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Women soldiers in German captivity. Chapter five from the book “Captivity. Not for the faint of heart! What did German soldiers do to Russian women?

It's just a nightmare! The maintenance of Soviet prisoners of war by the Nazis was extremely terrible. But it became even worse when a female Red Army soldier was captured.

Order of the fascist command

In his memoirs, officer Bruno Schneider told what kind of instruction German soldiers received before being sent to the Russian front. Regarding the female Red Army soldiers, the order said one thing: “Shoot!”

This is what many German units did. Among those killed in battle and encirclement, a huge number of bodies of women in Red Army uniform were found. Among them are many nurses and female paramedics. Traces on their bodies indicated that many were brutally tortured and then shot.

Residents of Smagleevka (Voronezh region) said after their liberation in 1943 that at the beginning of the war, a young Red Army girl died a terrible death in their village. She was seriously injured. Despite this, the Nazis stripped her naked, dragged her onto the road and shot her.

Horrifying traces of torture remained on the unfortunate woman's body. Before her death, her breasts were cut off and her entire face and arms were completely mangled. The woman's body was a complete bloody mess. They did the same with Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya. Before the show execution, the Nazis kept her half naked in the cold for hours.

Women in captivity

Captured Soviet soldiers—and women too—were supposed to be “sorted.” The weakest, wounded and exhausted were subject to destruction. The rest were used for the most hard work in concentration camps.

In addition to these atrocities, female Red Army soldiers were constantly subjected to rape. The highest military ranks of the Wehrmacht were forbidden to enter into intimate relationships with Slavic women, so they did it in secret. The rank and file had a certain freedom here. Having found one female Red Army soldier or nurse, she could be raped by a whole company of soldiers. If the girl did not die after that, she was shot.

In concentration camps, the leadership often selected the most attractive girls from among the prisoners and took them to “serve.” This is what the camp doctor Orlyand did in Shpalaga (prisoner of war camp) No. 346 near the city of Kremenchug. The guards themselves regularly raped prisoners in the women's block of the concentration camp.

This was the case in Shpalaga No. 337 (Baranovichi), about which the head of this camp, Yarosh, testified during a tribunal meeting in 1967.

Shpalag No. 337 was distinguished by particularly cruel, inhumane conditions of detention. Both women and men Red Army soldiers were kept half naked in the cold for hours. Hundreds of them were stuffed into lice-infested barracks. Anyone who could not stand it and fell was immediately shot by the guards. Every day, more than 700 captured military personnel were destroyed in Shpalaga No. 337.

Women prisoners of war were subjected to torture, the cruelty of which medieval inquisitors could only envy: they were impaled, their insides were stuffed with hot red pepper, etc. They were often mocked by German commandants, many of whom were distinguished by obvious sadistic inclinations. Commandant Shpalag No. 337 was called a “cannibal” behind her back, which spoke eloquently about her character.

In development of the topic and in addition to the article Elena Senyavskaya, posted on the website on May 10, 2012, we bring to the attention of readers a new article by the same author, published in the magazine

At the final stage of the Great Patriotic War Having liberated the Soviet territory occupied by the Germans and their satellites and pursuing the retreating enemy, the Red Army crossed the state border of the USSR. From that moment on, her victorious path began across the countries of Europe - both those that languished under fascist occupation for six years, and those who acted as an ally of the Third Reich in this war, and across the territory of Hitler’s Germany itself. During this advance to the West and the inevitable various contacts with the local population, Soviet military personnel, who had never been outside their own country before, received many new, very contradictory impressions about representatives of other peoples and cultures, which later formed the ethnopsychological stereotypes of their perception of Europeans . Among these impressions, the most important place was occupied by the image of European women. Mentions, and even detailed stories they are mentioned in letters and diaries, on the pages of memoirs of many war participants, where lyrical and cynical assessments and intonations most often alternate.


