fbpx
Wikipedia

Simo Häyhä

Simo Häyhä (Finnish: [ˈsimo ˈhæy̯hæ] (listen); 17 December 1905 – 1 April 2002), often referred to by his nickname, The White Death (Finnish: Valkoinen kuolema; Russian: Белая смерть, romanizedBelaya smert’), was a Finnish military sniper in World War II during the 1939–1940 Winter War against the Soviet Union. He used a Finnish-produced M/28-30 (a variant of the Mosin–Nagant rifle) and a Suomi KP/-31 submachine gun. He is believed to have killed over 500 enemy soldiers during the Winter War, the highest number of sniper kills in any major war. Because of this he is often considered as the deadliest sniper of all time.[2][3][4][5]

Simo Häyhä
Häyhä after being awarded the honorary rifle, model 28, on 17 February 1940
Nickname(s)
  • "Simuna" (personal)
  • "The White Death" (military)
  • "The Magic Shooter" (military)
Born(1905-12-17)17 December 1905
Rautjärvi, Viipuri Province, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire
Died1 April 2002(2002-04-01) (aged 96)
Hamina, Finland
Buried 61°17′05″N 28°49′48″E / 61.284678°N 28.829907°E / 61.284678; 28.829907
Allegiance Finland
BranchFinnish Army
Service years1925–1926, 1939–1940
Rank
Unit6th Company of Infantry Regiment 34
Conflict
Awards

Häyhä estimated in his private war memoir that he shot around 500 Soviet soldiers.[5][6] The memoir, titled Sotamuistoja (War memoirs), was written in 1940, a few months after he was wounded, and described his experiences in the Winter War from 30 November 1939 to 13 March 1940. Hidden for decades, the memoir was discovered in 2017.[5]

Early life and youth

Häyhä was born in the Kiiskinen hamlet of the Rautjärvi municipality in the Viipuri Province of southern Finland near the border with Russia.[7] He was the seventh of eight children in a Lutheran family of farmers;[8] his father, Juho Häyhä, was the owner of the Mattila farm while Simo's mother, Katriina (née Vilkko) was a loving and hard-working farmer's wife.[7] He attended school in the village of Miettilä in Kivennapa parish and cultivated his home farm together with his eldest brother. He was a farmer, hunter, and skier prior to his military service.

Militia and military service

 
Häyhä during his first years in the army

Häyhä joined the Finnish voluntary militia Civil Guard (Suojeluskunta) at the age of 17. He was successful in shooting competitions in the Viipuri Province; his home was reportedly full of trophies for marksmanship.[9] He was not keen to hog the spotlight, and accordingly in group photos from his youth he usually stood at the back, until his later successes forced him to take centre stage.[10]

In 1925, at the age of 19, Häyhä began his 15-month compulsory military service in the Bicycle Battalion 2 in Raivola, Viipuri Province. He attended the Non-Commissioned Officer School and served as a conscript officer in the Bicycle Battalion 1 in Terijoki. However, he did not receive formal sniper training until a year before the war in 1938 at a training centre in Utti.[7]

According to Major Tapio Saarelainen—who met Häyhä several times and has written five books about him, including his biography—Häyhä was able to estimate distances with an accuracy of 1 metre (3.3 ft) up to 150 metres (500 ft).[11] Saarelainen notes that during his Civil Guard training, Häyhä once hit a target 16 times from 150 metres away in just one minute. "This was an unbelievable accomplishment with a bolt action rifle, considering that each cartridge had to be manually fed with a fixed magazine that held together five cartridges."[12]

Winter War service

Häyhä served as a sniper in the Finnish Army during the 1939–40 Winter War between Finland and the Soviet Union, under Lieutenant Aarne Juutilainen in the 6th Company of Infantry Regiment 34 (Jalkaväkirykmentti 34, or JR 34) during the Battle of Kollaa in temperatures between −40 and −20 °C (−40 and −4 °F). He was dressed completely in white camouflage; Soviet troops were not issued camouflage uniforms for most of the war, making them easily visible to snipers in winter conditions. Joseph Stalin had purged military experts in the late 1930s as part of the Great Purge, and the Red Army was consequently highly disorganized.[13]

Finnish sources state that Häyhä was nicknamed "The White Death" by the Red Army (Russian: Белая смерть, Belaja smert; Finnish: valkoinen kuolema; Swedish: den vita döden).[7] The name "White Death" has been suggested to originate entirely in Finnish propaganda, rather than having been given to Häyhä by the Russians; according to information from prisoners, to the Russians "White Death" referred to a severe frost in the deep forest. Häyhä having the nickname "White Death" first appeared in the Finnish Winter War literature of the late 1980s.[14] During the war, the "White Death" was one of the leading themes of Finnish propaganda.[15] Finnish newspapers frequently featured the invisible Finnish soldier, thus creating a hero of mythical proportions.[15][16] To add to the myth, he was also nicknamed "The Magic Shooter" among Finns (Finnish: taika-ampuja, in close reference to the Finnish word for "sniper"; Finnish: tarkka-ampuja).[7]

Häyhä's war memoir states that they captured a Soviet soldier, blindfolded him, spun him around until he was disoriented, and then took him to a party in the tent of Häyhä's company Lieutenant Aarne "The Terror of Morocco" Juutilainen. The Soviet soldier was overjoyed by the carousing and was disappointed when he was released.[6][5]

Achievements as a sniper

 
Häyhä in Kollaa on 17 February 1940, right after being awarded the honorary rifle.

