From nurses to snipers – The story of the Czechoslovak girls who served in World Battle II


Deployment on the Jap Entrance




Members of the Czechoslovak Army unit in Buzuluk in 1942 | Photo:  Military History Institute

In January 1942, Soviet radio broadcast a name for Czechoslovak residents within the USSR to enlist in a brand new Czechoslovak Army unit, which was being shaped in Buzuluk, in southern Russia. Volunteers, together with girls, quickly started arriving in Buzuluk from all elements of the Soviet Union. Between 1942 and 1945, greater than 60,000 folks joined the Czechoslovak navy items on the Jap Entrance. The historians Alena Flimelová and Roman Štér have devoted years of analysis to uncovering the tales of the feminine volunteers. Ms Flimelová says that it’s nonetheless unclear what number of girls precisely joined the power:

“Throughout our analysis, we’ve got discovered the names of 1,151 girls that served with the Czechoslovak forces on the Jap Entrance. Nonetheless, we don’t think about this to be the ultimate quantity since a number of the names within the out there databases might overlap. Among the girls would have gotten married and altered their names, which might trigger them to be counted twice.”




Czechoslovak Army Headquarters in Buzuluk | Photo:  Post Bellum

Lots of the girls that arrived in Buzuluk had already emigrated to the Soviet Union following the annexation of Czechoslovakia by Nazi Germany in 1939. Early volunteers had been both Jewish or Subcarpathian Ruthenian Czechoslovaks that had been imprisoned in Soviet forced-labour camps or gulags. In 1942, they had been launched by Soviet authorities and allowed to enlist within the Czechoslovak unit. Members of Czech-speaking communities that had traditionally settled on Russian territory, such because the Volhynian Czechs, additionally made up a major a part of the Czechoslovak forces.

The ladies who joined the Czechoslovak unit had been typically very desirous to volunteer, even when it meant placing themselves into hurt’s manner. Historian Roman Štér informed Czech Radio about their commonest causes for enlisting.




Roman Štér | Photo: Czech Army

“One of many principal motives, particularly for the Volhynian Czechs, was patriotism. Others had been eager to get revenge or to contribute to the defeat of fascism, which they noticed as the best evil potential. After all, there have been additionally romantic causes, similar to falling in love with one of many male troopers. Lots of the girls had been attracted by newspaper photographs of their friends in uniform. A few of them joined with out actually pondering it by means of and even studying their entry paperwork. Then again, others had a transparent motivation for coming into the unit. For example, Lieutenant-Colonel Irena Malínská informed me she joined in order that she may take care of injured servicemen.”

All through 1942, the volunteers at Buzuluk undertook primary coaching and ready to enter fight alongside the Crimson Army. The Soviet navy had first allowed girls to enlist in its ranks in 1941, because the German Wehrmacht made fast advances throughout Western Russia. Servicewomen within the Crimson Army took on quite a lot of posts, serving as anti-aircraft gunners, snipers, machine-gun operators, pilots, and even tank-drivers. Alena Flimelová explains that, in contrast, Czechoslovak commanders on the Jap Entrance didn’t initially count on girls to tackle main fight roles.




Karolína Stegurová and Alena Flimelová | Photo:  Czech Academy of Sciences

“When the Czechoslovak Army formation within the USSR was shaped in 1942, it was established in accordance with pre-war Czechoslovak laws, which didn’t permit for girls to affix any navy unit. On the similar time, an increasing number of girls had been arriving at Buzuluk eager to enlist. It turned clear that the Czechoslovak command would by some means should take care of this example. So, girls started to be enlisted spontaneously on the non-public duty of Ludvík Svoboda, the commander of the formation. The ladies had been educated primarily in supporting roles, most continuously as nurses or cooks. Two women additionally undertook sniper coaching.”

The 2 feminine snipers talked about by Ms Flimelová had been Vanda Biněvská and Marie Ljalková. Each high sharpshooters, they went on to grow to be two of essentially the most well-known feminine veterans of the Czechoslovak unit. Ljalková is alleged to have amassed over thirty battlefield kills. Alena Flimelová explains how the 2 younger women turned snipers.




