What events can be held by May 9. Competition "Sea voyage"

Scenario for the May 9 holiday “To the feat of the people to live for centuries”

Goals and objectives:

To form students’ knowledge about the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945, its defenders and exploits;

To foster patriotic feelings, historical memory, respect for the older generation;

Awaken a sense of pride for your people.

Equipment:

Multimedia equipment, screen, computer, sound equipment;

Tools and materials:

Film "Holy War";

Video “Children of War”;

Photos of veterans;

Balloons.

(The soundtrack of a waltz sounds. He appears on stage. dancing girl, and a boy with a flower comes up to the front of the stage, looks at the dance, approaches the girl, silently gives the flower, both freeze. The soundtrack becomes quieter, and a voice sounds offstage.

Sounds disturbing music and the howl of sirens and the roar of explosions is heard, the girl presses against the boy, both look around with alarm, a voice behind the stage.

The music gives way to the introduction of the song “Get up, huge country.”

Men in black appear, separate the lovers, dress the young man in a military uniform and a cap, the girl sees him off).

Teacher. Good afternoon We are happy to welcome everyone to today's celebration!

May 9 is an unusual holiday. Any holiday is, first of all, joy, fun, laughter. The joy of today's holiday is intertwined with grief, laughter with tears.

The Great Patriotic War... How many lives it took, how much misfortune it brought to the Soviet people...

Child performance

People slept, putting it off until the morning

All your worries and affairs.

In a bright house, quiet and cozy,

The little girl was sleeping.

There are toys on the bed, on the table,

Outside the window there is a large green garden,

Where are the apple and pear trees in spring?

They put on festive attire.

The sky floated in bright, starry points,

The sky was also waiting for the day,

And no one knew that that night

At dawn the war began.

Presenter 2. Our people achieved victory at a high price. The war claimed almost 27 million Soviet lives. But the Soviet Union not only survived such a brutal war, but also defeated fascism because the war was a nationwide one. Everyone rose up to defend the Motherland: men, women, old people, young people, all nations and nationalities of the country. Unprecedented fortitude and heroism on the battlefields, the courageous struggle of partisans and underground fighters behind the front line, almost round-the-clock tireless work in the rear - this is how this victory was won.

The guys' story about our village during the war

Presenter 2. Four years - is it a lot or a little? Who, if not a soldier, should know about this? What helped you survive without becoming hardened in heart? Probably the letters that told them that they were loved were waiting. “Wait for me and I will return” - these words of Konstantin Simonov became a symbol of that time. These letters warmed the soul, giving the soldiers’ hearts the light of love and warmth.

Reading the poem by K. Simonov “Wait for me - and I will return”

Teacher. During the Great Patriotic War, over 11 thousand soldiers of all nationalities were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. This award was received for accomplishment of a feat and outstanding achievements during hostilities.

Presenter 2. Most of all, of course, during the war it was the children who suffered the most, the small, the weak, the defenseless. The war took away their childhood. They showed so much courage and heroism, standing on par with adults to defend our country. Children took part in battles, fought both in partisan detachments and behind enemy lines.

Teacher. The life of captured Soviet children who were captured by the Germans was terrible. Katya Susanina is a 15-year-old girl who died in German captivity. Before she died, she wrote a letter to her dad. The letter did not reach my father. But it was published in the newspaper and millions of Soviet people read the girl’s letter with tears.

Letter from Katya Susanina

March 12, Liozno, 1943.

Dear, good dad!

I am writing you a letter from German captivity.

A few words about my mother. When you return, don't look for your mother. The Germans shot her. When they asked about you, the officer beat her in the face with a whip, my mother could not stand it and proudly said, these are her last words: “You will not intimidate me with a beating. I’m sure that my husband will come back and throw you, vile invaders, out of here!” And the officer shot mom in the mouth...

Dad, I turned 15 today, and if you met me now, you wouldn’t recognize your daughter. I became very thin, my eyes were sunken, my pigtails were cut bald, my hands were dry and looked like a rake. When I cough, blood comes out of my mouth - my lungs are knocked out. Do you remember, dad, two years ago, when I turned 13? How good my name day was! You, dad, then told me: “Grow up, daughter, to great joy!” The gramophone was playing, my friends wished me a happy birthday, and we sang our favorite pioneer song.

