Russia training snipers in beautiful and historic Western region


Elite Russian snipers are training in the beautiful Belgorod region



Russia is legendary for her snipers, brave men, and women, who brought the Nazi war machine to its knees during the Great Patriotic War. The famous Lyudmila Pavlichenko (from Bilaya Tserkva in White Church, Ukraine) was considered by far the deadliest female sniper in human history, slaying hundreds of Nazis, and immortalized even by the Americans in a Woody Guthrie song. (See special addendum below). 

Russia continues this tradition of excellence in shooting skills today. Now, Russian news correspondents were given special access to watch the nations most elite snipers train. These guys are no joke, you wouldn’t believe how far away they can hit a coin from.


Extreme Sniper Training: 100 Crack Sharpshooters Undergo Intense Training in Western District

Published on Jun 27, 2018

Thorough camouflage and the human limits of endurance. More than 100 snipers of the western military district have completed an advanced survival course at a training range in the Belgorod Oblast.

The Snipers were training in the fertile fields and forests of the Belgorod region, Western Russia, near the famous Kursk region where the legendary tank battle took place, and the Miraculous Kursk Root Icon hails from.

Belgorod in red, near Kursk, Orel, and Voronezh, south-west of Moscow

Belgorod is a very fertile region of Russia, in the Black Earth region, among the most fertile and blessed soil in the world. You know, the scientific word for Black Earth, the most fertile soil in the world is Chernozem (Чернозём – the “e” at the end only, is pronounced like “yo”– a Russian word.


There are few places more lush and green in the world, than the areas around Voronezh, Kursk, Belgorod, Orel, and other regions including Tambov (very kind friends come from Tambov, it means “There is God”).

 

 

 


BE SURE TO CLICK ON ALL IMAGES!


Russia. Belgorod Oblast. Prokhorovka settlement. In the summer of 1943, Prokhorovka was the site of the Battle of Prokhorovka, a major armored confrontation during the Battle of Kursk of World War II. A memorial on the Prokhorovka battlefield

It must be said, that the soil of the Belgorod region was water with the blood of martyrs, Saints, and Heroes in WW2, and now Russia’s defenders train in her fields, in the hopes that never again would black wings fly over the vast fields of the Motherland and her black soil.

One of the nicest aspects of some areas of rural Russia, like Belgorod, is that there are many villages and small cities which preserve their ancient feel, and rural nature, but yet they’re very clean, orderly, and modernized like a 21st-century city. Like the Shire from Lord of the Rings, mixed with Minis Tirith – the White City.

Just look at how incredibly orderly this small town is, and there many other examples. Everything feels young and newly built, yet the surrounding region is quite old. Unlike in the US, the Russian government makes sure the sidewalks are nice and orderly, flowers are planted in perfect rows, and everything is clean and beautiful.


Russia. Belgorod Oblast. Another vista.


Belgorod itself, the provincial capital is also very beautiful, modernized, and larger than these examples. The word literally means White City, making it a cognate of the Serbian capital Belgrad/Beograd, which was the same meaning.

The city of around 350,000 people on the Ukrainian border is roughly the size of Cleveland, Ohio. It is not hard to figure out how Belgorod got named “The White City” either.

Still, should you visit, you can be assured you will find plenty of colors; this is Russia after all, and flowers are a must.



This beautiful region of Russia is now guarded by her most elite snipers, currently training there. That should not scare you away from visiting of course! As the Vesti video explains, these Snipers train for war, but never want to see one. They much prefer to shoot paper targets.

Still, they are prepared to guard this beautiful region, tragically unknown in the west.



For more pictures of the Belgorod province, see here.


 ADDENDUM No. 1
The life and times of an incredible woman, Lyudmila Pavlichenko, one of the deadliest snipers in history. 

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Lyudmila Pavlichenko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lyudmila Mikhailovna Pavlichenko
[a] (née Belova; 12 July 1916 – 10 October 1974) was a Soviet sniper in the Red Army during World War II,[1] credited with 309 kills. She is regarded as one of the top military snipers of all time[2] and the most successful female sniper in history.[3][4]Born in Bila Tserkva in the Russian Empire (currently located in Ukraine) on 12 July 1916, Pavlichenko (née Belova) moved to Kiev with her family at the age of fourteen. There she joined a OSOAVIAKhIM shooting club and developed into an amateur sharpshooter, while working as a grinder at the Kiev Arsenal factory.[5] In 1932, at the age of 16, she married Alexei Pavlichenko and gave birth to a son Rostislav (1932-2007), but soon they divorced. In 1937, as a student of Kiev University she completed a master’s degree in history, focusing on the life of Bohdan Khmelnytsky.[6]

