Minister of Health of the Buryat ASSR. In Oka, the people's teacher Ayusheeva Alexandra Sharlaevna Sabzhaev Galsan Tsyrenovich passed away

Minister of Health of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Back in December 1931, in the village of Aginskoye of the then Buryat-Mongolian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, a daughter was born into the family of the Gyrgenovs Dantsaran Shagdarovich and Yanzhivan Dashevna. They called her Any. In the summer of 1933, my father was transferred to work in Verkhneudinsk as an inspector of the Burkoopsoyuz. In May 1934, my father voluntarily went to serve in the Red Army. The knowledge of the Mongolian language acquired in childhood determined the type of his service for many years. Starting from the Oryol Armored School, he served as a translator in the military educational institutions of Kalinin, Ulaanbaatar, Yevpatoria, Kyiv, and Moscow, where command personnel for the MPR army were trained. Thus, Lyuba Gyrgenova had the opportunity to live and study in different cities of the USSR, in the MPR, and during the war years, from September 1941, in Buryatia, the village of Zun-Murino, where she lived with her mother with her grandfather Shagdar. Here Yanzhivan Dashevna worked in the Torsky village council as a tax collector from the population of the village of Zun-Murino, and ten-year-old Lyuba kept all the accounting and reporting documentation. Their work during the war was awarded medals “For valiant labor in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945.” (in 1946 and 1993). In December 1942, Yanzhivan Dashevna and her daughter moved to Ulaanbaatar, to her husband’s next place of service. Lyuba learned to read at the age of 5. Despite the family’s frequent moves, she studied “excellent” throughout the years and actively participated in the public life of schools. She graduated from high school in 1949 in Kiev with a gold medal. At this time, my father was already serving in Moscow at the Military Law Academy. Lyuba entered the medical faculty of the First Moscow Medical Institute and graduated with honors in 1955. By this time, the parents lived in Buryatia. At the request of the Ministry of Health of the Republic, L. Gyrgenova was given the opportunity, immediately after graduating from the institute, to enter a clinical residency in therapy with the famous academician V.N. Vinogradov. After completing her residency in 1957, the Ministry of Health of the RSFSR sent her to work in Buryatia, in the new republican hospital. Thus, in the autumn of 1957, Lyubov Dantsaranovna’s labor and social activities began in the republic. Over the years of work at the hospital, she proved herself to be a highly qualified clinician who boldly introduced new diagnostic and treatment methods into practice, and in 1958, after completing the first acupuncture courses in the USSR in Moscow, she was the first in the republic to begin practicing acupuncture. Since that time, this method of treatment has been used in practice. In 1963, she was appointed chief therapist of the Ministry of Health of the Republic, and in December 1965 - Minister of Health of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. In this position L.D. Madiyeva worked until March 1987. For over twenty years, the Ministry of Health of the Republic, under her leadership, has directed efforts to develop and strengthen the material and technical base, improve medical care for workers in industrial enterprises and agriculture, protect motherhood and childhood, develop specialized types of medical care, preventive measures to reduce the incidence of the population, training and advanced training of medical personnel. In Ulan-Ude, three large clinics and an emergency hospital, a republican sanitary and epidemiological station, a blood transfusion station, a dental clinic with a hospital, the first buildings of a psychiatric hospital, and standard hospital complexes and buildings were built in ten regional centers. The construction of the Kizhinginskaya Central District Hospital, the surgical building of the Barguzinskaya Central District Hospital, maternity hospitals in the Oktyabrsky district of Ulan-Ude and Sosnovo-Ozersk began, design and estimate documentation was prepared for the construction of a republican anti-tuberculosis dispensary, a children's multidisciplinary hospital, a car garage, a House of Sanitary Education with scientific and medical library. By attracting funds from industrial enterprises, collective and state farms, district, city and republican budgets, a significant number of medical facilities were built, expanded, and reconstructed, including 193 two-apartment houses for rural health workers. During the years of her work as minister, the number of doctors increased almost 3 times and the number of paramedical workers increased 2.3 times. In three medical schools of the republic, the enrollment of students was increased, including through the opening of new specialties: sanitary paramedic, dentist, dental technician; a center for retraining nursing staff was organized on the basis of the republican hospital. Every year, the Ministry of Health conducted on-site training courses for doctors in various specialties by employees of the country’s central institutes; many doctors were sent to courses. About 400 doctors were trained in clinical residency and graduate school alone, which contributed to the creation of research and educational institutions in the republic in the late 80s and 90s: a branch of the Blagoveshchensk Research Institute of Pathology and Physiology of the Respiratory Organs, a laboratory for children's health from the Irkutsk Research Institute of Pediatrics of the East Siberian Scientific Center of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences, a branch of the Irkutsk Institute for Advanced Medical Studies and, finally, the Faculty of Medicine at the Buryat State University. The question of opening a medical institute in the republic L.D. During her work as minister, Madiyeva repeatedly challenged the leadership of the republic. On this occasion, she also spoke at regional meetings on the development of the productive forces of Buryatia, but due to the then insufficient material, technical and personnel base, this issue was not resolved. But her contribution to building up technical and human resources later made it possible to translate into reality the training of specialists with higher medical education in the republic. At the beginning of 1966, the young minister L.D. Madiyeva prepared one of the first memos to the OK CPSU, where, in the list of problems that needed to be solved in the republic to improve the health of the population, she proposed to engage in a more in-depth study of the ancient manuscripts of Tibetan medicine “Zhud-shi”, stored in the library of the Buryat branch of the SO USSR Academy of Sciences, to create a scientific unit to complete the translation and study of ancient recipes with the aim of introducing them into modern medical practice. Two years later, by decision of the Presidium of the Baltic Branch of the Siberian Branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences, a museum of oriental cultures was created at the Buryat Institute of Social Sciences (BION), which later grew into an independent department of biologically active substances (department of Tibetan medicine), where many doctors from practical healthcare were sent. Thus, the Ministry of Health of the Republic supported the initiative of BION scientists to create a scientific direction to study the heritage of Tibetan medicine. I would like to note a significant stage in the activities of the Ministry of Health of the Republic during the construction of the Buryat section of the BAM. In the North Baikal region, with a territory equal to the territory of Lithuania, during the first 6 years of construction of the highway (1974-1980), the population increased from 6 to 53 thousand people. The Ministry of Health of the Republic, headed by L.D. Madyeva had to take prompt measures. A blood transfusion department and a branch of the medical aviation department of the republican hospital were opened at the Nizhneangarsk regional hospital; Due to the construction of extensions and separate buildings, its bed capacity has been increased, material and personnel support has been strengthened. The development of the medical and sanitary service of the BAM was late, and therefore the load on local institutions was enormous. The heads of the Ministry of Health often flew to the region, knew the situation well and regularly reported to the governing bodies of the republic, the Ministries of Health of the RSFSR and the USSR. Therefore, the honorary right granted to the first passenger of the Davan-Severobaikalsk train and the awarding of the medal “For the construction of the Baikal-Amur Mainline” to L. D. Madyeva was well deserved. From the context of the large, multifaceted state and public activities of L.D. Madyeva deserves attention for her trip in the summer of 1964 to Ceylon and India as part of a delegation of the Soviet-Ceylon Friendship Society, of which the Ministry of Health of the Republic was a collective member at that time. The Soviet doctor in Ceylon was first introduced in the person of Lyubov Dantsaranovna, a Buryat woman from the shores of Lake Baikal. There she took part in several meetings with different groups of the population. For active promotion of the achievements of the Soviet country and, in particular, Buryatia, she was awarded a Certificate of Honor from the Soviet Committee of Friendship between Peoples. In the fall of 1976, L.D. Madiyeva and the chairman of the OK trade union of medical workers V.P. Baldanov received the President of the National Union of Healthcare Workers of the USA Leon Davis and his wife, who was visiting the USSR. The meetings took place in a cordial atmosphere, rich in a fruitful program of stay, which was noted in the letter of gratitude from the Chairman of the Central Committee of the Union of Medical Workers L. Novak in personal correspondence. The Ministry of Health of Buryatia constantly maintained business and friendly ties with health workers of the Selenga aimag of the Mongolian People's Republic. In 1970, L.D. Madiyeva personally participated in the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the MPR in Sukhbaatar. In 1983, she took part in the reception of the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the MPRP Yu. Tsedenbal and his wife during the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in Ulan-Ude. The Ministry of Health of Russia assessed the performance of the Ministry of Health of Buryatia very positively, therefore it held interregional seminars and meetings on the basis of some republican institutions. The accumulated work experience allowed the minister to solve complex issues of rural health care in areas with low population density and livestock-raising agriculture. This was the reason for conducting scientific research jointly with the Research Institute of Social Hygiene and Health Organization of the USSR Ministry of Health, which resulted in the dissertation work of the applicant L.D. Madyeva on the topic “Social, hygienic and organizational foundations for the development of therapeutic care for the rural population of Eastern Siberia,” defended in February 1986. Since 1985, cooperation with the Research Institute of Experimental Medicine of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences began, together with the Buryat Scientific Center of the Siberian Branch of the USSR Academy of Sciences, with the aim of possibly creating a branch of this institute in the republic, headed by Academician N.P. Bekhtereva. In July 1987, L.D. Madiyeva was elected by competition to the laboratory of atherosclerosis epidemiology of this research institute as a senior researcher and headed a small research group of doctors in the city. Ulan-Ude to study regional features of the development of hypertension and the state of lipid metabolism in adults and adolescents. The idea of ​​creating a branch of the Research Institute of Experimental Medicine in Ulan-Ude, unfortunately, was not supported by the Presidium of the USSR Academy of Sciences, but the research work continued and ended with the defense of three candidate's theses. In 1991 L.D. Madiyeva moved to practical healthcare - TMO-3, where she headed the organizational and methodological department, and in January 2000 she retired. The selfless work of L.D. Madyeva was awarded government awards: the Order of the Red Banner of Labor and two orders of the “Badge of Honor”, ​​seven medals, as well as the medal of the All-Buryat Association for the Development of Culture “For Services to the Buryat People”, honorary titles “Honored Doctor of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic” and “Honored Doctor of the Russian Federation” . She was a member of the Buryat OK CPSU (1968-1987), a deputy of the Supreme Council of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of five convocations, a member of the presidium of the Buryat Regional Trade Union Council, a member of the board of the All-Union Society of Soviet-Indian Friendship, chairman of the “Doctors against Nuclear War” commission, a member of the Buryat branch Soviet Peace Committee, member of the scientific society of medical historians. She has published more than 130 articles of a scientific, organizational and historical nature. Madyev's husband Petr Bizyayevich worked as a teacher and associate professor at VSTI (VSGUTU) for more than 20 years; their son Alexey, after graduating from the Moscow Higher Technical School. N.E. Bauman works as a teacher at VSUTU, daughter-in-law Larisa is a doctor, grandson Sayan is a graduate of Tomsk Polytechnic University, granddaughter Darima is a schoolgirl. The Madyev family is rich in family traditions and carefully preserves the history captured in documents and photographs. From the book "My Small Homeland - Tunka"

