Galya Komleva A-3 Leningrad Patriotic war Poster
Galya Komleva A-3 Leningrad Patriotic war Poster
Orgin: Leningrad, USSR. 1972
State: early antique
Size: A-3 / 30x42cm
A-3 size original poster of Pioneers & Heroes
Featuring:
Galina Komleva (1927-1943) - pioneer hero , liaison of a partisan detachment during the Great Patriotic War.
Born on July 7 , 1927 in the village of Torkovichi , Oredezhsky district (now Luga district ) , Leningrad region .
Before the war , she managed to complete six classes and was an excellent student.
When the Great Patriotic War began , Galina Komleva was fourteen years old. Before the Germans arrived in the village of Torkovichi , a partisan detachment was formed, the commander of the detachment was the secretary of the Oredezh district party committee, I. I. Isakov. The partisan detachment went into the forest before the Nazis captured the village of Torkovichi .
From August 18, 1941 to February 1944, the village of Torkovichi was occupied by the Germans. Contact with the partisan detachment was maintained by the thirty-year-old senior pioneer leader of the local school in the village of Torkovichi - Anna Petrovna Semyonova, who organized an underground group of girls: Galya Komleva (the youngest of the group), Elena Nechaeva, Ekaterina Bogdanova, Taisiya Yakovleva, who were eighteen years old.
The liaison officer of the partisan detachment was Galya Komleva, she brought important information to the partisan detachment about the location of German troops in the village of Torkovichi , this information was obtained with great difficulty, it was hidden with food, bread, potatoes. From the partisans, Galya brought senior pioneer leader Anna Semyonova a new task; together with Komsomol member Tasya Yakovleva, Galya wrote and distributed leaflets received from the partisan detachment in villages and towns.
In December 1942, young underground girls were betrayed and captured by the Nazis, who held them in the Gestapo. The German punishers mocked the girls for a long time, tortured, raped Galya Komleva, doused her with boiling water and continued to torture. The young heroines bravely withstood all the hellish tortures. The Nazis did not find out anything about the partisan detachment, the girls were firm and did not say anything to the punishers. The young heroines were shot on February 20, 1943.
Pioneer hero Galya Komleva was posthumously awarded the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree