Sergey Taboritsky
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2020) |
Sergey Taboritsky | |
---|---|
Сергей Таборицкий | |
Born | |
Died | 16 October 1980 | (aged 83)
Occupation | Journalist |
Political party | Nazi Party (1942–1945) |
Sergey Vladimirovich Taboritsky (Russian: Сергей Владимирович Таборицкий; 12 August 1897 – 16 October 1980) was a Russian journalist, renowned for his nationalist and monarchist positions. From 1936 to 1945, he was the deputy of the Bureau for the Russian Refugees in Germany. After 1942, Taboritsky became a member of the Nazi Party, and directly collaborated with the Gestapo.
Biography
Early years
Sergey and his younger brother, Nikolay Taborisky (the spelling of his name at the beginning of the twentieth century was inconsistent; during the emigration years, the "Taboritsky" variant was used) were the illegitimate children of baptized Jewish tailor and owner of a fashion shop Anna Vladimirovna and her cohabitant, Sergey Alexandrovich Zapevalov (who broke up with her in 1901). Both brothers were raised as Orthodox Christians. Taboritsky's godfather was the future Ober-Procurator Vladimir Sabler . The brothers had the surname of Anna Vladimirovna's first husband, also Jewish, Wulf Aizikovich Taborissky, a tradesman from Ashmyany, who had left the country long before both of them were born, in 1887. According to the documents, they were regarded as the children of Wulf Taborissky, since the first divorce of their mother occurred only in 1899. The mother became a second guild merchant and married a noble named Marasanov, taking his surname. Anna Marasanova died in March 1914 in France. In 1915, after their mother's death, Sergey and Nikolay unsuccessfully tried to reach the Petrograd Spiritual Consistory with a plea to recognize them as the children of the "Russian Orthodox person" and rid them of the "Cain's seal", citing their religious and monarchist sentiments.[1]
He graduated from the Realschule of Gurevich in 1915. There were later stories that Taboritsky was participating in World War I fighting under the command of Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich as part of the Caucasian Native Cavalry Division, but can't be considered as reliable, as documented information on his activities in 1915-1919 has not been found. According to some reports, he was an assistant to the commissioner from the State Duma and deputy Georgy Deryugin during this time.[2]
After the February Revolution, he was in Ukraine, where he left for Germany. In Kyiv, in a Petlyurite prison, he became acquainted with the monarchist Pyotr Shabelsky-Bork, with whom he then constantly communicated while he was in exile.
Emigration
At first, Taboritsky lived in Berlin, then in Mecklenburg, and from January to March 1922 in Munich. While in Berlin, he was co-editor of the antisemitic magazine Luch Sveta ("Ray of Light"), which was published from April 1919 onward. Luch Sveta had republished the notorious antisemitic forgery, the Protocols of the Elders of Zion,[3] and indirectly became one of the first outside forces along with Shabelsky-Bork and Vinberg to influence the burgeoning ideology of Nazism in their support of violence against individuals deemed subhuman. Before the assassination attempt on Paul Milyukov, he worked as a typewriter. For ideological reasons, he refused to take commissions from the Soviet Union.
In 1921, Taboritsky accidentally met former State Duma politician Alexander Guchkov on a street in Berlin. Taboritsky attacked him with an umbrella, for which he spent several days in a local prison.[4]
Attempted assassination of Pavel Milyukov
Together with Shabelsky-Bork, Taboritsky participated in the preparation of the assassination attempt against Pavel Milyukov. To accomplish that, they drove from Munich to Berlin. During the lecture of Milyukov, Taboritsky opened fire. When Vladimir Dmitrievich Nabokov rushed at Shabelsky, striking him in the arm in which he was holding a revolver, Taboritsky shot three times at point-blank range at Nabokov. Nabokov was immediately killed by a shot in the heart. After this, Taboritsky went to the wardrobe and, taking his clothes, went to the exit door, but a woman exclaimed: "Here is the killer!", and Taboritsky was detained by the crowd. In addition to Nabokov who died on the spot, during the attempted indiscriminate shooting nine people were injured, including the chairman of the Berlin group of the Kadet party, L. E. Elyashev, and one of the editors of the "Rul' " newspaper, Avgust Kaminka .
A medical examination of Shabelsky-Bork and Taboritsky showed that both had long been using drugs, a strong dose of which was taken on the day of the assassination.[5]
The trial of the assassination attempt against Milyukov took place on July 3–7, 1922, in the Berlin Criminal Court in Moabit. The court sentenced Taboritsky to 14 years in prison for complicity in the attempt and intentionally inflicting serious wounds on Nabokov that caused his death, though in the spring of 1927 he was released under amnesty.