And now, dad, when I look at myself in the mirror - my dress is torn, in shreds, my number is on my neck, like a criminal’s, I’m as thin as a skeleton - and salty tears flow from my eyes. What good is it that I turned 15 years old? Nobody needs me. Here many people are not needed by anyone. They wander hungry, hunted by shepherds. Every day they are taken away and killed.

Yes, dad, and I am a slave of a German baron, I work for the German Charlain as a laundress, I wash clothes, wash floors. I work a lot, but I eat twice a day in a trough with “Rose” and “Clara” - that’s the name of the owner’s pigs. The baron ordered so. “Russ was and will be a pig,” he said. I'm very afraid of "Clara". This is a big and greedy pig. She almost bit off my finger once when I was taking potatoes out of the trough.

I live in a woodshed: I can’t go into the room. One time, Yuzef’s Polish maid gave me a piece of bread, and the hostess saw and beat Yuzef on the head and back with a whip for a long time.

Twice I ran away from my owners, but their janitor found me. Then the baron himself tore off my dress and kicked me. I was losing consciousness. Then they poured a bucket of water on me and threw me into the basement.

Today I learned the news: Yuzefa said that the gentlemen were leaving for Germany with a large batch of male and female slaves from the Vitebsk region. Now they take me with them. No, I will not go to this thrice-damned Germany! I decided it was better to die on my native side than to be trampled into the damned German soil. Only death will save me from a cruel beating.

I’ll put the letter away for extradition (inaudible)

I don’t want to suffer anymore as a slave to the damned, cruel Germans who didn’t let me live!..

I bequeath, dad: avenge mom and me. Goodbye, good daddy, I'm leaving to die.

Your daughter Katya Susanina...

My heart believes: the letter will arrive.

Video "Children of War"

Teacher. Look carefully at the screen. This is a monument to the Soviet soldier who saved a German girl, which was erected in Germany.

Monument

It was at dawn in May,

The battle rumbled near the walls of the Reichstag.

I noticed a German girl

Our soldier on the dusty pavement.

She stood at the pillar, trembling,

The child's mouth was twisted in fear,

And pieces of whistling metal

Death and torment were sown around...

Then he remembered how, saying goodbye, in the summer

He kissed his daughter

Maybe this girl's father

His own daughter was shot...

But now, in Berlin, under fire,

The fighter crawled and, shielding him with his body,

A girl in a short white dress

He carefully took it out of the fire.

How many children have their childhood restored?

Gave joy and spring

Privates of the Soviet Army,

People who won the war!

And in Berlin on a holiday

Was erected to stand for centuries,

Monument to the Soviet soldier

With a rescued girl in her arms.

He stands as a symbol of our glory,

Like a beacon shining in the darkness.

This is him - a soldier of my state -

Protects peace throughout the world!

Action "Immortal Regiment"

Teacher: We did not experience the sorrows and hardships of the war, but it entered our hearts from our great-grandfathers, grandfathers and fathers.

Presenter 2: And we know the price of our happy childhood, the price of peace on earth.

Teacher: Many of us only have photographs of our grandfathers and great-grandfathers and their names.

Presenter 2: We strive to be worthy of their Memory.

The guys talk about their relatives who participated in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945.

Promotion "St. George's Ribbon"

Teacher: For several years now, residents of our country have been participating in the “St. George’s Ribbon” campaign, and on the eve of the Great Victory Day we will attach St. George’s ribbons to our chests.

Presenter 2: The colors of the ribbon are black and orange - meaning “smoke and flame” and are a sign of the soldier’s personal valor on the battlefield.

A child's story about the St. George's ribbon.

A long time ago, when you and I were not in the world, this magic ribbon appeared. Strong and brave people have always worn it on their chests. They were military. At all times they defended their country from enemies who wanted to conquer. The soldiers did not spare their strength, health and their lives for victory. Military units were awarded such ribbons, they were attached to banners, silver trumpets, and many orders and medals were worn on the St. George ribbon.

Presenter 2: 72 years have passed since the end of the terrible days of the war. We live with you now under a peaceful sky, play, study, create. We promise to preserve the memory of the exploits of our ancestors.

What is Victory Day?

This is the morning parade:

Tanks and missiles are coming,

A line of soldiers is marching.

What is Victory Day?

This is a festive fireworks display:

Fireworks fly into the sky

Scattering here and there.

What is Victory Day?

