Scenario of the ceremonial line “Minute of Silence.

Event scenario
"Let's remember everyone by name"

Music sounds Victory Day song

Presenter1: Those who went into battle for their homeland, survived and won.

Presenter2: To those who flew away with the smoke from the Buchenwald ovens...

Presenter1: To those who have sunk for centuries in fascist captivity...

Presenter2: To those who lay under cars instead of pontoon bridges...

Presenter1: Dedicated to all those who went into immortality and won...

Presenter 2: June 22. This day will forever return our memory to 1941. And that means by May 9, 1945. There is a strong thread between these two dates. Without one there could not be another.
Presenter1: Today with us are those who, during the terrible years of war, showed examples of courage, perseverance, iron discipline, and the ability to win.

(Called full names of invited guests)

Veteran of the Great Patriotic War -

Presenter 2:

Do you remember, soldier, many springs ago
Was the sky ablaze with sunsets?
You walked through the pain and repeated it like a password,
Like a sacred oath: “Victory!”

Presenter 1:
Do you remember, soldier, the burnt Reichstag,
A scarlet banner that lit up half the sky?
The world remembers, soldier, many springs ago
Your firm word: “Victory!”

First reader

War...From Brest to Moscow 1000 kilometers, from Moscow to Berlin - 1600. Total 2600 kilometers. So little, isn't it? By train - four days, by plane - four hours, and in Plastun - four long years.

Video “Get Up” The country is huge.

Second reader

War... This is the fearlessness of the defenders of Brest, this is the 900 days of besieged Leningrad, this is the oath of Panfilov’s men: “Not a step back, Moscow is behind us!”

Third reader

This is the victory at Stalingrad won by fire and blood, this is the feat of the heroes of the Kursk Bulge, this is the storming of Berlin, this is the hard work of home front workers, the torment of concentration camp prisoners, this is the memory of the hearts of the entire people.

Fourth reader

No! Neither we nor our children should forget about this. To forget the past, to forget the lessons of war means to betray those who did not spare their lives for the sake of our future, to leave new generations without experience gained at an exorbitant price.

Fifth reader.

If a minute of silence was declared for every person who died in the Second World War, the world would be silent for fifty years.

Buchenwald Nabad sounds (before words)

Presenter 2:

Remember!
Through centuries, through years - remember!
About those who will never come again - remember!
Don't cry!
Hold back the moans in your throat, the bitter moans.
Be worthy of the memory of the fallen!
Eternally worthy!

Presenter 1: The war has disrupted peaceful life.

Presenter 2: The road to victory was not easy. Millions of daughters and sons of our Motherland gave their lives so that people all over the earth could live and work under a peaceful sky.

Buchenwald Alarm sounds

Student performance: (the task is given to students in advance)

Reader 1:

Reader 2:

Presenter 2:

War - there is no crueler word,

War - there is no sadder word,

War - there is no brighter word

In the melancholy and glory of these years

And on our lips there is something else

It can't be yet and no.

Reader 3

Reader 4:

Presenter 1:

Eternal glory to the heroes who died for our Motherland!
All those who gave their lives for the Fatherland,
All those who did not return home,
All those who fought and suffered,
I'll hug you for a minute.
Let everything freeze in this minute,
Even if time is silent,
We remember you, fathers and grandfathers,
Russia, the Motherland honors you!

Presenter2.

And we remember them. A minute of silence is announced.
Metronome sounds.

Reader 5:

Video clip of the “Battle of Stalingrad”

Reader 6:

Presenter2:

You brought freedom to the prisoners of Auschwitz, Dachau, Buchenwald.

You did not invade other people's borders, you defended your Fatherland, your family.

You weren't waiting for an award, the highest award for you was Victory

You walked the roads of war until complete Victory.

Reader 7:

Reader 8:

Presenter 1:

In moments of calm, at rest stops, in dugouts, a good song warmed the soldier’s heart. The song inspired, called for heroic deeds in the name of the Motherland.

The song “Dugout” is playing

Presenter 2:

And the soldier also believed that they were waiting for him, this faith instilled hope and strength to fight the enemy.

Poem by K. Simonov “Wait for me” (read by student)

Wait for me and I will return.

Just wait a lot.

Wait when they make you sad

Yellow rains,

Wait for the snow to blow

Wait for it to be hot

Wait when others are not waiting,

Forgetting yesterday.

Wait when from distant places

No letters will arrive
Wait until you get bored

To everyone who is waiting together.

Wait for me and I'll be back

Don't wish well

To everyone who knows by heart,

It's time to forget.

Let the son and mother believe

In the fact that I am not there

Let your friends get tired of waiting
They'll sit by the fire

Drink bitter wine

In honor of the soul...

Wait. And at the same time with them

Don't rush to drink.

Wait for me and I'll be back

All deaths are out of spite.

Whoever didn't wait for me, let him

He will say: - Lucky.

Those who were not waiting for them cannot understand,
Like in the middle of fire
By your expectation
You saved me.
We'll know how I survived
Just you and me, -
You just knew how to wait
Like no one else.

Presenter 1:

Years go by, decades change. But this feat, the feat of the people in the Great Patriotic War, is destined to remain in history.

Presenter 2:

Thank you for
That the day comes again.
That bread ripens and that children grow up
Thank you,
For all my dear people,
Living in such a vast world!
Because life is a river without banks,
For every spring and winter,
For all friends and even for enemies,
Thank you, for all this - thank you!

Presenter1: We owe a lot to our veterans. And today our guest is:

Presenter 2:

It's midnight outside. The candle burns out.
High stars are visible.
You write a letter to me, my dear,
To the blazing address of war.

Presenter 1:

Warmer at the front from affectionate letters.
Reading, behind every line
You see your beloved
And you hear your homeland,
Like a voice behind a thin wall

Presenter 2:

We'll be back soon. I know. I believe.
And the time will come:
Sadness and separation will remain at the door,
And only joy will enter the house.

Presenter 1:

And some evening with you,
Pressing your shoulder to your shoulder,
We will sit down and the letters are like a chronicle of the battle,
Let’s re-read it as a chronicle of feelings...

Presenter 2:

Our Victory will never fade. Guys, let's always remember those who gave us the great holiday - Victory Day.

Presenter 2:

Dear veterans!
We wish you health and happiness!
May your dreams come true
And with our sincere love
Accept fresh flowers.

Students present carnations to veterans and home front workers.

Presenter 1:
We congratulate you on your great day,
Happy day of our glory!
Happy Victory Day!
We were not yet in the world,
When fireworks thundered from one end to another.
Soldiers, you gave to the planet
Great May!
Victorious May!

Everyone sings the song "Victory Day"

Presenter 2:

Let's bow to the great

those years

To those glorious

commanders and soldiers,

And to the marshals of the country,

and privates,

Let's bow

both dead and alive.

To all those whom

we must not forget,

Let's bow, bow, friends!

The music is "The Last Battle"


Municipal educational institution "Secondary school No. 1" in Izobilny

Scenario for the ceremony “Minute of Silence”

Songs of the war years are heard.

Presenter 1: Many years have passed since that victorious time, since that last war day, but the memory of the exploits of the heroes does not fade with time. May 9 is a solemn holiday. On this day, joy is intertwined with grief, laughter with tears.

Presenter 2: May 9 is Victory Day, but on this day we remember the terrible price paid for it, about millions of human lives, and there is nothing more valuable than human life in the world. Let us remember the great past of our country!

Presenter 1: Attention! The ceremonial line dedicated to the memory of those who fell during the Great Patriotic War, as well as living veterans who experienced the horrors of war, is declared open!

^ The anthem plays.

Presenter 2: June 22 and May 9 – two numbers, two pages of the calendar, two days in the life of our Motherland. They are marked in the calendar with different colors. One is black, bristling with bayonets and falling bombs, the other is red with rainbows of victorious fireworks and symbols of military valor and glory! They are called: Day of Remembrance and Sorrow, the beginning of the war, and May 9, Victory Day.

Presenter 1: Victory!

Glorious forty-fifth!

Friends, let's look back!

From forty-one guys

Today they talk to us.

Presenter 2: We hear them.

They are close to us

Its direct legacy.

For us they are not obelisks,

They are us today.

Presenter 1: The country was blooming. But the enemy is around the corner

He carried out a raid and went to war against us.

In that terrible hour, becoming a steel wall,

All the youth took up arms.

^ There are explosions, shots, and the roar of airplanes.

To the soundtrack of the song “Holy War,” young men in soldier’s uniforms appear on stage.

Presenter 2: 40 graduates and teachers of our school, led by director Sergei Vasilievich Klinnikov, also went to the front.

Soldier 1.

In the forty-first, forty memorable year

From the fascist nest - Berlin -

To the whole Earth, to all people in trouble

An iron avalanche poured out.

Soldier 2.

A rocket tore through the sky.

A sheaf of fire swayed over the water.

The first salvo of the war! And ricochet

A hundred fragments splashed at me.

^ The soundtrack of the explosion sounds.

Soldier 3.

Did you bequeath to us to die, Motherland?

Life promised

Love promised, Motherland!

Are children born for death, Motherland?

Did you want our death, Motherland?

Soldier 4.

The flame hit the sky -

Do you remember, Motherland?

She quietly said: “Get up to help” - Motherland.

Nobody asked you for fame, Motherland.

Everyone simply had a choice: me or the Motherland.

Soldier 5.

The best and dearest thing is the Motherland!

Your grief is our grief too, Motherland!

Your truth is our truth, Motherland!

Your glory is our glory too, Motherland!

I met you, war. I have large abrasions on my palms. There's noise in my head. I want to sleep. Do you want to wean me off everything I'm used to? Do you want to teach me to obey you unquestioningly, war?

Soldier 4. The commander’s cry - run, do it, bark deafeningly: “Yes!”, fall, crawl, fall asleep on the move. The rustling of a mine - bury yourself in the ground, dig it with your nose, hands, feet, without feeling fear, without thinking. Friends are dying - dig a grave, sprinkle earth, shoot into the sky three times.

Soldier 3. Let there be suffering. Who said I'm afraid to suffer? It was at home that I was afraid of many things, at home.

Soldier 2. And now I have already found out everything, tried everything. I'll still be useful in life. After all, it’s even funny to kill a person who didn’t manage to do anything. I didn't even finish tenth grade.

Soldier 1. I'll get through everything. Until the very end. I will shoot at the Nazis like a sniper, I will fight tanks, I will not sleep, I will suffer.

^ To the soundtrack of the song “Cranes”, girls dressed in the uniform of wartime nurses appear on stage.

Nurse 1.

Don't ask me about this.

Soldiers' graves are growing in the steppe,

My youth is wearing an overcoat.

Nurse 2.

In my eyes there are charred pipes.

Fires are burning in Rus'.

And again unkissed lips

The wounded boy took a bite.

Nurse 3.

No! You and I didn’t learn from the report

Great retreat to suffer.

Self-propelled guns rushed into the fire again,

I jumped onto the armor as I walked.

Nurse 4.

And in the evening over the mass grave

She stood with her head bowed...

I don’t know where I learned tenderness, -

Perhaps on the front road.

^ A school ensemble (primary classes) takes the stage.

Presenter 1. Not only adults, but also children fought. They met the war at different ages: some were very young, some were teenagers, some were on the threshold of adolescence. The war found them in capital cities and small villages, at home and visiting their grandmother, in a pioneer camp. And they died on the front line, participating in partisan wars and in concentration camps.

Student 1.

We were ten years old then.

We remember the night of the war.

There is not a light in the windows -

They are darkened.

Student 2.

Who lived only ten years,

Will remember forever

How, after extinguishing the trembling light,

There were trains.

Student 3.

In the darkness the troops were transported to the front,

Children - to the distant rear,

And the train at night without a whistle

I left the stations.

Student 4.

He will never forget

Even though he was very small,

Like the road there was water,

And there wasn't always food

And how was his father then?

Fought for happiness!

^ The ensemble performs the song “Blame the War”

After the performance, the ensemble leaves, leaving 2 students. A girl in a white (red?) robe comes onto the stage (to the soundtrack of a recording of Levitan’s voice?) - this is Victory.

^ The dialogue takes place to the soundtrack of the song “Victory Day”:

Boy: Look who it is?

Girl: How, haven't you guessed it yet? This is the Victory of our great-grandfathers.

Boy:

How did you not die from a bullet?

How did the blow not knock you down?

Victory:

I stayed alive, isn't it because

That when I had no strength at all,

I saw it from distant stops,

From snow-clogged dead ends,

Behind the mountains of moving tanks,

Behind the forests of raised bayonets

Got busy, Victory Day dawned,

Having overshadowed the earth with his wing.

Through your own and through other people's troubles

On this day I went ahead!

Presenter 1:

So here it is - the solemn hour of Victory,

Putting an end to firestorms,

For the sake of which each of you,

My chest was exposed to shrapnel and bullets.

Presenter 2:

Everyone today is like a brother with a brother,

The hour becomes brighter and more heartfelt.

And the old soldier cries with happiness,

Who has never cried in his life.

Victory:

This has never happened before -

Let the joy thunder in full, without ceasing:

Peace Day entered the calendar

Victory Day - May 9th!

^ The song is getting louder. There is a changing of the guard. “Victory Day” gives way to a sad melody. A girl in black clothes approaches the monument.

Presenter 1: Not everyone had the opportunity to experience the happiness of Victory.

Mother.

My boy, how long have I been waiting for you!

And suddenly I heard the call of Victory.

I've already collected everything on the table,

I'm waiting for you, but you're still not there.

All the dust has long since flown away from the bird cherry trees.

My boy, where are you lost?

Our house is already full of friends and acquaintances,

You're the only one left.

Son.

Mom, you know it's my fault

I'm to blame for you.

I was about to go back

And suddenly that last battle.

The battle is after the end of the war,

But the Krauts did not know this.

Everyone's nerves are raw,

That's probably why I fell.

I died, mom, forgive me,

Stay at the gate for me.

And if Varya asks me,

Say that love is not a mistake.

Mother.

My boy, don’t go, wait!

Let's choose a different path.

Another will die in that last battle,

Let him leave his love.

Son.

Oh, mom, the other one - after all, he is my brother,

He is also not guilty of anything.

Since it fell to me to fall in the last battle,

So I will take my love away.

Forgive me, mom!

Presenter 2.

How sad it is for us to stand at the obelisks

And see grieving mothers there!

We bow our heads low.

Prostration for your sons!

Presenter 1: Loyalty test

Beloved Fatherland,

Passed with honor

Each of our guys.

Their names from now on

Immortal and proud

Like in a line of fighters,

They are on the school list.

Presenter 2: Let's remember everyone by name,

Let us remember with our grief...

It's not the dead who need it,

The living need this!

Presenter 1: The right to conduct a heroic verification is granted to ___________________

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Presenter 2: The memory of generations is inextinguishable

And the memory of those whom we sacredly honor,

Come on people, let's stand for a moment.

And in sorrow we will stand and be silent.

Presenter 1: School, attention! A minute of silence is declared in memory of the heroism of the fallen.

^ An improvised eternal flame is lit. The sounds of a metronome and bells are heard.

Presenter 2.

Flowers are laid on gravestones.

No! No one is forgotten and nothing is forgotten!

Presenter 1: Attention! Delegations from classes should lay flowers at the obelisk.

^ Laying flowers to the soundtrack.

Presenter 2: The Great Patriotic War lasted 1418 days and nights. Our long-suffering land was washed with streams of blood and tears during these endless long four years. It seemed that it was simply impossible to survive in the midst of heavy fire and not lose your mind at the sight of the death of thousands of people and monstrous destruction.

Presenter 1: But the power of the human spirit turned out to be stronger than metal and fire. That is why with such deep respect and admiration we look at those who went through the hell of war and retained the best human qualities - kindness, compassion and mercy.

Presenter 2: Fewer and fewer of those who fought for our Motherland are left alive. The presence of honored guests at the holidays - veterans of the Great Patriotic War - is all the more precious for us.

Presenter 1: For a peaceful dawn rising over the planet,

For faith in today!

For happiness, for a childhood without tears and anxiety.

Because the roads are all open for us

Thank you, dears,

Low bow.

Presenter 2: We owe a lot to our veterans. And today our guest is a veteran of the Great Patriotic War ___________________________________________________. Dear _____________________________________________________, with deep respect we give you the floor.

Presenter 1: The floor for greetings is given to the director of the school, Sergei Grigorievich Kuzmenko.

^ Guest performance.

First graders take the stage.

Student 1:

The war has passed, the suffering has passed,

But pain calls to people.

Come on people, never

Let's not forget about this!

Student 2:

May her memory be eternal

They keep about this torment,

And the children of today's children,

And our grandchildren's grandchildren.

Student 3.

Border guard on the border

He guards our land,

To work and study

All the people could calmly.

Student 4.

Protects our sea

Glorious valiant sailor,

Flying proudly on a battleship

Our native Russian flag.

Student 5.

Our hero pilots

The sky is vigilantly guarded,

Our hero pilots

Protect peaceful labor.

Student 6.

Our army is dear

Guards the peace of the country,

So that we grow up without knowing troubles,

So that there is no war.

Student 7.

Glory to you, brave ones!

Glory to the fearless!

The people sing eternal glory to you.

Destroying death

Those who fell valiantly,

Your memory will never die!

Presenter 1: Let the sun drown the whole earth in its rays!

First graders: Let it go!

Presenter 1: Let the peaceful stars shine above her!

First graders: Let it go!

Presenter 1: Let you breathe deeper, calmer, freer!

First graders: Let it go! Let it go! Let it go!

The phonogram of the song “Children must laugh” plays

Presenter 2: This concludes our solemn line-up. We invite distinguished guests to go to the school assembly hall for a festive concert.

Event scenario

The area near the Memorial is fenced for the convenience of spectators.

Representatives of local administration, institutions and organizations stand next to the Memorial with wreaths to lay.

Between the slabs and near the pedestal “1941-1945” there is a guard of honor. To the left of the pedestal are choir bars for performers. In the middle of the pedestal there is a place for the “MEMORY” group.

At 10.00 the call signs of the holiday are heard in the soundtrack.


Speaker. Great Victory Day, in honor of its 65th anniversary dedicated...


A metronome sounds in the soundtrack.

They come out from both sides simultaneously: the fanfare group, which stands in the middle, and the choir, which takes its place on the choir benches.

The head of administration approaches the central microphone.

After exiting, the fanfare group performs a signal.
Speaker (after the signal). The Chorale of Memory is opened by the Head of Administration.
The Head of Administration comes out, makes a brief speech, congratulates the townspeople on the holiday, and says wishes.

After the speech of the head of the administration, the fanfare group again performs signal.

After the signal, the choir performs “Ave Maria” or another appropriate piece. Against the background of the song being performed, the following are moving along the two paths of the Memorial from the Eternal Flame: on the left is a children’s dance group with doves in their hands, on the right is the “Memory” group, members of a theater group, accompanied by 6 conscripts (in capes, helmets with machine guns) .

The dance group takes a place on the steps, the “Memory” group and its accompanying people take place on the central podium.

« MEMORY" (after the song).

That military disaster
I won’t shake my hands.
I won’t wash it away with tears,
I won't bury it in the ground.

I am not a word, not a reproach,

Not with a glance, not with a hint,

I am not a hired song,

I am not making immodest boasts...

And with a bow to the ground


In a green field I will remember...
The choir members bow their heads. The dance group releases pigeons into the sky and performs a number. After its completion, the fanfare group gives a signal.
SPEAKER (after the signal). A word from a participant in the Great Patriotic War (gives last name and regalia).

The war participant congratulates those gathered on Victory Day and says words of wishes. After his last words, the fanfare signal sounds again.
« MEMORY" (after the signal). Victory is at our door...
We will greet you like a welcome guest!
Let women raise their children higher,
Saved from a thousand thousand deaths,
This is our long-awaited answer.
The choir performs a song on the appropriate theme.

Against the background of the song, festively dressed children (20 people), with flowers in their hands and divided into two groups of 10 people, walk along two paths of the Memorial to lay flowers at the Eternal Flame and remain there. After the song, the fanfare group gives a signal.
SPEAKER (after the signal). Word to the conscript (gives full name).
The conscript comes out and congratulates everyone gathered on Victory Day).

The song begins to sound, against its background, veterans and participants of the Great Patriotic War take the Garland of Glory in their hands and go to lay it on.
"MEMORY" (after the song).

We know what's on the scales today,

And what is happening now.

The hour of courage has struck on our watch,

And courage will not leave us.

It's not scary to lie dead under bullets,


It's not sad to be homeless.
But we will save you, Russian speech,
Great Russian word.

We will carry you free and clean


We will give it to our grandchildren and save them from captivity.
FOREVER!

CONTRACTS (accompanying).

FOREVER!
FOREVER!


FOREVER!
The choir performs a song.

"MEMORY" (after the song).
And you, my friends,
Last call!
To mourn you -
My life was saved.

Over your memory


Don't be a weeping willow
And shout to the whole world
All your names.

What names are there?


I slam the saints,
And everyone on their knees! –
Crimson light poured out,

In orderly rows


All the Kurgan residents pass.
Living with the dead.
For God there are no dead.

The fanfare group gives the signal. In the soundtrack: bell ringing.

SPEAKER (against the background of ringing). We invite all those present to lay flowers and wreaths at the Eternal Flame.

The “Memory” group with accompanying conscripts and the choir line up on both sides of the Memorial.

All rally participants go to lay flowers and wreaths at the Eternal Flame.

A brass band is lined up near the eternal flame.

At the moment of passing and laying, the brass band performs the number “Let’s Bow the Banners.”
« MEMORY" (after laying on). We will honor the memory of our fallen compatriots with a minute of silence...
A minute of silence. Automatic fireworks.
"MEMORY" (after a minute of silence). I invite you, dear chorale participants, to the Central Square of our village (or to the Palace of Culture) for a festive program (concert).

The brass band performs "Victory Day".

Everyone goes to the central square.

MINUTE OF SILENCE

Scenario of a citywide rally


Central square of the city, 22 hours.

A fanfare soundtrack sounds.

SPEAKER. There is a moment of silence.

Metronome soundtrack.

SPEAKER. Everything breathed such silence,


It still seemed that the whole earth was sleeping
Who knew that between peace and war

About five minutes left?..

Phonogram of the song “Holy War (music by B. Alexandrov).

Simultaneously with the soundtrack, 100 torchbearers begin to move from the city administration building to the center of the square. They stop in front of the monument and turn to face the building.

SPEAKER (against the background of song and movement).


The boys left
There are greatcoats on the shoulders.
The boys left
They sang songs bravely.
The boys retreated

Dusty steppes,


Boys were dying
They didn’t know where...
Boys got caught
In terrible barracks,
They drove the boys
Fierce dogs.
Boys were killed
For escaping on the spot.
The boys didn't sell
Conscience and honor...
The boys saw -
Brave soldiers -
Volga in forty-first,
Spree - in '45.
The boys showed
In four years:
Who are the boys
Our people!

As soon as the torchbearers take their places, the soundtrack is mixed and goes into a metronome.

It sounds like a methorone.

SPEAKER (against the background of a metronome). People!


Remember!

Through centuries, through years, -


Remember!

About those who will never come again,


Remember!
Don't cry!

Hold back your moans in your throat,


Bitter moans.

In memory of the fallen, be worthy!

Eternally worthy!


As long as hearts are knocking.
Remember!

At what price was happiness won?


Please remember!

People of the earth!

Carry your dream through the years
And fill it with life!..
But about those who will no longer come
Never, I conjure, -
Remember!

