Juliana Gromova

Juliana Matveevna Gromova (Russian: Ульяна Матвеевна Громова; 1924 – 1943) was a Ukrainian Soviet member of the Soviet underground resistance in World War II (called, in the Soviet Union, the Great Patriotic War), executed by the Nazis. She is a posthumous Hero of the Soviet Union.

Early life

Gromova was born to working-class family on 3 January 1925 in the village of Pervomaysky (English: "May First", named for International Labor Day) in what is now Luhansk Province of the Ukraine (then in the Ukrainian SSR of the Soviet Union; Luhansk Province was not established until 1938).

Gromova's father, Matthew Maximovich Gromov, was born in 1880 in Poltava Province of the Ukraine, then part of the Russian Empire. Gromova's father served in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905, then moved to Krasnodon and worked as mineworker, retiring in 1937. Gromova's mother (born 1884) was housewife; the family had five children, Juliana being the youngest.[1] In March 1940 Juliana Gromova joined the Komsomol (Young Communist League).[2]

At the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Gromova was 17 years old and in tenth grade. Like many of her classmates, she worked in agriculture to replace farm workers and took care of wounded soldiers in the hospital (reading to them, helping them write letters, and so forth). She was graduated from high school with good to excellent marks on 3 June 1942.[3]

Resistance, arrest, and execution

When her home province was occupied by German troops, which began on 17 July 1942,[4] Gromova was not able to evacuate because she needed to care for her sick mother. Together with Maya Peglivanovoy and Anatoly Popov, she organized a group of patriotic young people in her village of Pervomaysky[5] who became part of the "Young Guard" of the underground resistance Komsolol organization in September 1942.

In October 1942, Gromova was elected a member of staff of the organization. She took an active part in the preparations for armed resistance, the creation and dissemination of anti-fascist leaflets, collecting medicines, and campaigning among the population, urging them to not obey the enemy and to disrupt plans to supply the Germans with material and impress Soviet youth to work in Germany.

On the night of November 7, 1942 (on the eve of the 25th anniversary of the October Revolution), Gromova and Popov hoisted the red flag on a pipe shaft at Mine Number 1 in occupied Krasnodon.

Mass arrest of suspected underground figures began in the city, and the Young Guards developed an escape plan for Gromova, but she was arrested by the German authorities on 10 January 1943. She was severely beaten and tortured during interrogation, but she stayed true to her oath to her motherland and comrades[5] and did not reveal details of the underground's activities. She was hung by her hair, burned with hot irons, had a five-pointed star cut into her back and the wound rubbed with salt,[6] and suffered a broken arm and broken ribs. She endured her suffering stoically, and even cheered her imprisoned comrades by reciting Lermontov's epic poem Demon, which she knew by heart. Even in the note which she managed to pass secretly to her relatives, knowing her death was near, she expressed faith in victory and called for her brother Elisha to stand firmly for his homeland.[7]

On 16 January 1943 Gromova, along with other Young Guards, was executed, and her body thrown in the 58-meter pit of Mine Number 5 in Krasnodon.

After the liberation of Krasnodon (which occurred on 14 February 1943), Gromova was buried with military honors on 1 March 1943 in a mass grave of patriotic heroes in the central square of Krasnodon, where a memorial to the Young Guards was erected.

Awards

Memorialization

1944 Soviet stamp commemorating the Krasnodon Young Guard – Gromova is at the left

Gromova is a character (along with other characters both real and fictional) in Alexander Fadeyev's 1946 novel The Young Guard, which was included in school curriculums. In the 1948 film The Young Guard based on Fadeyev's novel, Gromova is played by Nonna Mordyukova in her film debut.

In many cities of the former Soviet Union, there are streets named for Gromova and memorials to her. For instance, in Nizhny Tagil is Juliana Gromova Street, likewise in Kaliningrad a busy street is named for her, and Tolyatti has a memorial to her.

On 1 July 1986 the vessel "Juliana Gromova" (a river tug) was launched in Peleduy, a town of the Sakha Republic.[8]

References

  1. Dmitry Shcherbinin. "Ульяна Громова" [Juliana Gromova]. Young Guard. Retrieved August 5, 2016. (Russian)
  2. "Gromova's Komsomol membership card". Young Guard. Retrieved August 5, 2016. (Russian)
  3. "Gromova's high school diploma". Young Guard. Retrieved August 5, 2016. (Russian)
  4. Dr. T. Yu. Anpilogova. "Нацистский оккупационный режим на Ворошиловградщине" [The Nazi Occupation Regime in Voroshilovgrad]. Perspective+. Retrieved August 5, 2016. (Russian)
  5. 1 2 Alex S. Zlygostev. "Клятва, записки и надписи на стенах тюремных камер фашистских застенков членов краснодонской подпольной комсомольской организации «Молодая гвардия». Конец сентября 1942 г.- 9 февраля 1943 г." [Oaths, Notes, and Inscriptions on the Walls of Fascist Dungeon Prison Cells, by Members of the Krasnodon Underground Komsolol Organization "Young Guards" – End of September 1942 to February 9, 1943]. Historic.ru. Retrieved August 5, 2016. (Russian)
  6. A. F. Gordeev. "О палачах и предателях "Молодой Гвардии"" [The Betrayers and the Executioners of the Young Guard]. Young Guard. Retrieved August 5, 2016. (Russian)
  7. Juliana Gromova. "Gromova's Prison Letter". Young Guard. Retrieved August 5, 2016. (Russian)
  8. "УЛЬЯНА ГРОМОВА" [Juliana Gromova (vessel registry and technical specifications)]. Korabel.ru (ship information site). Retrieved August 5, 2016. (Russian)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.