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Title: Atamansha
Author: Malcolm Archibald
Date: 2007
Language: en
Topics: Ukraine, makhnovism, Makhnovists, Nestor Makhno, anarchist biography, biography, history, Russian Revolution, Russia
Source: http://nestormakhno.info/english/marusya.htm

Malcolm Archibald

Atamansha

Introduction

The Ukrainian anarchist Maria Nikiforova (1887–1919) has sometimes been

compared to Joan of Arc. Like Joan she started from humble origins and,

improbably, became a ferocious military commander who was captured and

executed by her sworn enemies. And, like Joan, she was a fanatic who

pursued her goals in a violent, ruthless fashion.

But there is no cult of Maria Nikiforova. There are no shelves of books

devoted to her life in any language. Although she played a prominent

role in the Russian Revolutions of 1917 and the subsequent Civil War,

she was virtually expunged from Soviet histories of the period. A

biographical dictionary of the Russian Revolution published in the

Soviet Union which includes hundreds of names does not mention her,

indeed mentions only a couple of dozen women. There are entries on the

Bolshevik heroines Alexandra Kollontai, Larissa Reissner, and Inessa

Armand but none of these women held independent military commands like

Nikiforova.

There is no scholarly biography of Maria Nikiforova, no historiography

of her life which only needs to be updated and possibly reinterpreted.

Partly this is because she spent most of her life in the underground:

she joined an anarchist terrorist group at age 16 and was really only

"above ground" for two years (1917-1919). So there are very few

documents to trace her activities and almost no photos. Recognition can

be fatal for a terrorist and so it was for Nikiforova in the end. Such

accounts of her life which exist are usually found in memoir literature

or fiction. Most of these accounts are hostile to Nikiforova and tend to

depict her as repulsive and evil.

Nikiforova was a Ukrainian and her activities in the Russian Revolution

and Civil War took place mostly in Ukraine but she has been largely

ignored by Ukrainian historians. She was anti-nationalist and, like the

Ukrainian anarchist movement in general, she couldn't be assimilated to

a nationalist historical perspective.

Even writers sympathetic to anarchism have, as a rule, neglected her.

Although she was closely associated with the famous peasant anarchist

Nestor Makhno, books about Makhno scarcely mention her. And yet in 1918

Nikiforova was already famous as an anarchist atamansha (military

leader) throughout Ukraine, while Makhno was still a rather obscure

figure operating in a provincial backwater. She is absent from the works

of Peter Arshinov, Volin, and Paul Avrich. Alexandre Skirda's book on

Makhno mentions her but only devotes one paragraph to her in a work of

400 pages. Exceptions to the rule are Makhno himself and his former

adjutant Victor Belash. In his memoirs (which only cover 22 months of

revolution and civil war) Makhno provides eye-witness accounts of a

number of dramatic incidents in which Nikiforova played a leading role.

Belash, whose work was rescued from the files of the Soviet secret

police, also presents primary source material about her.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union there has been tremendous

interest in Russia and Ukraine in filling in the "white patches" in

their history. Makhno and Nikiforova have benefited from this interest

with many books on Makhno being published and a few essays on

Nikiforova. The archives have yielded some solid information; for

example, Nikiforova's service record exists since she was once a member

of the Red Army. Gradually a clearer picture of her life is coming to

light and it is possible to establish a reasonably reliable narrative

although many ambiguities remain.

The following sketch of Nikiforova's life is based mainly on secondary

sources published in Russian and Ukrainian in the last two decades.

The Young Terrorist

According to tradition, Maria Grigorevna Nikiforova was born in the

Ukrainian city of Aleksandrovsk in 1885, the daughter of an officer who

had been a hero of the last Russo-Turkish War. Although this story might

help to explain her later martial ardour, it seems unlikely. For even

the daughter of an impoverished officer would be unlikely to leave home

at 16 to earn a living on our own as Maria did.

At the turn of the 19th century, Aleksandrovsk was a rapidly

industrializing city with a large and militant working class population.

Under the conditions of the time there was little paid work for women,

but Maria was able to find employment as a baby sitter, sales clerk and,

finally, a bottle washer in a vodka distillery.

Around the same time she became a factory worker, Nikiforova also joined

a local group of anarcho-communists. This political tendency was

distinguished from other left-wing groups, including other anarchists,

by the belief that human society had already reached a level that could

allow an immediate transition to communism. Anarcho-communist organizers

first appeared in Ukraine in 1903 and enjoyed considerable success among

the working class youth of industrial centres. During the revolutionary

events of 1905-07 there were as many as 90 anarcho-communist groups in

Ukraine, more numerous and better-organized than their counterparts in

Russia.

Many of these groups, including the one Maria belonged to, espoused

motiveless terror (bezmotivny terror) which advocated the necessity of

attacking agents of economic repression based solely on the class

position they occupied. This economic terrorism was a change from

earlier varieties of Russian terrorism in which the targets of the

terrorists were political tyrants. After serving some kind of probation,

Maria became a full-fledged militant (boevik), empowered to take part in

expropriations (to raise money for the cause) and terrorist acts.

Our age has also not lacked "motiveless terror" but it is important to

try to see the Ukrainian anarchist terrorists in the context of their

own times, not ours. The early years of the 20th century created pent-up

frustrations among the lower classes of the Russian Empire because of

the failure of revolutionary activity to change the country's

socio-political order in any meaningful way. This was an empire headed

by a monarch who was an honorary member of the "Union of the Russian

People", an organization roughly equivalent to the Klu Klux Klan. Under

prevailing conditions it was not just the anarchists who resorted to

terror against the regime. All the socialist groups used terror. In

fact, even middle class liberals endorsed the use of terror against

tsarist repression. And although the Russian anarchists never numbered

more than a few thousand, the ranks of their sympathizers were many

times larger.

Maria participated in a bomb attack on a passenger train. No one was

hurt but some wealthy passengers were terrified. Another bomb killed a

plant manager, causing the plant to shut down for an extended period. An

attack on the business office of an agricultural machine plant in

Aleksandrovsk resulted in the chief cashier and a guard being killed and

17,000 roubles stolen. When the police finally closed in, Maria tried to

kill herself with a bomb, but it didn't explode and she ended up in

prison.

At her trial in 1908 she was accused of the murder of a policeman and

taking part in armed robberies at four different locations. The court

sentenced the young anarchist to death but later, because of her age (in

the Russian Empire adulthood began at 21), the sentence was commuted to

20 years at hard labour. She was transferred, first to Petro-Pavlovsk

Fortress in the Russian capital and then conveyed to Siberia to serve

her sentence.

It's hard to determine exactly when, but at some point in her life Maria

Nikiforova began to be known as "Marusya", one of the many Slavic

diminutives for "Maria". In folklore she is always referred to as

Marusya and she certainly tolerated the name herself, allowing even

strangers to address her as Marusya. Therefore we shall use it here.

The Grand Tour

Marusya didn't spend long in Siberia. According to one version, she

organized a riot in the Narymsk prison and escaped through the taiga to

the Great Siberian Railway. Eventually she reached Vladivostok, and then

Japan. There she was helped by Chinese student-anarchists who bought her

a ticket to the U.S. She found a temporary home among the large group of

anarchist-emigrants from the Russian Empire, mainly of Jewish origin,

who had settled in New York and Chicago. Apparently Marusya published

propaganda articles in the anarchist Russian language press under

various pseudonyms.

Around 1912 Marusya returned to Europe, settling in Paris. In 1913 she

paid a visit to Spain where she was able to share her knowledge of

"actions" with the Spanish anarchists. While taking part in an anarchist

bank robbery in Barcelona, Marusya was wounded and had to undergo

treatment secretly at a clinic in France.