The song “Cranes” (1st verse and chorus) begins to sound in the soundtrack. At this time, the torchbearers kneel on their right knee. From the words: “...they have been lighting Roman candles to this day, since those ancient times...” After the “Cranes”, the torchbearers rise from their knees. At the same time, Levitan’s voice begins to sound in the soundtrack with the “Message of Victory.”

After the last phrase - the first volley of fireworks.

Fireworks begin. The torchbearers leave.

Guryev Yu., Astrakhan

ONE VICTORY FOR ALL

Scenario for the gubernatorial reception of veterans

war and film concert to celebrate the anniversary

Victories in the Great Patriotic War
Venue. The central hall of the Oktyabr cinema and concert complex.

Date– May 8, 14-00.
On the right side of the stage there is a wreath in the shape of a five-pointed red star with a Guards ribbon, and on the proscenium there is a garland, also with a Guards ribbon.

Fanfare players - 6 people - come on stage. Fanfare sounds on the theme of the song “This Victory Day”. On the screen are film stills from the documentary “Victory Day” - the hoisting of the banner over the Reichstag, Levitan’s text: “In commemoration of the Victory of the Soviet people over Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War... May 9 has been declared a national Victory Day.”

Ceremonial parade march. The military enters the hall. Guard of honor. The Victory Banner is brought in. It is installed on the left side of the stage.

First presenter. 65 years ago, not just a holiday was born on our land, marked with a red date on the calendar. Our people walked towards this holiday through fierce battles, through the most severe suffering and trials. This holiday has entered not only our, but also world history, as a memory of the heroism of the Soviet people who saved the world from the brown plague of fascism.

Today in this hall you have gathered, for whom fate was destined to fully drink the cup of hard military roads, to experience the bitterness of the losses of friends and fellow soldiers, the joy of victory over the enemy and many years of creative work for the prosperity of the Fatherland. For you, veterans of the Great Patriotic War, this holiday will always be a special day. Happy holiday, comrades!

Dear veterans, the governor of the Astrakhan region greets you (represents).

Festive fanfare sounds. The governor comes up to the stage. During his speech, he announces a minute of silence.
Metronome. A minute of silence. Then the governor announces the conferment of military ranks and presents shoulder straps. The governor’s speech ends with words of congratulations to the veterans, after which he takes his place in the hall).

Second presenter. Today, on this day, we cannot help but remember those who, faithful to duty and oath, at the cost of their lives dealt a crushing blow to the brown plague. And we will always be grateful to them for saving the world. No matter how many centuries pass, they will forever remain in the memory of grateful descendants.

Schumann's "Dreams" are playing. Presenter's text. Video footage – Eternal Flame.

First presenter. Here in undisturbed eternal sleep
A Russian soldier sleeps in his grave,
Here he found peace and home -
There is an unquenchable fire above him.

On behalf of all those present in this hall, in memory of the victims, this wreath of memory will be laid at the Eternal Flame in the Brotherhood Garden.

The soldiers, in a solemn march to the beat of drums, take the wreath from the hall and head to the Eternal Flame in the Brotherhood Garden.

Second presenter. Children often ask questions that are difficult for even the wisest adult to answer right away. “Why does man need war?” - they ask. Really - why? Our children, perhaps genetically, have a cruel memory of war. That’s why even they in our country cherish this memory so sensitively and so sincerely conjure: “Sleep, war! Sleep, war!

Choir “Lik” and Anton Smikhovsky “Sleep, War” (group “Winter Hut of Animals”). On the monitors are video footage of peaceful life.

First presenter. Memory. Memory of the past. She paints for us a short June night of '41, when the armored armadas of the fascist Wehrmacht suddenly rushed across the borders of our Motherland - the Soviet Union!.. It was the last peaceful night for five long years. Trouble came suddenly, changing the fate of the country and all its people.

Film footage “This Victory Day” (part 2, 1 min. 50 sec.)

Second presenter. Along the vast stretch of the Soviet-German front from the Barents to the Black Sea, a furious cannonade thundered, and the entire planet froze in a stupor - whether or not the Red Army would be able to repel the fascist troops who had never known defeat.

But on the approaches to the capital, the city of Moscow, it was as if the spring of popular anger had loosened. The myth of the invincibility of Hitler's army was dispelled, and the plan for a lightning war was buried. The words “Russia is big, but there is nowhere to retreat, Moscow is behind us,” as if a spell was used to stop the enemy.

The song “My Dear Capital” is playing (music by I. Dunaevsky, lyrics by M. Lisyansky, S. Agranyan), film footage of the film “This Victory Day” (“Destruction near Moscow”, part 2) is being shown.

First presenter. Columns of soldiers walked and walked towards the front, and along the roads stood women - sisters, wives, mothers, suddenly aged and suddenly clearly understanding their loss, their loneliness and endless heartache for the fate of a loved one. A few front-line triangles became the only thread of hope for return and faith in our victory. They saw off and hoped, waited and believed...

Film stills “The Ballad of a Soldier” (part 9, 5 min, T. Potapova “The Ballad of a Mother” and “This Victory Day” (“Destruction near Moscow”, part 3).

Second presenter. Memory! World history preserves the memory of many battles. But none of them can compare in scale, ferocity and significance with the Battle of Stalingrad.

The Stalingrad victory showed the great unity of the entire people, front and rear, a shining example of the courage of soldiers and the strategic thinking of commanders who earned the respect and gratitude of the entire people.

Film footage “Stalingrad” (4 min. 20 sec.)

First presenter. Who said you have to quit?
Songs at war
After the battle the heart asks
Music doubly so.

The words of this front-line song warmed the soul, reminded us of peaceful life, and it was impossible to survive in the madness and brutality of military battles without music and songs.

Very often, the soldiers who fought on the front line were visited by the artists beloved by all the people. As part of concert teams, they toured on all fronts, bringing joy and good mood. And the heart sank from the soft lyrical singing of the Russian singer herself, Lidia Ruslanova.

Film footage of “Ruslanov” (3 min. 45 sec.)

