The Brutal Nazi Torture of Soviet Women Soldiers is Hard to Stomach

In the Soviet Union of the late 1930s, many people believed that if another war broke out, it would be short. They imagined the enemy would be easy to defeat, that the soldiers would return quickly. Those ideas did not come from experience, but from movies, songs, and speeches aimed at keeping morale high. On the screens, a strong country was shown, self assured, with brave soldiers imposing tanks and invincible planes.
Although fear existed, the cinemas remained full. Propaganda repeated that the Red Army would never lose. There was talk of heroes who rescued, flew, fired, and won. Everything was designed to make the population believe that in the event of conflict, everything would turn out well.
But when the real war began, nothing was as it had been portrayed. The defeats were severe, death was massive, and improvisation was total. Many women were sent to the front, not because there was trust in them, but because soldiers were lacking. Some received uniforms, others not even that. Several ended up alone, prisoners, wounded or dead.
And those who survived did so without anyone wanting to hear their stories. Why did those women who gave everything for their country end up disappearing from memory as well? [Music] recruited without choice how the Red Army used women. When people imagined that a war might be approaching, they tried to picture what it would be like.
Those accounts rarely matched what actually happened, but being accurate was not the goal. What mattered was convincing themselves that their sons would return quickly or that the enemy would be eliminated with precision, like in that old belief that everything would be over by Christmas. In 1938, as the warlike atmosphere intensified, citizens of the Soviet Union, just like in other parts of Europe, tried to calm their fears with encouraging stories.
The Soviet vision of the coming conflict was designed to inspire a new generation of volunteers, but it did not arise by chance. It was constructed by a group of leaders whose worldview already pointed toward a global confrontation. Cinema was the tool they chose to deliver that message. There a fight was shown between an ideal system and an outdated one all in black and white.
The music emphasized the tone. At the same time, newspapers published heavy diplomatic texts. Everything indicated that the country was preparing to fight. Although the news spoke of threats, the films conveyed the idea that the Red Army was going to win. The most emblematic production was Alexander Nevski by Sergey Eisenstein, an anti-fascist parable showing the Russians defeating the Germans.
Although it was set in the 13th century with Slavic leaders and Germanic knights, the film released in 1938 included recognizable symbols like shields with crosses resembling swastikas. The message was clear to anyone who understood the official language. Despite its ideological tone, the work was recognized as a fundamental piece of Soviet cinema.
Other similar films did not stand the test of time. But in that decade, the cinemas were always full. While Alexander Nevski spoke of the past, those who wanted to think about what was coming had another option. If war comes tomorrow by FM Zun, also released in 1938. There the Soviets faced a fictional invasion, but won easily.
Ziggon aimed to reassure. His film, which lasted 1 hour, combined acted scenes with real footage from news reels, building a narrative where everything was resolved without difficulties. The message, firm and hopeful, was repeated with a catchy song written by Vasilei Leedv Kumak. The film connected so strongly with the audience that it continued to be shown even after the real war had begun.
In the winter of 1941, when the enemy had already occupied a large part of the country, the tanks and planes that appeared on screen no longer existed, and many of the soldiers shown were dead or captured. By then, no one believed the war would end quickly. That winter, those watching the film in empty buildings or makeshift houses were people fleeing from cities like Ukraine or Smolinsk.
As they settled in with the little they had and waited for someone to start the projector, they watched that story. It was no longer a depiction of what was happening, but an image that kept a conviction alive. That conviction and those images became part of the imagination of an entire generation that had to live through the war.
The film began by showing a fair possibly in Gorki Park in Moscow. In the background, the towers of the Kremlin were visible. Everything was lit up. Attractions, lights, and people strolling were shown. The scene represented a peaceful life with the population enjoying themselves and the leaders taking care of all that was important.
Then the script jumped to the border where foreign troops were on the move. Those enemies were not shown as fearsome rivals but as ridiculous figures. They had large mustaches, walked clumsily, and spoke exaggerated German. The Nazi symbols they carried did not inspire fear. The intention was to mock them. The invasion happened at night.
At first, it seemed dangerous, but the Soviet defenders responded. A woman cooking near the front joined the group, firing weapons. The message was that anyone could defend their country. Then came an air attack. The enemy planes flew low, but were intercepted. The Soviet fighters, modern and organized, appeared on screen. Among them were well-known pilots, Babushkin, Vodapanov, and Gromov.
Their names were popular for their feats. In a scene that would become bitter years later, the Soviet planes bombed the enemy without suffering losses. Then the infantry appeared. Volunteers from all over enlisted. An older man, a veteran of the Civil War, offered himself again. He raised his arm and said the fascists would remember him.
Those fascists were portrayed as the historical enemies of the people, now wearing a different uniform. The Soviet tanks advanced through rivers, descended mountains, and crossed the countryside. As they appeared, the music swelled. In the end, the enemy was defeated without complications. It was a victory without chaos or suffering.
Spectators left convinced. If war came, everything would turn out well. The country was prepared. The soldiers were capable. No one could stop them. That vision was etched into memory. But when the real war came, it was different. There was no quick triumph. There was no early return. Many women enlisted after seeing those images.
They went with the idea of defending their country but ended up in the middle of a devastating conflict. Many were not given weapons or training. Others were sent to the front without preparation. Some were raped or executed upon capture. The Germans did not see them as soldiers. Their own country did not defend them either.
For many, the hardest part came afterward. If they managed to return, they were not received with respect. Some were interrogated. Others were sent to disciplinary battalions. If they had been prisoners, they were no longer trusted. It did not matter if they had fought. Having been in enemy hands was enough to be marked.
What had once been a symbol of courage was now a burden. Sent to the slaughter, the disaster no one told them about. The first serious test of Stalin’s Red Army came at the end of 1939. On November 30th, Soviet troops crossed into Finland. The operation ended in disaster. In less than 30 days, nearly 18,000 soldiers, about half of those who crossed the border in that first advance, were dead, captured, or missing.
The slaughter was so intense and the chaos so extreme that even today it is difficult to calculate exactly how many died in that short war. Soldiers were thrown directly against Finnish positions. The tanks and their crews were hit and burned. Entire regiments were trapped. Whole units leading the offensive were cut off from reinforcements and supplies, while leaderless soldiers lost control in the face of hunger and cold.
Stories of horrors began to circulate. Some spoke of Soviet bodies without sexual organs or without hands. Others said they had seen faces with eyes and tongues ripped out. When the conflict ended, many of those stories came from the trauma suffered by inexperienced recruits who advanced again and again in lines through areas filled with unburied corpses, frozen, broken, gnawed, or torn apart by dogs.
Deaths in the Red Army exceeded 126,000. Nearly 300,000 more were removed due to wounds, burns, illness, or frostbite. On the Finnish side, 48,243 people died, and there were 43,000 wounded. In the end, the only thing that tipped the balance was the number of men and weapons Moscow possessed. Reinforcements were sent to the Curelian front.
A new attack, as forceful as a battering ram, broke through the Finnish defensive lines. The forests north of the old city of Vipuri, now Vyborg, became scorched ground full of molten metal and dead trees. Finland surrendered at the end of March. Readers of the official Soviet newspaper Pravda read that justice had been served and that the war had eliminated one more threat against the people’s freedom.
But even they had already heard the rumors brought back by returning soldiers. And outside the USSR, no one considered that outcome a victory for Moscow. The military leaders of the Nazi regime already had their reports ready. That spring, Hitler’s officers were handling documents that detailed the Soviet army’s weakness.
An American journalist in Stockholm said the war between the Soviet Union and Finland had revealed more secrets of the Red Army than the last 20 years. He was referring mainly to failures in training, tactics, and equipment. Analyzing those four months with a military eye, any agent would have seen that the Red Army had been tested and had failed in nearly everything.
Intelligence units failed to detect the existence of a fortified line of bunkers that halted the infantry’s advance. Even the Fins themselves were surprised at how easy it was to cause so many casualties. Just a few artillery operators were enough to stop or make entire regiments flee. It also helped that the Soviets were poorly equipped to fight in Arctic conditions.
Although they too knew the cold, the soldiers sent to the front lacked the proper equipment. Many lacked uniforms suitable for the snow. Their boots did not protect against the weather. The problem was not just the gear. The commanders made mistakes that cost thousands of lives. They did not adapt plans to the terrain, the climate, or the enemy’s combat style.
When they encountered unexpected obstacles, they didn’t know how to respond. Orders kept coming from above without taking into account what was really happening at the front. Thus, soldiers were sent again and again into senseless attacks. The women who were there as doctors, nurses or couriers were caught in the same chaos.
They too crossed minefields. They too were shot at. Many died in bombings or from freezing. Some were hit while trying to pull bodies from the hardened mud, but no one spoke of them. They were not in the official reports. They did not appear in images. No one wrote about them. To the high command, they didn’t exist.