Marie Ljalková | Photo:  Military History Institute

“It was actually a coincidence as a result of Marie Ljalková was born a Ukrainian and married a Subcarpathian Ruthenian who was fleeing to the Soviet Union in 1939. By this marriage, she obtained Czechoslovak citizenship after which entered the Czechoslovak unit. She was initially coaching to be a nurse. However the nurses additionally needed to undertake capturing coaching. The officer in cost noticed that Ljalková excelled within the coaching and positioned her within the sniper’s course. It was the identical story with Vanda Biněvská. The ladies had been required to hit a goal no less than as soon as in three tries. They each hit the bulls-eye 3 times in a row and had been thus chosen for sniper coaching.”

In 1943, the Czechoslovak troops entered fight for the primary time. On the Battle of Sokolovo, they confronted German items advancing on the close by metropolis Kharkiv. Because the Czechoslovak unit fought to delay the German onslaught, its nurses labored tirelessly to rescue injured troopers who got here below enemy fireplace. Lots of the girls obtained medals for his or her efforts. Alena Flimelová explains that, after Sokolovo, the Czechoslovak unit modified its strategy to deploying girls in battle.




Battle of Sokolovo | Photo: Military History Institute

“The Battle of Sokolovo was the primary fight deployment of the Czechoslovak items, together with the ladies. You will need to be aware that, at Sokolovo, the Czechoslovak Army command had probably not determined but on the way it needed to make use of the feminine part. In the course of the battle, nurses had been allowed to function on the frontline. Though just one was injured and none had been killed, the command nonetheless determined afterwards that one of these deployment was too dangerous. So, after Sokolovo, girls had been not allowed to go as much as the frontlines.”

Other than the 2 snipers, servicewomen had been due to this fact pulled from direct fight after this baptism of fireside for the Czechoslovak items on the Jap Entrance. Nonetheless, girls nonetheless got here below lethal fireplace on the Battle of the Dukla Cross in 1944. Throughout this main conflict on the north-eastern border of immediately’s Slovakia, the entire Czechoslovak unit got here below German mortar assault. 5 girls, together with three signallers and two anti-aircraft gunners, died from wounds inflicted by shrapnel. These are the one documented fight deaths of Czechoslovak girls in World Battle Two.




Czechoslovak women in the British auxiliary corps | Photo:  Military History Institute

Ladies within the British auxiliary corps

The state of affairs of the Czechoslovak servicewomen in Britain was extra sophisticated, because the London-based Czechoslovak government-in-exile didn’t permit girls to affix the Czechoslovak items shaped in Britain. Historian Karolína Stegurová explains that Czechoslovak girls eager to get entangled within the warfare effort in Britain had to take action within the auxiliary corps of the British navy.




Czechoslovak women in the British auxiliary corps | Photo:  Military History Institute

“Confronted with inadequate recruitment numbers, the Brits started permitting international residents to affix the auxiliary corps of the British navy in 1941. The ladies’s circumstances of entry had been at all times negotiated with the respective governments in exile. The international volunteers may both serve immediately with the British navy, or they might kind their very own nationwide items that will finally grow to be impartial of the British. The latter occurred for instance within the circumstances of France, Poland, or Norway.”

“In contrast, the Czechoslovak Army solely agreed with the Brits concerning the circumstances on which Czechoslovak girls may enter the British auxiliary corps. Nonetheless, it didn’t concern itself with the matter a lot after that. Whereas it agreed to create an impartial nationwide formation if sufficient girls volunteered, no effort was made to maintain any proof of what number of volunteers signed up.”




Photo:  Military History Institute

Why didn’t the Czechoslovak Army permit girls to affix its ranks? The official motive given by the federal government was that letting females enlist would require amending pre-war laws, which solely permitted males to affix the power. In actuality, Czechoslovak generals needed to liberate assist roles for males who weren’t bodily match sufficient to serve in fight.

