An 18-year-old Long Island woman born in a Siberian prison has made history in the Marine Corps — and is gearing up to kick some ISIS butt.

Pfc. Maria Daume of Selden joined the fabled ranks of the few and the proud when she graduated Friday from boot camp at Parris Island in South Carolina.

But she and three other women had already made their mark in the corps 13 weeks earlier, when they showed up with infantry contracts in hand — the first to be recruited for such duty — to face the wrath of drill instructors.

“I want to fight ISIS,” Daume declared, according to Central European News . “Even though everybody in the military fights, I want to be a grunt. I think everything about it is for me, and I want to prove that females can do it.”

After 10 days of well-deserved leave, Daume will attend the School of Infantry at Camp Geiger in North Carolina along with the other three women to prepare for combat duty.

Three more women had previously graduated from the school but did so as part of a gender-integration research program that allowed them to change their military career fields to infantry and join a unit at Camp Lejeune, NC, Marine spokesman Capt. Joshua Pena said.

“It doesn’t matter if you are a male, female, whatever you want — that doesn’t mean that you can’t fight,” Daume said in a video made by the 1st Infantry Division in September, when she was preparing as a so-called poolee in the delayed-entry program. “To be able to fight for this great country is an honor.”

Maria and her twin brother, Nikolai, were born when their mom was being held in a Russian prison for an undisclosed charge. The children spent the first two years of their lives behind bars until their mother died.

They lived in a Moscow orphanage for another two years before being adopted by Maureen and John Daume.

Daume told the Island Packet newspaper of Hilton Head, NC, that she remembers little from those early years – but that she won’t drink apple juice to this day because she drank a vile version of it in the orphanage.

“They made it by putting rotten apple in water,” she told the paper.

Daume recalled being bullied until she was a senior at Newfield High School.

“It would be for being Russian or being adopted. They would say things about my mom and why she was in prison even if no one knew why. Bullying was a big thing,” the Marine Corps Times reported.

Daume drew physical and emotional strength from her early hardships – taking up mixed martial arts and jiujitsu to stand up for herself.

“With MMA it is all about staying calm and not getting angry,” she said. “If you get angry you can make stupid mistakes. I know how to get hit and keep cool. With the team sports, you have to work together. When you’re a team, you’re a family.”

At age 12, she and Nikolai took part in a Relay For Life fundraiser for their aunt, who had been diagnosed with cancer.

Marines showed up at the event to hold pull-up and push-up competitions, Nikolai told The Post.

“My sister did it and she fell in love with it,” said Nikolai, who is studying forensic science at the University of New Haven.

In December 2015, Defense Secretary Ash Carter removed gender-based restrictions on combat.

“They’ll be allowed to drive tanks, fire mortars and lead infantry soldiers into combat,” he said at the time. “They’ll be able to serve as Army Rangers and Green Berets, Navy SEALs, Marine Corps infantry, Air Force parajumpers and everything else that was previously open only to men.”

Daume jumped at the opportunity to apply for an infantry contract.

“I was driving when (my recruiter) called me,” Daume said. “He said, ‘Are you sure you want this?’ I said confidently, ‘Yes.’ He then congratulated me and told me I got (the infantry contract.) I was so excited I had to stop the car and call my best friend and tell her.”

Daume officially joined the ranks of the Marines on Jan. 6, when she completed the grueling 54-hour rite of passage known at the Crucible and was handed the iconic eagle, globe and anchor pin.

Nikolai was on hand a few days later to cheer her on at graduation, where he pulled a little sibling prank on the newly minted Marine, who was among 120 women to graduate.

“It was astonishing. She was emotional because we told her that her friends weren’t gonna come and see her,” said Nikolai, who was accompanied by their mom and various friends and relatives. Their dad died last January.

“But they did — and she started to cry,” he told The Post.

The proud twin said he supported Maria’s patriotic path of becoming a rifleman —

– dangers notwithstanding.

“It’s what she wants to do and I’m not going to stop it,” he said. “If she wants to defend this country, bu all means, go ahead. I feel she’s up to the challenge. She can do it.”