The first European country to be entered by the Red Army in August 1944 was Romania. In “Notes on the War” by front-line poet Boris Slutsky we find very frank lines: “Suddenly, almost pushed into the sea, Constanta opens up. It almost coincides with the average dream of happiness and “after the war.” Restaurants. Bathrooms. Beds with clean linen. Stalls with reptilian sellers. And - women, smart city women - girls of Europe - the first tribute we took from the vanquished...” Then he describes his first impressions of “abroad”: “European hairdressing salons, where they soap their fingers and do not wash their brushes, the absence of a bathhouse, washing from the basin, “where first the dirt from your hands remains, and then your face is washed”, feather beds instead of blankets - out of disgust caused by everyday life, immediate generalizations were made... In Constance, we first encountered brothels... Our first delight at the fact of the existence of free love quickly passes. It’s not only the fear of infection and the high cost, but also contempt for the very possibility of buying a person... Many were proud of stories like: a Romanian husband complains to the commandant’s office that our officer did not pay his wife the agreed upon one and a half thousand lei. Everyone had a clear consciousness: “This is impossible here”... Probably, our soldiers will remember Romania as a country of syphilitics...” And he concludes that it was in Romania, this European backwater, that “our soldier most of all felt his elevation above Europe.”

Another Soviet officer, Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Fyodor Smolnikov, wrote down his impressions of Bucharest on September 17, 1944 in his diary: “Ambassador Hotel, restaurant, ground floor. I see the idle public walking around, they have nothing to do, they are biding their time. They look at me like I'm a rarity. “Russian officer!!!” I am dressed very modestly, more than modestly. Let be. We will still be in Budapest. This is as true as the fact that I am in Bucharest. First class restaurant. The audience is dressed up, the most beautiful Romanian women stare provocatively (Hereinafter, it is emphasized by the author of the article). We spend the night in a first-class hotel. The capital's street is seething. There is no music, the audience is waiting. The capital, damn it! I will not give in to advertising..."

In Hungary, the Soviet army faced not only armed resistance, but also insidious stabs in the back from the population, when they “killed drunks and lone stragglers in the villages” and drowned them in silos. However, “women, not as depraved as the Romanians, gave in with shameful ease... A little love, a little dissipation, and most of all, of course, fear helped.” Quoting the words of one Hungarian lawyer: “It’s very good that Russians love children so much. It’s too bad that they love women so much,” Boris Slutsky comments: “He did not take into account that Hungarian women also loved Russians, that along with the dark fear that parted the knees of matrons and mothers of families, there was the tenderness of the girls and the desperate tenderness of the soldiers who gave themselves up to the murderers their husbands."

Grigory Chukhrai in his memoirs described such a case in Hungary. His part was stationed in one place. The owners of the house where he and the fighters were located, during the feast, “under the influence of Russian vodka, they relaxed and admitted that they were hiding their daughter in the attic.” The Soviet officers were indignant: “Who do you take us for? We are not fascists! “The owners were ashamed, and soon a lean girl named Mariyka appeared at the table and greedily began to eat. Then, having gotten used to it, she began to flirt and even ask us questions... By the end of dinner, everyone was in a friendly mood and drank to “borotshaz” (friendship). Mariyka understood this toast too straightforwardly. When we went to bed, she appeared in my room wearing only her undershirt. As a Soviet officer, I immediately realized: a provocation was being prepared. “They hope that I will be seduced by the charms of Mariyka, and they will make a fuss. But I won’t give in to provocation,” I thought. And Mariyka’s charms did not attract me - I showed her the door.

The next morning, the hostess, putting food on the table, rattled the dishes. “He’s nervous. The provocation failed!” - I thought. I shared this thought with our Hungarian translator. He burst out laughing.

This is not a provocation! They expressed friendship to you, but you neglected it. Now you are not considered a person in this house. You need to move to another apartment!

Why did they hide their daughter in the attic?

They were afraid of violence. It is customary in our country that a girl, with the approval of her parents, can experience intimacy with many men before getting married. They say here: you don’t buy a cat in a tied bag...”