All of Häyhä's kills were accomplished in less than 100 days, an average of five per day at a time of year with very few daylight hours.[17][18][19] His kill count as a sniper was based on his own reporting, with the confirmation of his comrades, and only those who were verified to be dead were counted. No count was taken when several snipers shot at the same target. Enemy soldiers killed with a submachine gun with Häyhä as a group leader were not counted.[20]

Häyhä's division commander Antero Svensson credited him with 219 confirmed kills with a rifle and an equal number of kills by submachine gun, when he awarded Häyhä with an honorary rifle on 17 February 1940.[21] On 21 December 1939, Häyhä achieved his highest daily count of 25 kills. In his diary, military chaplain Antti Rantamaa reported 259 confirmed kills made by rifle and an equal number of kills by submachine gun from the beginning of the war until 7 March 1940, one day after Häyhä was severely wounded. Later in his book, Rantamaa credited Häyhä with a total of 542 kills.[7]

Some of Häyhä's figures are from a Finnish Army document, counted from the beginning of the war, 30 November 1939:

  • 22 December 1939: 138 sniper kills in 22 days[22]
  • 26 January 1940: 199 sniper kills (61 in 35 days)[23]
  • 17 February 1940: 219 sniper kills (20 in 22 days)[7]
  • 7 March 1940 (one day after he was wounded): total of 259 sniper kills (40 in 18 days)[7]

Häyhä never discussed it publicly, but his own private memoir, discovered in 2017, states a number. He begins by stating that "this is his sin list", and estimates the total number he shot to be around 500.[6][5]

Finnish historian Risto Marjomaa questions the large number, as confirmation of casualties was difficult due to the absence of the bodies. In his article, published by the National Biography of Finland, Marjomaa credited Häyhä with the total number of "more than two hundred" kills.[24] Complicating matters further is the use of Häyhä's achievements as a tool of propaganda: the Finnish press built a hero's myth around Häyhä at the early stage of the war.[25]

Firearms and tactics

Häyhä used his issued Civil Guard rifle, an early series SAKO M/28-30, serial number 35281, Civil Guard number S60974. It was a Finnish Civil Guard variant of the Mosin–Nagant rifle known as "Pystykorva" (lit.'The Spitz' due to the front sight's resemblance to the head of a spitz-type dog) chambered in the Finnish-designed Mosin–Nagant cartridge 7.62×53R. When fighting as a group leader with the rest of his unit, he used a Suomi KP/-31 submachine gun.

Häyhä preferred iron sights over telescopic sights, as they enable a sniper to present a smaller target for the enemy (a sniper must raise his head a few centimetres higher when using a telescopic sight), and can be relied on even in extreme cold, unlike telescopic sights which tend to cloud up in cold weather. Another disadvantage of telescopic sights is that sunlight may reflect off the lenses and reveal the sniper's position. Häyhä did not have prior training with scoped rifles, and therefore preferred not to switch to the Soviet scoped rifle (M/91-30 PE or PEM).

Häyhä dealt with the intense cold by dressing properly with multiple layers of clothing. He kept sugar and bread in his pockets, consuming them for the calories necessary to keep his body warm. His slight stature of 160 centimetres (5 ft 3 in) assisted him in disguising his position. Hidden in a snow pit, he could lie still and observe the enemy for long periods of time.[21] It was Häyhä's custom to move, well before daybreak, to the position he had prepared, and stay there until after sunset.[21] He would frequently pack dense mounds of snow in front of his position to conceal himself, provide padding for his rifle, and reduce the characteristic puff of snow stirred up by the muzzle blast. He was known to keep snow in his mouth while sniping to prevent his breath in the cold air from giving away his position.[26]

Injury

 
Häyhä after being promoted to second lieutenant in 1940. He was disfigured after being shot in the face by a Red Army soldier earlier that year

On 6 March 1940, Häyhä was severely wounded after an explosive bullet fired by a Red Army soldier hit his lower left jaw.[27] After the battle, as he appeared to be dead, he was placed on a pile of dead bodies. A fellow soldier, under orders from his commanding officer, searched for Häyhä, noticed a leg twitching among the pile and found Häyhä alive, although unconscious.[12] He was evacuated by fellow soldiers who said that "half his face was missing". The bullet had removed his upper jaw, most of his lower jaw, and most of his left cheek.[12]

Rumours of Häyhä's death spread around in Finland and the Soviet Union. He regained consciousness a week later on 13 March, the day that peace was declared. He read about his own death in a newspaper, and sent a letter to the paper to correct the misunderstanding.[10] He spent 14 months recovering from his wounds and endured 26 surgeries.[12]

Häyhä wished to serve in the Continuation War (1941–1944). However, he was excused due to the severity of his facial injuries, from which he was still recovering.[28][29]

Honours

 
The Kollaa and Simo Häyhä Museum [fi] in Miettilä, Rautjärvi, Finland

Häyhä was awarded the First and Second class Medals of Liberty, as well as the Third and Fourth class Crosses of Liberty. The latter two were normally granted to only commissioned officers.[1] As an additional honour, on 17 February 1940, he received a nameplated SAKO M/28-30 “Pystykorva” Honorary Rifle (serial number 100 781), donated by Eugen Johansson, a Swedish businessman and supporter of Finland.[21] According to an unofficial count, he had shot 219 Red Army soldiers at the time.[7] He later donated the rifle to the Karelia Jaeger Battalion's Heritage Room, from where it was transferred to the Finnish Military Museum's collection after the dissolution of the North Karelia Brigade in 2013.[30]

Shortly after the Winter War, on 28 August 1940, Finnish Field Marshal Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim promoted Häyhä straight from alikersantti (the lowest military rank of a non-commissioned officer) to vänrikki (the first military rank of an officer).[31] In 1941, Häyhä was also nominated as a Knight of the Mannerheim Cross, the most distinguished Finnish military honour. However, the nomination remained "under consideration".[32] He also received the Kollaa fighters' medal, the silver version of the Cross of Kollaa Battle, number 4.[1]

The Kollaa and Simo Häyhä Museum (Kollaa ja Simo Häyhä -museo) is located in the village of Miettilä at Rautjärvi, in a former infirmary. The museum, opened in 1983, covers the Battle of Kollaa, and features a special permanent exhibition dedicated to the life of Simo Häyhä.[33]