Second presenter. Always sincere in a feminine way,
Immensely familiar and close,
Shulzhenko’s voice can be heard -
Everyone's favorite artist.
Beloved? Certainly! Once upon a time
In the dugout on a disturbing night
With the melancholy and hope of a soldier
We listened to "The Blue Handkerchief".

Film stills from Shulzhenko – “The Blue Handkerchief” (3 min. 10 sec.)

First presenter. Even before the war, in 1929, the first Soviet jazz group was organized in our country, led by Leonid Osipovich Utesov. The light music performed by Utesov’s jazz lifted the mood, and Utesov’s own style of performance, captivating with sincerity, was extremely popular among the soldiers.

Utesov’s speech sparkled with humor and warmth; it carried memories of peaceful life, love and family happiness, and what they fought for on the battlefield. Who doesn't know his songs from that time? "Odessit-Mishka". This song became the unspoken anthem of the defenders of Odessa.

Film stills from “Leonid Utesov” (9 min. 20 sec.)

Second presenter. The year 1945 arrived. This is a victorious spring, which has become victorious for all humanity. The Soviet soldier liberated the peoples of European countries from the brown plague and, despite the last fierce resistance of the German army, marched victoriously through the streets of the German capital, Berlin.

Ensemble "Resonance" - "Cossacks in Berlin". Video footage of "Berlin '45".

First presenter. Victory!.. It has come!.. The one that we have been waiting for, the one that we so needed for all of us. It began from the Belorussky station, because it was from the Belorussky station in 1941 that the first trains left for the Western Front, because on June 24, 1941, on the platform of the Belorussky station, Alexandrov’s song “Holy War” was heard for the first time, which became the anthem of the unconquered people.

It was at the Belorussky station that the first trains with victorious soldiers who were returning home from the war arrived in 1945. For many years after the war, veterans meet on Belorusskoye to remember their youth scorched by the war, past exploits and fallen comrades.

Film stills from “Belorussky Station” (B. Okudzhava’s song “Belorussky Station” also sounds in unison (3 min. 05 sec.)

Second presenter. Together with the entire people, Astrakhan residents took an active part in hostilities on all fronts of the Great Patriotic War. More than 120 thousand people left Astrakhan for the front, including 88 thousand in the active army. In the first year of the war alone, 5 thousand militias were sent to the front. Along the front roads that you have passed, you can trace the entire path of the Great Patriotic War: Brest, Smolensk, Moscow, Stalingrad, Kursk, Minsk, Warsaw and Berlin!

A wonderful page in the chronicle of the Great Patriotic War was written by the soldiers of the 28th Army, formed in your city and traveling a glorious path from the lower Volga region to Berlin. And it's you too!

Our city preserves the grateful memory of our fellow countrymen in the names of streets, museums of military glory, and on memorial plaques. Today almost 7 thousand veterans live in Astrakhan. They all meet every year like old friends, reminiscing about their youth.

They meet precisely on the days of the great Victory Day, which has become the main holiday of the entire people.

The song “There is a main holiday” (Spanish ensemble “Hobby”), video footage of veterans’ meetings on the monitors.

The text is about today, about how Russia will become a great power, about the beautiful Astrakhan land. The text is accompanied by video footage from the film “With Hope and Faith in the Future.”

The presenters represent the artistic group. There's a performance going on.

The presenters congratulate the veterans on Victory Day. The final words are spoken.

The brass band of the Department of Culture and soloist Boris Vanyushkin perform the song “Victory Day”).

This material is called “Scenario for a rally dedicated to the memory of soldiers who died in the line of military duty.” This script was developed on the eve of Victory Day and was intended to be held at the monument to fallen soldiers.

Download:


Preview:

Scenario of a rally dedicated to soldiers who died in the line of military duty

Compiled by a teacher of Russian language and literature

MBOU Secondary School No. 4 Medvedeva Lyubov Ivanovna

We dedicate our rally to the memory of the fallen, to the memory of the eternally young soldiers and officers who died in the performance of military duty...

Where does memory begin? - from birch trees?
From river sand? From the rain on the road?
And if - from murder? And if - from tears?
What if it was an air raid?

And if from a screeching saw in the clouds,
From adults, stretched out in the dust!
And if from childish knowledge about that -
How the living becomes dead!

And at five, and at fifteen, and twenty-five years old
Memory begins with war.
Here in this country
Where there are no people who don’t remember,
Let's try to imagine it...

Today we want to remember those who defended our Motherland during the Great Patriotic War and those who honestly fulfilled their military duty to it in our seemingly peaceful time.

The pages of the history of our Motherland are filled with courage, and the Great Patriotic War became the highest peak of this courage.

There are still people alive who taught this lesson to all of humanity.

You can also look at their faces, into their eyes, hear their stories about those times...

Look at the living, they have faced death,
And to this day they sometimes dream of death.
They are sad, they mourn at night
About those friends who sleep in damp ground.

Sometimes we do not realize that we live in the same time and on the same land with heroes who give everything to their homeland and do not demand anything in return.

We must do everything so that our children and our grandchildren remember their feat.

Age-old wisdom says: a man must build a house, plant a tree, raise a son. Many of them did not have time and will never have time to do this.

But their feat is worth a lifetime and eternal memory in our hearts.

Forty-one! June.
A year and a month of national struggle.
Even the dust of time
This date cannot be delayed.
The country was rising
And she went to the front in company
Red stars
Carrying away banners on canvases.

Forty-second! To Leningrad
Circumference on three sides
Hitler marched with the strength of 40 divisions.
Bombed. He brought the artillery closer,
But didn't shake even a micron
Didn't pause for a moment
He is the heartbeat of Leningrad.
And seeing this, the enraged enemy,
Planning to take the city by raid,
Seemingly proven strategists
He called for help: Frost and Darkness.
And they came ready for victories,
And the third, Hunger, followed them.


Forty-third!
In the damp steppe under a dig,
Where we broke boundaries
Where were the long trenches?
Ditches, barriers, dugouts.
There, at deserted crossroads,
So that the country remembers them,
On the stars, on plywood boards
We wrote the names.

