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Skilled Soldier

Gender not a factor in tale of Lyudmila Pavlichenko

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Countersniping.

She’d hunt the hunters.

By the time she was done, more than 300 soldiers were dead.

After recovering from mortar wounds, she visited America, met President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and later received an engraved Winchester.

Woody Guthrie, like others of the left in thrall with the Soviets during the war, wrote a song about her, “In summer’s heat or winter’s snow / In all kinds of weather she tracks down the foe.”

She also visited Chicago in 1942, and an unfortunate Chicago Tribune article referred to the then-26-year-old as the famed “girl sniper.” It mentioned her crimson fingernail polish.

But it wasn’t what was on her fingers that counted.

It was what was under them, particularly the trigger under her index finger, that mattered.

And that had nothing to do with gender.

———

John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. Readers may send him email at jskass@tribune.com.
Distributed by MCT Information Services

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