Albuquerque Journal

Grunya Moiseevna Khazanskay­a

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Grunya Moiseevna Khazanskay­a, 97, resident of Albuquerqu­e, passed away peacefully in her sleep on February 21, 2018, at Manzano del Sol Home Care. She was born on July 26, 1920, in Gorodok, a small town of Vitebsk province in Belorussia (Soviet Socialist Republic, now Republic of Belorus) with a large Jewish population, to Doba Piratinska­ya Khazanskay­a and Moisei Khazansky, a shoemaker. Grunya was the youngest of four children. The family moved to Ekaterinbu­rg, the major city of the Urals region, in 1924, the same year as it was renamed Sverdlovsk and soon to become a central city in Stalin’s plans for industrial­ization of the early USSR (1928-32). The city was perceived as a safer place for Jewish people and also provided broader new opportunit­ies. Her relatives who remained in Belorussia perished in the mass killing of 2,000 Jews from Gorodok during the German Nazi occupation and were buried in a communal grave now preserved by the Jewish community. Grunya finished high school in Sverdlovsk and in 1937 was admitted in the Uralskii Politechni­cheskii Institut in the Department of Electrical Engineerin­g. She graduated as an engineer in 1942 and began her career at the new hydro-electric power station in SUGRES, near Sverdlovsk, where she met Afanasy Spiridonov­ich Grigoriev, a fellow engineer, and they married in 1943. Daughter Tatiana was born in 1945 and son Mikhail in 1949. After transfers to various posts in the Urals, the family returned to Sverdlovsk in 1961 when Afanasy rose to a high post in the Soviet Ministry of Energy. Grunya continued her career as the rare woman in the field of electrical engineerin­g at the Research Energy Institute there. In 1966 with new profession­al opportunit­ies, they moved to Moscow. After her daughter Tania married and immigrated to the US in 1983, Grunya visited Albuquerqu­e to help care for her two small granddaugh­ters, and she herself came to live here permanentl­y in 1992. She moved to David Spector Shalom House in 1993, where she made new friends among the small Russian speaking community, enjoying life in an apartment of her own with a view of the Sandia Mountains, and became an American citizen in 1999. She renewed her Jewish faith, unfeasible in the Soviet Union, joined nearby Congregati­on Albert, and was happy at last to celebrate Jewish holidays freely. A vivacious and vigorous woman, her first priorities were always the support and wellbeing of her family. She was a loving and caring mother and grandmothe­r and will be deeply missed by all. She was preceded in death by husband, Afanasy S. Grigoriev. She is survived by daughter, Tania Lindsey and husband Byron; son, Mikhail A. Grigoriev and wife Elena; granddaugh­ters, Mariana Grigoriev and Eugenia Lindsey Gonzales and husband David, all of Albuquerqu­e, and Daria Lindsey of San Francisco CA; grandsons, Denis Grigoriev and wife Natalia, of St. Petersburg, Russia, Mikhail M. Grigoriev and wife Stacia, of Los Angeles CA, Grigory M. Grigoriev, of Erfurt, Germany; great-grandchild­ren Ekaterina and Elizaveta Grigoriev of St. Petersburg, Russia, and Aleksei Gonzales of Albuquerqu­e; niece, Lyudmila Shenker of Smolensk, Russia; and nephews, David (Dodik) Khazansky of Toronto, Canada, and Boris Gudkov of Kiev, Ukraine. Grunya Moiseevna was buried on February 23, 2018 at Sunset Memorial Park, and the family celebrated her long and colorful life with a Russian style "pominki" the following day. To view informatio­n or leave a condolence, please visit

www.danielsfun­eral.com

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 ??  ?? WYOMING CHAPEL 7601 Wyoming Blvd., NE (505) 821-0010 www.danielsfun­eral.com
WYOMING CHAPEL 7601 Wyoming Blvd., NE (505) 821-0010 www.danielsfun­eral.com

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