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Soviet women during the war
I would like to dedicate this thread to all Soviet women, who served, and also payed the ultimate sacrifice during the Great Patriotic War.
Women played a part in most of the armed forces of the Second World War. In most countries though, women tended to serve mostly in administrative, medical and in auxiliary roles. But in the Soviet Union women fought also in front line roles. Over 800,000 women served in the Soviet armed forces in World War II, mostly as medics and nurses, which is over 3 percent of total personnel; nearly 200,000 of them were decorated. 89 of them eventually received the Soviet Union’s highest award, the Hero of the Soviet Union, they served as pilots, snipers, machine gunners, tank crew members and partisans, as well as in auxiliary roles. Few of these women, however, were promoted to officers.
Pilots
Among the most famous combatants were the combat pilots who fought the Germans on the Eastern Front. Some of them had learned to fly before the war as part of flying clubs. They now turned those skills to liberating their homeland from the German invaders. These women often flew Polikarpov Po-2 biplanes, flimsy machines made of plywood and fabric.
The only substantial metal component was the engine, and if fire caught hold then the plane would be little more than cinders before it hit the ground. Using bombs and machine guns, these pilots attacked the German ground forces in dangerous low-level missions.
Snipers
The other group who gained widespread fame were the snipers. Thousands of women took on this role and most of them did not survive the war. Snipers worked alone or in pairs, finding vantage positions from which they could spy on the enemy lines. Under cover of camouflage, they often waited for hours to take a shot.
Their targets were primarily German frontline officers and NCOs, whose deaths could leave their men leaderless and thus ineffective. Soviet snipers also engaged in duels with their German counterparts, stalking each other through ruined cities, and many lost their lives this way.
Partisans
The partisans were irregular fighters holding out against the Germans in occupied territory. They were more combat-oriented than the resistance movements of other occupied nations, such as France and Czechoslovakia. With the USSR still fighting a war against the Germans, there was more need and more potential for overt action behind enemy lines.
The lives of partisans were tough and perilous. They lived in forests and swamps for weeks on end while hiding out from the Germans, suffering from cold and exposure. If they were caught then they would probably be tortured and certainly would be executed as an example to others.
The women in these units had to be combatants and caregivers as well. Some of them went into hiding with children or gave birth to them while on the run. They used all their cunning and courage to preserve hope in communities living beneath the Nazi bootheel.
Scouts
Like the partisans, scouts combined skills in fighting and sneaking as they crept through the forests and between the lines, crawling through the mud to covertly survey German positions. As a sergeant major of scouts, Albina Alexandrovna Gantimurova found the experience seared across her mind for the rest of her life. For years afterward, she dreamed of combat every night, waking up to memories of ambushes and jammed guns.
Commanders
Women didn’t just fill the ranks of combat units – sometimes they took command. Liubov Ivanovna Liuchik was one of a group of women who graduated from Ryazan Infantry School as commanders for machine-gun units.
She commanded a platoon of machine-gunners, leading and coordinating them. Like them, she carried heavy equipment for miles across Russia, as they held off and then drove back the invaders.
Anti-aircraft Gunners
For the first time, the Second World War saw the mass bombing of Soviet cities by enemy aircraft. Anti-aircraft gunners played a vital role in defending against this, protecting soldiers, munitions factories, and even civilian homes from attacks that were as much about creating terror as they were about destroying the Soviet war machine.
Nurses
Many women served as nurses and combat medics. Some worked in hospitals and dressing stations, away from the front lines. But others were in the combat zone, risking their lives to drag soldiers out of burning tanks or carry them off battlefields under fire, binding wounds and dispensing medicine in hopes of getting them back for more substantial treatment.
Doctors
Women worked as doctors as well as nurses. As fully trained professionals, they were higher ranking than other female medics, but still sometimes struggled to assert their authority because of gender expectations.
Though they worked tirelessly to preserve the lives of the men around them, not all could be saved. Captain Efrosinya Grigoryevna Breus was at the front with the same unit as her husband when he was hit by shrapnel and died.
Mechanics
Planes, tanks, trucks – all military vehicles experienced heavy wear in the war. Even without the perils of enemy fire, they suffered from malfunctions and breakdowns thanks to the strain put upon them. It took skilled mechanics to keep them in action.
Some of these women might have learned mechanical skills before the war, working on family farms. Others learned their trade in military service, acquiring specialist skills such as airplane maintenance.
Drivers
Drivers were essential to the running of the war, transporting men and supplies to, from, and around the combat fronts.
Traffic Controllers
Like drivers, traffic controllers were important to maintaining a steady flow of men and supplies for a war that was chewing through them at an unbelievable rate. It wasn’t a glamorous job, and because it wasn’t on the front line, giving it to a woman was less likely to stir up controversy from old-fashioned men.
Telephone Operators
Like transport, telecommunications were vital to supporting the fighting front. Sometimes telephone operators kept their stations around the clock, dozing in their seats between calls, their food brought to them by soldiers.
Cryptographers
As in the west, women in the USSR were involved in cryptography, encoding and decoding messages so that the Germans could not understand the ones they intercepted. It was work that had to be carried out with care and precision, as a small mistake could turn important information into gibberish.
Of course, all combat roles and many of those not directly associated with combat had their risks. Many Soviet women lost their lives in the line of duty, were wounded or captured. They took their on their roles with all the same responsibilities and dangers as their male counterparts.
Best regards,
SovPha
Reverse is blank.
June 1943, City Chelyabinsk. Supitalova Ljuda Vasilevna, military hospital 171.
Petropavlovsk, January 5th, 1945.
For a long keepsake from Nadya to Tanya, take a look and remember the sad front-line and at the same time cheerful life. August 2nd, 1945.
In keepsake to my battle friend Lena Korchak from Musya Davidova during the stay in the Red Army. City Lysychansk (Eastern Ukraine/Luhansk), October 19th, 1941.
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05-04-2020 11:15 PM
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Interesting Topic and nice pictures, thanks for posting!
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A very well-written piece, and an excellent tribute to these women. Thank you for posting.
Regards, B.B.
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I love this topic! Here is one of many similar threads...
The Russian Girls !
Nick
"In all my years as a soldier, I have never seen men fight so hard." - SS Obergruppenfuhrer Wilhelm Bittrich - Arnhem
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Thank you, SovPha,
They have misspelled her name in the newspaper cutting (Paclichenko), but you are quite right.. an original wartime example of her signature is a wonderful thing.
I have another splendid item to add here; not a photograph, unfortunately, but a rather battered citation for the defence of Leningrad medal, to Anna Ivanovna Fedosyeva:
Accompanied by an additional document, signed by Major P. Matveyev, of the Leningrad Staff Partizan Movement, 15th October 1943.
(Sadly, the medal is not directly related to these documents, just an early example added for the photographs).
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Hello, Kohima,
Awesome docs. Here is one of my favorite documents.
Gratitude Certificate #359 for taking Berlin awarded to Anna Ivanovna Vasileva on May 2nd, 1945.
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