Martyr Tatiana was born on December 14, 1903, in the city of Tomsk in the family of a clerk. She received her education at a gymnasium, which she graduated from in 1920. After the death of her father, she began working as an educator in a children's colony. In 1920, dedicating herself to helping others, she started delivering food to prisoners in jail. In 1923, she was arrested for her charitable activities, but was released after four months. In 1925, she was arrested again, but she continued to help prisoners, getting acquainted with prominent priests of the Russian Orthodox Church.
Her active charitable work attracted the attention of the OGPU, and on May 6, 1925, she was interrogated about her activities. After her arrest on May 18, 1925, she was punished with administrative exile for three years to the Zyryan region. In 1926, she was taken to Ust-Sysolsk, and in 1927, she was exiled to Kazakhstan, where she was released on December 19.
After her release, she settled in Moscow and began actively helping prisoners again. In 1931, she was arrested once more and sentenced to three years of imprisonment in a concentration camp, where she studied medicine and worked as a paramedic. In 1932, she was released with a prohibition to live in twelve cities, after which she settled in the city of Alexandrov.
In 1936, she moved to the village of Konstantinovo, where she worked as a laboratory assistant. Helping prisoners remained her priority. On April 14, 1931, she was arrested, and on April 30, she was sentenced to death by shooting for anti-Soviet agitation and sabotage. On September 23, 1937, she was shot and buried in an unmarked grave at the Butovo shooting range.
