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Tania Chernova


Tania Chernova was a Russian-American who claimed in interviews to have been a trained sniper for the Soviet forces during the Battle of Stalingrad. However, the historian Antony Beevor has questioned the veracity of her claims and described her as a "fantasist". A character, played by Rachel Weisz, based on Chernova, appeared in the film Enemy at the Gates.

Chernova was a Russian-American who went to Belarus to get her grandparents out of Russia. When she reached Belarus, the Germans had already killed them. After that incident, she joined the resistance.

Tania and her group went to Stalingrad by traveling through the sewer system to reach the Russian lines. After that, she joined Vasily Zaytsev's sniper school and became a sniper. The group of snipers that Zaytsev formed was called "The Hares." Tania was a part of a raid on a German headquarters. She and the rest of The Hares killed Germans by picking off guards one by one. Tania was accredited with 24 kills. Chernova and Zaytsev were in love during the war but were later separated.

While on the way to the German front lines with a small team to assassinate Field Marshall Paulus, Chernova was badly wounded in her abdomen when she set her foot on a land mine by mistake. She was admitted to a hospital in Tashkent and later recovered. She received misinformation about Zaytsev being killed in an explosion at Stalingrad. After her recovery, she married someone else, but could not conceive because of the injury.

In 1969 she was interviewed by American journalist William Craig and one of the things he asked her about was her time in the Hares. Confused as to how he got this information, she immediately asked him where he heard that. He replied with that Zaytsev told him. In Craig's book Enemy at the Gates: The Battle for Stalingrad that was written based on interviews, there is a narrative of a love triangle between commissar Danilov, Chernova and Zaytsev which has been explained as a work of fiction by English military historian Antony Beevor.

Tania Chernova survived the war. She continued to "break as many sticks" as she could. William Craig interviewed her for his 1973 book Enemy at the Gates: The Battle for Stalingrad:


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