- Andrei Shkuro
Andrei Grigoriyevich Shkuro (Shkura) (Russian: "Андрей Григорьевич Шкуро" ("Шкура"); Ukrainian : "Шкуро Андрій Григорович") (
January 19 1887 (O.S.:January 7 ) –January 17 1947 ) was aLieutenant General (1919) of theWhite Army .Biography
He was born in
stanica Pashkovskaya (Пашковская) near city of Yekaterinodar in aCossack family. Shkuro graduated from NikolayevCavalry School in 1907 and served in theKuban Cossack Host . InWorld War I Shkuro became the commander of a special guerrilla unit which executed several daring raids behind Austrian-Hungarian and German lines. During World War I Shkuro was promoted to the rank ofcolonel .In the spring of 1918, after the
Bolshevik take over, Shkuro organized an anti-Bolshevik Cossack unit in the area ofBatalpashinsk in theCaucasus . In May and June 1918 he raidedStavropol ,Yessentuki andKislovodsk . After officially joiningDenikin 's White Army, he became the commander of theKuban Cossacks brigade which soon increased in size and became a division. In May 1919 Shkuro, a young Lieutenant General, had a whole cavalrycorps of Cossacks under his command.Shkuro was a charismatic and audacious Cossack leader, and although his bravery often bordered on the reckless (he was wounded several times), he was also known for his cunning. Many in the White Army's high command, however, considered him too indisciplined and somewhat of a "loose cannon". According to
Soviet historians his forces were particularly cruel and prone to looting. In contrast, in his memoirs (which Shkuro dictated in 1921) he describes many instances in which he spared the lives of enemies, including even Bolshevik commissars (who were usually summarily executed). In the memoirs, Shkuro claims that he saved from execution aRed Army battalion of Jewish volunteers taken prisoner by the Whites, and that he spoke out against and preventedpogrom s against the Jewish population. "Beloye Delo, Drozdovtsi i Partizani"("White Cause"), Moskva Golos 1996, A.G. Shkuro, "Zapiski Belogo Partizana" ("Notes by a White Partisan") p. 224-226.]Although White Army General
Pyotr Wrangel valued initiative he also demanded discipline from his subordinates. Not surprisingly, Wrangel ended up disliking Shkuro and upon reorganizing the army Wrangel did not give him a command position. This prompted Shkuro's resignation. Shkuro claimed that to the detriment of the anti-Bolshevik cause, both Denikin and Wrangel did not sufficiently understand Cossack society, and that as a result some of their decisions alienated the Cossacks--even though the Cossacks in general remained deeply hostile to the policies of the Bolsheviks.After the defeat of the Whites, Shkuro lived as an exile, primarily in
France andSerbia . For the first few years he and a few other Cossack partners, taking advantage of their great horsemanship, performed in circuses as trick riders all across Europe. In addition, he continued to conductanti-Soviet activities. Russianémigré memoirs depict Shkuro as a very lively man who enjoyed social gatherings with plenty of dancing, singing, drinking, and vivid storytelling about times past.In 1941, Shkuro agreed to be one of the organizers of anti-Soviet Cossack units consisting of White émigrés and Soviet (mostly Cossack) prisoners of war in alliance with Nazi Germany. He, along with many other exiles, hoped that this would lead to the eventual liberation of all Russia from communism. Most of these exiles, Shkuro included, were not
fascist , but because of their past experiences and of what they knew of Stalinist Russia, they considered thatfascism was a lesser threat thancommunism . by hanging.References
Further reading
* Gabby de Jong " [http://home.hetnet.nl/~gabby-pat/repatriation%20generals.htm Don Cossacks] "
ee also
*
Pyotr Krasnov
*The Betrayal of Cossacks
*Helmuth von Pannwitz
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