Born in 1951 in the village of Zalan, Selenginsky district.

In 1989-1994. - Chairman of the collective farm named after. XX Party Congress. In 1994-1998 - Deputy of the first convocation of the People's Khural of the Republic of Buryatia. In 1998-2002 - Deputy of the second convocation of the People's Khural of the Republic of Belarus. From 1994 -2011 - Head of the Selenginsky district. In 1998, he graduated with honors from the Russian Academy of Management and Agribusiness (Moscow). Nima Dugarzhapovich – Honored Worker of Agriculture of the Republic of Buryatia, Excellence in Public Education of the RSFSR, Laureate of the All-Russian competition “Best Municipal Employee - 2005”. In 2008 he was awarded the Order “For Service to Russia”.

Budazhapov Sergey Purbuevich

Born in 1952. He worked as a physics teacher at Zagustayskaya secondary school. He was elected first secretary of the Gusinoozersk city committee of the Komsomol, and then the regional committee of the Komsomol. Candidate of Historical Sciences. He graduated with honors from the Novosibirsk Higher Party School. He was elected secretary of the Bichursky Republic Committee of the CPSU, first secretary of the Gusinoozersk city committee. Then he worked as the director of a forestry college. Sergei Purbuevich was a deputy of the State Duma of two convocations. Honored Worker of Education of Buryatia. Now - Minister of the Republic of Buryatia
Head of the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Buryatia of the Russian Federation in Mongolia.

Budazhapova Tsyrendulma Tsyrendorzhievna

Born in 1929 in the area of ​​Orbonto.

From 1951 to 1989 she worked as a calf raiser. Awarded the title “Honored Livestock Breeder of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.” Knight of the Order of the October Revolution.

