- Lotta Svärd
Lotta Svärd was a Finnish voluntary auxiliary
paramilitary organisation for women. During theFinnish Civil War it was associated with the Suojeluskunta. After the war Lotta Svärd was founded as a separate organisation onSeptember 9 1920 . The name comes from a poem byJohan Ludvig Runeberg . Part of a large and famous book,The Tales of Ensign Stål , the poem described a fictional woman named Lotta Svärd. According to the poem, a Finnish soldier, private Svärd, went to fight in theFinnish War and took his wife, Lotta, along with him. Private Svärd was killed in battle, but his wife remained on the battlefield, taking care of wounded soldiers. The name was first brought up by Marshal Mannerheim in a speech given onMay 16 1918 . The first known organisation to use the name Lotta Svärd was the Lotta Svärd ofRiihimäki , founded onNovember 11 1918 .The organisation expanded during the 1920s and it included 60 000 members in 1930. By 1944 it included 242 000 volunteers, the largest voluntary auxiliary organisation in the world, while the total population of Finland was less than four million. During the war some 100 000 men whose jobs were taken over by "Lottas" were freed for military service. The Lottas worked in hospitals, at air-raid warning posts and other auxiliary tasks in conjunction with the armed forces. The Lottas, however, were officially unarmed. The only exception was a voluntary anti-aircraft battery in Helsinki in the summer of 1944, composed of Lotta Svärd members. The battery operated the AA search-lights. The unit was issued rifles for self-protection, thus being the only armed female military unit of the Finnish Defence Forces history. [ [http://www.mil.fi/ruotuvaki/index.dsp?action=read_page&pid=36&aid=530 Valonheitinlotat - ainutlaatuinen osa historiaa.] Ruotuväki 19/2004. Retrieved 10-2-2007.] When the
Continuation War ended, theSoviet Union demanded that all organisations considered by them to beparamilitary ,fascist or semi-fascist be banned. Thus, the Lotta Svärd organisation was one of the groups which was disbanded. This happenedNovember 23 1944 . However, a new organisation calledSuomen Naisten Huoltosäätiö (Support Foundation of Finnish Women) was started which took over much of the old property. This organisation still exists to this day by the name ofLotta Svärd Säätiö (Lotta Svärd Foundation).The Finnish Lotta Svärd organisation has inspired similar organisations in other countries and there is still a Lotta Svärd organisation in
Sweden ("Lottorna "); the same model is also used inDenmark andNorway .A 2005 film [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0427914/"Lupaus"] ("Promise") describes the trials and tribulations of a number of Finnish Lottas during the Second World War.
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.