In the autumn of 1913 she turned up in Paris again, hanging around the

cafes and meeting poets and artists as well as the various Russian

politicos, including the Social Democrat Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko who

was later to help her out of some sticky situations. She discovered in

herself a talent, or at least a predilection, for painting and sculpture

and attended a school for artists.

Marusya also acquired a husband, the Polish anarchist Witold Bzhostek.

This was surely some sort of marriage of convenience for the couple

spent long periods apart and Marusya continued to use her own surname.

Nevertheless they seemed devoted to each other and ultimately shared the

same fate.

At the end of 1913, Marusya attended a conference of Russian

anarcho-communists held in London. She was one of 26 delegates and

signed the registration sheet as "Marusya". One of the main concerns of

this conference was the lack of anarchist educational and agitational

tracts, especially in comparison with their Marxist competitors.

This almost idyllic life came to an abrupt end with World War I. The war

split the left-wing groups into pro-war and anti-war factions. The

anarchists were no exception with the anarcho-communists close to

Kropotkin taking an anti-German position. Marusya seems to have sided

with Kropotkin and not just in theory for she enrolled in a French

military school and graduated with the rank of an officer. According to

her own story, she was eventually posted to the Salonika theatre of the

war and was there when revolution broke out in Russia.

Like many left-wing Russian emigrants, Marusya made her way back to

Russia in 1917. Reaching Petrograd, she immediately threw herself into

revolutionary activity.

Revolutionary Days in Petrograd

Petrograd was the seat of two competing organs of power – the

Provisional Government and the Petrograd Soviet. The Provisional

Government, lacking in legitimacy since it had never been properly

elected, was run by liberal and right-wing socialist politicians.

Unwilling and unable to end Russia's participation in the World War and

solve the land question in the countryside, the Provisional Government

lurched from one crisis to the next. The Petrograd Soviet included more

radical groups such as the Bolsheviks who were determined not to stop

with destroying the tsarist system but to finish off the bourgeois order

as well.

The Russian anarchists, as was often the case in 1917-18, acted as shock

troops for the better-organized groups on the extreme left. The

revolutionary activities of the anarchists brought down repression from

the Provisional Government which arrested 60 of them in June, 1917, in

Petrograd. One of those remaining in freedom was the anarcho-communist

I. S. Bleikhman, a popular deputy of the Petrograd Soviet. Bleikhman

planned a huge anti-government demonstration for July 3 which would

involve military personnel as well as militant workers. The

participation of sailors from the nearby Kronstadt naval base was

crucial and the anarchists put together a team of agitators to persuade

the sailors to take part.

Having recently arrived in Russia, Marusya was one of the anarchists who

went to Kronstadt. She gave a series of speeches on the huge Anchor

Square to crowds as large as 8,000 to 10,000 sailors, urging them not to

stand aside from their brothers in the capital. Partly thanks to her

efforts many thousands of sailors went to Petrograd to march in the

demonstrations of July 3 and 4 which almost toppled the Provisional

Government. Although some Bolshevik organizations supported the

demonstrations, that Party's leadership rejected the uprising as

"premature", dooming it to failure.

The government began hunting down the Bolsheviks and anarchists. Some of

the Bolsheviks, including Marusya's friend Alexandra Kollontai, ended up

in prison while others escaped to nearby Finland. Bleikhman was given

sanctuary by the Kronstadt sailors who protected him from arrest.

Marusya decided it was a good time to return to Ukraine and help revive

the anarchist movement there. In July 1917 she arrived back in

Aleksandrovsk, after an eight-year odyssey which had taken her around

the world.

Marusya – the Person and the Activist

At this point in her biography it seems appropriate to take up the

perplexing question of Marusya's sexuality. According to some published

sources, admittedly written after her death by people who were hostile

to her, Marusya was what would now be called an "intersex" person. This

view is reflected in several physical descriptions, for example the

former Makhnovist Chudnov writes of meeting her in 1918: "This was a

woman of 32 – 35, medium height, with an emaciated, prematurely aged

face in which there was something of a eunuch or hermaphrodite. Her hair

was cropped short in a circle."

The Bolshevik agitator Kiselev writes in his memoirs about meeting her

in 1919: "Around 30 years old. Thin with an emaciated face, she produced

the impression of an old maid type. Narrow nose. Sunken cheeks. She wore

a blouse and skirt and a small revolver hung from her belt." Kiselev

goes on to accuse her of being a cocaine addict. Most of the Bolshevik

descriptions of Marusya are at this level.

An exception is the Bolshevik Raksha who met Marusya in the spring of

1918:

"I had heard that she was a beautiful woman... Marusya was sitting at a

table and had a cigarette in her teeth. This she-devil really was a

beauty: about 30, gypsy-type with black hair and a magnificent bosom

which filled out her military tunic."

Another description from the summer of 1918:

"A carriage flew down the street at a mad speed. Carelessly sprawled in

it was a young brunette wearing a kubanka at a rakish angle. Standing on

the footboard was a broad-shouldered chap wearing red cavalry britches.

The brunette and her bodyguard had all sorts of weapons hanging from

them."

Generally the physical descriptions fall into these two camps, one

emphasizing attractiveness, the other repulsiveness. One suspects the

Bolshevik memoirists, finding her ideology unattractive, tried to make

her external appearance ugly as well. What we do know for certain is

that Marusya was a charismatic individual who made a strong impression

on people she met and was capable of influencing them purely on the

strength of her personality. Her comrades-in-arms were fiercely loyal to

her and she returned their loyalty in kind.

Marusya's political views are well known from her numerous speeches.

Prison, hard labour, and her global wanderings only strengthened the

convictions of her youth. She frequently said: "The anarchists are not

promising anything to anyone. The anarchists only want people to be

conscious of their own situation and seize freedom for themselves." Her

credo, which she expressed over and over again, was that "The workers

and peasants must, as quickly as possible, seize everything that was

created by them over many centuries and use it for their own interests."

On a tactical level, Marusya was influenced by the veteran anarchist

Apollon Karelin whom she met in Petrograd. Karelin represented a

tendency known as "Soviet anarchism" which encouraged anarchists to

participate in Soviet institutions so long as they were acting to push

the Revolution along in the right direction – the direction of more

freedom. As soon as the Soviets began to deviate from this path, the

anarchists were to rebel against them. Karelin himself became a member

of the highest organ of Soviet power in 1918. Many anarchists

disapproved of this tactic, especially since they were usually a

distinct minority in the organs of Soviet power.

Aleksandrovsk & Gulyai-Pole

Arriving in Aleksandrovsk, Marusya found a local Anarchist Federation

had been set up with about 300 members but not much influence on local

events. Marusya shook things up – she had an instant following among the

factory workers and carried out the successful expropriation of one

million roubles from the Badovsky distillery (possibly the one where she

had worked). Part of the money was donated to the Aleksandrovsk Soviet.

Aleksandrovsk happened to be the capital of the uyezd in which

Gulyai-Pole was situated. This "village" of 17,000 was the home of

Nestor Makhno, the leading figure of the local Anarcho-Communist Group

which had a membership in the hundreds. Makhno maintained close

relations with the Aleksandrovsk Anarchist Federation, visiting it

frequently although he was sceptical of its activities (or lack

thereof). The Aleksandrovsk anarchists were also critical of Makhno,

accusing him of leading a political party striving to seize power.

Marusya took it upon herself to travel to Gulyai-Pole (about 80 km. east

of Aleksandrovsk but much farther by train) to straighten out the local

anarchists who were not squeezing the bourgeoisie hard enough in her

opinion. On August 29, 1917 she addressed a well-attended open-air

meeting, chaired by Makhno, in the village's public garden.

