Nina Aleksandrovna Aleksandrova (November 19, 1916 - May 18, 1972) [1] - Soviet journalist, employee of the Izvestia newspaper.
| Nina Alexandrova | |
|---|---|
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| Birth name | Nina Ziskindovna Sazanova |
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | |
| Date of death | |
| A place of death | near the village of Russian Lozovaya ( Dergachevsky district of the Kharkiv region ), 24 km from Kharkov airport ( USSR , USSR ) |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | journalist |
| Awards and prizes |
|
Content
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Death
- 2 Some works
- 3 Collections of works
- 4 notes
- 5 Literature
Biography
Since 1931 she worked in the Moscow "Worker Newspaper". At the same time, she studied at an evening newspaper college.
After that, she worked in the journal "Pioneer", combining work and study, now at the evening department of the Literary Institute. A.M. Gorky (1941). [2]
She left as a volunteer in World War II. She was a correspondent for divisional and army newspapers on the Volkhov and 1st Belorussian fronts. She was seriously injured. Came to Berlin. She was awarded two orders of the Red Star, the Order of the Patriotic War, nine medals, including "For Courage". [1] [2]
Later - traveling correspondent of Komsomolskaya Pravda, since 1962 - special correspondent of the newspaper Izvestia. [2]
The starting point of the newspaper essays by Nina Alexandrova most often turned out to be readers' letters about acute life conflicts on the basis of injustice, red tape, philistine, indifference of the authorities and people. [3]
Based on Aleksandrova’s essay “Alien Children”, a film was made in 1958 [2] .
She lived in Karmanitsky per., 2, building 5; on Sheremetyevskaya St., 71, building 17. [2]
Doom
In 1972, Nina Alexandrova wrote (and was already accepted by the editorial board, typed, they wanted to print it) the essay “A drop of blood and a pound of salt” telling about an impostor, who ascribed the feat of a namesake, the hero of the uprising of prisoners of the Nazi camp Sobibor . All the evidence of his guilt was in Nina’s hands: both the records of the stories of other participants in the event, and the testimony of the leader of the uprising, and the penitential letter of the adventurer. Hold one thing: "I want to look in the eyes of a scoundrel!".
The An-10 plane, on which the journalist was flying, crashed on May 18, 1972. [1] [3]
The ashes are buried in the Vvedensky cemetery . [2]
Some works
- Foreign children (1954)
- Minor conflict
- A drop of blood and a pound of salt (1972)
- "Komsomol members left ..."
- Pink light
- When the comrades are silent
- Big garden
- The fate of the boy
- The light did not go out
Work collections
- “The light did not go out”, Moscow, Izvestia, 1973
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 “ How old was she? Consider this happened in 1972. Now, November 19th, she would have turned seventy-five. "- " Remembering Nina Alexandrova " - Edwin Polyanovsky, News No. 276, November 20-1991
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 Moscow Encyclopedia. Volume 1: Faces of Moscow. Book 1: A-Z. M.: Moscow Encyclopedia Foundation, 2010.
- ↑ 1 2 “I want to look into the eyes of a scoundrel!” - Inga Prelovskaya, Izvestia, 31-Aug-2006
Literature
- [Obituary] - Proceedings. 1972, May 20
- Atarov N. “About Nina Alexandrova” - Afterword to the book of Alexandrov N. “The light did not go out. Favorites ", 1973
- Polyanovsky Ed. “Remembering Nina Alexandrova” - News No. 276, November 20-1991
- Prelovskaya I. “I want to look into the eyes of a scoundrel!” - Izvestia, 31-Aug-2006