They were only there to serve, endure, and if necessary, die. Several generals used the disaster to blame the soldiers. They said the men were cowards, that they lacked commitment. But in reality, many were untrained teenagers. They carried old weapons. They had not been trained. They had been forcibly recruited. They didn’t know how to move on frozen terrain.
When the enemy counterattacked, fear froze them in place. Some tried to flee. Some were executed for desertion. Others froze to death because they didn’t know how to protect themselves. Among the women, some died alone, lost in the forest trying to get back. And when it was all over, they weren’t recognized either. The defeat was masked with propaganda.
It was said that the Red Army had achieved its goals. The true figures were hidden. No one took responsibility. Meanwhile, the countries that were watching took notes, especially Germany. For Hitler and his inner circle, what happened in Finland was a sign that the USSR was weaker than it appeared. That impression later influenced, for example, the decision to invade in 1941.
The war in Finland was short, but it left deep consequences. It showed what could happen when thousands of people, including women, were sent to the front without preparation, without equipment, and without support. Those who survived returned with physical and mental scars. Some were mutilated.
Others could no longer have children. Several never spoke of what they experienced. Some didn’t even mention it at home. They were not welcomed as heroins. On the contrary, being a woman and having been in combat raised suspicions. They were accused of having relationships with officers or of behaving like men. Even those who only cared for the wounded were met with disdain, as if their pain didn’t matter, as if they hadn’t been in the same war as the others.
Defenseless prisoners. What was done to them when they fell into Nazi hands? June was a long-awaited month throughout northern Europe. In the European part of Russia and in Ukraine, it had a special air. The extreme cold of winter was almost forgotten, and the mud and rain of spring were behind. In Kiev, the chestnut trees bloomed.
In Moscow, the lilacs in Yala the Judas trees. It was the month of peies, of willows with green leaves, and of the white knights of the north. In 1941, the solstice night fell on a Saturday in Sevastapole, headquarters of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet. The atmosphere was calm. According to naval officer Evv’s diary, it was a splendid night in Crimea.
That Saturday, all streets and avenues were lit. The White Houses gleamed. Clubs and theaters were open for sailors on leave. The streets and parks were full of sailors and locals, many dressed in white. On the well-known Primorski Prominard, music could be heard. There were jokes and laughter. Everything seemed peaceful the night before the holiday.
A week earlier, Soviet foreign minister Molotov had assured that the rumors about a possible rupture of the pact with Germany and an attack on Soviet territory had no foundation. For many, it was easy to believe. One of the visible lights in the city’s two ports that night was the Incamman lighthouse. Thanks to that beacon, the German planes were able to approach without veering off.
They came from the east, flying low over the planes, crossing Soviet skies in a wide arc. They already knew their targets, the fleet, the warehouses, the anti-aircraft defenses. Soon the sea began to reflect new lights, flares, traces, search lights, and the glow of fires. “Are those our planes?” they asked Eviev as sailors rushed back to their ships.
“It must be another drill,” someone answered. But another said, “The anti-aircraft batteries are using live rounds, and those bombs don’t look fake.” “So, has it started already?” asked a third. “But against whom?” Hundreds of kilome further north, near the new border on territory that had once been Polish, Red Army soldiers were resting.
It was Sunday, and those on leave had gone to nearby cities like Lvof or Minsk to eat well and forget about service for a while. General Pavlof, head of the Western Military District, was at the theater. In Minsk, a comedy called The Wedding in Malininovka, was playing, and the officer’s club was full. The general did not allow the show to be interrupted, not even when his intelligence chief, Colonel Bloin, warned him that the German troops at the border seemed ready to move.
He even mentioned reports that gunfire was already being heard. “That can’t be true,” Pavof replied. On Sunday, June 22nd, the German forces crossed the border. By 3:00 in the morning, the attack was underway. Thousands of planes, tanks, and motorized units launched themselves at the Soviet West. It all happened without any Soviet response.
There were no instructions. Many soldiers were asleep or on leave. Some didn’t even have loaded weapons. Others didn’t know what to do. Communication lines were cut immediately. The German army moved with detailed maps. They knew where to enter and which areas were unprotected. Where they found women of the Red Army, like nurses or telephone operators, they made no distinction.
They were detained, beaten, raped, or killed on the spot. Some remained with prisoners for a few days, but then they too disappeared. Soviet formations were falling apart. Some tried to flee on foot. Others hid in the forests. Women without rank were treated like any spoils of war. Many were used as sexual slaves in turns. Then they were executed or abandoned naked.