Post-war life

 
Häyhä's gravestone in Ruokolahti Church graveyard, South Karelia, Finland, with the inscription: Home – Religion – Fatherland

It took several years for Häyhä to recuperate from his wound which required lengthy treatments and several surgeries.[10] Although his face remained disfigured, he otherwise made a full recovery. After World War II, he was given a farm in Valkjärvi ("Whitelake"), Ruokolahti, a small municipality located in southeastern Finland near the Russian border. He became a successful moose hunter and dog breeder.[26] In addition to farming, he enjoyed hunting,[29] and his hunting parties over the years included the President of Finland, Urho Kekkonen.[26]

However, some people did not approve of his actions during the Winter War; he was met with hate and even death threats.[10][28] The injuries he sustained in the war left recognizable facial scars, so as a well-known person, he avoided large groups of people. He never married, and lived as a bachelor.[29] He enjoyed working, but he suffered from loneliness and fear; nights were especially difficult for him. However, he had friends and also spent time at his parents' and siblings' homes after the war.[28] Eventually farm work became too difficult, so he put the farm up for rent, and moved to an apartment building in the centre of Ruokolahti.[29]

Häyhä was known as a modest man who never boasted of his wartime merits. He rarely spoke of the war and his experiences.[10] When asked in 1998 how he had become such a good sniper, he replied simply: "Practice". In an Independence Day interview with Helsingin Sanomat in December 2001, shortly before his 96th birthday, Häyhä opened up about his war experiences.[1] He was asked if he felt remorse for having killed so many people. He replied, "I did what I was told to do, as well as I could. There would be no Finland unless everyone else had done the same."[34][7]

Häyhä spent his last years in a war veterans' nursing home in Hamina, where he died in 2002 at the age of 96.[31][35] He was buried in his home town of Ruokolahti. He never married and had no children.[36]

In popular culture

Swedish heavy metal band Sabaton composed the song "White Death" in honor of Häyhä, which was released in 2010 on their album Coat of Arms.[37] Scottish black/thrash metal band Achren's three-song The White Death EP from 2014 is dedicated entirely to Häyhä, right down to the cover art.[37][38][39] Japanese metal band To Mega Therion has made a song called Simo Hayha, which appears on the 2015 Yog = Sothoth album.[37][40] The debut release of Liverpool based band Bisch Nadar was named Häyhä.

In 2011, Philip Kaufman began filming HBO's Hemingway & Gellhorn (first airdate 28 May 2012), which features Martha Gellhorn (played by Nicole Kidman) reporting from Finland during the Winter War. In this section, Steven Wiig portrays Häyhä, leading a group of Finnish soldiers to shelter.[37][41]

A film about Häyhä called The White Death has been planned since 2017.[42] The film is directed by David McElroy and written by James Poirier.[42][43]

American author Arna Bontemps Hemenway has written a short story about Häyhä, called "Wolves of Karelia", which was published in the August 2019 issue of The Atlantic magazine.[37][44]