Buyantuev Sergey Lubsanovich

Born in the village of Tamcha in 1945. In 1966, he entered the East Siberian Technological Institute as an electrical engineer. After graduating from the institute, S.L. Buyantuev was sent to the Ulan-Ude Industrial College for teaching work, and a year later he was invited to work as a teacher at his native electrical engineering department of the Institute of Technology.

Buyantuev S.L. I worked my way up at the university from assistant to professor, doctor of technical sciences. He worked as the dean of the evening electrical engineering faculty, and for many years was the head of the electrical engineering department.

Buyantuev S.L. awarded the honorary titles “Honored Worker of Science of the Republic of Buryatia”, “Honored Worker of Higher Professional Education of the Russian Federation” and “Honored Worker of Higher Education of the Russian Federation”.

Eremenko Vasily Romanovich

Born in 1922. He has lived in Gusinoozersk since 1963. He worked as first deputy secretary of the Gusinoozersk Industrial and Production Party Committee. Chairman of the Gusinoozersk Executive Committee of Workers' Deputies (1964-1967). Director of GPTU-3 (1967-1969). Secretary of the Selenginsky District Executive Committee (1969-1985). Chairman of the regional Council of War and Labor Veterans (1996-2005). Awarded the Order of the Patriotic War, II degree, and the Order of Friendship of Peoples.

Zubarev Nikolay Mikhailovich

Zubarev Nikolai Mikhailovich was born on December 18, 1954. in the city of Chita, Trans-Baikal Territory. He has two higher educations: he graduated from the East Siberian State Technological Institute with a degree in “Power supply of industrial enterprises, cities and agriculture” and “Management”.

The entire work activity of Nikolai Mikhailovich Zubarev is connected with the energy industry. The total experience is more than 30 years, of which he worked for 26 years at the Gusinoozerskaya State District Power Plant, going from an electrician to a commercial director.

In December 2001, he was appointed director of the Trans-Baikal enterprise MES of Siberia, a branch of OJSC Federal Grid Company of the Unified Energy System.

He was a deputy of the People's Khural of the People's Khural of the Republic of Buryatia of the second (1998-2002) and third (2002-2007) convocations.
In 1999 he defended the academic degree of Candidate of Economic Sciences, in 2008 - Doctor of Economic Sciences. In 2010, he was awarded the title of professor at the Department of Economics and Law of the Bashkir State Agricultural Academy named after V.R. Filippov.
For personal contribution to the development of the energy sector, he was awarded the honorary titles: “Honored Worker of the Ministry of Fuel and Energy”, “Honored Energy Engineer of Russia”, “Honored Energy Engineer of the Republic of Buryatia”. Awarded a Certificate of Honor from the Ministry of Energy (1992), a Certificate of Honor from JSC FGC UES (2004), a Certificate of Honor from the Government of the Republic of Buryatia (2008).
By decree of the President of Buryatia dated April 29, 2011, Nikolai Mikhailovich Zubarev was appointed to the position of Deputy Chairman of the Government of Buryatia for infrastructure development.

Kalashnikov Vladimir Fedorovich

Vladimir Fedorovich Kalashnikov was born on February 2, 1941. In 1963, he graduated from the Irkutsk Polytechnic Institute with a degree in mining engineer and surveyor, after which he was called up for military service, which he served on ships of the USSR Pacific Navy.

In 1965, Vladimir began his career as a local surveyor at mine 2/5 of the Gusinoozersk mine administration. From 1966 to 1982, he was the chief surveyor, chief technologist, and chief engineer of the Kholboldzhinsky open-pit mine of the Vostsibugol production association.

In July 1982, he was appointed director of the mine.

He was elected people's deputy of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, chairman of the credentials commission of the Supreme Council of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, and deputy of the People's Khural of the Republic of Belarus, where he worthily defended the interests of voters.

In 1970, he was awarded the medal “For Valiant Labor” in commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the birth of V.I. Lenin, in 1986 - the Order of the Badge of Honor. Also V.F. Kalashnikov is a holder of the Miner's Glory badge of I, II and III degrees.

Kargin Viktor Mikhailovich

Victor Mikhailovich, after graduating from the Irkutsk Polytechnic Institute, began his career as a foreman for installing thermomechanical equipment for thermal power plants in the Gusinoozersk installation department of the Vostokenergomontazh trust.

In July 1989, Viktor Mikhailovich became director of the Gusinoozersk installation department of the branch of Vostokenergomontazh OJSC.

Viktor Mikhailovich provides sponsorship assistance to many social facilities in the district.

For high production indicators, Viktor Mikhailovich was awarded the “Honorary Power Engineer” badge of the Ministry of Fuel and Energy of the Russian Federation, the Certificate of Honor of the association “Soyuzenergomontazh” of the Ministry of Fuel and Energy of the Russian Federation, the Certificate of Honor of the Regional Committee of the CPSU and the Council of Ministers of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, the badge “Winner of the Socialist Competition 75” of the USSR Ministry of Energy . In connection with the 85th anniversary of the formation of the Republic of Buryatia, he was awarded the medal of the Order of Merit for the Fatherland, II degree. He was awarded the anniversary medal “350 years of voluntary entry of Buryatia into Russia”, and was awarded the title “Veteran of Labor”.

Karpenko Evgeniy Ivanovich

Born in 1936 on the island. Russian. He worked at the Mine, headed the Timlyuyskaya Thermal Power Plant, and was the chief engineer of the Ulan-Ude Thermal Power Plant. In 1973 he was appointed director of the Gusinoozerskaya State District Power Plant under construction. For 25 years he headed one of the most powerful stations in the east of the country.

Doctor of Technical Sciences, member of the International Energy Academy and the Academy of Industrial Ecology, Honorary Energy Engineer of the Russian Federation.

Sabzhaev Galsan Tsyrenovich

Born in 1922 in the Khaltagai ulus of the Iroi Somon Council. In 1942, after graduating from Novoselenginskaya secondary school, he worked on a collective farm as an accountant for a field crew and as secretary of the primary Komsomol organization. In October 1943, the district party committee sent him to the editorial office of the Krasnaya Selenga newspaper. In 1942 he became executive secretary and then editor of the newspaper “Krasnaya Selenga” - until 1983. He graduated from the history department of the Buryat Pedagogical Institute and the journalism department of the Higher Party School under the CPSU Central Committee. He was elected as a delegate to the First All-Union Congress of Journalists of the USSR. Galsan Tsyrenovich - Honored Worker of Culture of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, Honored Worker of Culture of the RSFSR. Awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor.