Men who tried to help them were also killed. In the first days, tens of thousands of women were captured. Among them were doctors, radio operators, sappers, snipers, and scouts. Almost none returned. The few who survived were later treated as traitors. The chaos was total. There were no safe routes. Divisions were breaking.
Commanders were overwhelmed and many disappeared. Young women, especially those in uniform, were easily identified. Some tried to blend in with the civilian population, but were found out. Sometimes they were abused in front of others. Sometimes they were shot on the spot. German soldiers made no distinction between combatants and non-combatants.
The rejection was absolute. In several Western villages, German soldiers first searched for women in uniform. If they found them, they took them elsewhere and did what they wanted. The neighbors saw it but couldn’t intervene. Sometimes they were forced to walk through the village with torn clothing. Then they vanished. No one asked.
In other cases, they were forced to dig their own graves. It didn’t matter if they were soldiers or nurses. They were treated as personal enemies. The hatred towards them was different. The Soviet high command did not act. Stalin did not believe the attack until several hours later. Orders were slow, confusing, or contradictory.
Some commanders ordered resistance. Others ordered surrender. Captured women were caught in that chaos. No structure defended them. Field hospitals were wiped out. Communication units were eliminated. Those who didn’t die immediately were taken away in trains or locked up. Some ended up as hostages. In the early days, there were testimonies of women forced to choose between being raped or being shot.
Some refused. Others tried to resist but couldn’t. They were used as entertainment for soldiers. They were not looking for information. It was direct punishment. Many had their hair cut off. Others had their teeth smashed. Some were beaten until unrecognizable. Some were filmed. Those images were used as trophies by German commanders.
It was systematic terror. Meanwhile, Soviet communications continued to collapse. Many transmitters stopped working. Units that still had officers were overwhelmed. Sometimes, instead of fighting, the few who remained surrendered. Women who surrendered with them received no protection. Prisoner camps were improvised in the open air without food or water.
The women were separated. Sometimes they were left in view as a warning. Some were forced to clean corpses. Others collected belongings for the enemy soldiers. It was open slavery. These events were not officially recorded. The Soviet army itself left no record. There was no talk of the women who disappeared. Their names didn’t appear on death lists.
Many families never knew what happened. When they asked, they were told they had fallen in action or were on a mission, even if the truth was something else. The worst part was that when the war ended, many of the survivors were treated as guilty. The system didn’t accept that anyone could be captured and survive.
It didn’t matter if she had been raped, tortured, or witnessed a massacre. If she didn’t die, she was already suspicious. That was the fate of thousands of women in the Red Army during the first months of the German invasion. It was not accidental. They were located, detained, and punished for wearing a uniform. They were not treated as soldiers.
They were not seen as people. And their own country didn’t want to know what they had lived through either. Fallen in captured land, the hellfaced by female combatants. Summer lasted until the first week of October. Then came the rains, and with them the mud, which made movement of tanks, vehicles, and men nearly impossible.
Retreating troops became trapped on roads covered in sludge. The wheels sank. The weight of the trucks left them stranded. Mules and horses could not continue. Soldiers trudged forward with difficulty. Every step was a struggle. The enemy’s advance was relentless. The Soviet front retreated uncontrollably. In the villages, the inhabitants watched columns of the Red Army pass by.
Dirty, exhausted, disorganized. Some civilians offered water or food. Others hid. There was mistrust. Women in uniform were mixed in among the men. Some pushed stretchers. Others carried backpacks or helped the wounded. The retreat was slow without air cover or artillery support. Units split. Some were left isolated. No one knew where to go.
Orders were scarce or arrived too late. The general staff had no idea what was happening in the field. The roads were full of abandoned equipment, cannons without ammunition, broken down vehicles, unburied bodies. In some areas, troops burned their documents before leaving a position. Others simply fled, leaving everything behind. Enemy ambushes multiplied.
Air attacks destroyed entire columns. Improvised defenses failed. People died from freezing or starvation. In cities that had not yet fallen, hospitals were overwhelmed. Beds were lacking. Nurses worked without rest. Doctors operated with whatever they had. There was no morphine. Bandages were reused. Electricity failed.
Operating rooms functioned with oil lamps. Some women went days without sleep. Others fainted from exhaustion. Despite that, they kept going. No one asked for leave. No one deserted. The orders were clear. Hold out. Communication lines were broken. Radios did not work. Cables had been cut or destroyed.
Couriers were sent on foot or by bicycle. Many never returned. News took days to arrive. Sometimes it never did. Troops didn’t know if there was still support behind them. The enemy advanced in all directions. Train stations were bombed. Main roads were full of refugees. The women traveling with the troops were no exception. They rode in the same cars as the soldiers.
They shared space with the wounded. They slept on the floor. In medical trains, the smell of blood and urine permeated everything. There were not enough blankets. Water ran out quickly. The food was dry bread and watery soup. Some nurses carried weapons. Others were unarmed. No one knew if they would reach their destination.
In some occupied areas, civilians began to collaborate with the Germans. They reported who had been part of the Red Army. They said which houses had served as barracks. Women in uniform were the first to be pointed out. Some were caught in the streets, others in hospitals. They were beaten, insulted, taken to the new authorities. Some disappeared.
Others were imprisoned without trial. Their names were not recorded. No one knew what happened to them afterward. In the forests, small groups tried to regroup. Doctors continued treating the wounded. They used shirts as bandages. They made tourniquets with belts. Infections spread. There was no alcohol or medicine. Some women got sick.
Others died along the way. Those who survived barely spoke. They ate whatever they could find. They slept under trees, in holes, in abandoned houses. Always alert, always ready to run. In some villages, the Nazis entered with lists in hand. They looked for soldiers, officers, medical personnel. If they found women in uniform, they separated them. Some were interrogated.
Others were not asked a single question. They were just beaten, taken to courtyards, stables, basements. Some were raped in turns. Others were shot. Those who escaped never spoke again. They didn’t tell what happened, not even to other women. Reports from the Soviet army did not mention these cases. Female casualties were not discussed.
Disappearances were not recorded. Fallen doctors did not appear on lists. Captured nurses were treated as if they had never existed. Families received vague notes. They said the women had died in the line of duty or that they were missing. No one investigated. No one asked. Those who managed to return were met with coldness.
Some were interrogated by the Soviets themselves. They were asked if they had cooperated with the enemy, if they had surrendered, if they had been contaminated. Many were sent to punishment units. Others were relegated to minor tasks. Some lost their rank or their place in the unit. It was as if surviving was a fault.
In official speeches, women were not mentioned. There was talk of heroes, comrades, battles won, but not of nurses dragging stretchers, nor of doctors operating without light, nor of couriers crossing under fire. The stories were about tankers, gunners, pilots, not about those who cared for the wounded, not about those who covered the bodies.
Their effort was erased, at the brink of abandonment, when the front collapsed and women disappeared. The second summer of the conflict arrived with dry air, without triumphs, and without signs of improvement. What at first was supposed to be a march to Berlin had turned into a retreat without direction. “We never thought we would lose,” some soldiers would later say.
But that certainty from the early months no longer held up against repeated disaster. The police still demanded that everyone pretend to be optimistic. A soldier was arrested just for saying, “We are leaving and we’re not coming back.” By August of 1942, the fighters could no longer bear fear, sorrow, or the looks of rejection they saw as they left, one after another, from the empty towns of the Dawn, the Kuban, and Ukraine.
They had been retreating for months through wheat fields. Behind them lay the vulgar, the line separating Europe from the rest of the country. Beyond that, everything was dust, a barren land that to many was unfamiliar. For them, the end was no longer a defeat. It was having no land left to return to. The way of thinking that the regime had repeated to them, outwardly optimistic, inwardly suspicious, no longer worked.
For years, the idea had been instilled that the blame was always someone else’s enemies, spies, traitors. That culture avoided anyone standing out. The habit of blaming others, what the system called obeska, became a defense mechanism after the purges of 37. More than a year into the war, that same logic had the Red Army on the brink of collapse.
Now the message was that everyone had to give everything, even their life. But the string of defeats had already left many without strength. Fear was constant. In some cases, just the sound of tanks was enough to cause panic. Morale was destroyed. “We cried as we retreated,” said one soldier. They cried from exhaustion, but also from shame.
We were running from Karkov, some towards Stalingrad, others toward Vladikovkas. Where were we going to end up? In Turkey? The usual habit was to blame someone else. Soldiers from the center blamed the Ukrainians, especially those from the west. Entire companies abandoned their positions. The Ukrainians disappeared, said an officer named Lev.
They didn’t go with the Germans. They simply went home. Only the Russians kept fighting, complained a private. The Ukrainians all stayed in their homes. Looking out at the step in Kalikia, he said, “My home is far too. Why do I have to stay?” While the men argued about who was to blame for losing, the women were trapped in the middle of the disaster.
