Mamlakat Nakhangova
Mamlakat Akberdyevna Nakhangova (Tajik: Мамлакат Оқбердиевна Наҳангова, Russian: Мамлака́т Акбердыевна Наха́нгова; 1924 — 2003) was a Soviet cotton picker,[1] member of the Stakhanovite movement,[2] the youngest and first among the pioneers knights of the highest order of the USSR, the Order of Lenin (1935).[3]
During the World War II she participated in London at a peace conference.[4]
In adult life Nakhangova was a Soviet philologist, candidate of philological sciences; and Associate Professor of the Tajik State Pedagogical University. In 1970-1977 she was the head of the department of foreign languages of the medical institute in Dushanbe.[5][6]
Mamlakat Nakhangova became the heroine of the first poem by Mirzo Tursunzoda The Sun of the Country.[7][8]
She was married, and had two children, a daughter named Roxana and a son named Alisher.[9][10]
References[]
- ^ Борис Игнатович. Сталин и Мамлакат // club.foto.ru
- ^ Mobilizing Soviet Peasants: Heroines and Heroes of Stalin's Fields
- ^ Орден Ленина. История учреждения, эволюция и разновидности
- ^ Сто сорок бесед с Молотовым
- ^ Рассказ o...
- ^ Четвёртая высота
- ^ "Мирзо Турсунзаде. Биография". Archived from the original on 2017-01-14. Retrieved 2019-04-24.
- ^ Сталин и девочки на фотографиях: сколько было девочек
- ^ Мамлакат — значит страна
- ^ Советские герои: как сложилась судьба таджикской пионерки Мамлакат Наханговой
External links[]
- 1924 births
- 2003 deaths
- Recipients of the Order of Lenin
- Propaganda in the Soviet Union
- Soviet philologists
- 20th-century philologists
- Tajikistani philologists
- Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic people