Maia Yanovna Berzina (Russian:Майя Яновна Берзина; October 25, 1910 inParis – August 30, 2002) was a prominent Sovietethnographer,geographer andcartographer (member ofSoviet Geographic Society from 1954). Among her scores are "Americans" entry in theGreat Soviet Encyclopedia (3rd ed., 1970) and several maps in theGreat Soviet World Atlas (vol. 1 and 2). Overall she was the author of about fifty original ethnic maps.[1]
The father, Yan Berzin, a Latvian, was arrested and shot in 1938. Mother Roza Garmiza, originally a Jewish socialist-revolutionary, was arrested in the same year and died in imprisonment. Berzina was born in immigration, in Paris and spent most of her childhood abroad, mainly in England, being fluent in English.[1] She graduated fromMSU's geographic faculty as an econogeographer. She declared herself acosmopolite, even in the 1950s, when this word was discouraged in the Soviet Union.[1] Berzina spent only few months of her childhood in Russia, finally settling in Moscow in 1927. In 1937 she married Leonid Vasilevsky, a gifted econogeographer and part-time geographer.
Berzina joined the fresh-formed Peoples Maps Group at the Ethnography Chair ofMoscow State University, where she compiled the maps of ethnic compound ofSwitzerland,India,United States and other countries. During theGerman-Soviet War, Berzina was evacuated toTashkent, returning to Moscow in 1943. She was hired as a junior research fellow to the newly establishedMiklukho-Maklay Ethnography Institute ofSoviet Academy of Sciences and worked there until pensioning off in 1984, being elevated to senior research fellow in 1975.[1] In 1969 she upheld a thesis "Forming of the Ethnic Compound of Canadian Population" and published a book of the same name. Berzina was also a permanent contributor of theSoviet Ethnography journal, translating the journal summaries into English.