Many had been sent to the front without training, without resources, and without authority. Now they were abandoned, caught between lines, lost, or simply ignored. Communication networks were broken, so commanders didn’t even know where they were. Some without an assigned unit joined groups of fleeing civilians. Others wandered aimlessly.
Those still in uniform were easy targets. As the front line moved back, they became more exposed. In several places, doctors, sappers, or couriers were left alone in forward posts, which were then taken by the Nazis. Many were caught in the middle of the chaos. Some tried to blend in with the civilian population.
Others pretended to be wounded. Several were picked up by retreating soldiers, but that guaranteed nothing. At that point, the confusion was total. There were no officers in charge, no clear instructions. The only thing left was to flee and try to survive. The battlefields filled with untreated wounded.
Medical units were half dismantled and left exposed. Nurses who couldn’t leave had no way to defend themselves. Some were killed on the spot by the invaders. Others were taken by force. Several disappeared. The only thing left of them were the documents which would later be erased or forgotten. Their families never knew if they had died or been captured.
On evacuation trains, when they managed to board, the women were crammed next to wounded men, burned or missing limbs. There were not enough doctors. There was no food. The trains stopped at empty stations or under bombardment. Some died during the journeys. Others jumped from the train upon seeing blocked tracks.
Survival had to be achieved by any means. In southern villages, when Soviet troops retreated, they sometimes left behind women because they were in the way or because there was no space. Some were seen asking for help. No one stopped. A few days later, those villages were occupied by the Germans. What happened to those women was not written down anywhere.
Those who reached the rear were not treated as survivors, but as suspects. Upon arrival, they were interrogated. Why were they alone? Where was their unit? How had they escaped? If they had no papers or hesitated when speaking, they were arrested. Some ended up in labor camps, others in the gulag. No one cared if they had fought.
The fact that they were still alive was enough to make them seem suspicious. The collapse of the front was not just physical. It also happened in the minds of those who lived it. The women of the Red Army not only dealt with the enemy, but also with the rejection of their own comrades.
Some soldiers didn’t want them around. They said they brought bad luck. Others treated them like objects. When everything was falling apart, they were left even more exposed. What remained behind Nazi lines and what was found by those who returned. The German retreat after Stalingrad opened the possibility of reclaiming occupied areas.
Soviet troops began advancing and reoccupying destroyed cities one by one. By the end of January and throughout February of 1943, they retook Kursk, Rostoff, and Karkov. Although these were key locations, what they found upon entering were remnants, not victories. The neighborhoods were empty. Houses had no windows or doors. The floors were covered in dust and trash. Electricity didn’t work.
There were corpses hidden beneath soft soil. In some places, the walls showed signs of executions. In others, neighbors pointed to pits where they said bodies had been buried. There was hunger. People emerged from shelters asking for bread. Many were sick. Some didn’t speak. Red Army women who had been trapped behind enemy lines began to reappear.
Some still wore dirty uniforms. Others were dressed in old or borrowed civilian clothes. Many didn’t know if they should report to the authorities. Others stayed hidden. They had spent months in hiding or working under extreme conditions. Some had been prisoners, others had simply been left behind during the retreat.
There was no clear protocol for handling such cases. The first step was interrogation. They wanted to know how they had survived, who they had contacted, and what they had done during the occupation. Documents were reviewed. If they had no papers, suspicion increased. Sometimes questions were asked about possible collaboration with the Germans.
If it was found that they had worked as nurses in enemy controlled hospitals, reports were filed. If someone remembered seeing them in the company of German officers, they were marked. Some were sent to screening centers. These were not places for offering help. The goal was to classify, filter, and filter again.
The questions were mechanical. Where was your unit? Why didn’t you return sooner? What were you doing in that place? Were you forced or did you do it willingly? If they hesitated when responding, couldn’t recall dates, or showed nervousness, they were labeled untrustworthy. There were officers in charge of writing these reports.
Sometimes they did it in minutes. They used templates. If they found no grounds for accusation, they recommended surveillance or referred the case to another authority. Some women were sent to labor camps. Others lost the right to return to the front. Several were forbidden from speaking about what they had experienced. In military hospitals, doctors avoided documenting certain diagnosis.
If a woman arrived with signs of sexual assault, a brief report was written. It would say she had been wounded in combat or had received a blow. No investigations were opened. No support was offered. Nurses knew that talking about it was dangerous. If any insisted on recording what had happened, she could receive a warning or be reassigned.
