Meet the Night Witches, the communist female fighter pilots who bombed Nazis at night.
The all-female Soviet 588th Night Bomber Regiment, consisting of 80 women, flew over 23,000 missions in combat and dropped 3,000 tons of bombs on Nazi invaders in a span of four years, becoming a crucial asset in winning World War II.
They were seen as one of the greatest threats for Nazi soldiers and they were hated and feared so much that any Nazi airman who downed one was awarded the prestigious Iron Cross medal.
Consisting of mostly teenagers and early 20-year-old volunteers, they were nicknamed the Nachthexen or "night witches" by the Nazis, because the whooshing noise their wooden planes made resembled that of a witch's sweeping broomstick...
...when they would fly over enemy territories and then shut off their engines, allowing their planes to glide over their targets and drop their bombs silently. This sound was the only warning the Germans had. The women took the Night Witches insult as a compliment.
The pilots operated in the dead of night in freezing temperatures. Their wooden planes were so small they couldn’t be picked up on radars and so light they had to lie down on the wings in order to keep from blowing over during winter storms.
The planes could only hold two women and two bombs and not much else. They didn’t use radios, so radio locators couldn’t find them. They were basically ghosts.
The Night Witches were unique in the world as female fighter pilots, because the Soviet Union was the first nation to allow women to fly combat missions.
Other countries, including the United States, may have allowed women to fly as members of their early air forces, but only in support and transport roles.
The 588th Night Bomber Regiment has mostly been forgotten today, but their legacy as women prevailing over an abominable enemy despite all obstacles, serves as an inspiration to anti-fascists and women today. #WomensHistoryMonth
(Photos colorized by Klimbim)
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Depictions of historical victories over colonizers.
1: Native Hawaiians killed British colonizer Captain James Cook.
2: Hanging of French colonial soldier during the Haitian Revolution.
3: Ambon revolt of 1817 led by Kapitan Pattimura against the Dutch colonizers.
4: Philippine warriors kill Portuguese colonizer Magellan.
5: The Zulus killing the British Lieutenants Melvill and Coghill at the Battle of Isandlwana in 1879.
27 years ago today the Zapatista Uprising began when the EZLN declared war on the Mexican government from the Lacandona jungle in Chiapas, Mexico.
The 1994 uprising was programmed to coincide with the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The Zapatistas aimed to regain land and wealth from the most privileged and redistribute it among the oppressed.
Led by the figurehead of the movement known as subcomandante Marcos, the Zapatistas were considered a grave danger by the Mexican government for their actions & grabbing international media attention. In 2006 the EZLN became a political organization, leaving the armed insurgency.
That time Malcolm X received Fidel Castro in Harlem in 1960. (A thread)
A year after the Cuban Revolution, Castro and his delegation came to New York to attend the UN General Assembly, but the management of the Manhattan hotel the delegation booked now refused to house them after the US government already pressured other hotels to reject the Cubans.
Upon learning of their situation, Malcolm X invited them to come uptown to Harlem, to stay at the Black-owned Hotel Theresa, where Malcolm X said he would be greeted with open arms.
Dog of the decade: Negro Matapacos, Chile's cop-biting riot dog.
Matapacos was a famous stray dog who showed up at student protests for free education in 2010, defying tear gas and water cannons and accompanying the students in their struggle, only attacking or barking at the "pacos" (Chilean slang for "cops") and never at protesters.
The image of the black dog in a red bandana appears throughout Chile today and artwork of the canine has been shared all over social media, as people pay tribute to the dog who marched with the people and stood by them when facing state violence.
From Chile to Palestine, from Haiti to Indonesia the last decade has been marked by mass protests, riots and uprisings.
Here are some of the most iconic protest and riot photos from around the world of 2011 - 2020 #decadeinreview
First tweet clockwise:
Chile 2019, Palestine 2018, United States 2014
This tweet clockwise:
Chile 2019, Egypt 2011, Burkina Faso 2014, Haiti 2018
Clockwise: Catalonia 2018, Chile 2019, Indonesia 2019, Greece 2010