Masha
Bruskina
The
17-year-old Jewish high school graduate, Masha Bruskina, was one of
many young women during World War II who were put to death for fighting
against the Nazi règime and the first teenage girl to be publicly hanged
by the Nazis in Belorussia.
She worked as a nurse
in a military hospital in Minsk, and was a member of an underground cell
which aided Soviet officers hospitalized there, to escape certain death
and join the partisans. Despite the constant danger they continued to risk
their lives by disobeying orders, sabotaging the daily routine. In 1941
the members of the cell were informed on and quickly rounded up by Nazi
officers.
Masha and two of
her male comrades, Volodya Sherbateivich and Krill Trous,
were sentenced to death by the Nazis. They were led through the streets
with Masha wearing a large placard proclaiming that they were partisans.
Their hands were tied behind their backs with cord and they were hanged
one at a time, Masha first, by the German 707 Infanteriedivision who
meticulously filmed the proceedings. The young prisoners were neither
hooded nor blindfolded, and they were given no drop, so their cruel and
slow deaths would act as a stronger deterrent to the local people who
witnessed the event.
Hanging was the preferred Nazi method for the execution for partisans as
it produced more of a public spectacle than shooting and was used to
terrorize the local populace as well as entertain the German troops ...
The execution of Masha and her comrades took place on October 26th 1941 in
the city of Minsk and the bodies were left hanging for several days as a
grim reminder to others.
The photograph of the 1941 execution has been reproduced many times all
over the world but, in her native Belorussia, Masha Bruskina has not
yet gained recognition. Despite the weight of overwhelming evidence, the
testimony of eyewitnesses and the confirmation of respected scholars
Masha's homeland denies her identity. She may be recognized elsewhere, but
in Minsk, Belorussia, where she fought and for whom she died, the girl in
the photograph is still officially described as unknown. The reason:
Masha was Jewish.
Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya, a
18-year-old schoolgirl from Moscow, voluntarily joined a partisan
detachment in 1941, when Nazi forces invaded Russia and mounted an
offensive in the direction of Moscow. The brutality of the Nazis
accelerated with murder, violence and terror, and on the night of the 27
November 1941, Zoya, together with two comrades, set fire to a German
stable near Moscow. Nazi officers quickly caught one of them - Wassilij
Klubkow. Under interrogation he betrayed Zoya.
The Nazis arrested her immediately and brutally tortured her in order to
get some information on the partisan detachment. Rape, torture, and
mutilation could not break her, so they hanged her in public in
Petrishchevo near Moscow on the 29th November 1941. Just before she was
pushed off the platform with a loop about her neck she shouted to the
Nazis: 'You cant hang all 190 million of us.'
Zoya met her death with amazing courage and demonstrated a strong
streak of defiance. Her words became a pithy saying.
In same partisan squad with Zoya was another young russian girl, Vera
Voloshina. Several days before Zoya's execution Vera was wounded in
her shoulder during combat and captured. After torture Vera Voloshina was
also publicly hanged, later in the same day.
After the war Zoya became the symbol of Soviet resistance to Nazi
occupation and she was posthumously decorated a Hero of the Soviet
Union as was her brother, Shura, for his service in the Red Army tank
corps.
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