Military Tank Institute. Military Academy of Logistics (branch, Omsk). The procedure for enrolling candidates as cadets


Troops of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, as well as the armed forces of other states near and far abroad.

(OABII WA MTO)
Other names Omsk Higher Tank Engineering School of the Order of the Red Star named after Marshal of the Soviet Union P.K. Koshevoy
(OVTIU)
Former name Omsk Tank Engineering Institute named after Marshal of the Soviet Union P.K. Koshevoy
(OTII)
Head organization Military Academy of Logistics named after Army General A.V. Khrulev
(VA MTO)
Year of foundation
Type higher military educational institution
Location Omsk region
Campus military City
Address , Omsk, Cheryomushki village, 14th military town, 119
Email [email protected]
Website OABII on the VA MTO website
Awards

Names

Full name :

  • Branch of the Federal State Treasury Military Educational Institution of Higher Education “Military Academy of Logistics Support named after Army General A.V. Khrulev” of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation in Omsk.
Abbreviated names:
  • Branch of VA MTO in Omsk;
  • Omsk Automotive and Armored Engineering Institute;
  • OABII WA MTO.

Story

Omsk Automotive and Armored Engineering Institute originates from Osipovichi Infantry School(OPU), formed on December 5, 1939 in the city of Osipovichi (Belarusian SSR, USSR) on the basis of Directive No. 11791 of the Deputy People's Commissar of Defense of the USSR.

In December 1940, in accordance with the Directive of the headquarters of the Western Special Military District No. 0013487 dated December 10, 1940, the Osipovichi Infantry School was relocated to Bobruisk and received a new name - Bobruisk Infantry School(BPU), and then, on the basis of Order of the People's Commissar of Defense of the USSR No. 0127 of March 28, 1941, it was reorganized into Bobruisk Military Tractor School(BVTU).

On July 6, 1941, the school was relocated to Stalingrad. However, due to the rapid change in the situation at the front, by Order of the Commander of the North Caucasus Military District No. 0495 dated August 5, 1941, the school was relocated to the city of Kamyshin and renamed Kamyshin Military Tractor School(KVTU). In accordance with the Order of the People's Commissar of Defense of the USSR dated January 13, 1942, KVTU was reorganized into Kamyshin Tank School(KTU) for the training of lieutenants - commanders of T-34 tanks and tank platoons.

In September 1942, the school was sent to the territory of the South Ural Military District in the Aktobe region of the Kazakh SSR to the Berchogur railway station, and from there to a permanent location in the village of Shakhtstroy, 18 km from the station.

On July 25, 1943, in accordance with the Order of the People's Commissar of Defense, the school was relocated to Omsk, while continuing to bear the name Kamyshinsky. After the end of the war, the school continued to train tank officers.

Many graduates of the school showed courage and heroism during the Great Patriotic War, 33 of them were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, and one of them, junior lieutenant Vasily Grigorievich Nelyubov, was forever included in the lists of the school’s personnel.

By order of the USSR Minister of Defense dated January 31, 1968, OTTU was transferred to the category of higher educational institutions, and began to be called Omsk Higher Tank Technical School(OVTTU).

For great merits in the training of officers for the armed forces and in connection with the 50th anniversary of the SA and the USSR Navy, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of February 28, 1968, the school was awarded the Order of the Red Star and became Omsk Higher Tank Technical School of the Order of the Red Star(OVTTU).

In October 1976, the school was named after a prominent military leader, twice Hero of the Soviet Union, Marshal of the Soviet Union Pyotr Kirillovich Koshevoy, after which it began to be called Omsk Higher Tank Command School named after Marshal of the Soviet Union P.K. Koshevoy of the Order of the Red Star(OVTKU).

Chiefs

Deputy Chiefs

  • Colonel Chuprygin Daniil Semenovich (March 1941);
  • Colonel E.M. Kabanov;
  • Colonel I. S. Vershigora;
  • Colonel A. A. Chernov;
  • Colonel V.V. Zhmakin;
  • Colonel N. A. Shuldyakov;
  • Colonel S.V. Makarov;
  • Colonel D. A. Solonitsyn;

Deputy Heads for Educational and Scientific Work

  • Colonel N. G. Khalizev;
  • Colonel A.V. Tarasov;
  • Colonel A.P. Ogarok;
  • Colonel V. M. Lebedev;
  • Colonel V.I. Ivanov;
  • Colonel O. A. Mamaev;
  • Colonel P. A. Prozorov;
  • Colonel S. D. Korovin.

