[1][2] She was born in the village of Nizhneye Kazanishche in the family of an officer of the Imperial Russian Army.
[2] Her father died suddenly at the age of 30, leaving a widow Aruv Azhay, a daughter Izumrud, a son Haji and a six month old Tatu.
[7] In these hundreds of years old letters, against the backdrop of revolution and civil war, among the calls to fight to the bitter end, a tragic love story unfolds.
[8] During the Russian Civil War Bulach was a supporter of the Red Army and participated in the establishment of the Dagestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.
In 1920-1921 she was elected a member of the Presidium of the Youth Council of the East, then she worked as a secretary of the Communist Party in Khasavyurt and Makhachkala.
[6] She was released in 1946, But freedom did not last long: in 1948 she was again arrested on charges of espionage and transported to the Krasnoyarsk, then deported to the city of Yeniseisk.