Young, physically healthy men had a natural attraction to women. But the ease of European morals corrupted some of the Soviet fighters, and convinced others, on the contrary, that relationships should not be reduced to simple physiology. Sergeant Alexander Rodin wrote down his impressions of the visit - out of curiosity! - a brothel in Budapest, where part of it stood for some time after the end of the war: “...After leaving, a disgusting, shameful feeling of lies and falsehood arose, the picture of the woman’s obvious, blatant pretense could not escape my mind... It is interesting that such an unpleasant aftertaste from visiting a brothel remained not only with me, a young man who was also brought up on principles like “not to give a kiss without love, but also with most of our soldiers with whom I had to talk... Around the same days I had to talk with one a beautiful Magyar woman (she somehow knew Russian). When she asked if I liked it in Budapest, I replied that I liked it, but the brothels were embarrassing. "But why?" - asked the girl. Because it’s unnatural, wild,” I explained: “the woman takes the money and then immediately begins to “love!” The girl thought for a while, then nodded in agreement and said: “You’re right: it’s not nice to take money in advance...”

Poland left a different impression. According to the poet David Samoilov, “...in Poland they kept us strict. It was difficult to escape from the location. And pranks were severely punished.” And he gives impressions from this country, where the only positive aspect was the beauty of Polish women. “I can’t say that we liked Poland very much,” he wrote. “Then I didn’t see anything noble or knightly in her.” On the contrary, everything was petty-bourgeois, peasant - both concepts and interests. Yes, and in eastern Poland they looked at us warily and semi-hostilely, trying to rip off what they could from the liberators. However, the women were comfortingly beautiful and flirtatious, they captivated us with their mannerisms, cooing speech, where everything suddenly became clear, and they themselves were sometimes captivated by the rough male strength or the soldier’s uniform. And their pale, emaciated former admirers, gritting their teeth, went into the shadows for the time being...”

But not all assessments of Polish women looked so romantic. On October 22, 1944, junior lieutenant Vladimir Gelfand wrote in his diary: “The city I left with the Polish name [Vladov] loomed in the distance. with beautiful Polish girls, proud to the point of disgust . ... They told me about Polish women: they lured our soldiers and officers into their arms, and when it came to bed, they cut off their penises with a razor, strangled them by the throat with their hands, and scratched their eyes. Crazy, wild, ugly females! You need to be careful with them and not get carried away by their beauty. And the Polish women are beautiful, they are scoundrels.” However, there are other moods in his records. On October 24, he records the following meeting: “Today my companions to one of the villages turned out to be beautiful Polish girls. They complained about the lack of guys in Poland. They also called me “sir”, but they were inviolable. I patted one of them gently on the shoulder, in response to her remark about men, and consoled her with the thought of the road to Russia being open to her - there were a lot of men there. She hurried to step aside, and in response to my words she replied that there would be men for her here too. We said goodbye with a handshake. So we didn’t come to an agreement, but they’re nice girls, even though they’re Polish.” A month later, on November 22, he wrote down his impressions of the first large Polish city he met, Minsk-Mazowiecki, and among the descriptions of architectural beauty and the number of bicycles that amazed him among all categories of the population, he gave a special place to the townspeople: “A noisy idle crowd, women, as one, in white special hats, apparently worn by the wind, which make them look like forties and surprise them with their novelty. Men in triangular caps and hats are fat, neat, empty. How many of them! ... Painted lips, penciled eyebrows, affectation, excessive delicacy . How different this is from natural human life. It seems that people themselves live and move specifically just to be looked at by others, and everyone will disappear when the last viewer leaves the city...”

Not only Polish city women, but also village women left a strong, albeit contradictory, impression of themselves. “I was amazed by the love of life of the Poles who survived the horrors of war and the German occupation,” recalled Alexander Rodin. – Sunday afternoon in a Polish village. Beautiful, elegant, in silk dresses and stockings, Polish women, who on weekdays are ordinary peasant women, rake manure, barefoot, and work tirelessly around the house. Older women also look fresh and young. Although there are also black frames around the eyes...“He further quotes his diary entry from November 5, 1944: “Sunday, the residents are all dressed up. They are going to visit each other. Men in felt hats, ties, jumpers. Women in silk dresses, bright, unworn stockings. Pink-cheeked girls are “panenkas.” Beautifully curled blonde hairstyles... The soldiers in the corner of the hut are also animated. But anyone who is sensitive will notice that this is a painful revival. Everyone laughs loudly to show that they don’t care, don’t even care at all, and aren’t envious at all. What are we, worse than them? The devil knows what happiness this is - a peaceful life! After all, I haven’t seen her at all in civilian life!” His fellow soldier, Sergeant Nikolai Nesterov, wrote in his diary that same day: “Today is a day off, the Poles, beautifully dressed, gather in one hut and sit in couples. It even makes you feel a little uneasy. Wouldn’t I be able to sit like that?..”

