Pyotr Gavrilov was an ethnic
Kryashen and a major in command of the 44th Motor Rifle Regiment of the
42nd Rifle Division. On 23 July 1941, he was taken captive by the Germans after holding out for 31 days and was held captive until his release after the end of the war in May 1945. After his release from captivity, he was restored to the army in the same rank, but his party membership was not restored due to the loss of his membership card and stay in captivity. He was reassigned as the chief of camp for
Japanese prisoners of war in
Siberia in 1946–1947. Afterwards, he moved to
Krasnodar. In 1956, he was reunited with his first wife and adopted son, whom he had not seen since the first day of the war. After Sergey Smirnov's book
The Brest Fortress («Брестская крепость») was published in 1956, Gavrilov's party membership was reinstated. By a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated January 3, 1957, Pyotr Mikhailovich Gavrilov was awarded the title of
Hero of the Soviet Union and the
Order of Lenin. Subsequently, Gavrilov made a number of trips around the USSR and was actively involved in social work. Delegations, filmmakers and journalists began visiting him. Gavrilov was given a three-room apartment in a new building. From 1968 until the end of his life, he lived in Krasnodar at house 103 on Svetlaya Street (in 1980 it was renamed Gavrilova Street). He died in Krasnodar on January 26, 1979. He was buried with military honors at the Brest garrison memorial cemetery next to his comrades in arms, according to his will.
Memory • Streets in Kazan, Brest, Krasnodar, Irkutsk and Pestretsy are named after Gavrilov. • A collective farm in his native village of Alvidino was also named after him. • A peak in the Central
Tien Shan is named after P. M. Gavrilov. • A museum has been opened in Alvidin, the native village of Pyotr Gavrilov. • The name of P. M. Gavrilov was given to secondary school No. 23 in Brest. One of the exhibitions in the school museum is dedicated to P. M. Gavrilov. ==Notes==