Suetin Ivan Petrovich

Born in 1924 in the village. Arrow. After graduating from the Novoselenginsk secondary school in 1942, he was drafted into the Red Army, and after graduating from the Transbaikal Machine Gun and Mortar School, he was sent to the Central Front, which defended Moscow. After being seriously wounded, he was demobilized from the Red Army.

After graduating from the Buryat-Mongolian Institute in 1946, he was sent as a teacher to Zakamensk Secondary School No. 1.

In 1948 – 1959 – director of the Bichur secondary school (1952-1954), head of the propaganda department of the Bichur Republic of the CPSU.

In 1954 – 1961 - director of the Novoselenginsk school.

In 1961 – 1971 - First Deputy Minister of Education of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

In 1971 – 1977 – Head of the Buryat Republican Department of Vocational Education.

In 1977 – 1981 – Manager of the Council of Ministers of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

Awarded the Order of the Great Patriotic War, I and II degrees, the Red Banner of Labor, the Badge of Honor, 13 medals, Honored Teacher of the RSFSR, Honored Teacher of the BurASSR school.

Shagdarov Maxim Zhamsaranovich

Born in 1937 in the village. Arbuzovo. Labor activity began in 1952. In 1964-1974. - agronomist, secretary of the party committee of the Selenginsky state farm, director of the Temnik state farm. From 1974 to 1980 - first secretary of the Selenga district committee of the CPSU, from 1980 to 1987 - chairman of the regional committee of the trade union of agricultural workers, from 1987 to 1997 - associate professor of the Buryat Agricultural Academy. In 1968 he participated in the ninth World Festival of Youth and Students in Sofia. Maxim Zhamsaranovich - Candidate of Agricultural Sciences, Honored Scientist of the Republic of Belarus, was elected as a deputy of the Supreme Council of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of the ninth and tenth convocations, awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples.

Nikitins

There is disrespect for ancestors

the first sign of savagery and

immorality.

A. S. Pushkin.

Morality is what distinguishes a person from other living beings. A person is capable of making adjustments to the laws of his conscience, but it is these changes that lead to the fact that a person becomes immoral. Pushkin considered disrespect for the memory of his ancestors to be the first such symptom, the first sign. This, it turns out, is where the moral decline of humanity and people begins - with the loss of respect for their ancestors, their deeds, and achievements. It is not for nothing that such people are called “Ivans who do not remember their kinship.”

I devoted my work to studying the biography of my grandfather and grandmother, the Nikitins Pyotr Osipovich and Valentina Aleksandrovna, who left a noticeable mark on the history of not only the village, but also our region, the republic. I think this material will be interesting both for the school museum and the regional one.

The material was collected during conversations with them, memoirs of contemporaries, and newspaper articles of those times.

1.1. REMOTE CHILDHOOD.

My grandfather, Pyotr Osipovich, was born on November 5, 1934 into a large and friendly family in the village of Verkhnie Taltsy. His parents, Osip Kapitonovich and Augusta Efremovna, raised 9 children. All children received education

(1 - higher, 2 - specialized secondary). From my grandfather’s memoirs: “... In 1941 I went to first grade, the school was then a seven-year school. From the first grade I worked on a tobacco plantation - weeding and watering. From the 5th grade he worked in a brigade in haymaking. After graduating from the 7th grade, he worked in forest skidding, and at the age of 14 he began working as an accountant in a field tractor brigade. He graduated from the eighth grade in the village of Unegetei in 1949. After working for another year, I finished grades 9 and 10. By that time, a 10-year school had opened in the village of Verkhnie Taltsy.

He was drafted into the army in 1954. Served in the north, port of Tiksi. After service, in 1957 he entered the BSHI at the Faculty of Agronomy.”

Grandmother, Valentina Aleksandrovna, was born on March 30, 1937 in the village of Bayangol, MPR, in a large family where 9 children were also raised. As the grandmother recalls: “The family was large, we huddled in a small hut, we had to sleep on the floor, and we were often sick. I remember how they saw off my older brothers to the front in 1943. They rode in a cart, and we all followed them on foot. The brothers served one in Belarus, the other in Korea.

Father Zimirev Alexander Alexandrovich was the chairman, they practically never saw him at home. The time was very difficult, everyone worked for the front - they donated bread, grain, tobacco, knitted mittens, socks, sewed pouches.

Tobacco was grown in entire plantations, the leaves were collected and strung on long threads, then dried, shag was made from the stems and everything was sent to the front. I really wanted to go to school; in 1945 I went to first grade. I was the eighth child in the family, we learned from the same ABC book, and he told me

I received it pretty shabby, but all the pages were in place. From grades 1 to 4 I studied in the village of Shamor, and then the family moved to Zun Haara station, where I completed 10 grades.

1.2. STUDENT YEARS

After graduating from school, she entered the Agricultural Institute in Ulaanbaatar, the Faculty of Agronomy, where she studied for 3 years and then moved to Ulan-Ude and continued her studies. As my grandmother recalls, “... it was the best time of my life. We lived only on a stipend, which amounted to 30 rubles.

Here she met Nikitin Pyotr Osipovich, and in her last year they got married. Together we were engaged in research work “The influence of microelements on the yield of agricultural crops and sowing dates.” They wrote a thesis on this topic. They were offered to stay and work at the research institute. But this was not in the nature of the young people; they wanted real work.

1.3. START OF EMPLOYMENT.

In 1962, the young family left for the Kyakhta Territorial Production Collective and State Farm Administration, where Pyotr Osipovich held the position of senior agronomist. In 1963, he was transferred as chief agronomist to the Lenin collective farm in the Dzhidinsky district. Valentina Aleksandrovna got a job at the Petropavlovsk environment school as a biology teacher and in 1964 entered the correspondence department at the Belarusian State Pedagogical Institute named after. D. Banzarova at the Faculty of Biology and Chemistry, which she graduated in 1968.

1.4. “NO, HE’S NOT A HERO, NOT A STAR – HE’S A SIMPLE PEASANT”

Where to start, how to increase the gross grain harvest, without which the rise of the collective farm economy is unthinkable? These concerns completely occupied the imagination of the young agronomist from the first days of his work.

This is what the district newspaper of the Dzhidinsky district wrote then: “Walking along the path of intensification, P. Nikitin placed the main emphasis on improving agricultural technology; for watering and irrigation, and fertilization. The collective farm’s grain growers immediately noticed the young specialist’s bold acumen and passion for the land, appreciated his knowledge and, most importantly, his search and daring.”

And in one of the autumn issues, the regional newspaper wrote: “The suffering died down, the collective farm fields went into bins and drains, into piles and trenches in a golden stream and a green conveyor belt. And the grain growers of the aimak gathered for their traditional “Harvest” holiday to take stock of what they had done and outline new milestones...