Soldier Galina Yartseva is much more merciless in her assessment of “European morals,” reminiscent of a “feast during the plague.” On February 24, 1945, she wrote to a friend from the front: “...If it were possible, we could send wonderful parcels of their captured items. There is something. This would be our barefoot and undressed people. What cities I saw, what men and women. And looking at them, you are overcome by such evil, such hatred! They walk, they love, they live, and you go and free them. They laugh at the Russians - "Schwein!" Yes Yes! Bastards... I don’t love anyone except the USSR, except those peoples who live among us. I don’t believe in any friendships with Poles and other Lithuanians...”

In Austria, where Soviet troops invaded in the spring of 1945, they were faced with “general capitulation”: “Entire villages were ruled by white rags. Elderly women raised their hands when meeting a man in a Red Army uniform.” It was here, according to B. Slutsky, that the soldiers “got their hands on the fair-haired women.” At the same time, “the Austrians did not turn out to be overly intractable. The vast majority of peasant girls married “spoiled.” The vacationing soldiers felt like they were in Christ's bosom. In Vienna, our guide, a bank official, was amazed at the persistence and impatience of the Russians. He believed that gallantry was enough to get everything he wanted from Vienna.” That is, it was not only a matter of fear, but also certain features of the national mentality and traditional behavior.

And finally, Germany. And the women of the enemy - mothers, wives, daughters, sisters of those who, from 1941 to 1944, mocked the civilian population in the occupied territory of the USSR. How did Soviet soldiers see them? The appearance of German women walking in a crowd of refugees is described in the diary of Vladimir Bogomolov: “Women - old and young - in hats, scarves with a turban and just a canopy, like our women, in elegant coats with fur collars and in tattered, incomprehensible cut clothes . Many women go to dark glasses so as not to squint from the bright May sun and thereby protect your face from wrinkles..." Lev Kopelev recalled a meeting in Allenstein with evacuated Berliners: "There are two women on the sidewalk. Intricate hats, one even with a veil. Good-quality coats, and they themselves are smooth and well-groomed.” And he quoted soldiers’ comments about them: “chickens”, “turkeys”, “if only they were so smooth...”

How did the German women behave when meeting with Soviet troops? In the report of the deputy. Head of the Main Political Directorate of the Red Army Shikin in the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks G.F. Alexandrov dated April 30, 1945 about the attitude of the civilian population of Berlin to the personnel of the Red Army troops said: “As soon as our units occupy one or another area of ​​the city, the residents They gradually begin to take to the streets, almost all of them have white bands on their sleeves. When meeting our military personnel, many women raise their hands up, cry and shake with fear, but as soon as they are convinced that the soldiers and officers of the Red Army are not at all what their fascist propaganda portrayed them to be, this fear quickly passes, more and more the population takes to the streets and offers their services, trying in every possible way to emphasize their loyal attitude to the Red Army.”

The winners were most impressed by the humility and prudence of the German women. In this regard, it is worth citing the story of mortarman N.A. Orlov, who was shocked by the behavior of German women in 1945: “No one in the Minbat killed German civilians. Our special officer was a “Germanophile.” If this happened, then the reaction of the punitive authorities to such an excess would be quick. Regarding violence against German women. It seems to me that when talking about this phenomenon, some people “exaggerate things” a little. I remember an example of a different kind. We went to some German city and settled in houses. “Frau,” about 45 years old, appears and asks for “Ger Commandant.” They brought her to Marchenko. She claims to be in charge of the quarter and has collected 20 German women for sexual (!!!) service of Russian soldiers. Marchenko German understood, and to the political officer Dolgoborodov standing next to me, I translated the meaning of what the German woman said. The reaction of our officers was angry and abusive. The German woman was driven away, along with her “squad” ready for service. In general, the German submission stunned us. They expected partisan warfare and sabotage from the Germans. But for this nation, order - "Ordnung" - is above all. If you are a winner, then they are “on their hind legs”, and consciously and not under duress. This is the psychology..."