Women who had been raped found no support. If it was known that they were pregnant, the situation worsened. Some were rejected by their own units. Others were transferred to remote areas. Some requested leave and never returned. The army had no instructions on what to do. The implicit order was that all of it should be forgotten.
In the recovered towns, the situation was just as confused. Local authorities slowly resumed their functions. There were no complete records. There wasn’t enough personnel. Red Army soldiers acted on intuition. If they found women who had worked in homes or schools during the occupation, they asked why. Some said they did it out of necessity, that there was no other option, or that they did it to help others.
Even so, they were viewed with suspicion. In some cases, lists were made, names and surnames were recorded. Details like age, profession, or links to the enemy were included. The documents were sent to central offices. In many cases, no follow-up occurred, but that didn’t mean they were free. Being on file was enough for any promotion, transfer or future request to be denied.
Women who had served since the beginning of the war also faced problems. Some were reassigned without explanation. Others received minor decorations. Official reports avoided naming them. They spoke of medical personnel or liaison. Public speeches highlighted officers. Enlisted soldiers were not mentioned, nor were women. In February of 1943, Stalin gave a speech for the anniversary of the Red Army.
He referred to the war as a historic struggle. He said the country was united. He spoke of the valor of the combatants. He mentioned the generals and the marshals. He made no mention of the human cost. He did not mention numbers. He did not speak of civilians nor of women. He said victory was inevitable, that the enemy would not withstand, and that the people would carry on.
That same month, the creation of a museum dedicated to the war was announced. There was talk of collecting objects, photos, and documents. Units were asked to send material. Citizens were also asked to write their memories. But the instructions were clear. Defeats were not to be mentioned, nor mistakes. The word surrender was not allowed.
Everything had to be focused on victory, on the unity of the people, on the strength of the army. Many women who had been in occupied zones decided to remain silent. Some destroyed photos or documents. Others avoided writing letters. They knew any detail could be used against them. They had seen what happened to others.
They knew that telling what they had lived could be dangerous. They preferred to say nothing, just carry on. The return of Soviet troops was not the same for everyone. While some were welcomed with hugs, others arrived in empty towns. There were places where no one returned. In others, houses had been taken by new inhabitants.
Women who came back didn’t find what they had left. Their documents were lost. Their families scattered. Their belongings burned. Some asked to be reinstated. Others didn’t know what to do. Several accepted any available position. Some were assigned to administrative tasks, others to domestic labor. Few managed to return to the front.
Commanders preferred not to take risks. If there were doubts, conflict was avoided. The person was kept away from combat, away from the spotlight, away from everything. For many, the only option was to disappear, move to another city, start over, use a different last name, or do something that didn’t raise suspicion.
The state didn’t look for them, nor did it help them. Stability was prioritized. Order, the official narrative. The enemy was retreating. The borders were shifting. But the scars of the occupation weren’t easily erased. Internal reports spoke of ruined cities, of crowded hospitals, of halted factories, of schools without teachers. Reconstruction was slow.
Distrust remained. The internal divisions had not healed. For the women who had lived all of that from within, the end of combat was not a liberation. It was a new stage without certainties, without support, and without recognition. What they had seen, what they had done, and what they had suffered remained outside the books and outside official memory.
Forgotten, judged, and erased by their own country. Stalin led the war as he governed in normal times. The main rule was simple. Individual life held no value when weighed against what the state deemed a priority. The other rule was that the people had to remain united against enemies. By 1943, the first rule began to show its toll.
There were no longer enough healthy combatants. The winter operations stalled because there weren’t enough men. But the second rule remained firm. For years, convenient enemies had included the Kulaks, spies, Troskyists, or former white guards. Now the Nazis, the Hitlerites were tangible enemies. The population responded with strength.
A visible unity formed around the cause, but not everyone was on the same side. The war also divided people, caused deaths, and left wounds. Violence, hunger, and isolation did not create unity. They shattered it. The idea of a united people was another invention of Stalin, and it persisted because the state controlled what people knew.
Some prospered in the midst of conflict. Among them were bureaucrats who never set foot on the front lines. On November 6th, 1943, they gathered in Moscow to listen to Stalin. It was the eve of the 26th anniversary of the revolution. Outside, everything remained dark with covered windows and reduced lighting. Inside, under lit lamps, they congratulated each other.
