A Little-Known Story: Maria Leontievna Bochkareva, Who Met President Wilson

Of peasant stock, beaten by her alcoholic father, working since age eight, she married at fifteen and left her husband when he began beating her and swore to kill her. She married again, followed her husband to exile in Siberia but left him when he tried to hang her. In 1914 she fought for the Czar as the only woman in the 25th Tomsk Reserve Battalion, where fellow soldiers taught her to read and write. She was wounded twice, decorated three times for bravery, fought with frost-bitten feet, bayoneted German soldiers, and pulled fallen comrades to safety.
She was hit by shrapnel next her spine and, inoperable, she lay in hospital paralyzed for months. She had to learn to walk again and returned to duty though not required. Enlisting as a private she was promoted into a commissioned rank. She and other officers were captured and waited their turn to be shot as they stood next heaps of corpses. A soldier she had once dragged wounded out of the line of fire recognized her and spared her life. In 1917 she fought against the Red Army for Kerensky, who charged her with forming and commanding the first female combat battalion, called the 1st Russian Women's Battalion of Death.
The Bolsheviks refused her a passport so, with the help of the British Consul, Maria Leontievna Bochkareva disguised herself as a veiled English lady and on an American transport locked herself in a cabin with American soldiers standing watch against Red Guard inspection until the ship got underway. From Vladivostok she arrived in San Francisco, making her way to New York and Washington, D.C, sponsored by the wealthy socialite Florence Harriman (cousin of Averell Harriman, New York governor, Commerce Secretary, and Democratic party presidential candidate.)
Maria Bochkareva met with President Woodrow Wilson on July 10, 1918 and she told him of the Czarist army losing to the Germans because troops were demoralized due to planted, covert Bolshevik agents and Bolshevik connivance with the enemy. Officers were being discharged by soldier committees and the remaining generals were powerless to enforce discipline. Describing the horrible conditions of ordinary Russians, she begged Wilson to intervene. Eyes wet, Wilson promised to do what he could, which turned out to be an expeditionary force of American troops to Siberia, forgotten to popular history.
In New York she met Isaac Don Levine, a Russian émigré, journalist, anti-Communist, and friend of Albert Einstein. Through him she dictated her memoirs, Yashka: My Life As Peasant, Exile, and Soldier. In Great Britain she was granted an audience with King George V. British suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst called her “the greatest woman of the century.”
Back in Russia and forming a women's medical unit for White Admiral Kolchak, she was eventually captured by the Bolsheviks and found guilty as a White Russian, an enemy of the people. This was ironic because as a peasant and laborer nobody could have been more proletarian. Tied to a pole, blindfolded, a white aiming patch over her bosom, she was shot by a Cheka firing squad on May 16, 1920. They shot her because her ideology had been corrupted by elitists. Simply put, she fought on the other side. More
Her book Yashka: My Life As Peasant, Exile, and Soldier can be downloaded free at Gutenberg or Google Books.

Labels: Maria Leontievna Bochkareva



All they have in common are the first three letters.
You can disassemble clocks. You can reduce them to their parts, then put them back together. You can't do that with clouds. Therein lies the difference between reductionism and emergent systems, as well as reductionism & the unnameable. It depends on your point of view.
As P.W. Anderson had it, here is a broken symmetry. A new level of understanding must be created before we can move on to the next level. You cannot be explained in terms of the particles which compose you.
You are here in the Milky Way Galaxy, 1 of about 100 billion in the visible universe. This is not science-fiction.
But we sleep all the way. From the womb to the grave, we are never thoroughly awake.(John Donne, Sermons)
In 1851, Jean Bernard Léon Foucault (1819-1868) demonstrated the Earth turning. At the Paris Pantheon, the pendulum revealed reality not as it seems. Human kind
cannot bear very much reality, said TS Eliot. People are comfortable in the way things seem. Some guests in 1851 thought the pendulum moved with Earth stationary. But gravity kept it moving in the same plane as Earth turned along with the building from which it hung. They felt none of it, just as we feel none of the following phenomena. Earth rotates about 1000 mph (1680 kph) on its axis. At 66,000 mph it fully orbits the sun once a year. With Earth & other planets in tow, the sun orbits our Milky Way galaxy at 483,000 mph, completing the orbit every 230 million years. Somehow the pendulum ignores these "local" motions and aligns with its original orientation. How can this be? Nobody understands why it swings relative to the universe as a whole, but that seems to be the case.









 'Ernst Mach
I can imagine Jack The Ripper also saying this. John


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