David Samoilov cites a similar incident in his military notes: “In Arendsfeld, where we had just settled down, a small crowd of women with children appeared. They were led by a huge mustachioed German woman of about fifty - Frau Friedrich. She stated that she was a representative of the civilian population and asked to register the remaining residents. We replied that this could be done as soon as the commandant’s office appeared.

This is impossible,” said Frau Friedrich. - There are women and children here. They need to be registered.

The civilian population confirmed her words with screams and tears.

Not knowing what to do, I invited them to take the basement of the house where we were located. And they, reassured, went down to the basement and began to settle down there, waiting for the authorities.

“Herr Commissar,” Frau Friedrich told me complacently (I was wearing a leather jacket). “We understand that soldiers have small needs. “They are ready,” Frau Friedrich continued, “to give them several younger women for...

I did not continue the conversation with Frau Friedrich.”

After communicating with residents of Berlin on May 2, 1945, Vladimir Bogomolov wrote in his diary: “We are entering one of the surviving houses. Everything is quiet, dead. We knock and ask you to open it. You can hear whispering, muffled and excited conversations in the corridor. Finally the door opens. The ageless women, huddled in a tight group, bow fearfully, low and obsequiously. German women are afraid of us, they were told that Soviet soldiers, especially Asians, would rape and kill them... Fear and hatred are on their faces. But sometimes it seems that they like to be defeated - their behavior is so helpful, their smiles and words are so touching. These days there are stories in circulation about how our soldier entered a German apartment, asked for a drink, and the German woman, as soon as she saw him, lay down on the sofa and took off her tights.”

“All German women are depraved. They have nothing against being slept with." , - this opinion existed in the Soviet troops and was supported not only by many illustrative examples, but also by their unpleasant consequences, which military doctors soon discovered.

Directive of the Military Council of the 1st Belorussian Front No. 00343/Ш dated April 15, 1945 stated: “During the presence of troops on enemy territory, cases of venereal diseases among military personnel increased sharply. A study of the reasons for this situation shows that sexually transmitted diseases are widespread among Germans. The Germans, before the retreat, and also now, in the territory we occupied, took the path of artificially infecting German women with syphilis and gonorrhoea in order to create large centers for the spread of sexually transmitted diseases among Red Army soldiers».

The Military Council of the 47th Army reported on April 26, 1945 that “...In March, the number of sexually transmitted diseases among military personnel increased compared to February of this year. four times. ... The female part of the German population in the surveyed areas is affected by 8-15%. There are cases when the enemy deliberately leaves German women with venereal diseases behind to infect military personnel.”

To implement the Resolution of the Military Council of the 1st Belorussian Front No. 056 of April 18, 1945 on the prevention of venereal diseases in the troops of the 33rd Army, the following leaflet was issued:

“Comrade military personnel!

You are being seduced by German women whose husbands visited all the brothels in Europe, became infected themselves and infected their German women.

Before you are those German women who were specially left by the enemy to spread venereal diseases and thereby incapacitate the Red Army soldiers.

We must understand that our victory over the enemy is close and that soon you will have the opportunity to return to your families.

With what eyes will someone who brings a contagious disease look into the eyes of their loved ones?

Can we, warriors of the heroic Red Army, be the source of infectious diseases in our country? NO! For the moral image of a Red Army warrior must be as pure as the image of his Motherland and family!”

Even in the memoirs of Lev Kopelev, who angrily describes the facts of violence and looting by Soviet military personnel in East Prussia, there are lines that reflect the other side of the “relationships” with the local population: “They talked about the obedience, servility, ingratiation of the Germans: this is what they are like, for they sell a loaf of bread and their wives and daughters.” The disgusting tone in which Kopelev conveys these “stories” implies their unreliability. However, they are confirmed by many sources.

