Марат said:
Good day! Let's try to look at the information arrays that we have. Maybe we will find something.
Hello!
Many thanks to you, Marat, for coming to the rescue when you give up and there is a feeling of guilt in front of the fallen soldier!
I sent an official request about the son of a fighter - Sheimis Dmitry Mikhailovich 1933g. in the TsAMO of Podolsk, with the hope of finding at least information about his service in the Soviet army (conscription in 1952), where he served, when and where he was discharged, maybe he could find the name of the military commissariat where he was assigned upon returning from the army.
But alas ....
This is what they sent from TsAMO according to D. Sheimis
Those. obtained from their answer. what if D. Sheimis himself I turned to them for this information, then the answer would be positive for him (they have documentary information about the service), and I was "kicked" with this letter to the recruiting office of his call in Yekaterinburg.
Without losing hope, I moved forward, looking for the trail of Dmitry Sheimis. I contacted the Military Commissariat of the Sverdlovsk Region to find his call in 1952 and attachment as a person liable for military service to the regional RVC for demobilization.
Then I requested the State Archive of Administrative Bodies of the Sverdlovsk Region, where they informed me that he was called up on November 15, 1952. Kuibyshevsky RVK Sverdlovsk, and sent to the military unit 10142.
After this answer, she turned to the Ordzhonikidze (formerly Kuybyshevsky) military commissariat, but there is no information about the further fate of D. Sheimis. I was not found and advised to contact the TsAMO.
Here is such an enchanted circle for finding the son of the deceased defender of Leningrad I did. The registry office would help us a lot, but which one?
During my search for this story, a lot of thoughts arose in my head about this:
possible death during military service, demobilization to another city or region of the former USSR, because no one was waiting for him at home, he was an orphan and brought up in an orphanage.
This story haunts me .....
Perhaps the descendants of the dead hero of the Second World War live somewhere!
Sincerely, Elena Zhilinskaya, Moscow