World War II

In June 1941, 24-year-old Pavlichenko was in her fourth year studying history at the Kiev University when Germanybegan its invasion of the Soviet Union.[5] Pavlichenko was among the first round of volunteers at the Odessa recruiting office, where she requested to join the infantry and subsequently she was assigned to the Red Army‘s 25th Rifle Division;[5] Pavlichenko had the option of becoming a nurse but refused; “I joined the army when women were not yet accepted”.[5] There she became one of 2,000 female snipers in the Red Army, of whom about 500 survived the war. In early August 1941 she made her first two kills as a sniper near Belyayevka, using a Tokarev SVT-40 semi-automatic rifle with 3.5X telescopic sight.[5]


1943 postage stamp featuring Pavlichenko

Pavlichenko fought for about two and a half months near Odessa where she recorded 187 kills.[6] She was promoted to senior sergeant in August 1941 when she reached 100 confirmed kills. When the Romanians gained control of Odessa on 15 October 1941, her unit was withdrawn by sea to Sevastopol on the Crimean Peninsula,[6]where she fought for more than eight months.[5][7] In May 1942 newly promoted Lieutenant Pavlichenko was cited by the Southern Army Council for killing 257 German soldiers. Her total of confirmed kills during World War II was 309,[4][5] including 36 enemy snipers.

In June 1942, Pavlichenko was wounded by mortar fire. Because of her growing status, she was withdrawn from combat less than a month after recovering from her wound.

Visits to Allied countries 

Pavlichenko (center) with Justice Robert Jackson(left) and first lady Eleanor Roosevelt in Washington DC.


Pavlichenko was sent to Canada and the United States for a publicity visit and became the first Soviet citizen to be received by a US President when Franklin D. Roosevelt welcomed her to the White House.[8] Pavlichenko was later invited by Eleanor Roosevelt to tour America relating her experiences.[8] While meeting with reporters in Washington, D.C., she was dumbfounded about the kind of questions put to her. “One reporter even criticized the length of the skirt of my uniform, saying that in America women wear shorter skirts and besides my uniform made me look fat.”[3][9]

Pavlichenko appeared before the International Student Assembly being held in Washington, D.C., and later attended the meetings of the Congress of Industrial Organizations and made appearances and speeches in New York City and Chicago. In Chicago, she stood before large crowds, chiding the men to support the second front. “Gentlemen,” she said, “I am 25 years old and I have killed 309 fascist invaders by now. Don’t you think, gentlemen, that you have been hiding behind my back for too long?” Her words settled on the crowd, then caused a surging roar of support.[8] The United States gave her a Colt semi-automatic pistol. In Canada she was presented with a sighted Winchester riflenow on display at the Central Armed Forces Museum in Moscow. While visiting in Canada along with fellow sniper Vladimir Pchelintsev and Moscow fuel commissioner Nikolai Kravchenko they were greeted by thousands of people at Toronto’s Union Station.[citation needed]

On Friday 21 November 1942, Pavlichenko visited Coventry, accepting donations of £4,516 from local workers to pay for three X-ray units for the Red Army. She also visited Coventry Cathedral ruins, then the Alfred Herbert works and Standard Car Factory from where most funds had been raised. She had inspected a factory in Birmingham earlier in the day.[10]

Having attained the rank of major, Pavlichenko never returned to combat but became an instructor and trained Soviet snipers until the war’s end.[5] In 1943, she was awarded the Gold Star of the Hero of the Soviet Union,[11] and was commemorated on a Soviet postage stamp.

Later years and death

After the war, she finished her education at Kiev University and began a career as a historian. From 1945 to 1953, she was a research assistant of the Chief HQ of the Soviet Navy. She was later active in the Soviet Committee of the Veterans of War.[5] Pavlichenko died of a stroke on 10 October 1974 at age 58, and was buried in the Novodevichye Cemetery in Moscow.[5]

A second Soviet commemorative stamp featuring Lyudmila Pavlichenko’s portrait was issued in 1976.

In popular culture

Second Soviet Union-issued postage stamp dedicated to Pavlichenko

The American folk singer Woody Guthrie composed a song (“Miss Pavlichenko”) as a tribute to her war record and to memorialize her visits to the United States and Canada.[12] It was released as part of The Asch Recordings.[13][14]

Pavlichenko was a subject of the 2015 film, Battle for Sevastopol (original Russian title, “неразрушимый ” (“Indestructible” / “Unbreakable”)). A joint Russian-Ukrainian production, it was released in both countries on 2 April 2015. The international premiere took place two weeks later at the Beijing International Film Festival.

The first English language edition of her memoirs, titled Lady Death, was published by Greenhill Books in February 2018.[15] The book has a foreword by Martin Pegler and is part of the Greenhill Books Sniper Library series.[16] The book was serialised in the Mail on Sunday newspaper on Sunday 18 March 2018[17].




Below: Battle for Sevastopol (Only Russian language—sorry!)

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  ADDENDUM No. 2 

Lyudmila Pavlichenko (1916-1974)

The Deadliest Female Sniper in History
Rejected Princesses.com

Don’t miss it. Please click on this link for Part 2 of this post.

  ADDENDUM No. 2 

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Or you can click right here to go preorder the book. 🙂

(enjoy the art? you can get it as a poster, shirt or phone case!)

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