Vera Zakharova
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Vera Kirillovna Zakharova (; 12 July 1920 1 January 2010) was a
Po-2 Po2, pO2, , or PO2 may refer to: * A military rank: ** Petty Officer 2nd Class in the Canadian military ** Petty Officer Second Class in the United States military * Polikarpov Po-2 or U-2, a Soviet aeroplane * Partial pressure of Oxygen, that is, ...
air ambulance pilot in the Soviet Air Force during World War II, a student of aviation pioneer
Valery Kuzmin Valery Ilyich Kuzmin (; 7 November 1918 – 1 June 1983) was an aviation pioneer in Yakutia who became the director of the Yakutsk division of Aeroflot, the Soviet state airline, a recipient of the titles Honoured Pilot of the USSR as well as Hero ...
, and the first
Yakut Yakut or Yakutian may refer to: * Yakuts, the Turkic peoples indigenous to the Sakha Republic * Yakut language, a Turkic language * Yakut scripts, Scripts used to write the Yakut language * Yakut (name) * Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic ...
woman pilot.


Early life

Zakharova was born on 12 July 1920 in the village of Delgey,
Yakutsk Oblast Yakutsk Oblast () is a historical oblast (province) within the Russian Empire and the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, RSFSR (until 1920). It corresponds with the modern day Sakha Republic. The administrative center was Yakutsk. Geo ...
, located within the present-day
Olyokminsky district Olyokminsky District (; , ''Ölüöxüme uluuha'') is an administrativeConstitution of the Sakha Republic and municipalLaw #172-Z #351-III district (raion, or ''ulus''), one of the thirty-four in the Sakha Republic, Russia. It is located in the so ...
of Sakha; she had seven siblings. Her father Kirill, a Yakut, was a schoolteacher, and her mother Yevdokiya, a Russian was a doctor. Because her mother was not fluent in the Yakut language, Vera often helped her by being a translator. Soon after she was born her family moved to the village of
Churapcha Churapcha (; , ''Çurapçı'') is a rural locality (a '' selo'') and the administrative center of Churapchinsky District in the Sakha Republic, Russia. Population: Geography Churapcha is located by the lake of the same name, which drains to the ...
, where her father was from. There she completed primary school before moving to
Yakutsk Yakutsk ( ) is the capital and largest city of Sakha, Russia, located about south of the Arctic Circle. Fueled by the mining industry, Yakutsk has become one of Russia's most rapidly growing regional cities, with a population of 355,443 at the ...
in 1934. In autumn the next year her brother Innokenty joined the local glider flight school, leading to Vera joining in 1937 and becoming the first Yakut girl admitted to the aeroclub. There she learned to fly the Po-2 trainer under the instruction of
Valery Kuzmin Valery Ilyich Kuzmin (; 7 November 1918 – 1 June 1983) was an aviation pioneer in Yakutia who became the director of the Yakutsk division of Aeroflot, the Soviet state airline, a recipient of the titles Honoured Pilot of the USSR as well as Hero ...
, the first Yakut pilot. Soon she earned the status of parachute instructor after completing her 19th parachute jump. In 1940 she moved to
Moscow Moscow is the Capital city, capital and List of cities and towns in Russia by population, largest city of Russia, standing on the Moskva (river), Moskva River in Central Russia. It has a population estimated at over 13 million residents with ...
to attend the Moscow Aviation School, but due to enrollment delay she initially attended the Moscow Institute of Physical Culture. However, she attended only one semester before leaving due to financial difficulties, which forced her to return to Yakutsk.


