Veniamin Emmanuilovich Dymshits (or alternatively Benjamin Dymshitz; February 15, 1910[1][2] – May 23, 1993)[1] was a Soviet state and party leader. Hero of Socialist Labor.
Since 1928, a worker at the enterprises of Moscow;
1929–1931 – student of the Moscow Autogenous Welding Institute, later transformed into the Welding Department of the Moscow Higher Technical School Named After Nikolai Bauman;[9]
Since 1931, work manager, engineer, production manager, deputy work manager of the Kuznetskstroy Welding Office;
Since 1932 – Director of the Ural Regional Welding Office;
Since 1933, he was the Head of the Department of Engineering Structures for Construction at Azovstal in Mariupol;
Since 1934, he studied in absentia at the Mechanical Faculty of the Donetsk Institute of Business Executives (did not graduate);
Since 1937 – Director of a Metalwork Plant at the construction site of the Azovstal Metallurgical Plant, Head of Construction at the Krivoy Rog Metallurgical Plant;
In 1939–1946, he was the manager of the Magnitostroy Trust. It was during the Great Patriotic War that Dymshits's high human dignity and his talent as a leader were clearly revealed: he had a difficult task – to lead the creation of an outpost of the domestic industry in the Urals. In record time, 42 complex objects were built under his leadership;
From April 25, 1962, to July 17, 1962 – First Deputy Chairman of the State Planning Committee of the Soviet Union – Minister of the Soviet Union;
Since July 17, 1962, Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union, at the same time Chairman of the State Planning Committee of the Soviet Union (July – November 1962);
Chairman of the Council of the National Economy of the Soviet Union (1962–1965);
On March 4, 1970, Veniamin Dymshits was the main figure at a press conference of Jewish citizens of the Soviet Union, where he defended Soviet policy towards Jews and was against the policy of the State of Israel.
Veniamin Dymshits made a significant contribution to the foundation of the industrialization of the Soviet Union, its transformation into a powerful state. Here are some of the construction projects in which he participated and which he headed: Azovstal, Kuznetsk, Krivoy Rog, Magnitogorsk, Zaporozhye, Bhilai (India) Metallurgical Plants, lead industry facilities and many others.
Since December 20, 1985, he has been a personal pensioner of union significance.
He died on May 23, 1993. He was buried in Moscow at the Novodevichy Cemetery (Plot No. 10).
Stalin Prize of the Second Degree (1946) – for the development of new methods of high–speed construction and installation of blast furnaces, carried out at the Chusovsky and Magnitogorsk Metallurgical Plants;
Stalin Prize of the Third Degree (1950) – for the development and implementation of technological rules in housing and industrial construction.
^Deputies of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union. 9th Convocation. Published by the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union – Moscow, 1974 – 550 Pages
Boris Shmyrov. Dymshits Veniamin Emmanuilovich. Stages of a Long Journey – Chelyabinsk: ABRIS, 2015 – 112 Pages. (By Fate They Are Connected with the Urals). ISBN978-5-91744-113-9