These are songs at the table,

These are speeches and conversations,

This is my grandfather's album.

These are fruits and sweets,

These are the smells of spring.

What is Victory Day?

This means no war!

Song “Let there always be sunshine” (last verse and chorus).

During the chorus, children come out with balloons and sing together.

Presenter 2. We once again congratulate you on the wonderful holiday of May 9th. We remember, we are proud, we thank...

Lesson of courage "Dedicated to the children of war"

We didn’t even have a separate childhood,

And childhood and war were together.

R. Rozhdestvensky.

Progress of the lesson:

You are now 8 years old or a little older. You were born and raised in a peaceful land. You know well how spring thunderstorms make noise, but you have never heard gunfire. This year we celebrate the 70th anniversary of the liberation of our country from the fascist German invaders. You see how new houses are being built in the city, but you have no idea how easily houses are destroyed under a hail of bombs and shells. You know how dreams end, but it’s hard for you to believe that ending a human life is as simple as a cheerful morning dream. You wake up peacefully and smile at your parents, the children woke up just as happily on that fateful day. Levitan's voice sounded on the radio. This was the day the war began: June 22, 1941.

2nd slide Sound track of the message “From the Soviet Information Bureau” 3, 4th slides

So unexpectedly, on an ordinary summer day, June 22, 1941, the most terrible, bloodiest of all the Great Patriotic Wars began. You can count how many years, months and days the war lasted, how much was destroyed and lost, but how can you count the amount of grief and tears that it made you shed.

SLIDE No. 5

The war took a terrible toll on children’s destinies,
It was difficult for everyone, difficult for the country,
But childhood is seriously mutilated:
Children suffered greatly from the war...
They were called CHILDREN OF WAR.

What do we know about them? Slide 6

Children of war are all children born between September 1929 and September 3, 1945. Now they are veterans and have the status of “Children of the Great Patriotic War.”The country's factories were left without workers. During the harsh days of the war, children stood next to adults.

Slide 7 Schoolchildren earned money for the defense fund, collected warm clothes for front-line soldiers, worked in military factories, were on duty on the roofs of houses during air raids, and gave concerts to wounded soldiers in hospitals. The times were difficult. Children lost parents, brothers and sisters. Slide 8

Sometimes frightened children sat next to the cold bodies of their dead mothers for several days, waiting for their fate to be decided. At best, they were waiting for a Soviet orphanage, at worst - in fascist dungeons. Not all adults could survive the horrors of concentration camps; hunger, cold, backbreaking labor, and often torture awaited children in captivity. Slide 9

When the blockade ring closed, in addition to the adult population, 400 thousand children remained in Leningrad - from infants to schoolchildren and teenagers.

The only transport route connecting the city with the rear regions of the country was"The Road of Life", Slide 10 laid across Lake Ladoga. During the days of the blockade along this road from September 1941 to November 1943, it was possible to evacuate 1 million 376 thousand Leningraders, mostly women, children and the elderly

Shurik Ignatiev, three and a half years old, on May 23, 1942, in kindergarten, covered his piece of paper with random pencil scribbles with a small oval in the center. “What did you draw!” – asked the teacher. He replied: “This is war, that’s all, and there’s a bun in the middle. I don’t know anything else.” They were the same blockade runners as adults.” And they died the same way.

Images about Tanya Savicheva Slide 11

Among the incriminating documents presented at the Nuremberg trials was a small notebook from Leningrad schoolgirl Tanya Savicheva. It's only nine pages long. Six of them have dates on them - And behind each of them there is death. Six pages - six deaths. Nothing more than short, concise notes

Here are pages from the diary kept by Tanya Savicheva.

(Slides from the diary)

Zhenya is Tanya’s sister.

Leka is Tanya's brother.

"Everyone died"

“Only Tanya remains”

After the death of her relatives, Tanya ended up in an orphanage, from where she was taken to the mainland. They fought for Tanya's life for two years, but they could not save her.

A twelve-year-old girl told people so sincerely and concisely about the war, which brought so much grief and suffering to her and her loved ones, that even today shocked people stop before these lines, carefully written by a child’s hand. different ages and nationalities, peer into simple and terrible words. The diary is now on display at the Leningrad History Museum, and a copy of it is in the window of one of the pavilions of the Piskarevskoye Memorial Cemetery.