Marusya preached the gospel of insurrection – rebel, rebel until all

organs of power are eliminated. Carry the Revolution through to the end

now, she said, or Capital will revive. Immediate action was also called

for because of the assault on the Revolution by state power in Ukraine

connected with the appearance of the government of the Central Rada. Not

beating around the bush, Marusya called for terrorist action against

supporters of the fledgling Ukrainian state.

While Marusya was haranguing the locals, Makhno was suddenly handed two

telegrams. Interrupting Marusya, he told the stunned audience "The

Revolution is in danger!" Both telegrams were from Petrograd – one from

the Provisional Government, the other from the Petrograd Soviet. Both

told of General Kornilov's mutiny and his advance on Petrograd to put an

end to the Revolution. The Soviet's telegram suggested forming local

"Committees for the Salvation of the Revolution".

As the crowd buzzed a voice rang out: "Our brothers' blood is already

flowing but here the counter-revolutionaries are walking around

laughing." The speaker pointed to a certain Ivanov, a former secret

policeman. Marusya immediately jumped down from the platform and

"arrested" Ivanov who was now surrounded by an angry mob. But Makhno

intervened to save the life of the former cop whom he described as

"harmless".

The Gulyai-Pole Peasant Union and the Anarcho-Communist Group followed

the advice of the Petrograd Soviet with a slight change: they formed a

Committee for the Defence of the Revolution. Its first activity was

confiscating all the weapons in the hands of the local bourgeoisie.

Marusya had something slightly different in mind. In the nearby town of

Orekhov were stationed two regiments of the regular army. Marusya

proposed to seize their weapons.

She organized a group of about 200 militants and on September 10 they

travelled to Orekhov by train. They were poorly armed having only a

couple dozen rifles and a similar number of revolvers confiscated from

the Gulyai-Pole police station. Arriving in Orekhov, they surrounded the

headquarters of the regiments. The commander succeeded in escaping but

some of the junior officers were captured. Marusya dispatched them with

her own hand, showing her willingness to kill anyone who belonged to the

despised "officers' caste". The rank-and-file soldiers were only too

glad to turn in their arms and disperse to their homes. The weapons were

taken to Gulyai-Pole and Marusya returned to Aleksandrovsk.

The organs of the Provisional Government in Aleksandrovsk were headed by

a chief commissar B. Mikhno (a liberal) and a military commissar S.

Popov (an SR). These authorities were disturbed about the goings-on in

Gulyai-Pole, in particular, the confiscation of weapons from the

property-owning class and the dividing up of large estates among the

peasants. The local organs in Gulyai-Pole, thoroughly infiltrated by the

anarchists, began to receive threatening orders from the higher

authorities.

These orders were ignored in Gulyai-Pole; in fact, Makhno took the

offensive by travelling to Aleksandrovsk with another delegate, B.

Antonov, to meet directly with workers' groups. The two anarchists were

shown around the city by Marusya who took them to a number of workplace

meetings. Since Makhno and Antonov had mandates from the Gulyai-Pole

Soviet, the authorities didn't dare touch them. With Marusya it was a

different story, and after Makhno and Antonov had left the city she was

arrested at her apartment and taken to prison by car.

Matters soon took an unpleasant turn for the authorities. Marusya

enjoyed great popularity among the workers of Aleksandrovsk and news of

her arrest spread like wildfire. On the morning after her arrest a

delegation of workers visited the commissars to demand her release.

Their demand was refused. But there was also a Soviet in Aleksandrovsk

which shared power with the official government. A procession of workers

was organized which marched to the Soviet to demand justice. Plants sat

idle with their sirens wailing while the march took place. On the way

the demonstrators encountered the chairman of the Soviet, Mochalov (a

Menshevik), who was literally forced into a horse-drawn cab with some

worker delegates and dispatched to the prison. Marusya was released and

brought back to the demonstration where she was passed over the heads of

the workers to the front of the crowd massed outside the building of the

Soviet. Marusya, who possessed a powerful voice used the occasion to

make a stirring speech calling for the workers to struggle against the

Government and for a society free of all authority.

Meanwhile news of Marusya's arrest was causing havoc in Gulyai-Pole.

Makhno managed to reach Commissar Mikhno by telephone; threats were

exchanged and Mikhno hung up. The anarchists loaded up a train with

militants and set out to attack the government in Aleksandrovsk. En

route they received news of Marusya's release and held a celebration

instead.

One practical result of all this was new elections to the Aleksandrovsk

Soviet which produced a more left-wing body, including some anarchists,

which was prepared to tolerate the revolutionary activities in

Gulyai-Pole.

The October Revolution in Ukraine

Like most anarchists, Marusya received news of the October Revolution

with enthusiasm. The anarchists regarded the coup by the Bolsheviks and

the Left SRs (forming the so-called Left Bloc) as a further stage in the

withering away of the State. Following the demise of tsardom and the

bourgeois state, they thought the Left Bloc government was a temporary

phenomenon which would soon disappear.

Marusya spent the fall organizing "Black Guard" detachments in

Aleksandrovsk and Elizavetgrad, a central Ukrainian city, which also had

a strong anarchist federation. According to one historian, Marusya was

responsible for the murder of the chairman of the Elizavetgrad Soviet.

After the October Revolution, the soviets in many Ukrainian cities

oriented themselves towards the Ukrainian Central Rada in Kiev rather

than the Soviet government in Petrograd. In Aleksandrovsk the decision

was made on November 22, 1917 and the vote was 147 to 95 in favour of

becoming part of the Kiev-based Ukrainian National Republic.

When the nationalist government in Kiev refused to recognize the Left

Bloc government in Moscow, the Left Bloc invaded Ukraine with a motley

force composed of various Red Guard units. Both sides engaged in an

"echelon war", advancing and retreating along the railway lines, much

like the contemporaneous Mexican Revolution.

In December 1917 Marusya formed an alliance with the Bolshevik

organization in Aleksandrovsk with the aim of overthrowing the local

Soviet. The Bolsheviks received a secret shipment of arms while the

anarchists were able to arrange the support of a detachment of sailors

from the Black Sea Fleet led by M. V. Mokrousov. On December 12, 1917,

Mokrousov appeared at a joint meeting of the Aleksandrovsk Soviet and

factory committees and demanded the Soviet be re-constituted with

members who were Bolsheviks, Left SRs, or anarchists. The members of

other parties (Mensheviks and SRs) fled the scene and the new Soviet

took over.

On December 25-26, 1917, Marusya's detachment went to Kharkhov and

helped the Left Bloc establish soviet power in the city. Her troops

engaged in an action there which became her trademark – looting the

shops and distributing their goods to the inhabitants. On December 28-29

her Black Guards took part in battles with the haidamaks at

Ekaterinoslav, successfully establishing Soviet power in that city as

well. According to her own version of events, her detachment was the

first to enter the city and she personally disarmed 48 soldiers.

The Left Bloc dismissed the Russian Constituent Assembly at the

beginning of January, 1918, making Civil War virtually inevitable.

Lacking a strong base in the population, especially in the countryside,

the Left Bloc needed allies and only the anarchists shared their

implacable hatred of the bourgeoisie. The Left Bloc sought help

especially from the anarchists in Ukraine where there were a number of

groups like Marusya's and Makhno's which had military capabilities.

Meanwhile in Aleksandrovsk the new regime was under threat by troops of

the Central Rada. The forces the Soviet was able to muster were not as

numerous or as well armed as the haidamaks (who had armoured cars). The

revolutionaries decided not to use Mokrousov's artillery in order to

avoid destroying the city. After three days of street fighting, the

Bolsheviks and anarchists were forced to withdraw. The balance shifted

when Red Guards from Moscow and Petrograd arrived. On January 2, 1918,

the haidamaks retreated to the right bank of the Dnepr and power in the

city fell to the hands of the newly formed Revolutionary Committee

(Revkom). On January 4 Nestor Makhno and his brother Savva showed up

with an 800-strong Black Guard detachment from Gulyai-Pole. Nestor was

invited to join the Revkom and the Federation of Anarchists was allowed

to appoint two delegates, one of whom was Marusya who became the deputy

leader of the Revkom.

