holiday of the October Revolution, at a meeting of the partisan detachment, the fighters discussed who would go to Vitebsk and hang out red flags in honor of the holiday on the buildings in which the Nazis lived. According to the detachment commander Mikhail Ivanovich Dyachkov, the red flags hung in honor of the holiday were supposed to serve as a sign to the residents of the city that the war against the Nazi invaders continues in order to raise the morale of Vitebsk residents. The Nazis carefully guarded the approaches to the city, searched everyone, and even sniffed. If a suspect's hat smelled of smoke or gunpowder, they considered him a partisan and shot him on the spot. There was less attention to children, so we decided to entrust this task to 10-year-old Nadia Bogdanova and 12-year-old Vanya Zvontsov. At dawn on November 7, 1941, the partisans brought the children closer to Vitebsk. They gave me a sled in which brooms were neatly stowed. Among them are three brooms, at the base of which red cloths were wound, and rods on top. According to the idea of ​​​​the partisans, children had to sell brooms to avert the eyes of the Nazis.


Nadia and Vanya entered the city without any problems. Little children with sleds aroused no particular suspicion among any of the Nazis. Vanya, who was recently in the partisan detachment, was noticeably nervous at every glance of the Nazis in their direction. More experienced Nadia tried to cheer up the boy. To relieve herself of the suspicions of the Germans looking in their direction, Nadia approached a group of Nazis with a sled and offered them to buy brooms. They began to laugh and poke the muzzles of machine guns in her direction, after which one of them in broken Russian drove her away.


All day they walked around the city and looked at the buildings in the city center where they could hang red flags. When evening came and it became dark, they set to work. During the night, the guys set up flags at the railway station, a vocational school and an abandoned cigarette factory. When dawn came, the flags of the USSR were already flying on these buildings. Having completed the work, the children hurried to the partisan detachment to report on the completed task. When they, having already left the city, went out onto the main road, the Nazis caught up with them and searched them. Having found the cigarettes that the children had taken at the cigarette factory for the partisans, they guessed who they were carrying them to, and began interrogating them, after which they took them to Gorodok. The kids cried all the way. At the headquarters they were interrogated by the head of the district gendarmerie, putting the children against the wall and firing over their heads. After interrogation, he ordered the children to be shot. They were placed in the basement, where there were many Soviet prisoners of war. The next day everyone was taken out of Gorodok to be shot.


Nadya and Vanya stood at the moat under the guns of the Nazis. The children held hands and cried. A fraction of a second before the shot, Nadia lost consciousness. Some time later, Nadia woke up among the dead, including Vanya Zvontsov. Exhausted, she headed towards the forest, where the partisans found her. Since then, the squad for a long time did not allow her to independently perform tasks.


Reconnaissance and combat in Balbeki


In the captured settlements of Belarus, the Nazis set up firing points, mined roads, dug tanks into the ground. In one of these settlements - in the village of Balbeki - it was necessary to conduct reconnaissance and establish where the Germans had cannons, machine guns disguised, where sentries were stationed, from which side it was better to attack the village. The command decided to send the partisan intelligence chief Ferapont Slesarenko and Nadya Bogdanova to this task. Nadia, dressed as a beggar, was supposed to bypass the village, and Slesarenko - to cover her departure in a forest near the village. The Nazis easily let the girl into the village, believing that she was one of the homeless children who walk around the villages in the cold, collect food in order to somehow feed themselves. Nadia went around all the yards, collected alms and remembered everything that was needed. By evening, she returned to the woods to Slesarenko. There, a partisan detachment was waiting for her, to which she reported information.


At night, the partisans fired machine-gun fire at the Nazis from both sides of the village. Then Nadia first participated in a night battle, although Slesarenko did not let her go a single step. In this battle, Slesarenko was wounded in left hand: He fell and lost consciousness for a while. Nadia bandaged his wound. A green rocket soared into the sky, which was a signal from the commander to all partisans to retreat to the forest. Nadya and the wounded Slesarenko tried to leave for the detachment, but in deep snowdrifts Slesarenko lost a lot of blood and became exhausted. He ordered Nadia to leave him and go to the detachment for help. Putting spruce branches under the commander, Nadya went to the detachment.


The detachment was about 10 kilometers away. At night, it was difficult to get there quickly through snowdrifts in frost. After walking about three kilometers, Nadia wandered into a small farm. Near one of the houses where the police were having dinner, there was a horse with a sleigh. Creeping up to the house, Nadia got into the sledge and returned to the wounded Slesarenko. Climbing into the sleigh, they returned together to the detachment.


Mining of the bridge in Karasevo


In February 1942 (according to other sources - 1943), Nadia, along with demolition partisans, was ordered to destroy the railway bridge in Karasevo. When the girl mined it and began to return to the detachment, she was stopped by the police. Nadia began to pretend to be a beggar, then they searched her and found a piece of explosives in her backpack. They began to interrogate Nadia, at that moment there was an explosion and the bridge flew into the air right in front of the policemen.
The police realized that it was Nadya who had mined him, and, having tied him up, they put him in a sled and took him to the Gestapo. There they tortured her for a long time, burned a star on her back, doused her with ice water in the cold, threw her on a red-hot stove. Failing to get information from her, the Nazis threw the tormented, bloodied girl out into the cold, deciding that she would not survive. Nadia was picked up by the inhabitants of the village of Zanaluchki, who went out and cured her. Nadia could no longer participate in the war, because after the torture she practically lost her sight.


After the war


3 years after the end of the Great Patriotic War, Nadya was sent to Odessa for treatment. In Odessa, Academician Vladimir Petrovich Filatov partially restored her sight. Returning to Vitebsk, Nadya got a job at a factory. For a long time, Nadia did not tell anyone that she fought with the Nazis.
15 years later, she heard on the radio how the head of intelligence of the 6th partisan detachment Ferapont Slesarenko - her commander - said that the soldiers of their dead comrades would never forget, and named Nadya Bogdanova among them, who saved his life, wounded. Only then did she show up.


She was awarded the Order of the Red Banner, the Order of the Patriotic War, I degree, and medals. The name of Nadia Bogdanova is included in the Book of Honor of the Belarusian Republican Pioneer Organization named after V. I. Lenin.
She lived all her life in Vitebsk. Raised 1 native and 7 adopted children. Since the late 1970s, she has been in active correspondence with the pioneers of the 35th school in the city of Bratsk, Klemovskaya high school village Novoklyomovo, Moscow region, the 9th school of the city of Novopolotsk, the school of the city of Leninsk (now Baikonur) and others, as well as with local historians, whom she helped to restore the events that took place in the Byelorussian SSR during the war years. The pioneers of different schools called themselves "Bogdanovites" - in honor of Nadezhda Bogdanova. In 1965, she gave an interview to the writer Sergei Smirnov as part of the documentary series Tales of Heroism, in which she talked about her participation in the Great Patriotic War.


She died on August 21, 1991 - on the day of the August coup in the USSR. After her death, several schools organized fundraising for the opening of a monument to Nadezhda Bogdanova. At present, nothing is known about the fate of the monument.