Short skits for Victory Day on May 9 for children
As you know, there is more than one military holiday in our calendar, there are several of them: May 9, February 23, December 27, etc. Short skits for Victory Day can be used for children's events in honor of each of them. In kindergarten they are more primitive, without long monologues and complex semantic content; in elementary school - more meaningful and even fun; in high school - serious, lyrical and sometimes tragic. Boys in such dramatizations can play the roles of recruits, ground forces soldiers, pilots, commanders, and superiors. Girls are more suited to the roles of mothers, wives, nurses, etc. The main thing is that scenes for May 9 and other military holidays should be short, aesthetically pleasing and understandable for children.
A short children's skit for Victory Day “Jokes of army life”
The Colonel lined up the soldiers and addresses them.
Colonel . Comrade soldiers! Autumn has arrived, which means it's time to change colors. Now half of you are running to the trees and untying the green leaves from them. And the rest tie yellow leaves to the trees. All clear? The captain is appointed responsible for this event!
The captain waited for the colonel to leave. Addresses the soldiers:
Captain. Here the colonel gives it, he got hit hard on the head yesterday during the exercises - untie and tie the leaves!? Have you lost your mind, or what? Listen to my command! The colonel's order is canceled, we all go to the warehouse, get brushes and yellow paint and repaint the leaves! All clear!
Sketch “At a halt” about soldiers on Victory Day on May 9 in the House of Culture
Even small children know that war means suffering, grief and thousands of deaths. What can we say about adults? Gathering annually on May 9 at the Palace of Culture, military personnel, veterans and ordinary civilians recapture the terrible events of war and bitterly swallow tears for their fallen grandfathers and great-grandfathers. And senior schoolchildren and students demonstrate from the red stage, hung with the legendary victory symbols, the sketch “At a Rest” about soldiers on Victory Day on May 9 in the House of Culture. Along with welcoming words for veterans, themed songs and dances, and a speech by the city mayor, military performances look even more touching and heartwarming.
A funeral was flying from the front for a young boy, And he was lying alive in a crater... Oh, how merciless the war is!
And tanks passed by... Someone else's speech... and he lay there, And remembered his sister and mother, He lay there and died quietly.
His chest was pierced right through, And the blood flowed into the black snow, And he greeted his last dawn with blue eyes.
No, he didn’t cry, he smiled, And he remembered his home, And overcoming the pain, he stood up, And, lifting the machine gun with difficulty,
He splashed lead into the contorted faces of the Hot One, bringing this one minute closer to the end of the merciless War.
A funeral was flying from the front, The postman was already knocking, The soldier, his eyes closed in the funnel, was a moment ahead of her.