Oleg Ozerov was born on June 17, 1922 in Spassk, Ryazan Oblast. After finishing secondary school in June 1940, he was called up to serve in the Red Army, in the border guards, and was sent to the Soviet Union’s western border where he completed an intensive artillery institute training course.
He was stationed near Peremysl when war broke out on June 22, 1941. At the end of July he suffered shell shock and was taken prisoner. He then went through a number of Nazi concentration camps and work camps, the last of which was located in France near Bordeaux.
With the help of French communists, Oleg Ozerov escaped and fought with a partisan detachment in Brittany (the Dombrovsky 13th International Brigade). He returned to his homeland at the end of 1945.
After leaving the army, he graduated from the Minsk Polytechnic Institute, worked at a construction firm, Minmontazhspetsstroi, and was involved in building factories and bringing gas to Moscow Oblast. He was manager of a trust, deputy minister, and director of the State Technical Scientific Research Institute.
In 1985, he became a deputy rector of the Moscow Transport Institute, where he also taught. He still works there today as head of the labour protection department.
Oleg Ozerov is head of Combatants Volontaires, an interregional association of veterans of the French Resistance. He has been decorated with the French Order of Merit, the Croix de Guerre with swords, the Croix de Guerre, the Cross of the Volunteer Combatant and the Resistance Medal.