Häyhä's story has been adapted in two manga, in one called The White Witch (Japanese: 白い魔女, Shiroi Majo) by Nagakawa Naruki, the main character is named Simo Häyhä, but is female.[37][45] He also appears in the manga Record of Ragnarok (Japanese: 終末のワルキューレ, Shūmatsu no Warukyūre) by Shinya Umemura and Takumi Fukui, in which he is depicted as a fighter for humanity.[37][46]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Lappalainen, Jukka-Pekka (6 December 2001). "Kollaa kesti, niin myös Simo Häyhä" [The Kollaa held out, so did Simo Häyhä]. Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish). Helsinki. Retrieved 19 February 2011.
  2. ^ Rayment, Sean (30 April 2006). "The long view". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 30 March 2009.
  3. ^ Saarelainen, Taipo (15 November 2016). "The White Death: History's Deadliest Sniper". Forces Network. Retrieved 21 February 2018.
  4. ^ Tapio A. M. Saarelainen (2006), Sankarikorpraali Simo Häyhä
  5. ^ a b c d e Kivimäki, Petri (14 March 2018). "Tutkijan kädet alkoivat vapista – maailmankuulun sotalegendan Simo Häyhän muistelmat löytyivät sattumalta". Yle.fi. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  6. ^ a b c Kauppinen, Kari (18 July 2017). "Sotasankari Simo Häyhän ennennäkemätön päiväkirja löytyi – 'Tässä on minun syntilistani'". Iltalehti (in Finnish). Helsinki. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Saarelainen, Tapio (2016). The White Sniper. Casemate. ISBN 978-1612004297. Retrieved 12 March 2019 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ "Simo Häyhä". Geni.com. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
  9. ^ Gilbert, Adrian (1996). Sniper: The Skills, the Weapons, and the Experiences. St. Martin's Press. p. 88. ISBN 0312957661.
  10. ^ a b c d e Silvander, Lauri (14 October 2017). "Simo Häyhän muistikirja paljastaa tarkka-ampujan huumorintajun – "Valkoinen kuolema" esittää näkemyksensä ammuttujen vihollisten lukumäärästä". Iltasanomat. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  11. ^ Kivimäki, Petri (29 March 2017). "Sotalegenda Simo Häyhän ampumistaidot edelleen mallina nykypäivän tarkka-ampujakoulutuksessa". Yle Uutiset (in Finnish). Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  12. ^ a b c d Stahl, Michael (9 January 2020). "The Deadliest Marksman's Cold, Brave Stand". Narratively. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  13. ^ William R. Trotter (2002). The Winter War: The Russo–Finnish War of 1939–40. New York: Workman / London: Aurum Press. First published 1991 in the United States under the title A Frozen Hell: The Russo–Finnish Winter War of 1939–40. pp. 145–146
  14. ^ Kinnunen, Annika (5 November 2019). "Sotamuistoja – Simo Häyhän kuvaus talvisodasta" (PDF) (Candidate thesis) (in Finnish). University of Oulu. p. 13. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  15. ^ a b Huhtinen, Aki-Mauri (October 2002). "Perception Management in the Art of War: A Review of Finnish War Propaganda and Present-Day Information Warfare". Edith Cowan University School of Management Information Systems. Journal of Information Warfare. Teamlink Australia. 2 (1). Retrieved 12 May 2022.[verification needed]
  16. ^ . 22 February 2011. Archived from the original on 22 February 2011. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  17. ^ Jowett, Philip S. (2006). Finland at War, 1939–45. Osprey Publishing. pp. 44–45. ISBN 978-1841769691.
  18. ^ Pegler, Martin (2006). Out of Nowhere: A History of the Military Sniper. Osprey Publishing. p. 167. ISBN 978-1846031403.
  19. ^ Farey, Pat; Spicer, Mark (2009). Sniping: An Illustrated History. Zenith Press. pp. 117–118. ISBN 978-0760337172.
  20. ^ Myllyniemi, Timo; Manninen, Tuomas (25 December 2014). "Tarkka-ampuja Simo Häyhä ei koskaan saanut Mannerheim-ristiä – 'Harkitaan'". Ilta-Sanomat. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  21. ^ a b c d "Simo Häyhä – legenda ja syystä". Sotaveteraanit.fi (in Finnish). 20 February 2018. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  22. ^ JR34:n toimintakertomus 30.11.39–1.12.40. SPK 1327. Finnish National Archive Sörnäinen; Alikersantista vänrikiksi. Hurtti Ukko 1/1941
  23. ^ Rantamaa, A. J. 1942. Parlamentin palkeilta Kollaanjoen kaltahille. WSOY, Porvoo. pp. 84, 206
  24. ^ Marjomaa, Risto. "Häyhä, Simo (1905–2002)". Kansallisbiografia.
  25. ^ Marjomaa, Risto (2004). "Simo Häyhä". Suomen kansallisbiografia 4 – Hirviluoto-Karjalainen. Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  26. ^ a b c Stirling, Robert (2012). Special Forces Sniper Skills. Osprey Publishing. pp. 79–80. ISBN 978-1780960036.
  27. ^ Saarelainen, Tapio (2016). The White Sniper: Simo Häyhä. Casemate. ISBN 978-1612004297.
  28. ^ a b c "Tappouhkaukset ja pelko varjostivat sotalegenda Simo Häyhän elämää". Yle Uutiset (in Finnish). 18 June 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
  29. ^ a b c d "Kolme päivää, 51 kuollutta neuvostosotilasta – tarkka-ampuja Simo Häyhän uskomaton elämä". MTV Uutiset (in Finnish). 6 December 2017. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
  30. ^ "Talvisodan legendaarisen tarkka-ampujan Simo Häyhän kivääri ja varusteet pelastettiin". Ilta-Sanomat (in Finnish). 30 October 2015. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  31. ^ a b Feist, Paul (2012). "The Winter War and a Winter Warrior". The Redwood Stumper 2010: The Newsletter of the Redwood Gun Club, Arcata, CA. Arcata, CA: Redwood Gun Club. p. 36. ISBN 978-1300039730.
  32. ^ Hurmerinta, Ilmari (1994). Suomen puolesta: Mannerheim-ristin ritarit 1941–1945. Helsinki, Finland: Ajatus. ISBN 9519440283. OCLC 42290307.
  33. ^ "Museum". Kollaa ja Simo Häyhä -museo. Retrieved 18 May 2022.
  34. ^ Lehtinen, Pasi (4 December 2009). "Tarkka-ampuja Simo Häyhä – Vaatimaton legenda". Iltalehti (in Finnish). Retrieved 29 March 2021.
  35. ^ "Ei ne osumat, vaan se asenne". Yle.fi. 5 December 2013. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  36. ^ Heldebro, Johanna. "Swedish artist Johanna Heldebro on her work "White Death"". artterritory. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Yhdysvaltain Nato-käsittelyssä mainittiin Simo Häyhä – legendaarinen tarkka-ampuja on maailmalla yllättävän tunnettu popkulttuurihahmo – YLE. Retrieved 4 August 2022. (in Finnish)
  38. ^ Achren – The White Death – Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  39. ^ ACHREN – The White Death EP (2014) – Metal Forces Magazine. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  40. ^ Yog = Sothoth – To Mega Therion – Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  41. ^ Kinnunen, Kalle (22 May 2012). "Cannes 2012: Nicole Kidman Simo Häyhän seurassa rintamalla HBO-draamassa Hemingway & Gellhorn". Suomen Kuvalehti (in Finnish). Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  42. ^ a b Kirssi, Elina (26 November 2019). "Simo Häyhästä suunnitellaan yhä Hollywood-elokuvaa: "Ei ole tietoa, missä mennään"". Iltalehti (in Finnish). Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  43. ^ Kallonen, Kari (12 March 2017). "Talvisodan tarkka-ampuja Simo Häyhästä tehdään Hollywood-elokuva – mukana huipputuottaja!". Päivän Lehti (in Finnish). Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  44. ^ Arna Bontemps Hemenway (2019). "Wolves of Karelia". The Atlantic. Retrieved 28 September 2020.
  45. ^ Myllyniemi, Timo (20 March 2016). "Teinityttö nimeltä Simo Häyhä – näin legenda tarkka-ampujasta levisi maailmalle" [A teenage girl named Simo Häyhä: this is how the legend of the sniper spread to the world!]. Ilta-Sanomat (in Finnish). Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  46. ^ "Shuumatsu no Valkyrie: Record of Ragnarok Anime coming in 2021". Anime Troop. 18 December 2020. Retrieved 26 December 2020.

