Green beret, a dog on a leash, the border locked. On May 28th, Russia celebrates Border Guard Day. It's not just a professional holiday. It's a day of bravery, traditions, and green berets worn with pride. In 2026, the holiday falls on a Thursday. The border won't be closed, but veterans will take to the streets, put on their berets, and hold meetings at memorials. They will remember those who didn't return from the patrol.
The date is not chosen by chance. On May 28, 1918, the Decree of the Council of People's Commissars established the Border Guard Service of the RSFSR. At that time, it was a small service, but it expanded within a year. After the dissolution of the USSR, the holiday was preserved in Russia, as well as in Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan (on different dates).
In 2026, Border Guard Day is celebrated for the 108th time. For a military holiday, that's a solid age.
The first official celebration took place in 1958. That's when the tradition of green berets appeared. They started wearing them instead of red ones, which were worn until 1955.
A border guard is a military personnel who protects the state border on land, water, and in the air. They are part of the FSB of Russia (Border Service). The work is dangerous: smugglers, illegals, spies, armed groups. They serve on the border with 16 countries (the length of the Russian border is 61 thousand km, almost a full equator).
Service conditions are harsh: in the mountains, swamps, tundra, on barren shores. In the rain, heat, snow. Often far from cities. Border guards live on outposts — small garrisons with a house, a tower, a dog. There they serve their conscription (1 year) or a contract.
Symbols: green beret, tunic (light green stripes), the "Excellent Border Guard" badge. Motto: "The border is locked."
Dogs are an important part. They are trained to find drugs, weapons, explosives, and apprehend violators. German shepherds, Belgian Malinois, Labrador retrievers — the best friends of the border guard.
Traditions: on May 28th, veterans put on their berets and gather in parks, fountains, and embankments. In Moscow — in Gorky Park, in Alexander Garden (at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier), at the "Border Guards of the Fatherland" monument on the Yauza Embankment. In St. Petersburg — in Alexander Park, at the Border Guards monument on the Petrograd Embankment.
The program includes laying flowers, military parades, concerts, field kitchens with porridge and tea. In the evening — meetings of comrades-in-arms, stories about service, sometimes swimming in fountains (a tradition of the 1990s, now not allowed everywhere, but still preserved in some places).
In 2026, parades of canine units are expected — with dogs searching for "violators." Border guards also conduct demonstration arrests, show weapons and equipment.
In schools on May 28th — lessons of bravery. Veterans tell children about service, show berets, let them try them on.
The Border Guard Service of Russia is older than 1918. Under Ivan the Terrible, there was a watch service on the southern borders. Under Peter the Great — land militia (border regiments). Under Nicholas I — a separate corps of border guards.
The Great Patriotic War: the border guards of the Brest Fortress were among the first to face the German troops. They fought to the last, even after the fortress was surrounded. 18 border guards were awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union for the first days of the war.
The Soviet-Chinese conflict on the island of Damansky (1969): border guards died defending the island (considered Russian territory). 58 Heroes of the Soviet Union for this conflict, posthumously.
Border guards participated in wars in Afghanistan, Chechnya, Georgia, Syria — guarded borders, ensured passage of columns, searched for sabotage groups.
For veterans, May 28th is a day of meeting with youth. They put on uniforms, orders, medals. They go to parks where their comrades-in-arms usually gathered. They drink "front-line 100 grams" (not always), sing songs under the guitar ("Four Nights Without Sleep," "The Blue Has Spilled," "Birch Tree").
The main point in Moscow is Gorky Park. There, a tent is set up where veterans can drink tea, have a snack, share news. In 2026, it is planned to involve the canine service — showing dogs.
In St. Petersburg — Alexander Park near the Peter and Paul Fortress. Veterans come with families, with grandchildren. Children look at badges with interest and ask: "Did you kill anyone?" It's not necessary to answer.
In regions — their own places. In Yekaterinburg — Mayakovsky Park, in Novosibirsk — the Ob Embankment, in Vladivostok — the Falcon's Nest Hill.
In recent years, young contract border guards and even conscripts, who were lucky to be discharged on May 28th, have joined the veterans.
If your husband, father, brother, or neighbor is a border guard (or a veteran), give him flowers (gladioli, gladioli), a souvenir with symbolism (beret, mug, badge), a book about border guards, a thermos (a reminder of service). Do not give knives and weapons — it's bad taste (he was in the army, enough).
Prose greeting: "Happy Border Guard Day! I wish the border to always be locked, and you to be healthy and vigorous. Thank you for your service!"
If you pass by a veteran in a beret, say: "Happy holiday! Thank you for your service." He will be happy. Children can give veterans drawings — it's very touching.
May 28th is not a day off. But on this day, often actions that require coordination are held (rallies, marches). Veterans usually gather spontaneously, but it's allowed in parks. However, swimming in fountains is officially prohibited (asphalt gets damaged, water gets dirty). But some still jump in — by tradition. The police usually do not fine, but warn.
Important: on Border Guard Day, it is not advisable to drink in public places — it's an administrative offense (fine up to 3000 rubles). It's better to organize barbecues in nature or meet in cafes.
In Belarus, May 28th is also a holiday, traditions are similar. In Ukraine — Border Guard Day on April 30th. In Kazakhstan — August 18th (the day of the establishment of the border service). In the USA — there is no separate holiday for border guards, there is Customs Day (January 26th). In Germany — May 8th (the day of the border police).
But the Russian Border Guard Day is the most massive and colorful. Only here do veterans swim in fountains and march with dogs.
In 2026, border guards use drones, thermal imagers, electronic surveillance systems. Fewer people on the border, more technology. But dogs are irreplaceable: their sense of smell and loyalty are better than any electronics.
The personnel issue: more people want to serve on the border than in the infantry. Romance, nature, the importance of the mission. But the salary of contract soldiers is low (30-50 thousand rubles), so there is a high turnover. Veterans demand raises.
In 2026, it is likely that new types of weapons and drones for the border will be announced. But the main thing is not weapons, but people. Who will put on green berets and smile on May 28th.
Border Guard Day is not the most noisy holiday. But for those who served on the outpost, it's a day of life. A day when they feel young, strong, and needed again. Let's respect them. Don't throw trash in fountains, but come and say thank you. For the fact that we can sleep peacefully. The border is locked.
Happy Border Guard Day, green berets.
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