Inside The Terror: Beslan's School No. 1, 15 Years After The Hostage Crisis

Most of the hostages spent the first two days of their 52 hours in captivity in the school’s gymnasium. It is now a memorial.

School No. 1 taught students between the ages of 6 and 17. Its official ceremony to start the school year began at 9 a.m. on September 1, 2004. Within several minutes, armed men in camouflage had burst into the school’s courtyard.

The gymnasium of School No. 1. For 15 years, Beslan residents debated what to do about a planned memorial for the school. “[A]s a result, everything is collapsing,” said schoolteacher Nadezhda Guriyeva.

In memory of the children who died, small toys and water bottles are brought to the school. Both water and food were denied to the hostages, making thirst a stronger fear than gunshots,  recounted Yelena Ganiyeva, the school’s then vice-principal. “Nothing can be scarier than that for a person. My son today is already 24 years old and a water container stands by the side of his bed. “

Doors leading into one of the offices at School No. 1.

Former student Kombalat Bayev, 24, remembers that Vice-Principal Ganiyeva on the first day of the siege, September 1, forbade the children to drink anything. “She said, ‘Take [the liquid] in your mouth, rinse it out, but don’t swallow it because later the thirst will be stronger.’"

The militants started taking the children to use the toilet in the locker room only the next day.  "And there, while the terrorists weren’t there, we managed somehow to drink water out of the tap," Bayev said. "Then, they found out about this and quit letting us go [to the bathroom]. As a result, we went into the school building, just in various offices – the boys into one, the girls into another. "

On September 3, the last day of the crisis, "no one was giving us water.," he said. "We were eating the flowers.“

“Children are the brightest thing on earth!” reads a message on the school walls. Quite young children, who today remember nothing about the terrorist attack, were also among the hostages. “I went with my grandmother and mother to my sister’s first day of school, and was left all alone," said Astimir Kundukhov, who was taken hostage at the age of two.

School No. 1’s assembly hall. After special forces began storming the school, the terrorists moved all the hostages who had not escaped and were still alive into the assembly hall and cafeteria.

A corridor in School No. 1. Writing on the left wall declares "We remember!" and "We grieve." 

School No. 1’s cafeteria, where hostages were kept when Russian special forces started storming the building. History teacher Nadezhda Guriyeva’s son and daughter, Boris and Vera, died during that operation.

The children were taken to a morgue in Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia’s principal town, on September 4 for identification.  They were buried in closed coffins. 

“Verochka was very badly burned. Boris not so much; only half of his body,” remembered Guriyeva. Vera was identified by "the remains of her panties and her ball gown …" she said. "That's all there was." 
 

Susanna Dudiyeva’s son, Zaur, died when special forces stormed the school. She considers them responsible for his death as well as the terrorists. “It’s understood that the terrorists are guilty. They’re not humans,” she said. “I think that the responsibility should be divided, and I think that the head of state should have demanded more of the federal structures, but we didn’t see this.”

Bulldozers came to tear down School No. 1 a few months after the hostages' burial. Mothers of the slain children came to defend the site. 

Later, the boiler room, workshops, and the elementary-school building were dismantled during construction of the memorial complex. 

In their place, construction of a Russian Orthodox church began in 2012. Icon painters promise that all of those killed in School No.1 will be depicted on its walls.
 

In 2014, a domed memorial opened on the site of School No. 1’s gymnasium. A new school was built across the road, but, 15 years later, its name still does not include a number, the usual way of identifying Russian public schools. Whether or not the new building should be called School No.1 is an ongoing debate among Beslan survivors.