OMSK BRANCH OF THE MILITARY ACADEMY OF LOGISTICS AND TRANSPORT (OMSK TANK ENGINEERING INSTITUTE)

Higher professional education

In 2013, the branch is recruiting cadets for training in higher professional education programs in military specialties: “Tank technical support for troops” and “Automotive technical support for troops”, as well as for specializations: “Tank technical support for the Airborne Forces” and “Automotive technical support for the Airborne Forces” (based on the specialty 190110 “Special purpose vehicles”) with a training period of 5.5 years. During the period of study at the branch, cadets are fully supported by the state with the payment of a stipend, the amount of which significantly exceeds the scholarship in civilian universities. Upon completion of training, graduates are awarded the qualification “specialist” and the military rank of “lieutenant”.

The President of the Russian Federation signed the Law “On the monetary allowance of military personnel and the provision of individual payments to them,” according to which, from January 1, 2012, the monetary allowance of military personnel has been significantly increased. Thus, the salary of a lieutenant of the Armed Forces is about 50 thousand rubles (“Rossiyskaya Gazeta” dated November 7, 2011 and December 8, 2011).

Admission conditions

Citizens of the Russian Federation who have a state-issued document on secondary (complete) general, secondary vocational education or a diploma of primary vocational education, if it contains a record of the citizen receiving secondary education, are considered as candidates for admission to the branch for training in programs with full military special training. (complete) general education, from among:

citizens who have not completed military service - aged 16 to 22 years;

citizens who have completed military service and military personnel undergoing military service upon conscription - until they reach the age of 24 years;

military personnel performing military service under a contract (except for officers) - until they reach the age of 25 years.

The following cannot be considered as candidates for admission to universities: citizens who do not have Russian citizenship; citizens against whom a guilty verdict has been passed and who have been sentenced; in respect of which an inquiry is being conducted, or a preliminary investigation or criminal case in respect of which has been transferred to court; having an unexpunged or outstanding criminal record, serving a sentence of imprisonment, deprived for a certain period of time by a court decision that has entered into legal force of the right to occupy military positions during the specified period.

Citizens who have and have not undergone military service, who have expressed a desire to enroll in military educational institutions, submit applications to the department of the military commissariat of the constituent entity of the Russian Federation (municipal) at their place of residence (graduates of Suvorov military schools submit an application addressed to the head of the Suvorov military school in which they study) until April 20 of the year of admission to the university. Citizens living in military units stationed outside the Russian Federation submit applications to the head of the university before May 20 of the year of admission to the university.

Military personnel who have expressed a desire to enroll in military educational institutions submit a report addressed to the commander of the military unit before April 1 of the year of admission to the university.

The candidate's application shall indicate: last name, first name, patronymic, date of birth, education, address of residence, name of the military educational institution, level of professional education, specialty in which he wishes to study. In the report of candidates from among the military personnel, in addition to the above, the following shall be indicated: military rank and position held, and instead of the address of residence - the name of the military unit.

The application (report) is accompanied by: photocopies of a birth certificate and a document proving identity and citizenship, an autobiography, a reference from a place of work, study or service, a photocopy of a state-issued document on the appropriate level of education, three certified photographs measuring 4.5 x 6 cm, military service card; a certificate from the internal affairs bodies stating that the candidate is not registered and has not been brought to criminal or administrative liability; child development history (from the clinic); loose leaf for a teenager to the medical record of an outpatient (form 25Yu); VVK medical examination card.

A passport, military ID or certificate of a citizen subject to conscription for military service, an original state-issued document on the appropriate level of education, as well as original documents giving the right to enroll in universities on preferential terms established by the legislation of the Russian Federation, are presented by the candidate to the military admissions committee - educational institution upon arrival, but no later than one day before the meeting of the admissions committee to make a decision on the candidate’s admission to the university.

Chelyabinsk Higher Tank Command School named after the 50th anniversary of the Great October Revolution
CHVTKU

Sleeve insignia of the USSR tank forces
Years of existence 30.06.1941 - 28.05.2007
A country USSR USSR→Russia Russia
Subordination USSR Ministry of Defense → RF Ministry of Defense
Included in URVO → URVO → URVO → URVO
Type State Military Institute
Dislocation st. Monakova 28A,
Chelyabinsk, Russia
Commanders
Notable commanders See bosses.