Vladimir Gelfand described in his diary his courtship of a German girl (the entry was made six months after the end of the war, on October 26, 1945, but still very typical): “I wanted to thoroughly enjoy the caresses of pretty Margot - kisses and hugs alone were not enough. I expected more, but did not dare to demand and insist. The girl's mother was pleased with me. Still would! At the altar of trust and favor from my relatives, I brought sweets and butter, sausage, and expensive German cigarettes. Already half of these products are enough to have complete grounds and the right to do anything with your daughter in front of the mother’s eyes, and she will not say anything against. For food today is more valuable than even life, and even such a young and sweet sensual woman as the gentle beauty Margot.”

Interesting diary entries were left by the Australian war correspondent Osmar White, who in 1944-1945. was in Europe in the ranks of the 3rd American army under the command of George Paton. This is what he wrote down in Berlin in May 1945, literally a few days after the end of the assault: “I walked through the night cabarets, starting with Femina near Potsdammerplatz. It was a warm and humid evening. The smell of sewage and rotting corpses filled the air. The façade of Femina was covered with futuristic nudes and advertisements in four languages. The dance hall and restaurant were filled with Russian, British and American officers escorting (or hunting for) the women. A bottle of wine cost $25, a horse meat and potato hamburger cost $10, and a pack of American cigarettes cost a staggering $20. The women of Berlin had their cheeks rouged and their lips painted so that it seemed as if Hitler had won the war. Many women wore silk stockings. The lady hostess of the evening opened the concert in German, Russian, English and French. This provoked a barb from the Russian artillery captain who was sitting next to me. He leaned towards me and said in decent English: “Such a quick transition from national to international! RAF bombs are great professors, aren't they?"

The general impression of European women that Soviet military personnel had was sleek and elegant (in comparison with their war-weary compatriots in the half-starved rear, on lands liberated from occupation, and even with front-line friends dressed in washed out tunics), approachable, selfish, promiscuous or cowardly. submissive. The exceptions were Yugoslav and Bulgarian women. The stern and ascetic Yugoslav partisans were perceived as comrades and were considered inviolable. And given the strict morals in the Yugoslav army, “the partisan girls probably looked at the PPZH [field wives] as beings of a special, nasty kind.” Boris Slutsky recalled about Bulgarian women this way: “...After Ukrainian complacency, after Romanian debauchery, the severe inaccessibility of Bulgarian women struck our people. Almost no one boasted of victories. This was the only country where officers were often accompanied on walks by men, and almost never by women. Later, the Bulgarians were proud when they were told that the Russians were going to return to Bulgaria for brides - the only ones in the world who remained pure and untouched.”

The Czech beauties who joyfully greeted the Soviet soldiers-liberators left a pleasant impression. Confused tank crews from combat vehicles covered with oil and dust, decorated with wreaths and flowers, said to each other: “...Something is a tank bride, to clean it up. And the girls, you know, are hooking them. Good people. I haven’t seen such sincere people for a long time...” The friendliness and cordiality of the Czechs was sincere. “...- If it were possible, I would kiss all the soldiers and officers of the Red Army because they liberated my Prague,” said ... a Prague tram worker to the general friendly and approving laughter,” - this is how he described the atmosphere in the liberated Czech capital and the mood of local residents May 11, 1945 Boris Polevoy.

But in other countries through which the winning army passed, the female part of the population did not command respect. “In Europe, women gave up and changed before anyone else...” wrote B. Slutsky. - I have always been shocked, confused, disoriented by the ease, the shameful ease of love relationships. Decent women, certainly unselfish, were like prostitutes - hasty availability, desire to avoid intermediate stages, disinterest in the motives that push a man to get closer to them. Like people who recognized three obscene words from the entire lexicon of love poetry, they reduced the whole matter to a few body movements, causing resentment and contempt among the most yellow-faced of our officers... The restraining motives were not ethics at all, but the fear of getting infected, the fear of publicity, of pregnancy.” , - and added that under the conditions of conquest, “general depravity covered and hid the special female depravity, made it invisible and unashamed.”

However, among the motives that contributed to the spread of “international love”, despite all the prohibitions and harsh orders of the Soviet command, there were several more: women’s curiosity for “exotic” lovers and the unprecedented generosity of Russians towards the object of their affection, which distinguished them favorably from stingy European men.