The agricultural exhibition was crowded during the day. The center of attention was the stand of the Lenin collective farm. Even seasoned field farmers and production leaders shook their heads in surprise when commenting on the indicators of this farm.

Great deal. 31 centners per hectare. And they took hay up - 13 centners per hectare. And corn produces more than 500 centners of green mass per hectare.

Well done Nikitin, young, and apparently early. After all, it’s necessary: ​​all the prizes were taken.

And in the evening at a meeting of the region’s leading collective farm workers. Lenin was awarded first place in grain production. He also distinguished himself in selling it - two annual plans...”

It seemed that everything went as he had planned, but the call of his native land did not give him peace. And in the spring of 1965, Pyotr Osipovich and his family moved to his native village, where he was appointed chief agronomist of the Zaigraevsky state farm. A year later, the farm was renamed the Verkhne-Taletsky state farm, which included the villages of Sannomyssk, Tarbagatai and Verkhniye Taltsy.

In December 1967, he was appointed director of this farm.

“...He had goals - to do everything possible for his native land, so that his fellow villagers would live better, richer. He was a patriot of his native land, he invested

all his energy, impulse of soul, knowledge into the development of the economy of his native land... And Pyotr Osipovich was not mistaken. He achieved his goal: the Verkhne-Taletsky state farm has become one of the leading farms in the Khorinsky district, more than once the farm team has been included on the republican “Roll of Honor.” (newspaper “Udinskaya Nov” dated October 29, 2004)

He worked as director from December 1967 to May 1987. During this time, dairy farms were built in the villages of Verkhnie Taltsy and Dodogole for 200-400 heads with the mechanization of all labor-intensive processes - milking, feed distribution, manure removal. “High mechanization of production at the Verkhne-Taletsk dairy complex has always ensured that milk with high fat content and the least contamination reaches the creamery.” (Udinskaya Nov" 1984)

Almost all livestock buildings were renovated - sheds, calf sheds. A grain warehouse with the necessary storage facilities, repair shops, garages, a standard kindergarten for 90 children, and a standard secondary school for 500 students were built; houses were also built for state farm workers and the living conditions of livestock breeders in herds and flocks were improved.

To create a strong food base, the farm developed more than 3,000 hectares of virgin land. A special industry was created - a fodder production workshop, collective contracting was introduced, irrigation systems were built, and work was carried out to organize the watering of meadows.

As a specialist, he did not stop there; he constantly improved the organization of work. It is no coincidence that the grain growers of the state farm were among the first in the region to introduce the Ipatovsky method of grain harvesting, which makes it possible to reduce crop losses to a minimum and reduce harvesting to a minimum. In livestock farming, a flow-shop system for keeping cows and receiving and raising calves was introduced.

In addition to the introduction of full mechanization on farms, a Livestock Breeders' House was built at the Verkhne-Taletskaya MTF. In a two-story brick

The building housed a spacious red corner, a dining room, a kitchen, a service room, a store, offices for specialists, a bathhouse with a locker room. There was nothing like this in the district, and people came here from all over the republic to learn from experience.

In 1985 they began to build a bridge across the river. Udu, which is of great importance for the surrounding villages.

Naturally, such results did not come by themselves. First of all, this is the merit of the farm manager - the result of a properly structured economic and personnel policy.

“...It was both difficult and easy to work with him. It’s difficult because he has a quick temper and could sometimes explode. He always spoke openly, directly and categorically, regardless of faces. He didn't harbor any evil. It was easy to resolve any issues with him, because he was simple-minded, honest, and stood out among his colleagues for his diligence and enormous hard work. He got up earlier than everyone else, went to bed later than everyone else, was a decent and responsible person,” this is what Polikarp Vasilyevich Bakhaev, the former first secretary of the Khorinsky district port committee, who worked in this post for more than 15 years, writes about him.

It was rightly believed at that time that the Verkhne-Taletsky state farm was a source of personnel in the region. Pyotr Osipovich trained a whole galaxy of farm managers: Pyotr Kirillovich Dubinin, Vasily Yakovlevich Kuzmin, Vladimir Danilovich Ilkov, Pavel Petrovich Pomuran.

The contribution of Pyotr Osipovich to the development of agriculture in the region and the republic is highly appreciated. He is a holder of the Order of the Red Banner of Labor and the October Revolution, awarded 5 medals “For Valiant Labor”, “For the Development of Virgin Lands”, and has many Certificates of Honor from the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. He is an Honored Agronomist of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

In May 1987, he was transferred to the Baikal Association “Rybakkolkhozsoyuz” to the position of chairman, where he worked for 6 years. I had to travel a lot on business trips to fishing collective farms. Despite the specifics of this production, he quickly got into the swing of things, for which he gained respect from the chairmen of fishing collective farms.

In April 1993, he returned to his native village again as the head of the Verkhnetaletsk rural administration. With the same activity, he solves the problems of the village residents.

He worked in this post until 1999 and at the age of 65 retired.

1.5. HER CALLING IS TEACHER.

And all this time, a kind, understanding wife was nearby. It’s not for nothing that people say: “A good wife is half the success.” Together they raised three children and gave them higher education.

But Valentina Alexandrovna was not only a good wife and housewife, but also an excellent teacher. Teacher was her calling.

She worked at the Verkhne-Taletskaya school for 22 years as a teacher of biology and labor training, headed the school site, was the head of industrial training, and the head of the school forestry.

“...in 1964-65, 2 km from the village, cabbage and tomatoes were grown in a garden.

In 1966-67, we grew kuuzika seedlings for the state farm on the school plot in greenhouses, and participated in planting, processing and harvesting. For which the school was awarded a tractor and then a car.” Grandma remembers.

Much attention was paid to landscaping the school. In 1977, we moved to a new school building, which was built on a vacant lot. The district leadership gave the task “so that in a year the school will be surrounded by greenery.” Under

The leadership of Valentina Alexandrovna laid out a school site, in accordance with the requirements, there was also an experimental department, an arboretum, a flower garden, a greenhouse, and seedlings of fruit and berry crops were planted.

And it is no coincidence that students always took prizes at regional school exhibitions and flower exhibitions.

“Valentina Aleksandrovna Nikitina, a biology teacher at the Verkhne-Taletsk secondary school, is doing a lot of environmental work. For many years now she has been managing the school forestry.

Her painstaking and fruitful work produces results - all members of the school forestry work with pleasure, they know that nature conservation is of great national importance.

Members of the community and young friends of nature at the school, under the leadership of Valentina Alexandrovna, carried out significant work on landscaping the village and the school grounds. The school is a regular participant in the regional flower exhibition.” (“Udinskaya Nov” 1985)

Under the leadership of Valentina Aleksandrovna, members of the school forestry were engaged in planting pine seedlings, forest belts, protecting green spaces, attracting birds, collecting pine seeds and buds, and medicinal plants (bergenia, hawthorn, rose hips). Students have repeatedly won prizes in regional competitions. It is no coincidence that the 6th district and then republican gatherings of school forestries and young friends of nature were held on the basis of the Verkhne-Taletsk forestry and the Verkhne-Taletsk school forestry in June 1981.

Delegations of school forestries from 18 districts of the republic gathered 20 km from the village in the Barun area. The Minister of Education of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic P.F. took part in the meeting. Badarkhanov, Minister of Forestry N.E. Shelkovnikov, head of the district B.S. Shoynzhonov, director of the Khorinsky and Verkhne-Taletsky forestry enterprises P.P. Romanov, N.M. Filippov.

Students of that time still remember the biology classroom, which was the pride of the school. For assistance, the forestry enterprise was given a bonus of 1,000 rubles for the biology classroom. With this amount, stuffed animals were purchased and, with the help of students under the leadership of Valentina Alexandrovna, a nature museum was organized.

In the office, a wealth of material on environmental work was collected, tablets and stands were decorated.

As her students note: “... Valentina Alexandrovna was calm, friendly, never raised her voice, knew how to attract and interest.” She knew how to sew, knit, and cook, which she taught the girls in labor lessons. She has a rich imagination, drew well, made crafts from natural materials, and knew how to make stuffed birds and fish. Over the years of work, rich herbarium material and collections have been collected.

In 1987 she moved with her husband to Ulan-Ude. She got a job at SPTU-16 as a master of industrial training, and in 1989 at school No. 49 as a biology teacher, organizer of OPT and head. greenhouse, where she worked until 1992 and retired.

For her work, she was awarded the title “Excellence in Public Education of the RSFSR”; for her achievements in the field of education and upbringing of the younger generation, she received certificates from the Ministry of Forestry and the Ministry of Education of Bur. SSR, from the district council of VOOP, etc.

1.6. WE JUST LOOK OLD.

It is possible to be happy even at age

It's after your heart, if you find it,

And, if there is a reliable friend nearby

You won't get bored with him, you won't get lost

Now grandparents, despite their age, are optimists. They do housework and work in the garden all summer. Grandfather doesn't sit still

tries to move more, is busy in the yard. In their free time they read, grandma knits, thinking about her past life, writes poetry. I want to end it with verses:

We weren't looking for an easy life

And we are completely satisfied with fate

Our conscience is clear before people

This makes us doubly happy.

So as not to torment your conscience

Something, something I couldn’t

We managed to do everything

At times, though, they fell off their feet.

“Disrespect for ancestors is the first sign of savagery and immorality” (A.S. Pushkin) Morality is what distinguishes a person from other living beings. The moral decline of humanity begins with the loss of respect for ancestors, their deeds, and achievements. I devoted my work to studying the biography of my grandparents, the Nikitins Pyotr Osipovich and Valentina Alexandrovna. The material was collected during conversations with them, from the memoirs of contemporaries, and newspaper articles of that time.

My grandfather, Pyotr Osipovich, was born on November 5, 1934. in the village Verkhnie-Talydy. His parents Osip Kapitonovich and Augusta Efremovna raised 9 children. In 1941, grandfather went to school. From the first grade he worked in growing tobacco, from 5 in a brigade in haymaking, after graduating from 7 he worked in forest skidding, from the age of 14 he became an accountant in a field-growing tractor brigade. Finished grades 9 and 10 in the village. Verkhnie-Taltsy. He was drafted into the army in 1954. served in the North, port of Tiksi. After the army, in 1957 entered the BSHI at the Faculty of Agronomy.

Grandmother Valentina Alexandrovna was born on March 30, 1937. in the village Bayangol in the Mongolian People's Republic. Zimireva's parents Alexander Alexandrovich and Maria Vasilievna also raised 9 children. In 1945 went to first grade. After graduating from school, she entered the Agricultural Institute in Ulaanbaatar, Faculty of Agronomy, where she studied for 3 years, then moved to Ulan-Ude and continued her studies. Here they met Pyotr Osipovich and got married in their last year. Together we were engaged in research work “The influence of microelements on the yield of agricultural crops and sowing dates.”

In 1963 P.O. transferred as chief agronomist to the collective farm named after. Lenin, Dzhidinsky district. V.A. got a job at Petropavlovsk Secondary School as a biology teacher and entered in 1964. for the correspondence course at the Belarusian State Pedagogical Institute at the Faculty of Biology and Chemistry, which she graduated in 1968.

In the spring of 1965 BY. moved with his family to his native village, where he was appointed chief agronomist of the Verkhnetaletsky state farm, which included the villages of Sannomysk, Tarbagatai, Verkhnie-Taltsy. In December 1967 he was appointed director of this state farm, where he worked until May 1987. During this time, dairy farms were built in the village. V-T, Dodogole. In V-T a grain warehouse with storage facilities, repair shops, garages, a kindergarten, and a secondary school were built. More than 3000 hectares were developed. virgin lands. The Verkhnetaletsky state farm was one of the leading farms in the Khorinsky district.

P.O trained a whole galaxy of farm managers: Pyotr Kirillovich Dubinin (former director of Kurbinsky), Vasily Yakovlevich Kuzmin, Vladimir Danilovin Ilkov (president of SPK Kulsky). Prmuran Pavel Petrovich_(chairman of SPK Verkhnetaletsky)

In 1985 was elected deputy of the Supreme Council of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

In May 1987, he was transferred to the Baikal Association “Rybakkolkhozsoyuz” to the position of chairman, where he worked for 6 years.

In April 1993, he returned to Verkhnie-Taltsy as head of the village administration. He worked in this position until 1999 and retired.

Contribution of P.O. in the development of agriculture is highly appreciated. He is a holder of the Order of the Red Banner of Labor and the October Revolution, and was awarded the medals “For Valiant Labor” and “For the Development of Virgin Lands.” He is an Honored Agronomist of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

And all this time, a kind, understanding wife was nearby. Valentina Alexandrovna was not only a good wife and housewife, but also an excellent teacher. She worked at the Verkhnetaletsk school for 22 years as a biology and labor education teacher, headed the school site, and was the head of the school forestry department.

