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Ekaterina Mikhailova-Demina
Russian: Екатерина Илларионовна Михайлова-Дёмина
Ekaterina Dyomina, March 2005
Ekaterina Illarionovna Mikhailova-Demina in 2005
Born 22 December 1925(1925-12-22) (age 98)
Place of birth Leningrad,
USSR
Allegiance Flag of the Soviet Union Soviet Union Flag of Russia Russia
Awards

Hero of the Soviet Union Order of Lenin

Ekaterina Illarionovna Mikhailova-Demina (Russian: Екатерина Илларионовна Михайлова-Дёмина; born 22 December 1925 in Leningrad, Soviet Union[1]) is the only woman who served in front-line reconnaissance in the Soviet marines during World War II.[1] She carried hundreds of men off the battlefield and was seriously wounded three times during her career as a medic with the marines. Despite repeatedly being nominated she was denied high honours at the war's end, reflecting the Soviet Union's unequal approach to honouring its fighting men and women. However, she was belatedly honoured by President Mikhail Gorbachev in May 1990 with the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.[2]

Wartime career[]

Mikhailova-Demina lost her parents at an early age and grew up in a Leningrad orphanage. She was aged just fifteen at the outbreak of the Great Patriotic War in June 1941 but promptly volunteered for military service in Smolensk after a train she was travelling on was bombed en route to Brest.[1] Adding two years to her age,[1] she was rejected by the recruitment office but was accepted by a military hospital. The patients soon had to be evacuated after the building was bombed but Mikhailova-Demina stayed behind to work as a field medic for the Red Army, which was desperately short of medical personnel. She was kept busy as the German advanced towards Moscow through the summer of 1941. When she suffered a serious injury to her leg in fighting near Gzhatsk she was sent to the Urals to recuperate.[2]

On returning to duty she was posted to the Red Moscow, a hospital ship of the Soviet Navy that was employed in transporting wounded soldiers from Stalingrad to Krasnoyarsk. She was promoted to chief petty officer and commended for exemplary service.[1] However, she became bored by the work and volunteered for front-line service with the Azov Flotilla of the Soviet marine infantry. Although her request was initially denied, she appealed to the government in Moscow and was accepted for service in the 369th Independent Naval Infantry Battalion[3] in February 1943. She first saw action with the marines on the Taman Peninsula on the Azov Sea before moving on to battles elsewhere along the Black Sea littoral and on the Dniester.[1] After her unit was transferred to the Danube Flotilla she fought her way through Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Yugoslavia and Austria,[1] and ended the war in Vienna.[3]

She was not welcomed at first by the men in her unit. However, she was soon accepted after she proved that she could handle herself well in the front line. As well as scouting enemy territory alongside her male colleagues, her work involved treating the wounded and evacuating them to safety.[2] She won her first medal for valour for participating in the recapture of Temryuk on the Taman Peninsula and was awarded the first of two Orders of the Patriotic War for taking part in the Battle of Kerch.[1]

In August 1944 Mikhailova-Demina participated in a commando-style operation to recapture the city of Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi in Ukraine. Her unit crossed the Dniester estuary in rubber boats and climbed an enemy-held ridge. Mikhailova-Demina was in the first group to climb the ridge and joined in the charge to expel the enemy from the ridge. She single-handedly assaulted a fortified German position, taking 14 prisoners, and treated 17 wounded men and helped them get to safety.[2] She earned an Order of the Red Banner for her role in the assault.[1]

Four months later, in December 1944, her unit had advanced to Yugoslavia. During an attack on the fortress of Ilok in Croatia she was one of 50 marines who carried out a diversionary attack from a small island in the Danube below the fortress. The unit had to use trees as firing positions as the island was flooded. In the firefight that followed, Mikhailova-Demina was shot through the hand. Only 13 of her unit survived the intense gun battle and all were wounded. Some of the casualties fell out of their trees and into the freezing water but were saved by Mikhailova-Demina, who jumped in and used belts and rifle slings to tie the wounded men to the trees. Seven men were saved by her.[2] The battle left her with double pneumonia in addition to the wound to her hand and required her to be hospitalised.[3] Despite this, she left hospital early without authorisation and returned to her unit.[2] She was awarded a second Order of the Red Banner for her heroism.[1]

Post-war career and recognition[]

Mikhailova-Demina was demobilised in November 1945[1] but continued to work in the medical profession after the war, including stints with the Soviet Red Cross and Red Crescent Society.[2] She was awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal by the International Committee of the Red Cross for her work during the war; she is the only Russian woman to have received this award.[4] In 1950 she graduated from the Second Leningrad Medical Institute and worked as a doctor for 36 years, retiring in 1985.[1]

She was nominated three times for the Hero of the Soviet Union, the country's highest distinction, but was turned down on each occasion. She finally received the medal along with the Order of Lenin and Gold Star by a decree issued by President Gorbachev on 5 May 1990 to mark the 45th anniversary of the end of the war. Mikhailova-Demina was one of the last thus honoured before the fall of the Soviet Union a few months later.[2]

Honours and awards[]

References[]

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 "Легендарная разведчица ограблена в Москве" (in Russian). Novye Izvestia. 1 July 2008. http://www.newizv.ru/lenta/2008-07-01/93035-legendarnaja-razvedchica-ograblena-v-moskve.html. Retrieved 21 August 2011. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Sakaida, Henry (2003). Heroines of the Soviet Union 1941-45. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 23–25. ISBN 978-1-84176-598-3. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Cook, Bernard A. (2006). Women and war: a historical encyclopedia from antiquity to the present, Volume 1. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. p. 554. ISBN 978-1-85109-770-8. 
  4. "У Победы - женское лицо" (in Russian). TV1. 8 May 2004. http://www.1tv.ru/wap/shed/id=73537. Retrieved 21 August 2011. 
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