The Cossack Threat

The haidamaks had retreated, but now a new danger was threatening the

revolutionary city. A convoy of echelons loaded with Cossacks (and their

horses) was approaching the city from the External Front on their way to

the Don to join the counter-revolutionary movement of the reactionary

General Kaledin. Realizing the danger the Cossacks represented to the

Revolution, the Aleksandrovsk insurgents decided to stop them.

The anarchists led their detachments across the nearby Kichkass

suspension bridge over the Dnepr and dug in along the railway tracks.

Soon the Cossacks showed up. Contact was established by telephone and a

meeting arranged between representatives of the two sides. Makhno and

Marusya were part of the delegation which travelled by locomotive to the

meeting point. The Cossack officers were in a belligerent mood and

claimed they had 18 echelons of Cossacks and another seven echelons of

haidamaks and no one was going to stop them. Negotiations were broken

off.

The first Cossack train which tried to break through was met with heavy

fire and started to back up suddenly, colliding with the train behind

and causing a wreck with loss of life to both men and horses. Soon a new

truce party of Cossacks arrived which capitulated to the Aleksandrovsk

Revkom. They gave up their weapons but insisted on keeping their horses

and saddles for "cultural" reasons.

The disarming of the Cossacks was spread over many days and the local

politicians took the opportunity to try to win them over to the

Revolution. At one outdoor meeting thousands of Cossacks were addressed

by a series of socialist orators, with little effect. The Cossacks stood

around smoking, occasionally laughing at the speakers.

Then Marusya stepped to the podium and began to speak. Now the Cossacks

were paying attention. "Cossacks, I must tell you that you are the

butchers of the Russian workers. Will you continue to be so in the

future, or will you acknowledge your own wickedness and join the ranks

of the oppressed? Up to now you have shown no respect for the poor

workers. For one of the tsar's roubles or a glass of wine, you have

nailed them living to the cross."

As Marusya continued in this vein many of the Cossacks removed their

caps and bowed their heads. Soon some of them were weeping like

children.

A knot of Aleksandrovsk intellectuals was standing in the crowd. They

told each other: "The speeches of the Left Bloc representatives seem so

pale in comparison with the speeches of the anarchists and, in

particular, with the speech of M. Nikiforova." One upshot of the

meetings, which went on for days, was that a number of Cossacks

maintained contact with the Gulyai-Pole anarchists even after they went

home to the Kuban and other regions.

After the Cossacks had been disarmed, Marusya and Makhno returned to

their duties on the Aleksandrovsk Revkom. Makhno had been assigned the

"dirty" job of heading a tribunal which passed sentence on various

political prisoners collected by the new political order. Among the

prisoners who came before him was Mikhno, the former Provisional

Government commissar who had threatened him repeatedly and jailed

Marusya. Makhno released him, saying he was an honest man who was only

following orders.

Makhno was not inclined to be magnanimous with another prisoner, the

former prosecutor Maksimov. When Makhno was a prisoner in the

Aleksandrovsk prison many years earlier, Maksimov had made sure his stay

was as unpleasant as possible. Considering the evidence against him,

Makhno felt justified in sentencing Maksimov to be shot. But the other

members of the Revkom, including Marusya, interceded on his behalf.

Although they agreed he was a counter-revolutionary, their regime was

too shaky to be executing someone who was well regarded in the city.

Makhno didn't give in easily and it was only after an all-night meeting

that he agreed to remand Maksimov for further review of his case.

Makhno was soon fed up with the Aleksandrovsk Revkom (among other

things, they wouldn't let him blow up the prison) and decided to return

to Gulyai-Pole with his detachment. The other members of the Revkom came

to the train station to see them off – most went there by automobile,

Marusya on horseback. At the station the detachment sang the anarchist

battle hymn, then embarked.

Marusya was able to hold her Black Guard detachment together and began

to act as an independent military commander. It was at this point that

Marusya became a player on the national stage rather than just a local

figure.

The Free Combat Druzhina

Shortly after Makhno had returned to Gulyai-Pole Marusya proposed a

joint action of the Aleksandrovsk Federation with the Gulyai-Pole

Anarchist-Communist Group to seize more weapons. The target was a

battalion stationed in Orekhov where the anarchists had enjoyed success

earlier. The soldiers in the battalion, part of the 48th Berdyansk

Regiment, were about evenly divided between supporters of the Ukrainian

Central Rada and supporters of General Kaledin. Again the operation was

a success. The regional Bolshevik commander, Bogdanov, was ecstatic

about the seizure of arms, which included some mortars. Apparently he

assumed that since Marusya was still the deputy of the Aleksandrovsk

Revkom, the weapons would end up in his hands. Instead all of them went

to Gulyai-Pole. This incident marked the end of Marusya's loyalty to the

Left Bloc authorities. From now on she acted independently.

The commander of the Soviet forces in Ukraine was Vladimir

Antonov-Ovseyenko, one of the few Bolsheviks who had attended a military

academy. Marusya enjoyed considerable influence with him as she had

helped to establish Soviet power in three important Ukrainian cities. He

appointed her "commander of a formation of cavalry detachments in steppe

Ukraine" and allocated a significant sum of money to her which she used

to equip the so-called "Free Combat Druzhina". She was the only woman

commander of a large revolutionary force in Ukraine – an atamansha.

The Free Combat Druzhina was equipped with two large guns and an

armoured flatcar. The wagons were loaded with armoured cars, tachankas,

and horses as well as troops which meant that the detachment was by no

means restricted to railway lines. The trains were festooned with

banners reading "The Liberation of the Workers is the Affair of the

Workers Themselves", "Long Live Anarchy", "Power Breeds Parasites", and

"Anarchy is the Mother of Order."

The soldiers were better fed and equipped than many of the Red Army

units. Although there were no official uniforms, the soldiers certainly

had a sense of style. Long hair (not common in that era), sheepskin

caps, officers' service jackets, red breeches, and ammunition belts were

much in evidence. The Druzhina was composed of a core of militants

devoted to Marusya and a larger group which came and went on a fairly

casual basis. The militants included a fair number of Black Sea sailors,

noted for their fighting qualities throughout Ukraine.

With their black flags and cannons, Marusya's echelons resembled pirate

ships sailing across the Ukrainian steppe. One observer, the Left-SR I.

Z. Steinberg, compared the trains to the Flying Dutchman, liable to

appear at any time, anywhere.

Travelling in echelons, the Druzhina advanced to meet the enemy, which

in January, 1918, meant the White Guards and the Ukrainian Central Rada.

The anarchists took part in establishing Soviet power in Crimea. The

Druzhina and another anarchist detachment captured the resort city of

Yalta and pillaged and the Livadia Palace. Several dozen officers were

shot. Marusya next headed for Sevastopol where eight anarchists were

languishing in prison. The Bolshevik authorities released the prisoners

without waiting for the atamansha. Marusya spent some time in the city

of Feodosia where she was elected to the executive of the Peasant Soviet

and was able to organize more Black Guards.

The Battles of Elizavetgrad

On January 28, 1918, the Druzhina appeared in Elizavetgrad, an important

city in south-central Ukraine. Its presence allowed the local Bolshevik

organization to take over the city Soviet in a bloodless coup, ousting

Ukrainian SRs and Kadets, and set up their own Revkom.