Further reading

External links

  • Kollaa and Simo Häyhä Museum
  • (John Mitchell, mosinnagant.net, 2002; archived 2004)
  • Simo Häyhä – The Deadliest Sniper In History (Forces.net, 2020)

simo, häyhä, finnish, ˈsimo, ˈhæy, listen, december, 1905, april, 2002, often, referred, nickname, white, death, finnish, valkoinen, kuolema, russian, Белая, смерть, romanized, belaya, smert, finnish, military, sniper, world, during, 1939, 1940, winter, agains. Simo Hayha Finnish ˈsimo ˈhaey hae listen 17 December 1905 1 April 2002 often referred to by his nickname The White Death Finnish Valkoinen kuolema Russian Belaya smert romanized Belaya smert was a Finnish military sniper in World War II during the 1939 1940 Winter War against the Soviet Union He used a Finnish produced M 28 30 a variant of the Mosin Nagant rifle and a Suomi KP 31 submachine gun He is believed to have killed over 500 enemy soldiers during the Winter War the highest number of sniper kills in any major war Because of this he is often considered as the deadliest sniper of all time 2 3 4 5 Simo HayhaHayha after being awarded the honorary rifle model 28 on 17 February 1940Nickname s Simuna personal The White Death military The Magic Shooter military Born 1905 12 17 17 December 1905Rautjarvi Viipuri Province Grand Duchy of Finland Russian EmpireDied1 April 2002 2002 04 01 aged 96 Hamina FinlandBuriedRuokolahti Church graveyard 61 17 05 N 28 49 48 E 61 284678 N 28 829907 E 61 284678 28 829907Allegiance FinlandBranchFinnish ArmyService years1925 1926 1939 1940RankAlikersantti Corporal during the Winter WarVanrikki Second Lieutenant promoted to shortly afterwards 1 Unit6th Company of Infantry Regiment 34ConflictWorld War II Winter War Battle of Kollaa WIA AwardsMedal of Liberty 1st and 2nd classCross of Liberty 3rd and 4th classCross of Kollaa Battle 1 Hayha estimated in his private war memoir that he shot around 500 Soviet soldiers 5 6 The memoir titled Sotamuistoja War memoirs was written in 1940 a few months after he was wounded and described his experiences in the Winter War from 30 November 1939 to 13 March 1940 Hidden for decades the memoir was discovered in 2017 5 Contents 1 Early life and youth 1 1 Militia and military service 2 Winter War service 2 1 Achievements as a sniper 2 2 Firearms and tactics 2 3 Injury 3 Honours 4 Post war life 5 In popular culture 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life and youth EditHayha was born in the Kiiskinen hamlet of the Rautjarvi municipality in the Viipuri Province of southern Finland near the border with Russia 7 He was the seventh of eight children in a Lutheran family of farmers 8 his father Juho Hayha was the owner of the Mattila farm while Simo s mother Katriina nee Vilkko was a loving and hard working farmer s wife 7 He attended school in the village of Miettila in Kivennapa parish and cultivated his home farm together with his eldest brother He was a farmer hunter and skier prior to his military service Militia and military service Edit Hayha during his first years in the army Hayha joined the Finnish voluntary militia Civil Guard Suojeluskunta at the age of 17 He was successful in shooting competitions in the Viipuri Province his home was reportedly full of trophies for marksmanship 9 He was not keen to hog the spotlight and accordingly in group photos from his youth he usually stood at the back until his later successes forced him to take centre stage 10 In 1925 at the age of 19 Hayha began his 15 month compulsory military service in the Bicycle Battalion 2 in Raivola Viipuri Province He attended the Non Commissioned Officer School and served as a conscript officer in the Bicycle Battalion 1 in Terijoki However he did not receive formal sniper training until a year before the war in 1938 at a training centre in Utti 7 According to Major Tapio Saarelainen who met Hayha several times and has written five books about him including his biography Hayha was able to estimate distances with an accuracy of 1 metre 3 3 ft up to 150 metres 500 ft 11 Saarelainen notes that during his Civil Guard training Hayha once hit a target 16 times from 150 metres away in just one minute This was an unbelievable accomplishment with a bolt action rifle considering that each cartridge had to be manually fed with a fixed magazine that held together five cartridges 12 Winter War service EditHayha served as a sniper in the Finnish Army during the 1939 40 Winter War between Finland and the Soviet Union under Lieutenant Aarne Juutilainen in the 6th Company of Infantry Regiment 34 Jalkavakirykmentti 34 or JR 34 during the Battle of Kollaa in temperatures between 40 and 20 C 40 and 4 F He was dressed completely in white camouflage Soviet troops were not issued camouflage uniforms for most of the war making them easily visible to snipers in winter conditions Joseph Stalin had purged military experts in the late 1930s as part of the Great Purge and the Red Army was consequently highly disorganized 13 Finnish sources state that Hayha was nicknamed The White Death by the Red Army Russian Belaya smert Belaja smert Finnish valkoinen kuolema Swedish den vita doden 7 The name White Death has been suggested to originate entirely in Finnish propaganda rather than having been given to Hayha by the Russians according to information from prisoners to the Russians White Death referred to a severe frost in the deep forest Hayha having the nickname White Death first appeared in the Finnish Winter War literature of the late 1980s 14 During the war the White Death was one of the leading themes of Finnish propaganda 15 Finnish newspapers frequently featured the invisible Finnish soldier thus creating a hero of mythical proportions 15 16 To add to the myth he was also nicknamed The Magic Shooter among Finns Finnish taika ampuja in close reference to the Finnish word for sniper Finnish tarkka ampuja 7 Hayha