Zoya Voskresenskaya
Zoya Ivanovna Voskresenskaya (Russian: Зоя Ивановна Воскресенская; in marriage – Rybkina, Рыбкина; 28 April [o.s. 15] 1907 – 8 January 1992) was a Soviet diplomat, NKVD foreign office secret agent and, in the 1960s and 70s, a popular author of books for children. A USSR State Prize laureate (1968), Voskresenskaya was best known for her novels Skvoz Ledyanuyu Mglu (Through Icy Haze, 1962) and Serdtse Materi (A Mother's Heart, 1965). In 1962–1980 more than 21 million of her books were sold in the USSR.
Zoya Voskresenskaya | |
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Voskresenskaya on a 2019 stamp of Russia | |
Born | Zoya Ivanovna Voskresenskaya Зоя Ивановна Воскресенская 28 April 1907 |
Died | 12 April 1992 84) | (aged
Occupation | diplomat NKVD foreign agent author |
Years active | 1930s – 1992 |
Spouse(s) | Boris Rybkin |
Awards | Order of Lenin Order of the Red Banner of Labour USSR State Prize (1968) |
In the late 1980s, as Perestroyka incited the wave of declassifications, Zoya Voskresenskaya's story was made public. It transpired that a popular children's writer was for 25 years a leading figure in the Soviet intelligence service's foreign department. Voskresenskaya's war-time memoirs Now I Can Tell the Truth came out in 1992, 11 months after the author's death.[1][2]
Biography
Zoya Voskresenskaya was born in Uzlovaya, Tula Governorate, into the family of a railway station master's deputy, and spent her early years in Aleksin. Her father died when she was ten and mother with her three children moved to Smolensk. At 14 Zoya started working as a librarian, at the 48th Cheka battalion of the Smolensk Governorate. Two years later, in 1923, she was commissioned as a tutor and politruk to a local corrective labor colony for young offenders, then got transferred to a regional CP office in Smolensk. In 1928 Voskresenskaya moved to Moscow and in August 1929 joined the OGPU foreign office. Her first port of call in 1930 was Harbin in Manchuria; after two years of reconnaissance work she was moved to Riga, Latvia, then Germany and Austria.[2]
In 1935 Voskresenskaya started working in Helsinki, under the guise of 'Irina', an Intourist official, as a Soviet secret agent, in a tandem with an Embassy councilor (and NKVD Colonel) Boris Rybkin whom she soon married. As the Winter War broke out, Zoya Voskresenskaya returned to Moscow where in the course of the next several years she became one of the Soviet Intelligence service's leading analysts, coordinating the work of several residential groups, including Rote Kapelle in Germany. In 1940, in secret report she informed Iosif Stalin of the impending Nazi Germany invasion.[1]
As the Great Patriotic War broke out, Voskresenskaya joined the Pavel Sudoplatov-led group preparing saboteurs and partisan war leaders to be sent to the occupied territories. The first ever reconnaissance unit launched to the USSR Western border was trained by her. Voskresenskaya was preparing to be sent to the occupied territories, under the guise of a railway station guard, when in the late 1941 she and Rybkin were sent to Sweden where (as 'madam Yartseva') she joined the Soviet embassy as Alexandra Kollontai's press attaché. As a secret agent she continued to coordinate various reconnaissance groups and individual agents, collecting data concerning the Nazi Germany's transport maneuvering next to the Swedish border. Both women, working in close co-operation, were later credited for the fact the Sweden remained neutral throughout the war while Finland quit the coalition and in September 1944 signed the peace treaty with the USSR.[1][2]
After the war Voskresenskaya continued working in Moscow and in the late 1940s became the head of the Soviet Intelligence's German department. In 1947 her husband Boris Rybkin died, allegedly in a car crash near Prague. Voskresenskaya refused to accept the official version, but failed to get the permission to investigate the case personally.[3]
After Stalin's death in 1953, wide-scale purges of the NKVD ranks started. Outraged with the arrest of Pavel Sudoplatov, Voskresenskaya spoke out openly to defend her former boss. Almost instantly she received retirement orders but asked for the special privilege to remain an NKVD officer and was sent to a Vorkuta labour camp as a head of a minor department, in the rank of lieutenant.[2]
Literary career
In 1955 Voskresenskaya, in the rank of Interior Ministry colonel, retired from service and embarked upon the literary career. Writing for children, she made herself quite a name in the 1960s with novels Skvoz Ledyanuyu Mgly (Through the Icy Haze, 1962), Vstretcha (The Encounter, 1963), Serdtse Materi (Mother's Heart, 1965, about Maria Ulyanova, which has been adapted for the big screen in 1965), Devochka v Burnom More (Girl in the Stormy Sea, 1969), Dorogoye Imya (The Dear Name, 1970). With 21.6 million copies of her books published in 1962–1980, Zoya Voskresenskaya became one of the leading figures in the Soviet children's literature, several of her books featuring in the school lists of extracurricular reading.[1]
In the late 1980s, with most of the Stalin era's Intelligence documents declassified, the story of Voskresenskaya was made public. Already terminally ill, she started writing memoirs. Teper Ya Mogu Skazat Pravdu (Now I Can Tell the Truth) came out in 1992, 11 months after their author's death on 8 January of that year. She was buried at the Novodevichye Cemetery.[1][3]
In popular culture
- The Rosa Klebb character in Ian Fleming's From Russia with Love was partly based on Voskresenskaya, about whom he had written an article for The Sunday Times.[4][5]
References
- "Zoya Voskresenskaya, the Great Secret Agent" (in Russian). www.peoples.ru. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- Mikhaylov, Andrey (17 May 2012). "Zoya Voskresenshaya. Perom I shpagoy (With Pen and Sword)" (in Russian). Pravda. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- Simonova, Oxana. "Zoya Voskresenskaya: the beauty, the writer, the Intelligence agent" (in Russian). www.wild-mistress.ru. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
- Macintyre, Ben (2008). For Your Eyes Only. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7475-9527-4., p. 93.
- Halloran, Bernard F (1986). Essays on Arms Control and National Security. Washington, DC: Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. OCLC 14360080., p. 163.