Soon Marusya was engaged in her usual brand of mayhem. Hearing numerous

complaints about the local military commissar, Colonel Vladimirov, she

went to his quarters and shot him. Then she organized systematic looting

of the city's stores, distributing the goods to the poor. Noticing that

people were ending up with things they didn't need, she authorized the

bartering of goods although this had been expressly forbidden by the

Bolshevik Revkom.

Next Marusya met with the Revkom and sharply criticized its activities.

She said its members were "tolerant towards the bourgeoisie". She

favoured the merciless expropriation of all property acquired through

the labour of others and a violent response to any attempt at

resistance. Belonging to the class of exploiters was a crime in itself,

according to Marusya, and she included even the members of the Revkom in

this group. She threatened to disperse the Revkom and shoot its chairman

for the Druzhina was opposed to any kind of government organ and had not

overthrown the Soviet only to have it replaced by another bureaucratic

organ.

The Bolshevik administration in the city was extremely troubled by this

kind of talk and responded in typical bureaucratic fashion by setting up

a special "Committee for the Regulation of Relations with Marusya". This

Committee visited Marusya at her headquarters and asked her politely to

leave the city, hinting that the Revkom disposed of significant armed

forces. Marusya was hardly impressed with this threat, but did leave a

few days later after loading up with weapons from a local officers'

college after its student body had joined the haidamaks.

On February 9, 1918 a peace treaty was signed between the Ukrainian

Central Rada and the Central Powers. The Central Rada had been losing

territory to the armies of the Left Bloc and one of the provisions of

the treaty allowed the imperial troops of Germany and Austria-Hungary to

establish "order" on Ukrainian soil. German and Austro-Hungarian troops

then invaded Ukraine, and, assisted by the haidamaks of the Central

Rada, proceeded to push back and mop up the revolutionary forces.

Meanwhile in Elizavetgrad events unfolded tragically. The city was

subjected to the full horrors of civil war. With German forces

approaching the city the Bolsheviks hurriedly began to evacuate their

troops and institutions, leaving a power vacuum. The day after the

Revkom left, a new government called the "Provisional Committee of the

Revolution" (VKR) suddenly appeared. Its members were drawn from the

parties belonging to the previously overthrown Soviet. Any Bolsheviks

remaining in the city were arrested and imprisoned. The new authorities,

realizing they would need a military force to protect them from

retreating Bolshevik troops, recruited officers who had been in hiding

and scoured the countryside for returned military personnel. Peasants

were conscripted from nearby villages and their wagons requisitioned.

Arms were offered to anyone willing to fight the Left Bloc and its

allies.

Unexpectedly the Druzhina returned to the city. Marusya's detachment was

at full strength and its arsenal included five armoured cars. At first

there were several days of peace between the new civic authorities and

the anarchists. The Druzhina took over the railway station and annoyed

the citizens mainly by singing anarchist songs. The anarchists sent a

truck out every day to collect "contributions" from the bourgeoisie. The

Bolshevik prisoners remained in jail.

Then a crisis erupted. There was a robbery at the huge Elvorta plant –

40,000 roubles were stolen from the payroll office and the workers could

not be paid. Wild rumours circulated that the anarchists were

responsible and intended to take their revenge on the city for the

imprisoned Bolsheviks. Marusya decided to go to the factory herself and

explain the situation to the workers which she evidently regarded as a

provocation by right-wing elements.

The meeting hall at the plant was filled to overflowing when Marusya

arrived (the plant's workforce numbered around 5,000). Leaving her

escort at the door, she entered the hall alone and took the stage. But

she wasn't allowed to use her oratorical skills – there was ceaseless

shouting and cursing. Frustrated at not being allowed to speak, Marusya

pulled two revolvers out of her belt and opened fire over the heads of

the audience. Panic ensured. Doors were smashed and people jumped

through broken windows. Marusya's companions rushed into the hall and

rescued her. On the way back to the station her car was fired on and she

was slightly wounded.

The alarm was sounded in the city and the new government's militia

advanced on the train station. Street fighting went on for several

hours. There were many casualties as the anarchists defended themselves

with machine guns and grenades. But they were outnumbered many times

over by the attackers and Marusya was forced to make a difficult

withdrawal to the steppe, stopping at Kanatovo, the first station on the

line. At this point Marusya realized that some of her soldiers had been

taken prisoner and she resolved to re-engage the enemy to rescue them.

Finally Bolshevik forces arrived from the Front under Aleksandr

Belenkevich, a high ranking officer, and demanded the surrender of the

city. His demand being refused, he advanced boldly into the centre of

the city where his troops were attacked on all sides. After a three-hour

battle, Belenkevich's unit was almost wiped out with many of his troops

taken prisoner. Belenkevich himself barely escaped by train. The city

authorities began shooting some of the prisoners. Their forces were now

led by two retired generals.

Marusya advanced on the city along the railway line from the north but,

meeting resistance in the suburbs, she detrained and dug in. The VKR now

disposed of thousands of troops under the slogan "Down with Anarchy!"

They were armed with both heavy and light artillery, machine guns, and

even three airplanes. In order to inflame the population, a story was

spread that Marusya looted icons from churches. She was depicted as the

leader of a gang of thieves.

A war of attrition went on just outside the city on a front several

kilometres long. There was non-stop machine gun and artillery fire. The

owner of a distillery, Makeyev, made available unlimited quantities of

spirits to the defending troops. To keep up the supply of cannon fodder,

the city was scoured for shirkers, who were escorted to the front. There

were two lines of trenches: the rear line was manned by officers with

machine guns whose job was to block any retreat.

For two days (February 24-25, 1918) the battle see-sawed back and forth.

On February 26 Marusya received substantial reinforcements in the form

of a Red Guard detachment from the city of Kamensk, one thousand workers

with a light battery and machine guns. They advanced to the attack with

Marusya's troops.

The Red Guards did not fare well in the battle. They lost their

artillery and machine guns to the VKR troops and 65 of them were taken

prisoner. Meanwhile the artillery of the defenders had the advantage of

reconnaissance by airplanes, which also dropped bombs. The anarchist

attack got bogged down short of the enemy trenches. They were forced to

retreat still further, to the station of Znamenka. There they gained new

strength from another detachment under the Left S-R Colonel Muraviev,

who had captured Kiev from the Central Rada a few days earlier for the

Left Bloc.

The VRK authorities in the city declared for the Central Rada and sent

emissaries to the approaching German-Ukrainian forces requesting

immediate help. But it was already too late. In battling Marusya north

of the city, the VRK had left the south side unprotected. An armoured

train known as "Freedom or Death" steamed into the city under the

command of the Bolshevik sailor Polypanov. The guard units in the city

fled without giving battle. The sailors went directly to the VRK

authorities and demanded the release of all prisoners, including

Marusya's soldiers. The VRK was forced to comply. The VRK troops north

of the city discovered that it was effectively in Bolshevik hands.

Marusya and Muravyev now entered the city. There was more looting and

not just by the anarchists. But there were no mass reprisals; in fact

Polypanov said at a mass meeting that the three-day battle had been the

result of a misunderstanding. The Reds remained in power in Elizavetgrad

until the night of March 19, 1918 when they abandoned the city. Three

days later the first German train arrived.

The battles at Elizavetgrad were typical of the Civil War in Ukraine –

desperate encounters between fanatical opponents, with a more powerful

third party picking up the spoils. Elizavetgrad was destined to change

hands several more times before the Bolsheviks finally took over.

The Long Retreat

The Left Bloc tried to organize resistance to the German forces in the

name of the puppet government they had set up in Khar'kov. This was a

very unequal contest: comparing numbers alone, the German armies and

their allies totalled 400,000 to 600,000 soldiers versus Left Bloc

forces of around 30,000, including several thousand in anarchist

detachments. Nevertheless there was more than token resistance and the

occupation of Ukraine by the Central Powers took up most of the spring

of 1918.

