Monument to the Belarusian underground worker Fyodor Andreevich Krylovich, who performed a heroic feat in 1943. Under the nose of the German guards, he carried 2 mines to the Osipovichi station clogged with echelons and, working on the tracks under the escort of a German soldier, installed them on a train with fuel. As a result, everything burned down: the entire station with buildings, 5 trains, 5 steam locomotives, dozens of wagons with ammunition, equipment, food, many tanks with fuel and oil, including new German Tiger tanks, which were being transported to the Kursk Bulge. The shells exploded for another day, and a fire burned for a day. The guards of the nearby prisoner of war camp fled from fear, who also fled, most of them to the forest to the partisans. The hero was 27 years old. After the sabotage, he joined a partisan detachment, where he commanded a sabotage group until the end of the occupation. He was repeatedly wounded and concussed. After liberation from the Germans, he was discharged for health reasons. The sabotage caused enormous damage to the Germans and blocked an important station for a long time. He received the award for his services only in 1949. Based on this story, the film The Fate of the saboteur was shot.