Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license.
Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat.
We can research this topic together.
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Biography, a collaborative effort to create, develop and organize Misplaced Pages's articles about people. All interested editors are invited to join the project and contribute to the discussion. For instructions on how to use this banner, please refer to the documentation.BiographyWikipedia:WikiProject BiographyTemplate:WikiProject Biographybiography
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Russia, a WikiProject dedicated to coverage of Russia on Misplaced Pages. To participate: Feel free to edit the article attached to this page, join up at the project page, or contribute to the project discussion.RussiaWikipedia:WikiProject RussiaTemplate:WikiProject RussiaRussia
Great story. some of this deserves to be here, but some of it is obviously wartime propaganda. Better phrasing should help - e.g. "It is claimed" might be used - if we can say who claimed it - rather than stating things as fact that with a little thought, we should know cannot be documented - or even know - as fact. Smallbones18:54, 8 May 2007 (UTC)
Arsonist?
She was a soldier tortured to death. Soldiers now and then destroy properties of life. It does not give us the right to classify them as arsonists or terrorists. It is OK to attribute this opinion to somebody. It is OK to show that Soviet propaganda gilded her biography and show the dark and grey pages. It is not OK to specify libels as facts Alex Bakharev05:13, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
Women in War and Resistance, quoted in :
“
After personally burning down several peasant houses occupied by the enemy
in the village of Petrishchevo (Vereya District/Moscow Region), and cutting
some telephone wires, Kosmodem'yanskaya returned to the village, in order to
set fire to a presumed storehouse (which turned out to be a cavalry stable).
She was caught in the act by a German sentry. Her captors led her to the
house of peasant Mariya lvanovna Sedova, where they undressed her and began
to interrogate her.
This is your own original research that is better kept in your personal blog. You can put referenced facts and attributed notable opinion, not your own synthesis. Also please re-read WP:TROLL and stop behaving like one Alex Bakharev07:46, 14 August 2007 (UTC)