Children fought together with adults in partisan detachments. Slide 12

Nadya Bogdanova Slide 13

She was executed twice by the Nazis, and for many years her military friends considered Nadya dead. They even erected a monument to her.

It’s hard to believe, but when she became a scout in the partisan detachment of “Uncle Vanya” Dyachkov, she was not yet ten years old. 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.

The first time she was captured was when, together with Vanya Zvontsov, she hung out a red flag in enemy-occupied Vitebsk on November 7, 1941. They beat her with ramrods, tortured her, and when they brought her to the ditch to shoot her, she no longer had any strength left - she fell into the ditch, momentarily outstripping the bullet. Vanya died, and the partisans found Nadya alive in a ditch...

The second time she was captured at the end of 1943. And again torture: they poured ice water on her in the cold, burned a five-pointed star on her back. Considering the scout dead, the Nazis abandoned her when the partisans attacked Karasevo. Local residents came out paralyzed and almost blind. After the war in Odessa, Academician V.P. Filatov restored Nadya’s sight.

15 years later, she heard on the radio how the intelligence chief of the 6th detachment, Slesarenko - her commander - said that the soldiers would never forget their fallen comrades, and named among them Nadya Bogdanova, who saved his life, a wounded man...

Only then did she show up, only then did the people who worked with her learn about what an amazing destiny of a person she, Nadya Bogdanova, was awarded with the Order of the Red Banner, the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, and medals.

Vasya Korobko

Slide 14

Chernihiv region. The front came close to the village of Pogoreltsy. On the outskirts, covering the withdrawal of our units, a company held the defense. A boy brought cartridges to the soldiers. His name was Vasya Korobko.

Night. Vasya creeps up to the school building occupied by the Nazis.

He makes his way into the pioneer room, takes out the pioneer banner and hides it securely.

The outskirts of the village. Under the bridge - Vasya. He pulls out iron brackets, saws down the piles, and at dawn, from a hiding place, watches the bridge collapse under the weight of a fascist armored personnel carrier. The partisans were convinced that Vasya could be trusted, and entrusted him with a serious task: to become a scout in the enemy’s lair. At the fascist headquarters, he lights the stoves, chops wood, and he takes a closer look, remembers, and passes on information to the partisans. The punishers, who planned to exterminate the partisans, forced the boy to lead them into the forest. But Vasya led the Nazis to a police ambush. The Nazis, mistaking them for partisans in the dark, opened furious fire, killed all the policemen and themselves suffered heavy losses.

Together with the partisans, Vasya destroyed nine echelons and hundreds of Nazis. In one of the battles he was hit by an enemy bullet. The Motherland awarded its little hero, who lived a short but such a bright life, the Order of Lenin, the Red Banner, the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, and the medal “Partisan of the Patriotic War,” 1st degree.

Kostya Kravchuk

Slide 15

On June 11, 1944, units leaving for the front were lined up in the central square of Kyiv. And before this battle formation, they read out the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on awarding the pioneer Kostya Kravchuk with the Order of the Red Banner for saving and preserving two battle flags of rifle regiments during the occupation of the city of Kyiv...

Retreating from Kyiv, two wounded soldiers entrusted Kostya with the banners. And Kostya promised to keep them.

At first I buried it in the garden under a pear tree: I thought our people would return soon. But the war dragged on, and, having dug up the banners, Kostya kept them in the barn until he remembered about an old, abandoned well outside the city, near the Dnieper. Having wrapped his priceless treasure in burlap and rolled it with straw, he got out of the house at dawn and, with a canvas bag over his shoulder, led a cow to a distant forest. And there, looking around, he hid the bundle in the well, covered it with branches, dry grass, turf...

And throughout the long occupation the pioneer carried out his difficult guard at the banner, although he was caught in a raid, and even fled from the train in which the Kievites were driven away to Germany.

When Kyiv was liberated, Kostya, in a white shirt with a red tie, came to the military commandant of the city and unfurled banners in front of the well-worn and yet amazed soldiers.

On June 11, 1944, the newly formed units leaving for the front were given replacements by the rescued Kostya.

Zina Portnova

Slide 16

The war found the Leningrad pioneer Zina Portnova in the village of Zuya, where she came for vacation, not far from the Obol station in the Vitebsk region. An underground Komsomol-youth organization “Young Avengers” was created in Obol, and Zina was elected a member of its committee. She took part in daring operations against the enemy, in sabotage, distributed leaflets, and conducted reconnaissance on instructions from a partisan detachment.

It was December 1943. Zina was returning from a mission. In the village of Mostishche she was betrayed by a traitor. The Nazis captured the young partisan and tortured her. The answer to the enemy was Zina’s silence, her contempt and hatred, her determination to fight to the end. During one of the interrogations, choosing the moment, Zina grabbed a pistol from the table and fired at point-blank range at the Gestapo man.

The officer who ran in to hear the shot was also killed on the spot. Zina tried to escape, but the Nazis overtook her...

The brave young pioneer was brutally tortured, but until the last minute she remained persistent, courageous, and unbending. And the Motherland posthumously celebrated her feat with its highest title - the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

Valya Kotik

Slide number 17

He was born on February 11, 1930 in the village of Khmelevka, Shepetovsky district, Khmelnitsky region. He studied at school No. 4 in the city of Shepetovka, and was a recognized leader of the pioneers, his peers.

When the Nazis burst into Shepetivka, Valya Kotik and his friends decided to fight the enemy. The guys collected weapons at the battle site, which the partisans then transported to the detachment on a cart of hay.

Having taken a closer look at the boy, the communists entrusted Valya with being a liaison and intelligence officer in their underground organization. He learned the location of enemy posts and the order of changing the guard.

The Nazis planned a punitive operation against the partisans, and Valya, having tracked down the Nazi officer who led the punitive forces, killed him...

When arrests began in the city, Valya, along with his mother and brother Victor, went to join the partisans. The pioneer, who had just turned fourteen years old, fought shoulder to shoulder with adults, liberating his native land. He is responsible for six enemy trains blown up on the way to the front. Valya Kotik was awarded the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, and the medal “Partisan of the Patriotic War,” 2nd degree.

Valya Kotik died as a hero, and the Motherland posthumously awarded him the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. A monument to him was erected in front of the school where this brave pioneer studied.

Valya Zenkina

The Brest Fortress was the first to take the enemy's blow. Bombs and shells exploded, walls collapsed, people died both in the fortress and in the city of Brest. From the first minutes, Valya’s father went into battle. He left and did not return, died a hero, like many defenders of the Brest Fortress.

And the Nazis forced Valya to make her way into the fortress under fire in order to convey to its defenders the demand to surrender. Valya made her way into the fortress, talked about the atrocities of the Nazis, explained what weapons they had, indicated their location and stayed to help our soldiers. She bandaged the wounded, collected cartridges and brought them to the soldiers.

There was not enough water in the fortress, it was divided by sip. The thirst was painful, but Valya again and again refused her sip: the wounded needed water. When the command of the Brest Fortress decided to take the children and women out from under fire and transport them to the other side of the Mukhavets River - there was no other way to save their lives - the little nurse Valya Zenkina asked to be left with the soldiers. But an order is an order, and then she vowed to continue the fight against the enemy until complete victory.

And Valya kept her vow. Various trials befell her. But she survived. She survived. And she continued her struggle in the partisan detachment. She fought bravely, along with adults. For courage and bravery, the Motherland awarded its young daughter the Order of the Red Star.

Lenya Golikov

Grew up in the village of Lukino. When his native village was captured by the enemy, the boy went to the partisans. More than once he went on reconnaissance, bringing important information to the partisan detachment. There was a battle in his life that Lenya fought one on one with a fascist general. A grenade thrown by a boy hit a car. A Nazi man got out of it with a briefcase in his hands and, firing back, began to run. Lenya is behind him. He pursued the enemy for almost a kilometer and finally killed him. The portfolio contained very important documents. The partisan headquarters immediately transported them by plane to Moscow. At just over ten years old, in battles with the invaders, Lenya personally destroyed 78 German soldiers and officers and blew up 9 vehicles with ammunition. He participated in 27 combat operations, the explosion of 2 railway and 12 highway bridges. Lenya Golikov died in the spring of 1943 in an unequal battle. He was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

Marat Kazei.