In 1977 we moved to a new school building located on a vacant lot. Under the leadership of Valentina Alexandrovna, a school site was laid out and the school was landscaped. Members of the school forestry were engaged in planting pine seedlings, forest belts, collecting pine seeds and buds, and medicinal herbs. On the basis of the Verkhnee-Taletsky forestry and forestry in June 1981, the 6th district and then the republican meetings of school forestries were held. For assistance to the forestry enterprise, a prize was allocated for the biology classroom, for which stuffed animals and students were purchased under the guidance of V.A. organized a nature museum.

For her work she was awarded the title “Excellence in Public Education of the RSFSR”, she has certificates from the Ministry of Forestry, the Ministry of Education, and from the district council

Now grandparents, despite their age, are optimists. They do housework and work in the garden all summer.

In the process of working on the biography, I became acquainted with only one link in the chain, and in the future I want to continue studying my family. The work of studying the genus requires scrupulousness. Unfortunately, the tradition of studying genealogy in Rus' is almost lost.

You're not the first. But you are extreme. (S. Vikulov)

You happen to live today - you are the last one in your family, and you cannot say in front of your family: “My house is on the edge,” because life is structured in such a way that everything that has been accumulated before is passed on to the last one. And you must convey all this to the next generation, preserve the memory of the family. You have no right to ignore this task set by history. What if your descendants treat you the same way - with disdain, indifference and forget you. A person who has torn himself away from his roots, who has broken the connection of times, who has encroached on what is eternal is insignificant and ridiculous. (Martyshin B.S. “Your Pedigree”)

Nikitina Valentina Aleksandrovna, pensioner

Nikitina Elena Petrovna, student of BSU

With literature in war and in life

Andrey Andreevich Belousov was born on October 23, 1910 in the village. Oni-Noborsk, Khorinsky aimak, Buryatia. After graduating from a seven-year school, he entered the Verkhneudinsk reclamation technical school, which he successfully graduated in 1931. Until 1936, he worked as a land surveyor, then was accepted as a 2nd year student in the literary department of the historical and philological faculty of the Buryat-Mongolian Pedagogical Institute named after D. Banzarov. While studying at school , technical school, and institute, he was most attracted to literature, the Russian language, and philology in general.

During his student years, as before, he composed poems and stories, which undoubtedly affected his subsequent work. He subsequently connected his entire life and creative scientific activity with literature. In 1943, A.A. Belousov was drafted into the army and sent as a special propagandist to work with German prisoners of war, which he did throughout his years of military service, gaining extensive experience working in this area.

After demobilization in 1946, he immediately began working at the Buryat Pedagogical Institute. The order appointing him as a teacher of literary history was signed by the now living E.A. Rampilov, who was then working as the director of the institute. A new teacher appeared before the students of the literary department - a handsome, slender young man - in military uniform and army boots. Having listened to the first lecture of a novice, but clearly extraordinary lecturer, the students immediately fell in love with the new teacher, who had a keen sense of literature and a brilliant interpreter. And this love of students for the teacher, future associate professor, professor remained throughout Andrei Andreevich’s many years of activity in universities. As a teacher at the Belarusian State Pedagogical Institute, A.A. Belousov is elected to the party bureau institute and becomes its secretary. Here he reveals himself as a convinced communist, a principled party leader. By the decision of the regional party committee A.A. Belousov was nominated for party work and in 1948 became head. Department of Propaganda and Agitation of the Ulan-Ude City Party Committee. However, a year later he manages to leave party work to enter graduate school at the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute. Here he is especially interested in the problems of methods of teaching literature in the Buryat national school. In Moscow, a close friendship is established with a fellow countryman, Innokenty Vasilyevich Barannikov, the future Minister of Education of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, and later the head of the Institute of National Schools of the Academy of Pedagogical Sciences of the RSFSR.

In 1952, having successfully defended his dissertation for the degree of candidate of pedagogical sciences, A.A. Belousov returns to Buryatia, to his native pedagogical institute, where he becomes a senior teacher, associate professor and for a number of years works as the dean of the historical and philological faculty of the institute. In connection with the opening of a new humanitarian university in Buryatia - the East Siberian Institute of Culture - Andrei Andreevich was transferred there to strengthen personnel in 1960 Until 1970 he worked as the head of the literature department of this university. Over the years, he has been engaged in literary criticism a lot, often publishing reviews of upcoming books by Buryat writers and at the same time actively working on his doctoral dissertation. In 1968, at Moscow State University, among the first doctors of science in Buryatia, he successfully defended his doctoral dissertation on the topic “Russian-Buryat literary connections in journalism and literature of the 19th-20th centuries.”

In 1970 A.A. Belousov, at the invitation of the rector’s office, returned to the Belarusian State Pedagogical Institute and was elected head of the department of Russian and foreign literature, which he continuously headed until 1982, and in fact, on his own initiative, transferred to the position of professor of the department. Talent A.A. Belousov’s talent was especially evident during these years. He publishes a number of books, including the work “In a United Family,” where he traces the relationship between Russian and Buryat literature, explores the work of the Decembrists, I. Goncharov, A. Chekhov, M. Gorky, one way or another connected with the fate of Siberia and Buryatia. He devotes one chapter to the Buryat scientist Dorzhi Banzarov, hoping in the future to illuminate in detail the path of this man, who managed in the middle of the 19th century. to enter Russian culture, to declare that even on the outskirts of Russia there is its own spiritual life, its own culture, worthy of becoming equal to the cultural life of other peoples of Russia. Andrei Andreevich was unable to finish his work on D. Banzarov; he passed away in 1984, leaving an indelible mark in the memory of those who knew him.

Andrey Andreevich Belousov made a significant contribution to the development of the ideas of the Belarusian State Pedagogical Institute named after. D. Banzarova as a wonderful scientist, an excellent teacher, a bright personality, a talented person in all respects. Andrei Andreevich’s 22 years of work were associated with his native Buryat Pedagogical Institute, of which he himself was a graduate. Here he first worked as a teacher, then became an associate professor, dean of philosophy, head of the department of literature, an active literary critic and critic recognized in the republic. For his patriotic and fruitful activities during the Great Patriotic War, and then in peacetime in teaching work in universities, he was awarded the medal “For victory over Germany,” numerous anniversary medals of the Soviet government and the Armed Forces, the medal “For Valiant Labor.” “In commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the birth of V.I. Lenin", several Certificates of Honor from the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, the Ministries of Culture and Education of the Russian Federation and many others. He was awarded the honorary titles: “Honored Scientist of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic”, “Excellence in Education of the RSFSR and the USSR”. But the best reward for A.A. Belousov is the memory of all those who studied with him and with whom he worked for many years, the memory of his family and friends. Having passed away, Andrei Andreevich remained in the memory, first of all, of his students and colleagues in the literary workshop as a wonderful, bright master of words, an original lecturer, superbly fluent in a unique, unique style of conversational, lecturing, written and scientific speech. He always aroused keen interest and close attention of students, scientists and any audience where he spoke, finding vivid images and speech patterns close to the people to whom he addressed.(

History of Potanin Secondary School.

