Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Meet The Night Witches

 
This is such a good story and an unrealized film. You could do it with a mostly female cast and have director Jenkins and her star Gal Gadot use their star power to get this one made between sequels for Wonder Woman. We have so few good female WWII stories though their contributions are many. Follow the link to see the video and read about how truly remarkable these women were.

 
The squadron was the brainchild of Marina Raskova, known as the “Soviet Amelia Earhart”—famous not only as the first female navigator in the Soviet Air Force but also for her many long-distance flight records. She had been receiving letters from women all across the Soviet Union wanting to join the World War II war effort. While they had been allowed to participate in support roles, there were many who wanted to be gunners and pilots, flying on their own. Many had lost brothers or sweethearts, or had seen their homes and villages ravaged. Seeing an opportunity, Raskova petitioned Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin to let her form an all-female fighting squadron.

http://www.history.com/news/meet-the-night-witches-the-daring-female-pilots-who-bombed-nazis-by-night?cmpid=Atlas_nightwitches_partner



 
Altogether these daredevil heroines flew more than 30,000 missions in total, or about 800 per pilot and navigator. They lost a total of 30 pilots, and 24 of the flyers were awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union. Raskova, the mother of the movement, died on January 4, 1943, when she was finally sent to the front line—her plane never made it. She was given the very first state funeral of World War II and her ashes were buried in the Kremlin.

Despite being the most highly decorated unit in the Soviet Air Force during the war, the Night Witches regiment was disbanded six months after the end of World War II. And when it came to the big victory-day parade in Moscow, they weren’t included—because, it was decided, their planes were too slow.
 

 

1 comment:

Debra She Who Seeks said...

I may be dreaming, but I'm sure I once saw a film post over at Dezzy's Hollywood Spy of a Russian film about them?