Gyulboor Davydova
Russian winegrower From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Russian winegrower From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gyulboor Shaulovna Davydova (Russian: Гюльбоо́р Шау́ловна Давы́дова; March 8, 1892 – April 9, 1983) was a Soviet winegrower of Mountain Jewish descent. She was a manager of the collective farm named after Kaganovich in the Dagestan ASSR, the Soviet Union. She was an awardee of the Hero of Socialist Labor (1949).
Gyulboor Davydova | |
---|---|
Born | Gyulboor Shaulovna Davydova March 8, 1892 |
Died | April 9, 1983 91) | (aged
Nationality | Russian Empire , Soviet Union |
Occupation | Winegrower |
Awards |
Gyulboor Davydova was born on March 8, 1892, in the Mountain Jewish village of Khoshmenzil, Dagestan Oblast, Russian Empire, in a peasant family. Since childhood, she worked in the fields and helped her parents. After the death of her husband, she was left with two little children.[1]
In 1928, when the collective farm “New Life” was formed in the village, Gyulboor Davydova was not accepted into it, believing that women could not work on an equal basis with men. Then she gathered 14 widowed farmworkers and organized a women's collective farm, to which women named it “Red Farmwoman”, and Gyulboor Davydova was elected chairwoman. The women's collective farm completed the spring sowing, prepared the ground for melon crops, and their yield turned out to be higher than in the men's agricultural farm. Subsequently, both of these collective farms merged into one large farm.[1]
Two of Davydova's sons, David and Ruvin, died in the Great Patriotic War.[1][2]
On July 27, 1949, for obtaining high grape yields in 1948, the title of Hero of Socialist Labor was awarded to her by the decree of Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, the highest body of state authority in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Gyulboor Davydova was only Mountain Jewish woman who was awarded such a high award.[1]
Gyulboor Davydova was repeatedly elected as a deputy of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the Dagestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, as well as a deputy of the local Council of People's Deputies.[2]
Davydova died on April 9, 1983, and was buried at the Jewish cemetery in Derbent.[2]
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