Voru county is situated in southern Estonia with Voru town as its capital. The town was founded in 1784 by the order of Russian Empress Katherine II in the times when Estonia was still a part of the Russian Empire. The town is a relatively small one with the population of about 16 thousand people. Voru Russian Gumnaasium is the only Russian school in the county and it stands in the very heart of the town.
1 October 1945 is thought to be the school birthday which started as a basic school in a two-storey wooden building. There were only 7 classrooms and 131 students in it at that time. In course of time the number of students increased and reached 607 students and the school was granted a status of Secondary School in 1969. Then came 1991 year, the year of the collapse of the Soviet Union and the restoration of independent Republic of Estonia. Due to the withdrawal of Soviet troops and their families from Estonia , the number of the students in the school sharply decreased and since then this process has been continuing. At present there are only 68 students and 17 staff members in the school.
During 1945 - 1995 years the school was headed by 16 principals. The present headmistress Helle Rebane has been efficiently leading the school since 1995. The teachers’s staff are well – educated, experienced, enthusiastic and dedicated professionals doing their best to create a home-like atmosphere of trust and cooperation in the school.
The school itself is proud of its former students a lot of whom are gold and silver medalists awarded for their studying. Our schoolleavers are now working in different fields of activities in Estonia and abroad, many of them are holders of college and university degrees.
In spite of a diminished number of students the atmosphere and the spirit of mutual understanding and desire to learn are still prevailing in the school corridors and classrooms. Now the school is like a friendly large family keeping its traditions and long-established activities such as celebrations of Estonian and Russian national holidays, school outings and tours around the country and abroad, friendly meetings with the students of Estonian schools, participation in county sports competitions and Olympiads in school subjects, meetings with politicians and well-known people - the list could be quite long.
In conclusion it would be appropriate to say that Voru Russian Gumnaasium, being part and parcel of Estonia and her system of education, still retains its own distinctive features of Russian culture and mentality.