Activities under the Nazi regime
Since May 1936 Taboritsky was the deputy of General Vasily Biskupsky for the Nazi-created Bureau for Russian Refugees in Germany (Vertrauensstelle für russische Flüchtlinge in Deutschland).[6] Taboritsky's duties included maintaining a file cabinet of Russian emigration and political monitoring of its sentiments.[7] After the outbreak of war with the USSR, he headed the recruitment of translators for the Wehrmacht among Russian emigrants. Taboritsky's activities were carried out in close contact with the Gestapo.[1] Gleb Rahr describes Taboritsky as follows: "Dry, lean, pointed, wizened, slightly weazened type, not flowering, but fading".[8]
In April 1937, Taboritsky married Elisabeth von Knorre, granddaughter of the astronomer Karl Friedrich Knorre, who was a member of the Nazi party since 1931. After numerous petitions (including those on the name of Goebbels) and refusals, he received German citizenship (1938) and joined the NSDAP (1942, retroactively adopted from the date of application of 1940). He hid the Jewish origin of his mother and attributed German roots to her, and he ascribed the Russian nobility to the fictitious father, "Vladimir Vasilievich Taboritsky". Pretending to be of noble origin, he used the German surname particle "von" (von Taboritzki). He claimed that the assassination attempt on the "leader of Jewish democracy" and the "hater of Germany" Milyukov, for which he was serving a criminal sentence, was a feat to his new homeland.[1] He emphasized that he first made known the Protocols of Zion in Germany, and was proud of his persecution by Jews and "leftists".[1] In 1939 he created the National Organization of Russian Youth (NORM).[9] The organization was under the direct control of the SS. It was similar to the German Hitler Youth organization to which it was subordinate. In the last days of the war, Taboritsky fled from Berlin, later living in Limburg an der Lahn. He continued to occasionally publish in the Brazil-based monarchist journal Vladimirsky Vestnik .[1] After the death of Shabelsky-Bork in 1952 he wrote an obituary for him.[1] Taboritsky died on 16 October 1980 of natural causes.[citation needed]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f Petrov, Igor (June 2018). ""Все самочинцы произвола...": подлинная биография Сергея Таборицкого". Неприкосновенный запас. Дебаты о политике и культуре (in Russian). 6 (122). New Literary Observer: 162–189. ISSN 1815-7912. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
- ^ Sokolov, Mikhail (January 4, 2011). ""Незамеченное поколение" писателя Владимира Варшавского. О судьбе мужа и своей жизни рассказывает в Женеве переводчик Татьяна Варшавская". Радио Свобода (in Russian).
- ^ Williams, Robert Chadwell (1972). Culture in Exile: Russian Emigrés in Germany, 1881-1941. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-8014-0673-7.
- ^ Zubarev, Dmitry. "Слово и дело: письма Е.А. Шабельской из архива Департамента полиции // Дмитрий Зубарев" [Word and deed: letters of E.A. Shabelskaya from the archives of the Police Department]. Scepsis (in Russian).
- ^ Chistyakov, K.A. "Антибольшевистская Россия". Antibr (in Russian).
- ^ Stephan, John J. (1978). The Russian fascists : tragedy and farce in exile, 1925-1945. Internet Archive. New York : Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-014099-1.
- ^ Trubina, I.K. "Русская эмиграция и Великая Отечественная война | Научная Библиотека Пермского Государственного Национального Исследовательского Университета". Perm University Scientific Library.
- ^ Tolstoy, Ivan (September 9, 2012). ""Один русский – и тот Рар". К 90-летию со дня рождения Глеба Александровича Рара" ["One Russian - and that one is Rahr". To the 90th anniversary of the birth of Gleb Alexandrovich Rahr.]. Радио Свобода (in Russian).
- ^ "История НОРМ на сайте РПЦЗ". RPCZ Moskva (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2012-10-19. Retrieved 2020-09-16.
- 1897 births
- 1980 deaths
- Assassins from the Russian Empire
- Russian counter-revolutionaries
- Russian fascists
- Russian male journalists
- Russian nationalist assassins
- Nazi Party members
- Russian monarchists
- German monarchists
- 20th-century Russian criminals
- Russian people of Jewish descent
- Russian people imprisoned abroad
- Failed assassins
- People convicted of assault
- People convicted of attempted murder
- Prisoners and detainees of Germany
- White Russian emigrants to Germany
- White movement collaborators with Nazi Germany