The 1961 Elbarusovo school fire was a fire that occurred on 5 November 1961 in , Chuvash ASSR, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union.
The day of the fire the village was utilizing the school building on a Sunday as a concert area to celebrate the November 7 anniversary of the October Revolution. To make space the desks had been pushed against the windows and walls and stacked upon on another. Although the Soviet press did not report the disaster, internal documents from a November 9 meeting of the Chuvash Regional Committee of the Soviet Communist Party and the November 19 meeting in Moscow of the Central Committee of the Party concluded that a physics teacher at the school, M. N. Iritkov, was sent to relight a wood stove in order to provide heat to the building and poured gasoline from a bucket.
Rather than warning the students, Iritkov and the principal, S. I. Yarutkin, fled the building. Iritkov was sentenced to 10 years in prison, and Yarutkin to 8 years ("ÃÂÃÂøÃÂúþò ÿþûÃÂÃÂøû 10 ûõàûøÃÂõýøàÃÂòþñþôÃÂ, ð ïÃÂÃÂúøý â 8").
Most of the Soviet public didn't know about the disaster until November 5, 1991, the thirtieth anniversary of the tragedy, when the Soviet media covered the first public memorial to the victims for the first time ("âþûÃÂúþ 5 ýþÃÂñÃÂà1991 óþôð ñûðóþôðÃÂàëóþÃÂñðÃÂÃÂòÃÂúþù óûðÃÂýþÃÂÃÂøû, òÿõÃÂòÃÂõ ñÃÂûð ÿÃÂñûøÃÂýþ þÃÂüõÃÂõýð ÃÂÃÂð ôðÃÂð.") among them forty-four children aged under eight and four teachers.