The Druzhina stopped in the town of Berezovka in south Ukraine and tried

to extort a large sum of money from the inhabitants. Resistance appeared

from an unlikely source, a rival anarchist detachment headed by Grigori

Kotovsky. Kotovsky had been a real bandit before the Revolution, leading

a gang specializing in armed robberies and blackmail. The Revolution had

saved him from execution. But now he insisted the Berezovkans not give

Marusya a single kopeck. Given his superior firepower Marusya was forced

to back off.

The Druzhina now detrained and travelled cross-country as a cavalry

unit. The detachment made quite an impression as their horses were

arranged according to colour: "a row of black, a row of bay, and a row

of white – and then again, black, bay, and white. Bringing up the rear

were accordionists sitting in tachankas filled with carpets and furs."

Marusya herself rode a white horse and many of the troops were dressed

entirely in leather while others still had their sailor uniforms. As

usual the Druzhina excited the envy of the Red Guards who referred to it

as a "dog's wedding" or even worse names.

A rendezvous for the retreating Red detachments had been established on

a huge estate near the village of Preobrazhenka. When Marusya arrived

she found a Red Commander, Ivan Matveyev, in charge. Summoned to his

office, she told him she was willing to take orders from him "until such

time as all the detachments have arrived and it's clear who has the most

people."

All she was concerned about, she told Matveyev, was distributing the

goods found on the estate, starting with clothing. She had already

carried out an inventory of the dresses, jackets, and skirts hanging in

the huge wardrobes. "The property of the pomeshchiks," she said,

"doesn't belong to any particular detachment, but to the people as a

whole. Let the people take what they want."

Mateveyev, visibly annoyed, refused "on principle" to discuss "rags".

Marusya stormed out, slamming the door.

The Bolsheviks decided to disarm the Druzhina before any more anarchists

showed up. They called a general meeting of all the detachments where

they intended to seize the anarchists and disarm them. This was a huge

outdoor gathering in the centre of the estate. Marusya attended with

some, but not all of her troops. The Bolsheviks started off by talking

about the necessity of unity and discipline. Marusya caught their drift

and when one of the speakers started complaining about the anarchists,

she gave a signal for them to leave. When the Bolsheviks finally issued

a call to seize the anarchists, they had already slipped away from the

estate with their horses and tachankas.

The Druzhina reached a railway line and boarded echelons. Marusya

decided to head for her home town, Aleksandrovsk, and try to defend it

from the German invaders. The city was full of retreating Red Guard

detachments. Since Marusya had left a few weeks earlier, relations

between the Anarchist Federation and the Bolsheviks had gone downhill.

Nevertheless the Bolsheviks were glad to see Marusya because of her

reputation as a warrior.

On April 13, 1918, units of the Ukrainian Sich Riflemen broke into the

city and captured the railway station. In a warehouse nearby the corpse

of a young woman, dressed in leather, was found. A rumour immediately

spread through the city that the famous Marusya had been killed. Indeed

Marusya took part in the battle, but she was very much alive. A day

later the Riflemen were driven out of the city and forced to escape down

the Dnepr in boats.

On April 18 the Germans finally entered Aleksandrovsk. The Druzhina was

the last detachment to leave the doomed city.

Heading east, the Druzhina stopped at the station of Tsarekonstantinovka

where Marusya ran into a disconsolate Nestor Makhno. A nationalist

military coup in Gulyai-Pole had just resulted in the arrest of the

local Revkom and Soviet while Makhno was absent. Marusya proposed a

rescue mission but she knew she couldn't accomplish it alone. First she

telegraphed the sailor Polypanov but he refused, as did the sailor

Stepanov who was also passing through the station with a train packed

with refugees. Finally she lined up a Siberian Red Guard detachment led

by Petrenko. Marusya still possessed a couple of armoured cars which she

proposed to use as spearheads for the attack (Gulyai-Pole was eight

kilometres from the nearest train station). Just then Marusya received

word that the Germans had occupied Pologi, on the line she would need to

use to get to Gulyai-Pole. She had to abandon her plan and head further

east.

Trial in Taganrog

The Bolshevik and anarchists detachments in Left-Bank (Eastern) Ukraine

all headed for Taganrog on the Sea of Azov, the current site of the

fugitive Ukrainian Soviet government. The Bolsheviks had no hope of

hanging on to any part of Ukraine and, so as far as they were concerned,

the anarchist troops were no longer necessary. In fact, with their

constant agitation against the politics of the party state, they were an

ideological liability.

The authorities in the Moscow had already taken steps to get rid of

their obnoxious allies. On April 12, 1918 the Moscow Federation of

Anarchist Groups was suppressed and almost 400 people arrested. The

Bolsheviks propagandized this event as a police action against criminal

elements rather than the elimination of political competition. The

anarchists in Russia were too feeble to counter this action but in

Ukraine it was a different story.

Arriving in Taganrog, Marusya found herself accused of leaving the Front

(against the Germans) without permission. The task of arresting her and

disarming the Druzhina fell to the Red Guard unit commanded by Kaskin.

Marusya was arrested at the offices of the Central Executive Committee

of Ukraine. As she was being escorted from the building, she noticed the

well-known Bolshevik V. Zatonsky. She asked him why she was being

arrested. When Zatonsky replied, "I have no idea," Marusya spat at him

and called him a "lying hypocrite".

The disarming of the Druzhina didn't go smoothly either. The troops

refused to transfer to Kaskin's brigade and demanded to know where

Marusya was being held. The Taganrog Anarchist Federation and the

constantly arriving anarchist detachments also demanded that the

Bolsheviks justify their actions. Even the local Left SRs supported the

anarchists.

Contacted by the anarchists, the Bolshevik commander-in-chief

Antonov-Ovseyenko sent a telegram of support: "The detachment of Maria

Nikiforova, and Comrade Nikiforova herself, are well known to me.

Instead of suppressing such revolutionary formations, we should be

creating them." Telegrams of support were also received from several

other Red Guard commanders. And into Taganrog steamed an armoured train

under the command of the anarchist Garin, a personal friend of

Marusya's.

The chief accusation of the Bolsheviks against Marusya was the pillaging

of Elizavetgrad both before and after the right-wing uprising there. The

other main charge was deserting the Front, although Kaskin's troops had

left the Front before Marusya's. The anarchists were indignant at the

hypocrisy of the Bolsheviks who used up the strength of the anarchists

in the front lines of the Civil War, while stabbing them in the back in

the rear areas.

A "court of revolutionary honour" was held in late April, 1918. The

judicial bench was composed of two local Bolsheviks, two local Left SRs,

and two representatives of the Left Bloc government of Ukraine. The

Bolsheviks presented a series of witnesses who accused Marusya of crimes

which were punishable by death. But there were also many defence

witnesses in the packed courtroom, people who disputed the testimony of

the prosecution's witnesses and referred to Marusya's services to the

Revolution. The anarchist Garin noted that Marusya had faith in the

justice of the revolutionary court and added, "If I thought she didn't,

my detachment would liberate her by force."

Ultimately Marusya was acquitted of all charges and the Druzhina was

given back its weapons. Marusya and Makhno (also present in Taganrog)

arranged a series of lectures in the local theatre and various

workplaces on the topic: "The defence of the Revolution – against the

Austro-German army at the front – against the government authorities in

the rear". The pair also issued a leaflet on this topic.

