Masha Bruskina
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Masha Bruskina was a 17-year-old Soviet Jewish partisan who was captured by the Germans along with two others for killing a German soldier in Minsk, Byelorussian SSR, in October 1941. Before being hanged, she was paraded through the streets with a plaque around her neck which read (in both German and Russian): "We are partisans and have shot at German troops". She and her two comrades were hanged in public on October 26, 1941, in an improvised manner, adjacent to a yeast factory.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Cholawski, Shalom. "Minsk", in Encyclopaedia of the Holocaust vol. 3, p. 975. Captioned photograph of Masza Bruskina's hanging.
[edit] External links
- Eyewitness accounts of her execution
- Nechama Tec and Daniel Weiss: "A Historical Injustice: The Case of Masha Bruskina". Holocaust and Genocide Studies 11:3 (1997), p. 366-377. Online abstract
- Hanging Belarusian Partisans in Minsk (Belarus, U.S.S.R.) on 10/26/1941 (Set Four)

