Nikolai Matveevich Gribachev (Russian: Николай Матвеевич Грибачёв; 19 December 1910 – 10 March 1992) was a Soviet writer and politician.
In 1941, he volunteered for the army again after the German invasion and was commander of the riflemen of a platoon of a sapper battalion.
From 1943, he was a special correspondent of the newspaper "Boevoi Tovarish" ("Comrade in Combat"), where his poem "Rosiya" ("Russia") was first published.
Gribachev, according to most of his contemporaries primarily as an official party author who consciously put his poetry at the service of the government.
[4] However, he sometimes maintained an independent position and helped disgraced writers (for example, Aleksei Adzhubei), sought to award prizes to worthy people.