s war memoir states that they captured a Soviet soldier blindfolded him spun him around until he was disoriented and then took him to a party in the tent of Hayha s company Lieutenant Aarne The Terror of Morocco Juutilainen The Soviet soldier was overjoyed by the carousing and was disappointed when he was released 6 5 Achievements as a sniper Edit Hayha in Kollaa on 17 February 1940 right after being awarded the honorary rifle All of Hayha s kills were accomplished in less than 100 days an average of five per day at a time of year with very few daylight hours 17 18 19 His kill count as a sniper was based on his own reporting with the confirmation of his comrades and only those who were verified to be dead were counted No count was taken when several snipers shot at the same target Enemy soldiers killed with a submachine gun with Hayha as a group leader were not counted 20 Hayha s division commander Antero Svensson credited him with 219 confirmed kills with a rifle and an equal number of kills by submachine gun when he awarded Hayha with an honorary rifle on 17 February 1940 21 On 21 December 1939 Hayha achieved his highest daily count of 25 kills In his diary military chaplain Antti Rantamaa reported 259 confirmed kills made by rifle and an equal number of kills by submachine gun from the beginning of the war until 7 March 1940 one day after Hayha was severely wounded Later in his book Rantamaa credited Hayha with a total of 542 kills 7 Some of Hayha s figures are from a Finnish Army document counted from the beginning of the war 30 November 1939 22 December 1939 138 sniper kills in 22 days 22 26 January 1940 199 sniper kills 61 in 35 days 23 17 February 1940 219 sniper kills 20 in 22 days 7 7 March 1940 one day after he was wounded total of 259 sniper kills 40 in 18 days 7 Hayha never discussed it publicly but his own private memoir discovered in 2017 states a number He begins by stating that this is his sin list and estimates the total number he shot to be around 500 6 5 Finnish historian Risto Marjomaa questions the large number as confirmation of casualties was difficult due to the absence of the bodies In his article published by the National Biography of Finland Marjomaa credited Hayha with the total number of more than two hundred kills 24 Complicating matters further is the use of Hayha s achievements as a tool of propaganda the Finnish press built a hero s myth around Hayha at the early stage of the war 25 Firearms and tactics Edit Hayha used his issued Civil Guard rifle an early series SAKO M 28 30 serial number 35281 Civil Guard number S60974 It was a Finnish Civil Guard variant of the Mosin Nagant rifle known as Pystykorva lit The Spitz due to the front sight s resemblance to the head of a spitz type dog chambered in the Finnish designed Mosin Nagant cartridge 7 62 53R When fighting as a group leader with the rest of his unit he used a Suomi KP 31 submachine gun Hayha preferred iron sights over telescopic sights as they enable a sniper to present a smaller target for the enemy a sniper must raise his head a few centimetres higher when using a telescopic sight and can be relied on even in extreme cold unlike telescopic sights which tend to cloud up in cold weather Another disadvantage of telescopic sights is that sunlight may reflect off the lenses and reveal the sniper s position Hayha did not have prior training with scoped rifles and therefore preferred not to switch to the Soviet scoped rifle M 91 30 PE or PEM Hayha dealt with the intense cold by dressing properly with multiple layers of clothing He kept sugar and bread in his pockets consuming them for the calories necessary to keep his body warm His slight stature of 160 centimetres 5 ft 3 in assisted him in disguising his position Hidden in a snow pit he could lie still and observe the enemy for long periods of time 21 It was Hayha s custom to move well before daybreak to the position he had prepared and stay there until after sunset 21 He would frequently pack dense mounds of snow in front of his position to conceal himself provide padding for his rifle and reduce the characteristic puff of snow stirred up by the muzzle blast He was known to keep snow in his mouth while sniping to prevent his breath in the cold air from giving away his position 26 Injury Edit Hayha after being promoted to second lieutenant in 1940 He was disfigured after being shot in the face by a Red Army soldier earlier that year On 6 March 1940 Hayha was severely wounded after an explosive bullet fired by a Red Army soldier hit his lower left jaw 27 After the battle as he appeared to be dead he was placed on a pile of dead bodies A fellow soldier under orders from his commanding officer searched for Hayha noticed a leg twitching among the pile and found Hayha alive although unconscious 12 He was evacuated by fellow soldiers who said that half his face was missing The bullet had removed his upper jaw most of his lower jaw and most of his left cheek 12 Rumours of Hayha s death spread around in Finland and the Soviet Union He regained consciousness a week later on 13 March the day that peace was declared He read about his own death in a newspaper and sent a letter to the paper to correct the misunderstanding 10 He spent 14 months recovering from his wounds and endured 26 surgeries 12 Hayha wished to serve in the Continuation War 1941 1944 However he was excused due to the severity of his facial injuries from which he was still recovering 28 29 Honours Edit The Kollaa and Simo Hayha Museum fi in Miettila Rautjarvi Finland Hayha was awarded the First and Second class Medals of Liberty as well as the Third and Fourth class Crosses of Liberty The latter two were normally granted to only commissioned officers 1 As an additional honour on 17 February 1940 he received a nameplated SAKO M 28 30 Pystykorva Honorary Rifle serial number 100 781 