War struck the Belarusian land. The Nazis burst into the village where Marat lived with his mother, Anna Alexandrovna Kazeya. In the fall, Marat no longer had to go to school in the fifth grade. The Nazis turned the school building into their barracks. The enemy was fierce. Anna Aleksandrovna Kazei was captured for her connection with the partisans, and Marat soon learned that his mother had been hanged in Minsk. The boy's heart was filled with anger and hatred for the enemy. Together with his sister, Komsomol member Ada, the pioneer Marat Kazei went to join the partisans in the Stankovsky forest. He became a scout at the headquarters of a partisan brigade. He penetrated enemy garrisons and delivered valuable information to the command. Using this data, the partisans developed a daring operation and defeated the fascist garrison in the city of Dzerzhinsk... Marat took part in the battles and invariably showed courage and fearlessness, and, together with experienced demolitionists, mined railway. Marat died in battle. He fought to the last bullet, and when he had only one grenade left, he let his enemies get closer and blew them up... and himself. For courage and bravery, pioneer Marat Kazei was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. A monument to the young hero was erected in the city of Minsk

Towards them into my immortality
He took a few steps...
And there was an explosion and a menacing tornado
Bravely embittered enemies. /IN. Alekseev/ (slide

Today we remembered only a few little soldiers great war. And there are hundreds and hundreds of them. Take a closer look at these faces, remember them, those who gave their lives for our bright today. Slide 21

Young fallen heroes
You remained young for us.
We are a living reminder
That the Fatherland has not forgotten you.
Life or death - and there is no middle.
Eternal gratitude to you all,
Little tough men
Girls worthy of poems.
How many of you, cheerful and in love,
Buried in his native land?!
Today you are in the light noise of maples,
Quietly knocking on the window

In the Second World War, people died on Earth thirteen million children.

19 million Soviet children were orphaned during the years of this terrible war. And so that such a terrible tragedy does not happen again, humanity must not forget about these innocent victims.

We must all remember that in the war waged by adults, children also die. This is how we will remember and honor the memory of those who died.

In a few days, the great holiday of all our people will come - the anniversary Great Victory. Dear guys, I think that on this day you will try to congratulate and surround with attention and care not only the war and home front veterans living among us, but also people whose childhood was during the harsh years of the war. After all, today you learned what trials they had to go through, what sacrifices they made in the name of this bright day - Victory Day!


Even if we don’t know that war at all,

I wouldn't know forever what it is.

But we will preserve the memory of the heroes

And we will live worthy of heroes!

On the eve of the May 9 holiday, our school hosted events dedicated to the 72nd anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War.

From May 2 to 5, an exhibition of children's drawings dedicated to the Great Patriotic War “Echoes of a Distant War - Memory of Burning Years” is being held.

On May 3 and 4, from grades 1 to 11, school activists held a lesson in courage on the topic “Let’s bow to those great years,” where students were told about the events of the war and were shown video clips dedicated to the victory in the Great Patriotic War. Episodes from military everyday life could not leave children indifferent.


A living memory of the war... It does not fade, does not fade over the years. But is memory ever alive? A person can die twice. There, on the battlefield, when a bullet catches up with him. And the second time - in people's memory. Dying the second time is worse. The second time a person must live! After all, they did everything they could. Modern youth should know and remember all this so that the memory of the Heroes of the Great Patriotic War does not fade. It was for this purpose that, as part of the preparation of events for the celebration of the Great Victory, the “Immortal Regiment” action was held at the school.

During the action, the children went out into the school yard. In the hands of the children were portraits of their great-grandfathers and great-grandmothers. Participants in the “Immortal Regiment” campaign spoke about the exploits of their relatives in the Great Patriotic War.


Although there are fewer and fewer veterans and people who know first-hand every day, we cannot under any circumstances forget about the sad events that our ancestors experienced. As we celebrate, we salute the heroism of the Soviet people, who fearlessly fought for their Motherland and defeated a powerful enemy, even though he was noticeably outnumbered.

That is why the younger generation also needs to be involved in the celebration of the Great Victory, starting from a very early age. The first events for children dedicated to May 9 are held today in kindergarten. In this article we will tell you exactly how children are introduced to the Great Victory Day in this institution, and what may be included in the program for preparing students for May 9th.

Plan of events for May 9 in kindergarten

In addition to the gala matinee, every kindergarten necessarily holds a number of other events, dedicated to the Day Victory. Preparation for the great holiday takes quite a long time and is an integral part of the educational process.

Depending on the age of the pupils, events for Victory Day held in kindergarten may be different. Most often, in order to familiarize students with the history of their country and involve them in the celebration of May 9, the following is organized:

All these events can be held not only on the eve of the Great Victory holiday, but throughout the entire academic year.

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