Marusya and Makhno then split up. Makhno and other refugees from

Gulyai-Pole decided to go home and carry out an underground struggle

against the Germans and the Central Rada. Some of the Gulyai-Pole people

joined the Druzhina. German pressure soon forced the Bolsheviks and

anarchists to retreat to Rostov-on-Don. The anarchists collected

valuable documents from the local banks – deeds, loan agreements, and

bonds – and burned them in a bonfire in the main square. (Cynics noted

that paper money was spared.)

An eye-witness described Marusya's crew: "They looked like Spaniards

with long hair and black capes... . A pair of large pistols stuck out of

their belts, they carried grenades in their pockets. The younger ones

wore bell-bottom trousers and gold bracelets... ."

Finally the German advance halted and the long retreat could come to an

end. But now the Bolsheviks had reached territory where they had a

preponderance in numbers and could safely disarm the anarchists. Marusya

saw what was coming and slipped out of the trap. The Druzhina made a

dangerous journey north through the Don region, travelling along a

railway line partially controlled by White Cossacks, to reach the

Russian city of Voronezh where a new front was being formed.

It is difficult to follow Marusya's activities during the next few

months. The Druzhina visited a number of Russian towns close to the

border with Ukraine. As long as the Germans occupied Ukraine it was

impossible for Marusya to carry on above-ground activities in Ukraine.

Finding the Central Rada too radical for their tastes, the German

imperialists replaced it with a puppet government under the hetman

Skoropadsky. But in November, 1918, the Germans lost the World War. As

part of the armistice they were required to evacuate Ukraine.

Skoropadsky's government quickly collapsed and was replaced by the

Directory, a more radical nationalist group whose leading figure was

Simon Petliura. Ukraine was now vulnerable to another Bolshevik invasion

as well as to freebooters like Marusya and peasant insurgents like the

Makhnovists.

In the fall of 1918, the Druzhina was part of the order of battle of a

mixed force which seized Odessa from the Whites who had taken over the

city in the power vacuum caused by the withdrawal of the Germans.

Marusya then burned down the Odessa prison. This occupation of Odessa

was short-lived; the Whites, with backing from Allied troops (French and

Greek) were soon back in control.

Trial in Moscow

Marusya next turned up in the Russian city of Saratov, temporary home to

many anarchist refugees from Ukraine. There she was arrested by order of

the local Soviet and the Druzhina disarmed. During the Red Terror raging

at the time (triggered by the attempted assassination of Lenin by an

SR), Marusya could well have been shot without trial. Apparently the

local Chekists were reluctant to shoot a "heroine of the Revolution" who

may have known Lenin in Paris before the Revolution.

Marusya was transferred to Moscow and lodged in Butyrki Prison (where

Makhno had spent many years). But soon she was out on bail for she still

had friends in high places. The anarchist Karelin and the Bolshevik

Antonov-Ovseyenko were prepared to guarantee her good behaviour. Her

husband, the Polish anarchist Bzhostek, was also in Moscow. Like many

former residents of the Russian Empire with revolutionary credentials,

he had been given an important job in the new administration. While

awaiting trial, Marusya took the opportunity to enrol in Proletcult, an

officially sanctioned movement which encouraged workers to develop their

artistic talents.

Marusya was tried in Moscow on January 21-23, 1919 by a court of

"revolutionary honour". The Bolsheviks did not refrain from charging her

with crimes which she had already been acquitted of in Taganrog, egged

on by their exiled Ukrainian puppet government. That government had set

up a special commission to investigate her "crimes". According to the

chair of this commission, Yuri Piatakov, the Druzhina "disorganized the

defence against the Germans and White Guards" and Marusya herself "under

the mask of defender of the proletariat kept herself busy with

pillaging. She is simply a bandit operating under the flag of Soviet

power."

According to the indictment, "M. Nikiforova without the consent of local

Soviets carried out in many cities requisitions from quartermaster's

stores, private shops and societies; imposed large contributions of

money on landowners; and collected guns and other weapons abandoned by

the haidamaks. When the Soviets protested, she threatened them,

surrounding the buildings of the Soviets with machine guns and arresting

members of the executive committees. Her brigade shot a troop commander,

and for not carrying out orders she sentenced to be shot the chairman of

the Elizavetgrad Soviet and others."

Her old friend Karelin testified as a character witness, describing her

as unselfish: "All she had she gave away even to comrades she barely

knew. She wouldn't keep a kopeck for herself. She gave away

everything... ." Karelin added she was a complete teetotaller.

The verdict was published in Pravda on January 25, 1919. Marusya was

found guilty of "discrediting Soviet power by her deeds and by the

actions of her brigade in several instances; and of insubordination in

relation to local Soviets in the sphere of military activities." She was

acquitted of pillaging and illegal requisitions.

Marusya could easily have been shot for the crimes of which she was

convicted. Nevertheless the court sentenced her "to deprivation of the

right to occupy responsible posts for six months from the date of the

sentence." The tribunal announced that it had taken into consideration

Marusya's services in the struggle for Soviet power and against the

Germans.

Return to Gulyai-Pole

Although her sentence was light, it seemed onerous to Marusya. Six

months was a long time under Civil War conditions. So almost immediately

she headed for Gulyai-Pole where Makhno had carved out an anarchist

enclave by driving out the Whites and Nationalists. Makhno concluded an

agreement with the Bolsheviks on February 19, 1919 which allowed him

freedom to build an anarchist society. Makhno's short-range plans did

not include a confrontation with the Bolsheviks. So he was not

particularly happy when Marusya showed up, knowing her bad relations

with the Bolsheviks. Makhno made it clear to her that he intended to

observe the conditions of her sentence. She was asked to involved

herself with kindergartens, schools, and hospitals rather than military

matters.

An ugly incident occurred at the 2nd Congress of Soviets of Gulyai-Pole

raion held in the spring of 1919. Marusya, although not a delegate,

asked to speak. When she starting attacking the Bolsheviks, the peasants

became upset. They were more concerned about the Whites at that point –

the Bolsheviks were their allies. Makhno, always a bit of a demagogue

when it came to the peasants, physically dragged her down from the

podium.

Despite public disagreements, Marusya and Makhno continued to work

together. Marusya made trips to Aleksandrovsk, nominally under Bolshevik

control, which Makhno hoped to include in his sphere of influence. The

Bolsheviks responded by arresting anarchists she stayed with, although

she was not officially regarded as an enemy of Soviet power.

Gulyai-Pole was visited by several high-level Bolshevik leaders in the

spring of 1919, including Antonov-Ovseyenko, Lev Kamenev, and Kliment

Voroshilov. Marusya acted as a sort of hostess for these visits and

lobbied Kamenev to reduce her sentence from the Moscow court to three

months. Apparently she was successful in this.

The visits by the Bolshevik leaders had a sinister purpose: they were

trying to figure out when to stop using the Makhnovists for cannon

fodder against the Whites and proceed to their liquidation. The

Bolsheviks had already suppressed the anarchist organizations in

Ukrainian cities under their control. The anarchists were forbidden to

hold meetings or lectures, their printshops were shut down, and they

were arrested under almost any pretext. This led to an influx of urban

anarchists to Gulyai-Pole and the territory controlled by the

Makhnovists.

Return to Underground Terror

After her sentence had been shortened, Marusya went to the Azov port of

Berdyansk in May, 1919, and organized a new detachment using dedicated

militants from Makhno's counter-intelligence staff and anarchist

refugees from the cities. Among the members of this group was her

husband Bzhostek. He had come to Ukraine not to visit his wife but to

recruit experienced terrorists for an underground group in Moscow.

Early in June Makhno and his military staff were declared outlaws by the

Soviet state. This was an incredibly stressful time for the Ukrainian

anarchists. Fighting a losing battle against the Whites in the east,

they were now being attacked from the rear by the Bolsheviks. Makhno

responded by trying to salvage some military capability. Marusya had

other plans.