In the fall of 1959, with the onset of the new school year, an elementary school was opened in a two-apartment building on Oktyabrskaya Street. There were 42 students in this school. The first teachers were Maria Trofimovna Vyskubova (Kuzyakina) and Fedosya Nikolaevna Shoimordanova (Sizykh).

In the 1960-1961 school year, the school became an eight-year school, and classes began in a new two-story building. Frygina Roza Alexandrovna became the first director, sent by the district party committee of the Zaigraevsky district together with her husband, who was appointed head of the forest site.

The first teachers were Dashiev Buda Lubsanovich, Dashieva Zinaida Tsydenovna, Tsyrenova Galina Norboevna, Vyprotskikh Nina Grigorievna and the first teacher with higher education was Vshivkova Nina Nikitichna, teacher of chemistry and biology, “Excellence in public education.” The first graduates of the eight-year school were

Batomunkuev Molon Batomunkuevich, Sanzhitsyrenova Irina Irdynizhapovna,

Togoshieva Lyudmila Gomboevna - who later after college returned to their home school as teachers.

In the 1961-1962 academic year, a new director, Trofimov Afrikan, arrived Pimenovich., In the spring of 1962, he laid out a huge garden on the school grounds with alleys of birch and poplar trees, Siberian cedar, silver spruce, lilac bushes and acacia. Having worked as a school director for 17 years, he made the school famous throughout the republic, for which he received the title “Honored Teacher of Russian Schools.”

Chairman of the Union of Composers of Buryatia Yuri Irdyneevich Irdyneev began his career as a singing teacher after graduating from the Ulan-Ude Music School.

The school grew up a wonderful galaxy of teachers, masters of their craft, who enjoyed great authority: Elistratov F.A., Trofimova N.M., Shulunova S.M., Vandanova S.N., Zhalsaraeva E.Ts., Togoshiev D.Ts. ., Khrunova L.P., Mironova L.I., Makhancheeva P.V., Tsybenova N.T., Pavlova L.F., Samandueva A.B., Batomunkuev M.B.

Levchenko A.F., Rychkova V.S., Shangaev A.I., Darmazhapova Ts.Zh., Bayramova G.G.,

Pavlova L.F., Togosheeva S.L., Kravtsova L.D., Akhlyustina L.P., Damyanov B.I..

The first high school graduation took place in 1966 - 47 people. Galina Ivanovna Kuznetsova, who became a teacher, graduated from school with a gold medal, Lidiya Kolodina graduated from school with a silver medal. We are proud of our first graduate L.I. Egorova, People's Artist of the Russian Federation.

Among the first graduating class were 1 journalist, 5 engineers, 4 economists, 3 teachers, including Levchenko A.F., who worked as a mathematics teacher at our school.

In 1972, a new one-story school building was put into operation. The school switched to one shift.

Tourism and local history are widely used at school. It was headed by geography teacher F.A. Elistratov. In the beginning In the 70s, he created the first wonderful local history museum in the region with departments: nature (animal and flora of Transbaikalia), history of the development of the village of Potanino, labor and military glory, mineral resources of Buryatia, etc.

Every summer, a school tourist detachment traveled to the sites of partisan battles in the Maletinsky and Krasnochikoysky districts and met with former partisans who liberated Transbaikalia from Japanese invaders. The collected material was compiled by local historians in the school museum and served as excellent material for conducting educational work among students.

IN In 1977, the team of the Potanin Secondary School was headed by Stepan Efimov Gavrilovich. The successes of Stepan Gavrilovich’s teaching activities were noted by the leadership of the Ministry of Education of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1981, he was transferred to the apparatus of the Ministry of Education, then the Minister of Social Protection, and then worked in the apparatus of the President of the Republic of Buryatia - Deputy Chairman of the Government of Buryatia, now head of the department of “Theory of Social Work”.

Innokenty Nikolaevich Kovalev worked as the school director for many years. The radio engineering circle he led became known throughout the republic. For good performance in productive work, the student production team of the Potanin Secondary School was recognized as the best in the republic in 1985, and was awarded the Challenge Red Banner of the Ministry of Education of the Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.

The most difficult times of the 90s fell on the school director Kravtsov Leonid Efimovich. Thanks to skillful leadership, the school did not lose its traditions.

Since 2001, the school was headed by Batomunkuev Molon Batomunkuevich- “Excellence in public education.”

From 2003 to 2008, the director of the school was Arkady Zhamyanovich Munkuev. In 2006, several national projects were launched in Russia, one of which was a national project in the field of education. Strategically, it was intended to create the basis for breakthrough innovative development of Russia and strengthening its competitiveness. First of all, it was supposed to solve two main problems: the introduction of innovative technologies, increasing public participation in industry management and assessing the quality of education.

Our school, under the leadership of Arkady Zhamyanovich, was actively involved in the implementation of this project. The school received computers, which were later connected to the World Wide Web; according to the national project, they received a new KAVZ bus and an Istana minibus. Arkady Zhamyanovich annually holds a traditional freestyle wrestling tournament in memory of Ts. Don.

In September 2008, Yesheev Bator Ayurzhanaevich was appointed director of the school..

The mission of the school is to create conditions for rural schoolchildren to receive a quality education that allows them to live successfully in a rapidly changing world, through the individualization of the educational process and the introduction of new educational technologies. A school development program “Developing educational environment of the school as a factor in the formation of key competencies of students” has been developed.

Thus, as stated in the concept modernization of Russian education until 2010: “School - in the broad sense of the word - should become the most important factor in the humanization of socio-economic relations, the formation of new life attitudes of the individual. A developing society needs modernly educated, moral, enterprising people who can independently make responsible decisions in a situation of choice, predicting their possible consequences, are capable of cooperation, are characterized by mobility, dynamism, constructiveness, and have a developed sense of responsibility for the fate of their country.” This is the outcome the school is currently striving for.

Views