Sally A. Boniece : The
Shesterka of 1905-06 . Terrorist Heroines of Revolutionary Russia
As part of my ongoing study of the political
life and mythology of the Socialist Revolutionary (SR) terrorist and Left SR
party leader Mariia Spiridonova, in this article I examine the context within
which she launched her revolutionary career: the terrorist fringe of the
radical subculture known to its denizens as Underground Russia.
Specifically, I focus on the other five women who with Spiridonova formed
the shesterka of terrorists venerated in SR martyrology for their
roles in the revolution of 1905-07. Although Riva Fialka, Lidiia
Ezerskaia, Anastasiia Bitsenko, Mania ShkolÕnik and Aleksandra Izmailovich,
unlike Mariia Spiridonova, were very little known or not known at all to the
Russian public in 1905-06, they too were participants in the revolutionary
underground, their behavior as much guided by its ethics and mythology.
The stories of these five female SR terrorists,
juxtaposed with SpiridonovaÕs, demonstrate how women radicals of the
reluctantly modernizing Russian empire sought in the underground socialist
community the autonomy and equality denied them by RussiaÕs entrenched
patriarchal culture. In Underground Russia, women found fulfillment not
only in principled activism against the autocratic regime but also in the
empathetic support of like-minded comrades. Most significantly, the
collective revolutionary experiences of the shesterka underline the
emotional as well as the ideological bonds that deepened womenÕs involvement in
SR terrorist activities. According to prosopographical studies of female
Russian revolutionaries by Barbara Alpern Engel, Beate Fieseler and Barbara
Evans Clements, the bonds of romantic love, friendship and family featured
prominently in womenÕs radicalization.
In the story of each of these six SR heroines
can be found a confluence of similar motivations for taking up revolutionary
terrorism. All of the women experienced some form of personal loss or
frustration concerning their family situations and career opportunities.
Education or training as a means of achieving autonomy played a role in
radicalizing each of them, while gender, class or ethnic disadvantages gave
them a powerful empathy for, and even identification with, the least fortunate
classes and groups in Russian society. Family, friends and lovers drew
them into the revolutionary movement and toward terrorism as a political
tactic. Finally, each of these women sought moral, intellectual and
emotional fulfillment by participating in the radical subculture known as Underground
Russia.
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