donated by Eugen Johansson a Swedish businessman and supporter of Finland 21 According to an unofficial count he had shot 219 Red Army soldiers at the time 7 He later donated the rifle to the Karelia Jaeger Battalion s Heritage Room from where it was transferred to the Finnish Military Museum s collection after the dissolution of the North Karelia Brigade in 2013 30 Shortly after the Winter War on 28 August 1940 Finnish Field Marshal Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim promoted Hayha straight from alikersantti the lowest military rank of a non commissioned officer to vanrikki the first military rank of an officer 31 In 1941 Hayha was also nominated as a Knight of the Mannerheim Cross the most distinguished Finnish military honour However the nomination remained under consideration 32 He also received the Kollaa fighters medal the silver version of the Cross of Kollaa Battle number 4 1 The Kollaa and Simo Hayha Museum Kollaa ja Simo Hayha museo is located in the village of Miettila at Rautjarvi in a former infirmary The museum opened in 1983 covers the Battle of Kollaa and features a special permanent exhibition dedicated to the life of Simo Hayha 33 Post war life Edit Hayha s gravestone in Ruokolahti Church graveyard South Karelia Finland with the inscription Home Religion Fatherland It took several years for Hayha to recuperate from his wound which required lengthy treatments and several surgeries 10 Although his face remained disfigured he otherwise made a full recovery After World War II he was given a farm in Valkjarvi Whitelake Ruokolahti a small municipality located in southeastern Finland near the Russian border He became a successful moose hunter and dog breeder 26 In addition to farming he enjoyed hunting 29 and his hunting parties over the years included the President of Finland Urho Kekkonen 26 However some people did not approve of his actions during the Winter War he was met with hate and even death threats 10 28 The injuries he sustained in the war left recognizable facial scars so as a well known person he avoided large groups of people He never married and lived as a bachelor 29 He enjoyed working but he suffered from loneliness and fear nights were especially difficult for him However he had friends and also spent time at his parents and siblings homes after the war 28 Eventually farm work became too difficult so he put the farm up for rent and moved to an apartment building in the centre of Ruokolahti 29 Hayha was known as a modest man who never boasted of his wartime merits He rarely spoke of the war and his experiences 10 When asked in 1998 how he had become such a good sniper he replied simply Practice In an Independence Day interview with Helsingin Sanomat in December 2001 shortly before his 96th birthday Hayha opened up about his war experiences 1 He was asked if he felt remorse for having killed so many people He replied I did what I was told to do as well as I could There would be no Finland unless everyone else had done the same 34 7 Hayha spent his last years in a war veterans nursing home in Hamina where he died in 2002 at the age of 96 31 35 He was buried in his home town of Ruokolahti He never married and had no children 36 In popular culture EditSwedish heavy metal band Sabaton composed the song White Death in honor of Hayha which was released in 2010 on their album Coat of Arms 37 Scottish black thrash metal band Achren s three song The White Death EP from 2014 is dedicated entirely to Hayha right down to the cover art 37 38 39 Japanese metal band To Mega Therion has made a song called Simo Hayha which appears on the 2015 Yog Sothoth album 37 40 The debut release of Liverpool based band Bisch Nadar was named Hayha In 2011 Philip Kaufman began filming HBO s Hemingway amp Gellhorn first airdate 28 May 2012 which features Martha Gellhorn played by Nicole Kidman reporting from Finland during the Winter War In this section Steven Wiig portrays Hayha leading a group of Finnish soldiers to shelter 37 41 A film about Hayha called The White Death has been planned since 2017 42 The film is directed by David McElroy and written by James Poirier 42 43 American author Arna Bontemps Hemenway has written a short story about Hayha called Wolves of Karelia which was published in the August 2019 issue of The Atlantic magazine 37 44 Hayha s story has been adapted in two manga in one called The White Witch Japanese 白い魔女 Shiroi Majo by Nagakawa Naruki the main character is named Simo Hayha but is female 37 45 He also appears in the manga Record of Ragnarok Japanese 終末のワルキューレ Shumatsu no Warukyure by Shinya Umemura and Takumi Fukui in which he is depicted as a fighter for humanity 37 46 References Edit a b c d e Lappalainen Jukka Pekka 6 December 2001 Kollaa kesti niin myos Simo Hayha The Kollaa held out so did Simo Hayha Helsingin Sanomat in Finnish Helsinki Retrieved 19 February 2011 Rayment Sean 30 April 2006 The long view The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 30 March 2009 Saarelainen Taipo 15 November 2016 The White Death History s Deadliest Sniper Forces Network Retrieved 21 February 2018 Tapio A M Saarelainen 2006 Sankarikorpraali Simo Hayha a b c d e Kivimaki Petri 14 March 2018 Tutkijan kadet alkoivat vapista maailmankuulun sotalegendan Simo Hayhan muistelmat loytyivat sattumalta Yle fi Retrieved 14 March 2018 a b c Kauppinen Kari 18 July 2017 Sotasankari Simo Hayhan ennennakematon paivakirja loytyi Tassa on minun syntilistani Iltalehti in Finnish Helsinki Retrieved 18 July 2017 a b c d e f g h i j Saarelainen Tapio 2016 The White Sniper Casemate ISBN 978 1612004297 Retrieved 12 March 2019 via Google Books Simo Hayha Geni com Retrieved 9 May 2020 Gilbert Adrian 1996 Sniper The Skills the Weapons and the Experiences St Martin s Press p 88 ISBN 0312957661 a b c d e Silvander Lauri 14 October 2017 Simo Hayhan muistikirja paljastaa