Forty-four!
There's still war, but we stubbornly believe
Whatever the day, we will drink the pain to the dregs.
The wide world will open its doors to us again,
With the new dawn there will be silence.

Forty-fifth!
There was still mute darkness,
The grass was crying in the fog.
Ninth day of Big May
Already came into his own.
All over the country from edge to edge
There is no city like this, no village,
Wherever Victory comes in May
The great ninth.
Someone sang and someone cried,
And someone slept in the damp ground...

The war lasted 4 years – that’s 1418 days and nights! 34 thousand hours and 20 million dead people! 20 million, just imagine - if a minute of silence is declared for each of the 20 million in the country, the country will be silent... for 32 years!

Let's all be silent for a minute,

Let us remember with pain those who did not return,

Who tripped over a machine gun at full height,

Going on the attack through fire and smoke.

Let's all be silent for a minute,

Let the tears come to your eyelashes,

Frontline soldiers still dream of war

And to those whom we cannot resurrect in any way,

Let's all be silent for a minute.

We owe them our lives in the world -

And we ourselves and even our children.

Their feat is not forgotten, we will not repeat it.

Let's all be silent for a minute.

A minute of silence is announced.

(minute of silence)

Did you bequeath to us to die,
Homeland?
Life promised, love promised,
Motherland!
Are children born for death?
Homeland?
Did you really want us to die?
Homeland?


The flame hit the sky - do you remember
Homeland?
She said quietly: “Get up to help...” -
Homeland.
Nobody asked you for fame,
Homeland.
Everyone just had a choice: me or
Homeland.


The best and most expensive -
Homeland.
Your grief is our grief,
Homeland.
Your truth is our truth,
Homeland. Your glory is our glory,
Motherland!

Burn, candle, burn, don’t go out,
Be an everlasting pain.
Let them stand in your flame,
Whose path was cut short?


Who from the calm peaceful days
Stepped into hell on earth
And who carried to the fatal line
Rank: soldier.


Who's a little over eighteen
Learned the price of loss
Who gave their life for Russia,
Opened the door to immortality.


Burn, candle, don’t go out,
Don't let the darkness come in
Don't let the living forget all those
Those killed in the war!

Don't forget the evil of the war years.
Do not elevate authenticity into myths.
For four years I followed the soldiers
Everyday life takes bloody steps.


Don't say big words
To those who have been devoted to the oath since youth.
The high rumor will not die out
About those over whom Victory bows.


Don't take us back to the old days,
Don't unwittingly reopen old wounds.
Honor the fallen heroes. And alive...
Filial fidelity is enough for the living.

The war has passed, the suffering has passed.
But pain calls to people:
Let's never people
Let's not forget about this.

Let in everything that life is full of,
In everything that is dear to the heart,
We will be given a reminder
About what happened in the world!

Our people know well the value of peace and peaceful life.


Peace is a morning full of light and hope.


The world is blooming gardens and earing fields.


The world is a school bell, it is a school with sunshine in its windows.


It's good to wake up and know that you have a wonderful day ahead, that nothing threatens you, and that all your dreams will come true. It's good to be happy!

Volkovets Elena
Summary of the event for May 9 “They are not declared a minute of silence” in the 2nd grade GPA

Target: show the special significance of the relationship between animals and humans in wartime

Tasks:

1. Tell students about the role of animals in war;

2. Expand children’s knowledge about those animals that helped soldiers during the Great Patriotic War.

3. Fostering love for the Motherland, for nature, and a humane attitude towards animals.

4. Fostering a sense of pride in the victory of the Russian people in the Great Patriotic War.

Lesson slideshow.

Teacher: Hello guys! Tell me, please, what memorable anniversary will our entire country celebrate this year at the beginning of May?

Teacher: Yes, this year we will celebrate the 71st anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War!

Teacher: Years go by, life changes, but time is unable to erase the great date from our memory - May 9, 1945. This day is celebrated in every family as a great holiday - Victory Day in the Great Patriotic War.

On this day we remember the dead and the living, soldiers and civilians - everyone thanks to whom victory was won in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. Wartime events are not forgotten - they are alive in the memories of veterans. Today’s lesson closely resonates with this topic, and what exactly we will talk about today, we will find out after deciphering letters from the front.

Before you start, listen to the message prompt.

Child: During the difficult years, many fought alongside the soldiers at the front. But there were also those who were not given orders, they did not receive titles. They performed feats without knowing it. They simply did what they were taught - and died, like everyone else. But by dying, they saved thousands of lives.

(children work in groups, as a result a generalization is made: animals and birds)

Slide 2: animals and birds.

Teacher: Guys, what animal helpers of war do you know?

Teacher: Well done! Named correctly. The most active warriors during the Second World War were dogs.

Child: It’s not for nothing that we respect dogs:

The dog at the front was a nurse,

Signalman, sapper. Sometimes dogs

They rushed at the tanks during the attack.

Yes, it worked out like that in the war,

That “tigers” and “panthers” were afraid of dogs.

Teacher: Guys, who did the dogs serve at the front?

Slide 3

The dogs were:

1. Scouts

2. Orderlies

3. Sappers and miners

4. Sabotage

5. Riding

6. Signalmen

We learn how it was from a small film.

Teacher: Horses also became good helpers during the war years. Slide 5.

Student....And their hooves knock on the planet

Where there are wars there is a thunderstorm.

How many poor people were killed?

Their human eyes are crying...

The horses tried their best.

They took the heroes out of the attacks -

So that the heroes thunder in songs,

Just don't sing about horses...

Teacher: Despite the fact that World War II was called the war of engines, cavalry played an important role in it. The cavalry always takes the shortest route, through ravines and swamps, crossing rivers and seeping through forest thickets. Fast and tireless, entire partisan formations sometimes passed unnoticed, a few meters from the Nazis. During the war, horses were used to transport the wounded and dead; horses were irreplaceable.

When there were not enough faithful horse helpers, other animals came to the rescue:

Slide 6.