The failure of Czechoslovak authorities to maintain observe of the ladies that served with the British makes it laborious to find out what number of there have been. Karolína Stegurová estimates their quantity to be over 200. Within the British Army and Royal Airforce, they took up quite a lot of posts, most frequently as drivers, interpreters, or meteorologists. The Czechoslovak servicewoman Ruth Tosková recalled her expertise working for RAF’s indicators intelligence.




Ruth Tosková | Photo: archive of Martin Dostál,  My Heritage

“We eavesdropped on the communication of the Luftwaffe, which was directed from stations on the bottom. At first, we needed to study German codes, as a result of every little thing was broadcast in codes which had been then deciphered by different branches of the air power. It wasn’t tough because the code was restricted to some 200 or 300 phrases.”

An extra 119 Czechoslovak girls are estimated to have served with the British Army within the Center East. Lots of them had been Jewish and had emigrated to British Palestine shortly earlier than or after the warfare broke out. A contingent of about 30 Czechoslovak girls was stationed at Inform El Kebir, a dessert camp about 110 kilometres northeast of Cairo. Karolína Stegurová informed Czech Radio extra concerning the British base.




Photo:  Military History Institute

“The camp was a melting pot of various nationalities. Moreover Czechoslovaks, these included Greeks, Cypriots, Persian males, Arabs, and Jews. There have been additionally issues with self-discipline. From the military journals of Inform El Kebir we all know that thefts of mosquito nets and tyres had been very frequent. Merely put, there was at all times drama happening. However the archives additionally present that the Brits noticed the Czechs because the hardest-working group, together with the Greeks.”

The Czechoslovak girls at Inform El Kebir largely served as workplace staff, automobile mechanics, or drivers. The platoon of drivers was tasked with transporting materials from ports on the Crimson Sea to the entrance. It was commanded by captain Edita Zochovicová. Initially from Slovakia and of Jewish origin, Zochovicová was the primary Czechoslovak girl to grow to be a navy officer throughout World Battle Two. After the warfare, she obtained a number of medals for her service.




Edita Zochovická  (first left,  standing) with women drivers | Photo:  Academia publishing

The truth that the Czechoslovak girls served immediately below the British navy delayed their return house as soon as the warfare ended, as Karolína Stegurová explains.

“The British Army had a dedication to remain deployed till the warfare ended all over the world, which occurred in September 1945. So the Czechoslovak girls stayed within the Center East till the top of 1945. They then started to be processed by Czechoslovak repatriation authorities and solely returned house in March 1946.”

Submit-war persecution




Jáchymov uranium mines | Photo: Jan Langer,  ČT24

The post-war years in Czechoslovakia introduced hardships for a lot of female and male veterans alike. The communist regime that was established in 1948 noticed Britain as an enemy and got down to persecute those that had served in western forces. Though the dearth of a complete listing of Czechoslovaks that had served within the British auxiliary corps might have restricted the scope of the repression, identified servicewomen had been focused for state-sanctioned harassment. For example, Edita Zochovicová was dismissed from a job on the Czechoslovak international ministry and compelled to take up a collection of unqualified jobs. She emigrated to Switzerland in 1968. Some veterans had been even sentenced to pressured labour within the Jáchymov uranium mines. Though they could have served on the “proper aspect”, the state of affairs was not a lot better for a lot of girls coming back from the Soviet Union. People who had been in gulags had been seen as potential political opponents and had been additionally persecuted.

The story of Czechoslovak girls that served within the Second World Battle was for a very long time largely unexamined by historians. Revealed in 2021 by Alena Flimelová and Roman Štér, the e-book “Within the Shadow of Males: Ladies within the Czechoslovak Units on the Jap Entrance within the years 1942-1945” is the primary complete monography of its sort. In the meantime, the function of Czechoslovak servicewomen in Britain and the Center East was not too long ago mapped by Karolína Stegurová in her e-book “Ladies additionally Wished to Battle: Czechoslovak Ladies within the British Auxiliary“.



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