Since the last celebration, the scene had changed. First came the victory at Stalingrad with thousands of Germans dead or captured. But that was in winter. Kursk proved they could also triumph in summer. Since then, the news had told only of victories. Smolinsk was retaken on September 25th. Tam, gateway to Crimea on October 7th, and the crossing of the Denipa, also in that month, left a pile of dead.
That very November 6th, the leaders already knew what the country would hear the next day. Kiev was once again in Soviet hands. The Red Army was seen as a savior, but Stalin didn’t want the role of the party and government to be forgotten. His speech highlighted those who stayed behind. He began by speaking of the workers. If the army no longer had problems with weapons or bullets, it was thanks to our working class, long applause.
He also mentioned the peasants and the women who worked in factories, hospitals, and offices. In that narrative, there was no place for those who had truly fought. The snipers, sappers, combat medics, or couriers still went unmentioned. Though many died or were wounded, their names were never spoken.
Those who returned were not received as heroins. Instead of gratitude, they encountered difficult questions and cold stars. When a woman soldier returned to her village or city, she had to prove she had done nothing wrong with the enemy. If she had been a prisoner, she was already under suspicion. If she had survived in occupied territory, even worse, authorities asked for documents, sought witnesses, sometimes asked questions as if it were an investigation.
Some ended up imprisoned, others were sent to camps. Many found doors closed everywhere. The rejection also came from their own people. They were pointed at, called filthy, accused of having lost their honor. Some lost their jobs. Others were thrown out of their homes. If they returned pregnant or with children born during the occupation, they were looked at with contempt.
Even if some knew the truth, they preferred to stay silent. Silence served as common punishment. The regime never recognized what they had done. In parades, decorations or school books, they were not mentioned. It was said that millions of soldiers fought without distinction of gender.
There was no place for their stories, nor for their suffering, nor for them to speak. Over the years, several tried to tell what they had lived. Some wrote, others spoke at meetings. But most were ignored. It was repeated that it wasn’t the time, that what mattered was what came next, that the war had been won by everyone together, and there was no place for individual accounts. Many chose silence.
Some got married and never said a word. Others remained alone, feeling guilty. A few gathered papers to request help, but even then it was denied due to lack of evidence. They had lived through the war, but were overcome by oblivion. The state took charge of crafting the official memory.
The ideal soldier was male, firm, obedient. There was no room for a woman who had fired a weapon, lifted bodies, dug trenches, or lost her health in an emergency room. That figure was not fit for posters or books. And when peace officially came, not everything changed. The women who had fought returned to a life that did not want them.
They had learned to decide, to act, to give orders. But they were expected to return to the kitchen, to needle and thread, to raise children, and be silent. Everything they had done no longer mattered. Some kept letters, insignias, or photos, but in secret. Some burned everything out of fear. Others locked away their things.
Sometimes not even their children knew what they had done. The official story didn’t mention them, and they understood that speaking was not safe. That’s how the war ended for many of them. It did not end in Berlin, nor with a flag, nor with a celebration. It ended in an interrogation room, at an empty station, or in a room where no one was there to listen.
It ended with silence and with the unjust idea that staying alive was something to be ashamed of. When the war ended, the women of the Red Army returned to a country that no longer spoke of them. They had crossed fields under fire, worked in trenches, tended to the wounded without rest. Some had survived the occupation, others returned after being captured.
But their presence did not fit the official narrative. Several were called to testify. Their movements, associations, and conduct were scrutinized. The fact that they had returned alive was no guarantee of anything. Some were surveiled. Others were left out of the records. Their names did not appear in parades, in decorations, or in official figures.
They had served, but they were not counted. The model of the combatant was male. In speeches, only soldiers were mentioned. Women were not named in the final reports, nor in the history books. The state archive ignored their time at the front. Neither their roles, nor their wounds, nor their deaths were thoroughly documented.
In a war that altered every known order, the presence of armed women in the ranks of the Red Army changed the front, but did not change the fate reserved for them. From the first day, their role was tolerated under conditions and recorded carelessly. They participated in real combat, took on dangerous tasks, crossed lines under fire, but were left out of almost everything that was later chosen to be remembered.
Their names circulated in partial lists in administrative papers in scattered fragments of correspondence. In many cases, even their entry into the front or their disappearance in enemy territory was not documented. What did not fit the official narrative was kept to the side. Neither final statistics, nor official accounts, nor international trials fully included what they had lived.
Today, most of those records remain unorganized. The history they shaped was not openly denied, but it was never told either. It remains scattered in archives, in isolated memories, and in pages left unsighted. And as long as they are not given a place, an essential part of the story will remain missing.