Antonina Makarova

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Antonina Makarova
Antonina Makarova Ginzburg.gif
Born
Antonina Parfenova

1920
Died11 August 1979(1979-08-11) (aged 59)
NationalityRussian

Antonina Makarova (née Parfenova, Ginsburg by marriage, Russian: Антонина Макарова, 1920 – 11 August 1979[1]) was a Soviet war criminal and executioner who collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II. From 1942 to 1943 she executed hundreds of Soviet partisans and their family members by machine gun. Makarova was caught by the Soviet KGB in 1976 and executed three years later.

Early life[]

Antonina Makarova was born in a small village in the Sychyovsky Uyezd of Smolensk Governorate as Antonina Parfenova. On her first day at school, Parfenova's name was written down as Makarova, from her father's first name, Makar, as the shy girl had forgotten her last name.[2] Later, Makarova studied in Moscow, and when the war broke out she joined the Red Army as a volunteer nurse. Makarova also took courses to learn how to use a machine gun.[3]

Collaboration with Nazi Germany[]

In the Autumn of 1941, Makarova was separated from her troops. Three months later, in January 1942, she was recruited by the local authorities at the town of Lokot, which was the capital of the Lokot Autonomy, an collaborationist statelet established by the Nazis in October 1941.[3] Makarova was hired as a machine gun shooter. Her job was to execute Russian POWs and partisans including their families. Usually Makarova was ordered to execute a group of 27 people, which was the number of prisoners the local jailhouse could hold. In the evenings Makarova spent time with German officers along with local women who were working as prostitutes. In the summer of 1943 Germans found out that Makarova and the other women had a sexually transmitted disease and they were sent to a hospital in the rearguard.[2]

Post-war life[]

As the Red Army entered the Lokot region they found remains of about 1,500 people. Soviet troops captured and killed many Nazi collaborators, but Makarova, who was at a hospital behind the German lines, was not among them. In 1945, Makarova married a Russian war veteran named Viktor Ginsburg who was a Jew by origin. His whole family was executed by Germans and Soviet collaborators during the war. They settled in Lepiel, a town in Soviet Belarus, and had two daughters. Antonina and her husband lived as respected citizens enjoying all the privileges granted to war veterans.[2]

Trial and execution[]

The KGB kept the case open for many years but could not find the whereabouts of the "right" Antonina Makarova. In 1976, a Soviet Army officer named Parfenov was registering some documents of his relatives in order to get a visa. He found out that everyone in his family had the last name Parfenov save one: a woman named Antonina Makarova (Ginsburg after marriage). She was later recognized by several witnesses who had known Makarova during the war. The KGB arrested Makarova and the court sentenced her to capital punishment in November 1978. Antonina Makarova was executed by shooting on 11 August 1979.[2] She was one of only three women legally executed by the Soviet Union after the death of Joseph Stalin.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b "Суд над Тонькой-пулемётчицей - Процесс". diletant.media (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-07-20.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Woman who executed 1,500 people in WWII faced death sentence in 30 years". English Pravda. 12 December 2005. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Antonina Makarova biography Retrieved 26 June 2013.

External links[]

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