Olga Bordashevskaya

Sniper
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroSniper
PlacesRussia
wasMilitary personnel
Work fieldMilitary
Gender
Female
Birth1919, Odesa, Odessky Uyezd, Kherson Governorate, Russian Empire
Death29 March 2002 (aged 83 years)
Awards
Order of Glory Third Class 
Order of Glory Second Class 
Medal "For Courage" 
Medal "For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945" 
Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin" 
The details

Biography

Olga Fyodorvna Kiss née Bordashevskaya (Russian: Ольга Фёдоровна Бордашевская; 1919 – 29 March 2002) was a soldier in the Red Army during World War II, credited as one of the top women snipers in history. By some accounts, she tallied 108 kills, placing her behind only Lyudmila Pavlichenko, Tatyana Kostyrina and Nina Petrova.

Biography

Bersashevskaya was born in 1919 to a Russian family. Before the war she was a student at university in Odessa with dreams of becoming a writer. Upon the German invasion of the Soviet Union she immediately volunteered for the war effort, originally working as a nurse in a field hospital. Later on in the war, she attended the Central Women's Sniper Training School based in Podolsk, graduating and being deployed to the warfront as a sniper in 1944. Her customized rifle, which she nicknamed "Ivan Ivanovich", was a gift from the Komsomol. During her time as a sniper she rapidly accumulated a tally of enemy kills, including ten enemy snipers, and earned promotion to the rank of senior sergeant. However, her last kill was on 10 March 1945, since she was badly wounded by mortar fire days later and left unable to continue fighting. Her cumulative tally is not entirely clear due to lack of specification about final results in award documents, however, it is certainly sizable, with the lowest estimate being from a February 1945 magazine crediting her with 80 kills at the time, while most other sources go by Ivan Vybornyk's statement that she had 108 kills.

After the war she married, taking on her husband's surname. Despite her injuries from the war rendering her classified as a disabled veteran, she did not retire, participating in a long-term voyage of Soviet whalers to Antarctica and later becoming executive secretary of the Soviet Peace Committee. She died on 29 March 2002.

Awards

  • Order of Glory 2nd class
  • Order of Glory 3rd class
  • Medal "For Courage"
  • campaign and jubilee medals
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 03 Aug 2023. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.