No longer able to field a regular military force, Marusya decided to

launch an underground war against her enemies. But first she needed

money. Hearing about Makhno's outlaw status, she and her followers

caught up with him at the station of Bolshoi Tokmak. Meeting Makhno in

his railway car, she demanded money for her terrorist activities. Makhno

cursed and pulled out a revolver. He was too slow – Marusya already had

her gun out. After an acrimonious discussion Makhno gave her 250,000

roubles from his treasury and told her to get lost.

Marusya divided her group into three sections of about 20 each. One

group under Cherniak and Gromov was dispatched to Siberia to blow up the

headquarters of the White dictator Kolchak. They reached Siberia but

were unable to catch up with Kolchak and ended up being absorbed in the

anti-White partisan movement.

The second group under Kovalevich and Sobolev went north to Kharkov to

free Makhnovist prisoners and blow up the Cheka headquarters. But the

prisoners had already been shot and the Chekists had evacuated the city.

So the group went on to Moscow to organize a terrorist attack on the

Bolshevik leadership. In preparation for this they carried out a number

of armed robberies in Moscow and nearby cities top raise funds. On

September 25, 1919, they exploded a bomb at a meeting of the Moscow

Committee of the Bolshevik Party, killing 12 and wounding 55 prominent

party members. In the ensuing manhunt the group was wiped out. After

Kovalevich and Sobolev had been killed in shoot-outs, the rest of the

group holed up in a dacha and chose to blow themselves up along with a

number of Chekists.

The third group, including Marusya and Bzhostek, headed to Crimea, then

under White control, with the intention of blowing up the headquarters

of General Denikin, the leader of the White armies in southern Russia.

Denikin's headquarters was in Rostov-on-Don at the time but Marusya may

have sought help, financial or otherwise, from the Crimean anarchists.

The Last Trial

The last days of Marusya have long been the subject of various legends,

resulting from the fact that events in White Crimea were almost

impossible for people on "revolutionary soil" to know. The Makhnovists

Chudnov and Belash both gave conflicting stories, as did

Antonov-Ovseyenko. Only in recent years have documents come to light

which clear up the mystery.

On August 11, 1919, Marusya was recognized on the street in Sevastopol

and she and her husband were arrested by the Whites. Marusya's group,

despairing of being able to rescue her, headed for the Kuban region

where they took part in partisan activities in the rear of the Whites.

Marusya's arrest was a great coup for White counter-intelligence and a

month was spent gathering evidence for the case against her (difficult

under Civil War conditions). Her trial, actually a field court-martial,

was held on September 16, 1919 before General Subbotin, commandant of

Sevastopol Fortress. The indictment read:

1. That the person calling herself Maria Grigor'evna Bzhostek, also

known as Marusya Nikiforova, is charged as follows: that during the

period 1918-1919, while commanding a detachment of anarcho-communists,

she carried out shootings of officers and peaceful inhabitants, and she

called for bloody, merciless reprisals against the bourgeoisie and

counter-revolutionaries. For example:

several officers were shot, in particular, the officer Grigorenko;

detachments of anarchists and incited a mob with an appeal to carry out

bloody reprisals against the bourgeoisie and counter-revolutionaries;

participated together with the troops of Petliura in the capture of

Odessa, after which she took part in burning down the Odessa prison,

where the chief warden Pereleshin was killed in the fire;

order, including a certain Timofei Rozhkov.

criminal code of the Volunteer Army.

2. Vitol'd Stanislav Bzhostek is charged, not with taking part in the

crimes of Part I, but with knowing about them and shielding M.

Nikiforova from the authorities.

Both of the accused were found guilty and sentenced to death. As Part II

of the indictment indicates, V. Bzhostek was convicted of the "crime" of

being Marusya's husband.

According to reporters at the trial, Marusya was defiant throughout the

proceedings and swore at the court after the sentence was read. She only

broke down briefly while saying goodbye to her husband. They were both

shot.

The newspaper "Aleksandrovsk Telegraph" (the city was now in White

territory) crowed about her death in its September 20, 1919 issue: "One

more pillar of anarchism has been broken, one more idol of blackness has

crashed down from its pedestal... . Legends formed around this β€˜tsaritsa

of anarchism'. Several times she was wounded, several times her head was

cut off but, like the legendary Hydra, she always grew a new one. She

survived and turned up again, ready to spill more blood... . And if now

in our uyezd the offspring of the Makhnovshchina, the remnants of this

poisonous evil, are still trying to prevent the rebirth of normal

society and are straining themselves to rebuild once more the bloody

rule of Makhno, this latest blow means we are witnessing the funeral

feast at the grave of the Makhnovshchina."

Two weeks after these lines were published the Makhnovist Insurgent Army

captured Aleksandrovsk from the Whites.

The Legend Continues

Since Marusya had escaped death so many times, it was hard for people to

believe she was really gone. Their disbelief created the possibility for

false Marusyas to appear. There were at least three of these atamanshas

active in the Civil War and they apparently made use of the terror

evoked by Marusya's name:

(1) Marusya Chernaya commanded a cavalry regiment in the Makhnovist

Insurgent Army in 1920-1921. She was killed in battle against the Reds.

(2) Marusya Sokolovskaia, a 25-year old Ukrainian nationalist school

teacher, took over her brother's cavalry detachment after he was killed

in battle in 1919. She was captured by the Reds and shot.

(3) Marusya Kosova was an atamansha in the Tambov peasant revolt in

1921-1922. After the revolt was suppressed she disappeared from history.

Another legend had Marusya working as a Soviet secret agent. According

to this story she was sent to Paris for undercover work and was involved

in the assassination of the Ukrainian Nationalist leader Simon Petliura.

Petliura was killed by a former member of Kotovsky's anarchist

detachment. The only truth in this story might be the fact of anarchists

doing the Bolsheviks' work for them.

Maria Nikiforova represents the destructive side of anarchism, the

sweeping away of the old to make way for the new. She was not

insensitive to the other side of anarchism (see Appendix) but never

enjoyed the tranquillity necessary to pursue constructive work. Although

she had no effect on the ultimate course of the Russian Revolution, she

might have for she was always ready to act on her principles at key

moments. She devoted her considerable talents to fighting her legions of

enemies but eventually fell in this unequal struggle.

The two photographs of Marusya reproduced in this work were probably

taken in Elizavetgrad in 1918. On the back of one of them is written:

"Don't think badly of me. – M. Nikiforova".

Appendix

In December 1918 Marusya attended the First All-Russian Congress of

Anarchist-Communists in Moscow. The following is the text of a brief

speech she gave which was preserved in the minutes:

"Looking at the way anarchists live their lives, I feel depressed at how

many deficiencies there are in their work. What is the cause of this? A

lack of talent? But that can't be because you can't say there is no

talent among the anarchists. But why then are anarchist organizations

collapsing? Why, when anarchists followed where their consciences lead

them, did they not get those results they had hoped for? For this not to

continue, the anarchists must clarify their mistakes.

In their approach to their work, anarchists must not restrict themselves

to the big stuff. Any kind of work is useful. To sacrifice oneself is

easier than to work constantly, steadily, achieving definite goals. Such

work demands great staying power and a lot of energy. Anarchists don't

have enough of this staying power and energy and besides, they must be

prepared to submit to comradely discipline and order.

Anarchists must:

last point we need to register all the anarchists but we need to be

selective and encourage not so much those who know theory as those who

can put it into practice.

The process of social revolution is continuing and the anarchists must

be prepared for that moment when they must apply all their forces and

then each one must carry out their own task, not holding anything back.

But our work must be based on examples, for example, in Moscow itself we

should create a whole network of vegetable gardens on a communist basis.

This would be the best means of agitation among the people, people who

in essence are natural anarchists."