(CHVTKU) - higher military educational institution of the USSR Armed Forces and the Russian Armed Forces.

Story [ | ]

Period of the Great Patriotic War[ | ]

With the outbreak of hostilities in the Great Patriotic War, the leadership of the USSR raised the question of creating new military schools in the rear and relocating military schools located in the western part of the state to the east of the country.

By Directive of the General Staff of July 30, 1941 No. org/1/524382, the formation of the Chelyabinsk Tank School began. Recruitment took place at the expense of military personnel arriving from military units, educational institutions of the Red Army and in the direction of regional military commissariats. The military camp of the artillery regiment was chosen as the location of the school.

On August 8, 1941, the school was finally formed and became part of the Ural Military District, which was created on August 12, 1941.

The main task assigned to the Chelyabinsk Tank School was the training of tank commanders (crews), military technicians, senior mechanics-drivers for heavy combat vehicles such as KV-1, and later KV-1s, and KV-85, IS-1, IS-2, IS-3 and heavy self-propelled artillery units SU-152, ISU-152, ISU-122.

The training period was determined for command personnel - 8 months, for technical personnel - 9 months. Tank (crew) commanders were awarded the military rank of lieutenant and junior lieutenant. Senior mechanic rank technical lieutenant.

In September 1941, the training process began, in which 64 cadet platoons were involved.

The very choice of the military leadership of the city of Chelyabinsk to host a tank school, according to historians, was explained by the location of the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant, which since 1940 has mastered the production of KV-1 tanks.

To more effectively study the material part of armored vehicles, with the assistance of the Chelyabinsk Regional Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, in the first half of September, the school command experimented with the introduction of production practice: the cadets were assigned to teams of workers at the Chelyabinsk Tractor Plant engaged in the production of tanks and self-propelled guns, and took direct participation in production at all stages in various workshops. As a result of such industrial practice, the cadets acquired knowledge of both the design of units and combat vehicles in general.

The school's personnel as of December 1, 1941 amounted to 2,500 people. The first graduation of specialists (552 people) took place at the end of May 1942.

Since 1943, the procedure for recruiting applicants to the school has changed. Priority was given to Red Army soldiers and junior commanders with combat experience, who were sent from the front for training.

Immediately before the Battle of Kursk, 16 heavy self-propelled artillery regiments were formed in Chelyabinsk, in which the junior officers were mainly staffed by school graduates.

August 26, 1943 Chelyabinsk Tank School (CHTU) was renamed to Chelyabinsk Tank Technical School (CHTTU). This was due to the complete reorientation of the school to train military technicians and senior driver mechanics for heavy tanks and heavy self-propelled artillery.

Since July 1942, additional courses for the training of tank company commissars were introduced at the school. After the reform of the Institute of Commissars in June 1943, courses were held to retrain political personnel for command positions.

In total, from 1942 to 1945, the school graduated 37 military specialists in various specialties. A total of 6,863 officers were trained for the armored forces

Post-war period[ | ]

Since the fall of 1945, the Chelyabinsk Tank Technical School switched from a shortened course of study to a 3-year training period.

Due to the general reduction in the strength of the USSR Armed Forces in the post-war period, on June 10, 1948, the Chelyabinsk Tank Technical School was disbanded.

In the mid-60s, both new military schools were created and a number of previously disbanded schools were restored. USSR Minister of Defense Marshal of the Soviet Union Malinovsky R. Ya. approved the initiative to restore the Chelyabinsk Tank School.

On November 30, 1966, in pursuance of the order of the USSR Minister of Defense and the directive of the General Staff of the Armed Forces, the commander of the Ural Military District issued an order to form the Chelyabinsk Higher Tank Command School. The first order for the school was signed on December 16, 1966.

In January-February 1967, the teaching staff of the school was appointed. In April 1967, a special construction detachment began building facilities for the school, developing a shooting range and a tankodrome for driving tanks.

As was customary in the practice of Soviet military schools of the post-war period, cadets in the newly created schools were recruited from among second-year cadets from other single-disciplinary educational institutions. In September 1967, cadets sent from the Ulyanovsk and Kazan Tank Schools continued their second-year studies at the Chelyabinsk Tank School. At the same time, a set of cadets was recruited for the first year of study among the youth of the Ural region in the city of Chebarkul.

