Mariya Melentyeva Explained

Mariya Vladimirovna Melentyeva
Native Name:Мария Владимировна Мелентьева
Birth Date:24 January 1924
Birth Place:Pryazha, Karelia
Death Date:2 July 1943 (aged 19)
Death Place:Topornaya Gora, Medvezhyegorsky District, Karelian ASSR
Awards:Hero of the Soviet Union
Order of Lenin
Order of the Red Star

Mariya Vladimirovna Melentyeva (; 24 January 1924 – 2 July 1943) was a Soviet partisan from Karelia who was posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union on 25 September 1943 for her resistance activities.[1]

Early life

Melentyeva was born on 24 January 1924 to a Karelian peasant family in the village of Pryazha. After graduating from secondary school in her village and completing nursing courses she worked as a nurse in a hospital in Segezha. She was an athletic person and enjoyed various sports, much like her future colleague Anna Lisitsyna.[2] [3] [4]

Partisan activities

Melentyeva's partisan activities began in 1942. On 15 June Melentyeva went with fellow partisan Anna Lisitsyna and six other Komsomol members to Sheltozersky district, which was controlled by the Axis in order to conduct a reconnaissance-in-force mission and establish an underground Komsomol organization. When the plane that was supposed to bring the partisans back to friendly territory could not come the eight were told they would have to walk on foot across enemy lines to hand over documents containing the information they had gathered on the locations of Axis garrisons and names of individuals that were fighting for the Axis. During the crossing of the icy Svir River on 3 August 1942 her friend Anna Lisitsyna drowned, but Melentyeva managed to recover the documents Lisitsyna was carrying in her hat. Alone, Melentyeva wandered through the forest for five days without clothes, shoes, or food, carrying only the bundle of documents with her. On the sixth day she encountered the 272nd Infantry Regiment of the Red Army and was able to hand over the documents.[5]

In the summer of 1943 she was sent on another mission inside Axis-controlled territory; she was supposed to make contact with underground Komsomol committee she had helped establish in Sheltozersky and report back any information they had. After an informant had reported their activities to the Finnish military a standoff ensued, with Melentyeva firing on surrounding Finnish forces until she and the other surviving partisans were captured and taken prisoner. After refusing to answer the Finnish military's questions the partisans were shot at point-blank range inside a cellar on 2 July 1943. They were later buried in Topornaya Gora, Medvezhyegorsky District.

Recognition

Melentyeva was posthumously awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union on 25 September 1943 by decree of the Supreme Soviet, the same day as Anna Lisitsyna. She was also a recipient of the Order of the Red Star. Her image is featured in the Petrozavodsk Gallery of Heroes, a street in Karelia was named in her honor, and there are several monuments and memorials to her throughout Karelia.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Sakaida, Henry. Heroines of the Soviet Union 1941–45. 2012-04-20. Bloomsbury Publishing. 9781780966922. en. Henry Sakaida.
  2. Book: Janina, Cottam. Women in War and Resistance: Selected Biographies of Soviet Women Soldiers. 1998. Focus Publishing/R. Pullins Co. 1585101605. Newburyport, MA. 228063546.
  3. Fish. Gennady. 1969. Карельские девушки. Героини. Очерки о женщинах — Героях Советского Союза. ru. Politizdat. I. 327–345.
  4. Web site: Мелентьева Мария Владимировна. www.warheroes.ru. 2018-04-30.
  5. Book: Герой Советского Союза II, Любовь - Яшчук. Shkadov. Ivan. Voenizdat. 1988. 5203005362. Moscow. 312615596.