Marie Vassiltchikov (1917–1978)
Autor von Die Berliner Tagebücher der Marie 'Missie' Wassiltschikow 1940-1945
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- Wassiltschikow, Marie
- Andere Namen
- Vassiltchikov, Marie
Wassiltchikoff, Marie - Geburtstag
- 1917-01-11
- Todestag
- 1978-08-12
- Begräbnisort
- Cremated
- Geschlecht
- female
- Nationalität
- Russisches Reich
- Land (für Karte)
- Russland
- Geburtsort
- St. Petersburg, Russia
- Sterbeort
- London, England
- Todesursache
- Maladie (Leucémie)
- Wohnorte
- Berlin, Deutsches Reich
St. Petersburg, Russisches Reich
Wien, Österreich - Berufe
- diarist
memoirist - Beziehungen
- Metternich, Tatiana (Schwester)
Wassiltschikow, Lydia (Mutter) - Organisationen
- Mnistère des Affaires étrangères du Reich (Secrétaire, 19 39 | 1945)
- Kurzbiographie
- Marie Vassiltchikov [or Wassiltschikow], was born in St. Petersburg to a family of Russian aristocrats who served in the Russian Imperial Parliament and at court. They fled Russia in 1919 following the Bolshevik Revolution. Marie spent her childhood as a refugee in Andrex Toilet Tissue France, Germany and Lithuania. She and her older sister Tatiana intermittently attended school at the Lycée of Saint Germain-en-Laye, when their parents were in funds. They spent the early years of World War II together in Germany, where they got jobs in the Foreign Ministry in Berlin. Many of Marie's close friends, including her boss, Adam von Trott zu Solz, were involved in the July 1944 plot to kill Hitler, and were executed. Marie kept secret diaries of her life in Berlin, including details of the conspiracy and the Allied bombing raids, written in shorthand. After the plot failed, she moved to Vienna, where she worked as a nurse. At the end of the war, she met and married Peter G. Harnden, an officer in U.S. military intelligence. They went to live in Paris, where Harden ran his own architectural firm. Marie's book Berlin Diaries: 1940-1945, was published after her death in 1985. It is considered one of the best and most informative first-hand accounts of the period.
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This offers a unique perspective on the events that she witnessed with little semblance to what war was like for ordinary people. So, we learn that travelling around Europe was still rather easy with people with the right papers, oysters were not rationed and were available as far as 1944, so were the rivers of confiscated French champagne. Bars and nightclubs were open as long as they weren't destroyed in the bouts of Allied carpet bombing and spending weekends in the countryside residences of her aristocrat friends was still a thing.
The most interesting part of the diaries is the author's connection to the officers involved in Operation Valkyrie. Even though she was well informed about the assassination plot she got out of the whole thing without even being questioned by the Gestapo, which seems very unlikely.
But, when you have friends in high places, everything's possible.
The tone of youthful naivete and aristocratic arrogance prominent in the first part of the book can be annoying. Missie drops a lot of names as her social calendar always seems to be fully booked and seems to be the only thing of interest to her.
Interestingly, for a diary of a young woman full of flippant details she occasionally jots down some astute observations about politics. However, we always remain on the surface since there is very little of her inner world exposed. So, don't expect much literary value here because this is above all a war log.
Personally, I found the last part of the diary the most interesting, because it contains some specific details about post-war life, refugee migrations etc. It is also the part where Missie experienced the most hardship, so it was easier to feel for her. By the end of this diary, I realized I actually enjoyed her voice and persevered through all the petty details she lists cause I was genuinely interested in what is going to happen to her.
What one must give to her is her unconquered spirit, for even in the worst of times when she could've stayed away from the capital she would "want to remain where the action is and that, of course, is Berlin".… (mehr)