On November 7, 1967, cadets of the Chelyabinsk Tank School took part in a military parade in the regional center in honor of the 50th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution.

On April 20, 1968, the Chelyabinsk Tank School was awarded a Battle Banner with an honorary name in honor of the 50th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution: Chelyabinsk Higher Tank Command School named after the 50th anniversary of the Great October Revolution.

In May 1970, the school graduated its first lieutenants for tank forces.

Like all higher military schools of the USSR, training at the Chelyabinsk Tank School lasted 4 years. Upon completion, the graduate was awarded the military rank of lieutenant and awarded a diploma of higher technical education. The graduate was assigned the military specialty of “tank platoon commander.” Diploma specialty "engineer for operation and repair of tracked vehicles."

School after the collapse of the USSR[ | ]

After the collapse of the USSR, the school continued training personnel for the tank forces of the Russian Armed Forces.

Since 1995, the school, in accordance with interstate agreements, began training specialists for other states. The school trained specialists for the armed forces of Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Armenia, Angola, Guinea, Mali, Laos, Jordan, Mozambique, Ethiopia and Uganda.

November 1, 1998, during the reform of military educational institutions, Chelyabinsk Higher Tank Command School was renamed to Chelyabinsk Tank Institute.

Due to the changed status of the educational institution, the period of study was increased to 5 years. Graduates were awarded the qualification “engineer”. The training of cadets was carried out in the following specialties:

  • military - “Combat and daily activities of tank units”;
  • civil - 150300 “Multipurpose tracked and wheeled vehicles (MGKM).”
    • specialization: 150306 - “Operation and repair of multi-purpose tracked and wheeled vehicles (MGKM).”

In 2000, the following stages in the training of cadets were established:

  • 1st course - training of a soldier (crew member), tank commander;
  • 2nd year - platoon commander training;
  • 3rd year - training for company commander;
  • 4th year - studying the actions of the battalion, improving the training of a platoon-company commander;
  • 5th year - improving the training of a platoon-company-battalion commander.

In 2002, with another reform of higher military educational institutions, the period of study was reduced to 4 years with a change in specialization:

  • military - “Use of tank units”;
  • civil - 062100 “Personnel Management (Ground Forces).”

The graduate was awarded the qualification “manager”.

Liquidation of the school[ | ]

On the night from December 31, 2005 to January 1, 2006 in support battalion An emergency occurred at the Chelyabinsk Tank Institute. Due to prolonged bullying from fellow conscript soldiers, Andrei Sergeevich Sychev received disability. This incident had a wide public resonance, and the progress of the investigation was covered in detail in

The "Museum of Military History of the School" is located on the territory of the Omsk Tank Institute (OVTIU-OTII) in educational building No. 2, entrance from the parade ground.

In December 1940, the infantry school was reorganized into a military tractor school and relocated to Bobruisk. The first graduation from the school for platoon commanders for Red Army units took place on June 10, 1941. Near Bobruisk, from June 26 to July 7, 1941, the school’s personnel took part in hostilities as part of the 4th Army of the Western Front. ......
Photos are clickable, linked to a Yandex map.



For great merits in the training of officers for the armed forces and in connection with the 50th anniversary of the SA and the Navy, by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of February 28, 1968, the school was awarded the Order of the Red Star.
In 1976, the school was named after a prominent military leader, twice Hero of the Soviet Union, Marshal of the Soviet Union Pyotr Kirillovich Koshevoy.
By order of the USSR Ministry of Defense dated April 9, 1977, the school was transformed from a higher command school into the Omsk Higher Tank Engineering School of the Order of the Red Star named after Marshal of the Soviet Union P.K. Koshevoy.
By Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation No. 1009 of August 29, 1998, the school was reorganized into the Omsk Tank Engineering Institute.
Since 2009, the institute began training specialists with secondary vocational education.

1. Sign at the entrance to the "Museum of Military History of the School" OVTIU-OTII

2. Models of T-62 tanks on pedestals at the entrance to the "Museum of Military History of the School" OVTIU-OTII

3. In the museum lobby

4. The combat path of the school

The Omsk Tank Engineering Institute originates from the infantry school, formed on December 5, 1939 in the city of Osipovichi (Republic of Belarus).
In December 1940, the infantry school was reorganized into a military tractor school and relocated to Bobruisk. The first graduation from the school for platoon commanders for Red Army units took place on June 10, 1941. Near Bobruisk, from June 26 to July 7, 1941, the school’s personnel took part in hostilities as part of the 4th Army of the Western Front.

