Endocrinologist Dr. Bronislava Poskrebysheva was shot on this date in 1941.
She was the Jewish Lithuanian wife of Alexander Poskrebyshev, who was Stalin’s longtime aide and Chief of Staff to the Special Section of Central Committee of Communist Party — an organ that coordinated other state bureaus in the implementation of party directives, often sensitive ones. Bronislava, for her part, had a non-political career, although this was scarcely any guarantee of safety during the years of the purges.
At a scientific conference in Paris in 1933, Dr. Poskrebysheva and her brother, Michael Metallikov, had met the communist non grata Leon Trotsky; before the decade was out, the mere fact of this meeting was sufficient to implicate them as spies of the alleged Trotskyite conspiracies forever bedeviling the Soviet Union. Metallikov would ultimately be executed himself in 1939 but while his life hung in the balance, Dr. Poskrebysheva made bold to apply to that dread minister Lavrenty Beria to plead for her brother. She must have spoken a little too loosely in this personal interview of the exile’s charms, for not only did she fail to save him — she was arrested herself.
And her incidental brush with Trotsky proved more harmful to her by far than her intimate relationship with Soviet elites was helpful.
In truth her husband’s position was not nearly so strong a card as one might assume; as the doctor’s own backfiring effort to save her brother proved, there were perils risked by intercessors as well, and this would have been only more true for a man as perilously close to Stalin as was Alexander Poskrebyshev. Even brand-name Bolsheviks found in those years that they could not necessarily shield family from political persecution: Mikhail Kalinin‘s wife Ekaterina was thrown into the gulag, as was Vyacheslav Molotov‘s wife Polina Zhemchuzhina. The best Poskrebyshev could do was to raise the couple’s daughters, Galya and Natasha, even as he labored loyally onward for the state that had put a bullet in his wife. (He eventually became a Politburo member.)
Bronislava Poskrebysheva and Michael Metallikov were both posthumously rehabilitated in the 1950s.
On this day..
- 1998: Jeremy Vargas Sagastegui
- 1762: James Collins, James Whem, and John Kello
- 1960: Tony Zarba, anti-Castro raider
- 1871: James Wilson, steely burglar
- 1909: Francisco Ferrer, martyred teacher
- 1990: The October 13 Massacre
- 1944: Six German POWs, for Stalingrad's Dulag-205
- 1933: Morris Cohen, medicine-taker
- 1864: Ranger A.C. Willis, parabolically
- 1846: William Westwood, aka Jackey Jackey
- 1815: Joachim Murat, Napoleonic Marshal
- 1660: Major-General Thomas Harrison, the first of the regicides