1. Camels: a hardy animal could transport goods and people in hot weather in warm regions of the country. Thus replacing the horse.

2. Reindeer: deer helped the people of the northern region to do the work of a horse in severe frosts due to their endurance.

3. Moose: Moving in the forest, the prints of the horse's shoes were clearly visible in the forest. Then the idea of ​​using moose for this purpose came up. The moose tracks did not raise suspicions. Elk can feed on thin tree branches, and elk milk has healing properties. A special group was created to prepare the moose. The moose were driven around and trained to shoot.

4. Donkeys: Like others, they served as a means of transportation.

Slide 7.

Cats also took part in the war. The most famous were: Cat Simon (served bravely and steadfastly on the ship and strengthened the spirit of the sailors despite any difficulties) and Cat Maxim (who fed the whole family throughout the war: a sick mother and 4 small children, bringing not mice in his teeth, but meat and bread , Kosha Faith (she hid with her baby in the basement of a house that had collapsed from bombs and called for help for 3 days until they were found), etc.

Teacher: Anxiety, raised fur, frightened cries of cats, or as they were also called furry “sensers,” helped people determine the approaching danger of bombing.

During the war, cats saved the besieged city of Leningrad from attacks by hungry rodents. The train with the “meowing division,” as the St. Petersburg residents called these cats, saved the already meager food supplies from the rats.

The intelligence and courage of cats amazed people.

So, during the Great Patriotic War, I, a Soviet fighter pilot, was shot down by enemies in an air battle. The plane caught fire, I was injured, but I managed to bail out. However, I landed in territory captured by the Nazis. Somehow, with the last of his strength, he made it to the old windmill, climbed up the shabby steps inside and lost consciousness. And when I woke up, I saw some green moving dots in the darkness. At first I thought it was from weakness, but, looking closer, I realized it was cats. I spent two days in the mill among the cats, periodically losing consciousness. And suddenly I heard voices. I was happy, I thought they were villagers. However, when the voices got closer, I realized: the Germans were coming. Cold sweat appeared on his forehead. Hiding, through the gap between the boards, I watched the Germans. The brave sergeant major stepped onto the creaky steps and hit the door with his fist. And then a wild cat scream shook the air, forcing the fascist to back away. But that was not all! The leader of the cats, a black cat, instantly jumped on the German’s head and began tearing his face with its claws. The Germans left. And the next day the Soviet partisans came, made a stretcher, and laid me on it. And when they got ready to leave, at my request, they left small pieces of lard for the cats: after all, they, like the partisans, were rescuers.

Birds occupy a special place in war. Slide 8.

Pigeons: pigeon mail turned out to be effective where technology often failed; wired communications operated only at a distance of 3 km, radio – 5 km. Pigeons were also used to destroy enemy targets.

Poultry: provided food for people and gave signals when danger was approaching.

But not only pigeons saved people in war. During the war, guillemots saved the wounded and hungry residents of Murmansk.

Soldier (high school student or adult in disguise): I remember when the Nazis were finally convinced that they couldn’t take the city, they decided to burn it down. Thousands of cassettes with incendiary bombs flew onto wooden houses, and thousands of land mines fell on those who were trying to put out the fires. The situation in Murmansk, already difficult, became threatening. The city experienced enormous difficulties, especially with food. Everything was put at the service of the front. Fishermen went out to sea and caught fish under fire from fascist planes. And the ornithologist Belopolsky organized the “egg operation” of the Sixth Special Division.

In an unnamed bay on Novaya Zemlya, where hundred-meter cliffs rose, millions of guillemots laid eggs in the territory of their so-called bird colonies. They were collected by fishermen under the leadership of Belopolsky with a heartfelt apology to the birds. This is not an easy matter. And the Germans discovered the fishermen and began to fire, but Murmansk hospitals received over a million murre eggs, delivered on the trawlers “Kambala”, “Iskatel” and “Osetra”.

There were also unusual animal soldiers during the war. For example: Slide 9

Dolphins: Dolphins, having excellent ultrasonic hearing, helped find mines under water and neutralized enemy spies - scuba divers.

Slide 10: Seals: by sacrificing themselves, these animals shared their meat and fat with dying people, thereby saving entire cities: Arkhangelsk and Leningrad.

Slide 11: I recommend watching the video “Wojtek” about another unusual war warrior.

Teacher: The guys truly performed many feats, animals during the war and they will forever remain in the memory of people. Their memory is perpetuated.

Slide 12: dog monument

Slide 13: Monument to cats

Slide 14: Monument to camels and pigeons

Slide 15: Monument to deer and seals

Slide 16: monuments in other countries of the world

Slide 17: Thank you

Teacher: 71 years have passed since the end of the Great Patriotic War. Much has changed since then, but you and I must forever leave in our memory the feat that the people accomplished for the sake of peace on earth. We must remember those who died, giving us the opportunity to see clear skies above our heads. But we also need to remember a person’s good friends who helped him on the difficult path to victory. Guys, let's appreciate peace!

Student 1. Peace is the best word in the world,

Adults and children strive for peace,

Birds, trees, flowers on the planet.

Peace is the most important word in the world.

Student 2:

How many words have been said?

Maybe someone's muse is tired

Talk about war

And disturb soldiers' dreams.

It just seems to me

Little has been written to offend

About dogs - fighters,

Those who protected us during the war!

Student 3:

Nicknames have faded into memory

And now I can’t even remember my face,

We, who came later,

We don't know anything at all.

Student 4:

Only a gray-haired veteran

He also remembers the dog sled,

Brought to the medical battalion

From the battlefield once it!

Bundles of mines and grenades

The dogs carried them under the tanks.

Defending the country

And the soldier from impending trouble.

After the fight the fighters

Dog remains were buried.

Just not there now

No hill, no cross, no star!

And when on a May day

We come to the graves of saints,

And keeping the sacred

We stand in silence for a minute,

Then let this tribute

And fire and flowers of the field

Will be a bright memory

It will be a modest reward for them too!

Guys, remember all this and never offend our little brothers!



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