By August 1941, the school was relocated to the city of Kamyshin and renamed the Kamyshin Military Tractor School for the training of tank and platoon commanders.
In July 1943, by order of the People's Commissar of Defense, the school was relocated to Omsk. After the war, the school continued to train tank officers. In May 1946, it was transformed into a tank technical school.

5. Stand with photographs and short biographies of the heads of the school (OVTIU-OTII)

6. Stands dedicated to the Great Patriotic War

7. Stand dedicated to the Hero of the Soviet Union, junior lieutenant Vasily Grigorievich Nelyubov, forever included in the lists of the school’s personnel.

In the barracks, at one of the courses, in accordance with military tradition, a bed was installed for junior. Literary Nelyubova, above whom hangs a portrait. During the evening roll call, Nelyubov’s last name is read out (after pronouncing his last name, the platoon commander reports from the formation: “Second Lieutenant Vasily Grigorievich Nelyubov died a heroic death in the battle for the freedom and independence of the Fatherland - the Russian Federation”)

8. Order on permanent enrollment of ml. l-ta Nelyubova to the unit lists

9. Resolution of the Council of Ministers of the USSR No. 866 of October 24, 1976 on naming OVTIU after Marshal of the Soviet Union Pyotr Kirillovich Koshevoy

10. Order of the Minister of Defense of the USSR No. 247 of November 5, 1976 on naming OVTIU after Marshal of the Soviet Union Pyotr Kirillovich Koshevoy

Based on materials prepared by departments and departments of the ChVVKU in the year of closure, under the leadership of Deputy head of the school for educational and scientific workColonel A.M. Fortygin)

Chelyabinsk Tank Institute

1998-2004

In connection with the reorganization and liquidation of military educational institutions of vocational education by Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation of August 29, 1998 No. 1009, Order of the Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation No. 417 of September 16, 1998 and Directive of the First Deputy Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation No. 314/10/0706 of September 22 .1998 On November 1, 1998, the Chelyabinsk Higher Tank Command School was renamed the Chelyabinsk Tank Institute, with a branch created on the basis of the Kazan Higher Tank Command School. The Chelyabinsk Tank Institute is the legal successor of the Chelyabinsk Higher Tank Command School named after the 50th anniversary of the Great October Revolution.

From 1994 to 2004 Head of the Chelyabinsk Tank Institute, Candidate of Pedagogical Sciences, Professor of the Academy of Military Sciences, Major General Valentin Mikhailovich Lukyanov.

Author of 20 publications on the organization and conduct of combat operations in various situations, aspects of improving the tactics of combined arms units and the problems of increasing the effectiveness of cadet training.

He supervised the testing of new types of equipment and weapons. Based on the results of the test, educational videos were created that are widely used in the training of cadets and foreign military specialists.



The cadets were trained in the following specialties:

Military - “Combat and daily activities of tank units”;

- civil - 150300 “Multipurpose tracked and wheeled vehicles (MGKM).”

Specialization: 150306 - “Operation and repair of multi-purpose tracked and wheeled vehicles (MGKM).”

Specialist qualification: “engineer”, training period - 5 years.

School command

(From left to right: NU Deputy for Math. ensuring p-k O.Yu. Arshansky, NU in 2004-2005 - p-k A.E. Fedorov, NU 98-2004 General Mr. V.M. Lukyanov, deputy Well, according to the mat. according to playback work of sci. A.V. Gusev, deputy Well, according to the mat. for armament of PC Lenz V.I.)

In 2000 year, the institute developed (based on approximate) curriculum and programs, which reflected changes and additions to the 1996 program. The development of the 2000 programs was carried out in accordance with the directives of the Chief of the Main Directorate of the Ground Forces dated February 9, 2000 No. 451/2/205 and April 26, 2004. No. 451/2/590. They meet the requirementsChief of the General Staff of the RF Armed Forces on the phased training of cadets:

1st course - training of a soldier (crew member), tank commander;

2nd year - platoon commander training;

3rd year - training for company commander;

4th year - studying the actions of the battalion, improving the training of a platoon-company commander;

5th year - improving the training of a platoon-company-battalion commander.