World War II

Vera and her friends heard the news of the
German invasion of the Soviet Union Operation Barbarossa was the invasion of the Soviet Union by Nazi Germany and several of its European Axis allies starting on Sunday, 22 June 1941, during World War II. More than 3.8 million Axis troops invaded the western Soviet Union along a ...
over the radio while playing a game of volleyball. Her brothers were subsequently conscripted into the
Red Army The Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, often shortened to the Red Army, was the army and air force of the Russian Soviet Republic and, from 1922, the Soviet Union. The army was established in January 1918 by a decree of the Council of People ...
. Seeing her brothers drafted, Vera wished to join the war effort, so she attended nursing courses and was almost deployed, but she was turned away in Irkutsk. Not giving up, she continued to request to be sent to the front. Allegedly their father, who was ill with tuberculosis, expressed concerns about her brother's inability to speak Russian being a problem on the front. That, along with allegations that he expressed sympathies for the tsarist government, led to his subsequent arrest and execution under
Article 58 Article 58 of the Russian SFSR Penal Code was put in force on 25 February 1927 to prosecute those suspected of counter-revolutionary activities. It was revised several times. In particular, its Article 58-1 was updated by the listed sub-articles ...
as an "enemy of the people". Vera was informed of her father's death in 1943. However, she remained loyal to the Soviet Union and continued to request to be sent to the warfront. Initially she and other parachute instructors from the aeroclub were tasked with training paratroopers for the front. Eventually in February 1944 she along with two of her Russian friends from the Yakutsk aeroclub, Yelena Dvoryankina and Anna Remennikova, who were also parachute instructors, approached a recruiter requesting to be sent to the front and were accepted. Later the recruiter admitted to being half-asleep at the time, and normally would not have accepted them. After a brief stay with a training regiment, Vera and her friend Yelena were assigned to the 141st Separate Air Ambulance Regiment, which ferried injured soldiers in the Po-2, as well as delivering information and mail across the front. Upon arriving at regiment headquarters the women were initially treated with hostility by commanding officers, with the regimental commander jokingly asking if they dreamt of becoming colonels, to which Yelena replied affirmatively to the taunt, causing dead silence before their male counterparts burst out laughing at the idea. Not giving in to peer pressure, Zakharova remained in the regiment, and by August 1944 she totaled over 100 sorties, in the course of which she rescued over 200 wounded soldiers as well as delivering crucial medical supplies, ammunition, mail, and food to the front lines, sometimes flying three or four sorties in a day. On 6 or 7 August 1944 while flying in over
Poland Poland, officially the Republic of Poland, is a country in Central Europe. It extends from the Baltic Sea in the north to the Sudetes and Carpathian Mountains in the south, bordered by Lithuania and Russia to the northeast, Belarus and Ukrai ...
she and two other aircraft flying with her were shot down by anti-aircraft guns. The regimental commander, Nikolai Petrov, who was piloting one of the planes shot down, managed to make an emergency landing in a deserted area, and was rescued by Red Army infantry. However, Zakharova and the other pilot, Ivan Chesnokov, were not as lucky; Chesnokov landed in an area occupied by SS troops, who tortured him before killing him. Meanwhile, Zakharova landed in an area occupied by the Wehrmacht. After landing she checked on both of the wounded soldiers she was transporting to ensure that they were ok, but almost immediately the German soldiers began to approach her and her plane, hurling verbal abuse at her as they came. Several then proceeded to grab Vera, tearing off her belt with her pistol and her helmet, releasing her black hair over her face to the shock of onlooking troops, who yelled out "Frau", surprised that the pilot they found was a woman. Upon hearing machine-gun fire the Germans surrounding her dispersed and ran towards the noise. Temporarily away from the German soldiers, she only then realized that she had an open fracture in her leg; weakened by the injury and fearing return of the Germans, she grabbed documents from her plane and crawled away from the landing site before starting to dig a hole to hide in by a tree. One of the wounded soldiers she was transporting met up with her there, and together they tried to crawl over to Soviet-controlled territory, hiding in a rye field along the way. However, their location was revealed once the Germans used dogs to search for them. After the dog pounced on her its handler arrived and grabbed at her; initially she feared her was going to grab her throat and strangle her, but instead he reached for her parachutist badge and yanked it off her uniform. A group of German soldiers proceeded to take her and the other injured soldier prisoner, dragging them to a shed on stretchers. A doctor treated their injuries before they were loaded onto a freight train to be sent to
POW camp A prisoner-of-war camp (often abbreviated as POW camp) is a site for the containment of enemy fighters captured as prisoners of war by a belligerent power in time of war. There are significant differences among POW camps, internment camps, an ...
. Upon arrival the Germans told the prisoners and camp staff about Vera, declaring “This is a shot down Soviet pilot! The end of the Russians has come: there is no one to fight in the Red Army, and the Bolsheviks are putting Mongol women on their planes!", even going so far as to claim she was an officer with the rank of
major Major most commonly refers to: * Major (rank), a military rank * Academic major, an academic discipline to which an undergraduate student formally commits * People named Major, including given names, surnames, nicknames * Major and minor in musi ...
, even though she was a newly enlisted private. At the prison camp she was frequently asked by other inmates where she was from, and resigned to answering simply "
Russia Russia, or the Russian Federation, is a country spanning Eastern Europe and North Asia. It is the list of countries and dependencies by area, largest country in the world, and extends across Time in Russia, eleven time zones, sharing Borders ...
" since few had heard of Yakutia or knew where it was. Held in the camp for five months and fifteen days, she worked at a sewing machine in the garment workshop. After being freed from the camp she was interrogated by
SMERSH SMERSH () was an umbrella organization for three independent counter-intelligence agencies in the Red Army formed in late 1942 or even earlier, but officially announced only on 14 April 1943. The name SMERSH was coined by Joseph Stalin. The form ...
and told then told her that she should be demobilized for medical reasons, but she persisted in remaining in the military and then spent two and a half months seeking out her regiment; by the time she returned, it had been renamed as the 12th Aviation Regiment and based in Poland to assist the Polish Air Force. She continued to fly missions on the Po-2, totally 180 sorties by the end of the war, after which she carved "Zakharova from Yakutsk" on the walls of the Reichstag, having reached
Berlin Berlin ( ; ) is the Capital of Germany, capital and largest city of Germany, by both area and List of cities in Germany by population, population. With 3.7 million inhabitants, it has the List of cities in the European Union by population withi ...
.


Postwar

After the war she married Anatoly Shmatkov, a pilot from her regiment, and they initially settled in Bryansk. Due to Anatoly's job as a prosecutor they had to move frequently, often taking nothing but the sewing machine and their children. After her husband died of a heart attack in 1965 she returned to Yakutsk; she then worked at the local branch of the Institute of Cosmophysics and Aeronomy of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, and from 1976 to 1983 she served on the Soviet peace committee. She died in Yakutsk in 2010.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Zakharova, Vera 1920 births 2010 deaths Yakut people Soviet World War II pilots Soviet women in World War II Soviet prisoners of war Women air force personnel of the Soviet Union Soviet military personnel of World War II Yakut women