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Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya

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Zoya Anatolyevna Kosmodemyanskaya

File:Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya.jpg

(Космодемья́нская, Зо́я Анато́льевна in Russian) (September 13 1923 - November 29 1941) was a Soviet partisan, Hero of the Soviet Union (posthumously).

Kosmodemyanskaya joined the VLKSM in 1938. In October of 1941, still a high school student in Moscow, she volunteered for a partisan unit. At the village of Obukhovo near Naro-Fominsk, Kosmodemyanskaya and other partisans crossed the front line and entered territory, occupied by the Germans. According to the official version, she was arrested by the Nazis while on an combat assignment in a village of Petrischevo (Moscow Oblast) in the late November of 1941. Kosmodemyanskaya was savagely tortured and humiliated, but never gave away the names of her comrades or her real name (claiming that it was Tanya). She was hanged on November 29, 1941. It was claimed that before her death Kosmodemyanskaya had made a speech with the closing words "There are two hundred million of us, you can’t hang us all!" Kosmodemyanskaya was the first woman to become the Hero of the Soviet Union (February 16, 1942).

Many streets, kolkhozs and pioneer organizations in the Soviet Union used to bear the name of Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya. Soviet poets, writers, artists and sculptors dedicated their works to Kosmodemyanskaya. The Soviets erected a monument in her honor not far from the village of Petrischevo (sculptors - O.A.Ikonnikov and V.A.Feodorov). Two asteroids were named after her: 1793 Zoya and 2072 Kosmodemyanskaya. Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya was buried in Moscow.

Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya's brother Alexander (1925 - 4.13.1945), a Senior Lieutenant, died in combat in Germany and was posthumously awarded Hero of the Soviet Union in 1945.

Biography (in Russian), on the website dedicated to the Heroes of the Soviet Union/Russia
Short Biographical Article (in English), From Northstar Compass
Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya From The Voice of Russia

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