Since 2002 year, the school moved to implement the educational process on the basis of the State General Education Standard of Higher Professional Education (State Standard of Higher Professional Education) approved on December 23, 2001 (State Standard of Higher Professional Education of the second generation). Specialty of training: 062100 - “Personnel management (Armed forces, other troops, military formations and bodies of the Russian Federation).”

Qualification requirements for military-professional training of graduates (addition to the State Standards of Higher Professional Education) were approved by the Commander-in-Chief of the Ground Forces - Deputy Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation on February 21, 2002.

Cadets are trained in the following specialties:

Military - “Use of tank units”;

Civil - 062100 “Personnel Management (Ground Forces).”

Specialist qualification: “manager”, training period - 4 years.

The curriculum and programs were developed by the university (based on exemplary ones) and approved by the Commander-in-Chief of the Ground Forces - Deputy Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation on March 2, 2002. Curricula: book one - special disciplines, book two - general mathematical, natural science and general professional disciplines, book three - general humanitarian and socio-economic disciplines.

Chelyabinsk Higher Military Command School

(military institute)

In October 2005, the school passed a comprehensive audit of its activities by a commission of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation. Based on the results of the inspection, a positive conclusion was received from the accreditation board with an index of compliance with accreditation criteria of 1.43. By order of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation No. 1 of January 10, 2006, the school received a certificate of state accreditation, registration No. 2197, and license No. 169779, registration No. 5670, dated December 23, 2005, for the right to conduct educational activities for 5 years.

At this time, 151 people were involved in the educational process at the school. Including doctors of sciences or persons with the academic title of professor - 20 people (8.52%), candidates of sciences and associate professors - 82 people (54.3%), the share of teachers working at the school full time is 76.

The level of informatization of the university was analyzed during the certification examination. For 100 cadets of the given contingent of the Chelyabinsk Higher Military Command School (military institute), there are 29.0 units of IBM-compatible computer equipment. The school has 11 computer classes, Internet access for students and teachers, an electronic library with five workstations in the educational collection, and a local network.





Preparation foreign specialists in InInstitute has been carried out since 1995. The institute trained specialists for the national armies of Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Armenia,from Angola, Guinea, Mali, Laos, Jordan, Mozambique, Ethiopia, Uganda.


In the historical form of the Chelyabinsk Higher Technical School named after. On the 50th anniversary of the Great October Revolution, the Tank Institute, and in recent years - the Chelyabinsk Higher Military Command School, unfortunately there were no words about its relationship with the Chelyabinsk Tank School of 1941. But there is a relationship that does not require formal proof - a spiritual and historical relationship.

The heroic deeds of tankers of past and present generations are intertwined into a single whole. From the past, new heroes draw courage.

And in Alexander Nevzorov's film "Purgatory" - one of the main characters, a lieutenant tanker, is not by chance named after Igor Grigorashchenko. Its prototype was a 1994 graduate of the ChVTKU - Igor Grigorashenko, who laid down his life in the battles for Grozny.

Hundreds of new graduates have passed through the fiery crucible of Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Transnistria, Chechnya...

Our country is going through difficult times. Economic problems obscure many things, even memory for some.

But if you take away a person’s memory, he turns into a helpless creature, good for nothing. There is another historical memory. The price for it is huge. It makes a person part of the people. Take away this memory and there is no people, there is a crowd without a past and without a future.

In order to defeat a country now, it is not necessary to conquer it by force of arms - it is necessary to deprive the people of their historical memory, denigrating all the best that happened in their history and the country will fall apart.

It is this memory that they have tried and are still trying to take away from us. Our victory in that war was a miracle. By all laws, by “European” logic, we should have fallen. After all, the enemy was superior to us, so that some would not talk or write about it. But we won - expelling the invaders, liberating half of Europe, forcing the Nazis to unconditional surrender.

That victory was due in no small part to “Tankograd” and its tank crews. New generations need to remember her. In order to know what countless forces are hidden in your multinational people and what miracles they are capable of... To know and rely on this experience in difficult times for the country.

Among the bread there is a granite pedestal,

Severe lines, simple directness.

A heavy tank rose above the groves

Reminding centuries of courage.

By the thickness of the steel we will determine

What kind of knights were there once?

If they could carry it on their shoulders

Fifty tons of explosive armor armor.

Sergey Orlov- graduate of ChTU 1942


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