Chess
Goddesses
Ludmilla Vladmirovna Rudenko
After Vera
Menchik's death in 1944, the Women's Championship title lay vacant until
the aftermath of World War II. During the winter of 1949-50, FIDE set
up a world championship match in Moscow. Sixteen players from twelve
countries attended, but it was the four entrants from the Soviet Union
who took the first four places. The winner was Ludmilla Vladmirovna
Rudenko (IM, WIM) (7/27/04-3/4/86). Mrs. Rudenko held the title until
1953, when she lost it to her countrywoman, Elizaveta Bykova.
Mrs. Rudenko
had a career as an economic planner, but her avocation was chess. Her
father taught her to play when she was ten, and she was active in tournaments
from 1926 onward.
Today,
with the demise of the Iron Curtain and Cold War, it is difficult to
imagine under what conditions Mrs. Rudenko played. John Graham pointed
out in Women in Chess, at page 12:
"[I]n
the D. J. Richards book, Soviet Chess, [h]e shows
that after the 1917 [Russian] Revolution emphasis was placed on the
game by the authorities. In a report of the organizing committee of
the third All-Union Congress for the Organization of Chess, the authorities
suggest that chess be used "as a political weapon which must
be used in order: (a) to give the working masses, tired after their
daily labour, a rational leisure activity, and (b) to exploit the
educational significance of chess in order with its help to give a
new impetus to the growth of intellectual culture and to the training
of the mind among the labouring masses."
"Under
this influence, chess became an intellectual cause celebre
in the Soviet Union. Success in the game was an important demonstration
of the success of the Revolution, inside and outside the country.
Chess masters became intellectual ambassadors, and it was nationally
important that they be perceived as successful. Under this impetus,
it was natural that schools were set up to train chess professionals
who were given special considerations and every facility to ensure
that they be successful in international events. This background was
extended not only to men, but also to women. In the new society, women
were far closer to being equal to men than they were in the societies
of the West."
Again,
quoting from Women in Chess, at page 22:
"Grandmaster
Nikolai Krogius, on behalf of the Soviet chess federation, wouldn't
allow questions to be asked of their women players regarding their
creative strengths, whether they be imaginative or based on technique."
Mrs. Rudenko
and the other Soviet women players may not have been "allowed" to answer
questions from inquisitive reporters; but they nonetheless spoke to
the entire world through the quality and strength of their games. Unfortunately,
there is, a dearth of information on Mrs. Rudenko on the World Wide
Web (and, in fact, on the prior generations of women chessplayers in
general). However, the last half of a 1946 game played over radio with
an English opponent can be found at
http://www.freespeech.org/chessdate/events/lruden.html
; Grandmaster Krogius would be proud! Move 13: Bxh6! Information
on Ludmilla Vladmirovna Rudenko obtained from Women in Chess, Players
of the Modern Age, John Graham, (McFarland & Company, Inc.,
1987) and from Chessdate Events, http://www.freespeech.org/chessdate/events/lruden.html