tarkka ampujan huumorintajun Valkoinen kuolema esittaa nakemyksensa ammuttujen vihollisten lukumaarasta Iltasanomat Retrieved 19 August 2019 Kivimaki Petri 29 March 2017 Sotalegenda Simo Hayhan ampumistaidot edelleen mallina nykypaivan tarkka ampujakoulutuksessa Yle Uutiset in Finnish Retrieved 25 July 2020 a b c d Stahl Michael 9 January 2020 The Deadliest Marksman s Cold Brave Stand Narratively Retrieved 2 July 2020 William R Trotter 2002 The Winter War The Russo Finnish War of 1939 40 New York Workman London Aurum Press First published 1991 in the United States under the title A Frozen Hell The Russo Finnish Winter War of 1939 40 pp 145 146 Kinnunen Annika 5 November 2019 Sotamuistoja Simo Hayhan kuvaus talvisodasta PDF Candidate thesis in Finnish University of Oulu p 13 Retrieved 20 August 2022 a b Huhtinen Aki Mauri October 2002 Perception Management in the Art of War A Review of Finnish War Propaganda and Present Day Information Warfare Edith Cowan University School of Management Information Systems Journal of Information Warfare Teamlink Australia 2 1 Retrieved 12 May 2022 verification needed Suuret Suomalaiset 100 Suurinta suomalaista 22 February 2011 Archived from the original on 22 February 2011 Retrieved 12 March 2019 Jowett Philip S 2006 Finland at War 1939 45 Osprey Publishing pp 44 45 ISBN 978 1841769691 Pegler Martin 2006 Out of Nowhere A History of the Military Sniper Osprey Publishing p 167 ISBN 978 1846031403 Farey Pat Spicer Mark 2009 Sniping An Illustrated History Zenith Press pp 117 118 ISBN 978 0760337172 Myllyniemi Timo Manninen Tuomas 25 December 2014 Tarkka ampuja Simo Hayha ei koskaan saanut Mannerheim ristia Harkitaan Ilta Sanomat Retrieved 12 March 2019 a b c d Simo Hayha legenda ja syysta Sotaveteraanit fi in Finnish 20 February 2018 Retrieved 11 May 2020 JR34 n toimintakertomus 30 11 39 1 12 40 SPK 1327 Finnish National Archive Sornainen Alikersantista vanrikiksi Hurtti Ukko 1 1941 Rantamaa A J 1942 Parlamentin palkeilta Kollaanjoen kaltahille WSOY Porvoo pp 84 206 Marjomaa Risto Hayha Simo 1905 2002 Kansallisbiografia Marjomaa Risto 2004 Simo Hayha Suomen kansallisbiografia 4 Hirviluoto Karjalainen Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura Retrieved 9 February 2020 a b c Stirling Robert 2012 Special Forces Sniper Skills Osprey Publishing pp 79 80 ISBN 978 1780960036 Saarelainen Tapio 2016 The White Sniper Simo Hayha Casemate ISBN 978 1612004297 a b c Tappouhkaukset ja pelko varjostivat sotalegenda Simo Hayhan elamaa Yle Uutiset in Finnish 18 June 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2020 a b c d Kolme paivaa 51 kuollutta neuvostosotilasta tarkka ampuja Simo Hayhan uskomaton elama MTV Uutiset in Finnish 6 December 2017 Retrieved 18 May 2022 Talvisodan legendaarisen tarkka ampujan Simo Hayhan kivaari ja varusteet pelastettiin Ilta Sanomat in Finnish 30 October 2015 Retrieved 11 May 2020 a b Feist Paul 2012 The Winter War and a Winter Warrior The Redwood Stumper 2010 The Newsletter of the Redwood Gun Club Arcata CA Arcata CA Redwood Gun Club p 36 ISBN 978 1300039730 Hurmerinta Ilmari 1994 Suomen puolesta Mannerheim ristin ritarit 1941 1945 Helsinki Finland Ajatus ISBN 9519440283 OCLC 42290307 Museum Kollaa ja Simo Hayha museo Retrieved 18 May 2022 Lehtinen Pasi 4 December 2009 Tarkka ampuja Simo Hayha Vaatimaton legenda Iltalehti in Finnish Retrieved 29 March 2021 Ei ne osumat vaan se asenne Yle fi 5 December 2013 Retrieved 12 March 2019 Heldebro Johanna Swedish artist Johanna Heldebro on her work White Death artterritory Retrieved 10 March 2014 a b c d e f g Yhdysvaltain Nato kasittelyssa mainittiin Simo Hayha legendaarinen tarkka ampuja on maailmalla yllattavan tunnettu popkulttuurihahmo YLE Retrieved 4 August 2022 in Finnish Achren The White Death Encyclopaedia Metallum The Metal Archives Retrieved 4 August 2022 ACHREN The White Death EP 2014 Metal Forces Magazine Retrieved 4 August 2022 Yog Sothoth To Mega Therion Encyclopaedia Metallum The Metal Archives Retrieved 4 August 2022 Kinnunen Kalle 22 May 2012 Cannes 2012 Nicole Kidman Simo Hayhan seurassa rintamalla HBO draamassa Hemingway amp Gellhorn Suomen Kuvalehti in Finnish Retrieved 20 August 2022 a b Kirssi Elina 26 November 2019 Simo Hayhasta suunnitellaan yha Hollywood elokuvaa Ei ole tietoa missa mennaan Iltalehti in Finnish Retrieved 20 August 2022 Kallonen Kari 12 March 2017 Talvisodan tarkka ampuja Simo Hayhasta tehdaan Hollywood elokuva mukana huipputuottaja Paivan Lehti in Finnish Retrieved 20 August 2022 Arna Bontemps Hemenway 2019 Wolves of Karelia The Atlantic Retrieved 28 September 2020 Myllyniemi Timo 20 March 2016 Teinitytto nimelta Simo Hayha nain legenda tarkka ampujasta levisi maailmalle A teenage girl named Simo Hayha this is how the legend of the sniper spread to the world Ilta Sanomat in Finnish Retrieved 28 June 2021 Shuumatsu no Valkyrie Record of Ragnarok Anime coming in 2021 Anime Troop 18 December 2020 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Further reading EditP Sarjanen Valkoinen kuolema ISBN 9525170055 Tapio A M Saarelainen Sankarikorpraali Simo Hayha ISBN 9525026523 Tapio A M Saarelainen The Sniper Simo Hayha ISBN 978 9525026740 William R Trotter Frozen Hell The Russo Finnish Winter War of 1939 40 Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill 2000 ISBN 978 0945575221 Adrian Gilbert Tom C McKenney Dan Mills Roger Moorhouse Charles Sasser Tim Newark The Sniper Anthology Snipers of the Second World War Pelican Publishing Company 2012 ISBN 978 1455616824 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Simo Hayha Kollaa and Simo Hayha Museum Meeting a Legend Simo Hayha John Mitchell mosinnagant net 2002 archived 2004 Simo Hayha The Deadliest Sniper In History Forces net 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Simo Hayha amp oldid 1140951168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.