Junior Lieutenant Daniil Zlatkin ended up in Denmark, on the island of Bornholm, at the very end of the war. In his interview, he said that the interest of Russian men and European women in each other was mutual: “We didn’t see women, but we had to... And when we arrived in Denmark... it’s free, please. They wanted to check, test, try the Russian people, what it is, how it is, and it seemed to work better than the Danes. Why? We were selfless and kind... I gave a box of chocolates for half a table, I gave 100 roses to a stranger... for her birthday..."

At the same time, few people thought about a serious relationship or marriage, due to the fact that Soviet leadership clearly stated its position on this issue. The Resolution of the Military Council of the 4th Ukrainian Front dated April 12, 1945 stated: “1. Explain to all officers and all personnel of the front troops that marriage with foreign women is illegal and is strictly prohibited. 2. All cases of military personnel marrying foreign women, as well as connections between our people and hostile elements of foreign states, must be reported immediately upon command to bring the perpetrators to justice for loss of vigilance and violation of Soviet laws.” The directive from the head of the Political Directorate of the 1st Belorussian Front dated April 14, 1945 read: “According to the head of the Main Personnel Directorate of NGOs, the Center continues to receive applications from officers of the active army with a request to sanction marriages with women of foreign countries (Poles, Bulgarians, Czechs) and etc.). Such facts should be considered as a dulling of vigilance and dulling of patriotic feelings. Therefore, it is necessary in political and educational work to pay attention to a deep explanation of the inadmissibility of such acts on the part of Red Army officers. Explain everything officers who does not understand the futility of such marriages, the inadvisability of marrying foreign women, even to the point of direct prohibition, and not allow a single case.”

And the women had no illusions about the intentions of their gentlemen. “At the beginning of 1945, even the stupidest Hungarian peasant women did not believe our promises. European women were already aware that we were forbidden to marry foreigners, and they suspected that there was a similar order also about appearing together in a restaurant, cinema, etc. This did not prevent them from loving our ladies’ men, but it gave this love a purely “out-of-the-way” [carnal] character,” wrote B. Slutsky.

In general, it should be recognized that the image of European women formed by the soldiers of the Red Army in 1944-1945, with rare exceptions, turned out to be very far from the suffering figure with hands chained, looking with hope from the Soviet poster “Europe will be free!” .

Notes
Slutsky B. Notes about the war. Poems and ballads. St. Petersburg, 2000. P. 174.
Right there. pp. 46-48.
Right there. pp. 46-48.
Smolnikov F.M. Let's fight! Diary of a front-line soldier. Letters from the front. M., 2000. pp. 228-229.
Slutsky B. Decree. op. pp. 110, 107.
Right there. P. 177.
Chukhrai G. My war. M.: Algorithm, 2001. pp. 258-259.
Rodin A. Three thousand kilometers in the saddle. Diaries. M., 2000. P. 127.
Samoilov D. People of one option. From military notes // Aurora. 1990. No. 2. P. 67.
Right there. pp. 70-71.
Gelfand V.N. Diaries 1941-1946. http://militera.lib.ru/db/gelfand_vn/05.html
Right there.
Right there.
Rodin A. Three thousand kilometers in the saddle. Diaries. M., 2000. P. 110.
Right there. pp. 122-123.
Right there. P. 123.
Central Archive of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation. F. 372. Op. 6570. D; 76. L. 86.
Slutsky B. Decree. op. P. 125.
Right there. pp. 127-128.
Bogomolov V.O. Germany Berlin. Spring 1945 // Bogomolov V.O. My life, or did I dream about you?.. M.: Magazine “Our Contemporary”, No. 10-12, 2005, No. 1, 2006. http://militera.lib.ru/prose/russian/bogomolov_vo/03. html
Kopelev L. Keep forever. In 2 books. Book 1: Parts 1-4. M.: Terra, 2004. Ch. 11. http://lib.rus.ec/b/137774/read#t15
Russian State Archive of Socio-Political History (hereinafter referred to as RGASPI). F. 17. Op. 125. D. 321. L. 10-12.
From an interview with N.A. Orlov on the “I Remember” website. http://www.iremember.ru/minometchiki/orlov-naum-aronovich/stranitsa-6.html
Samoilov D. Decree. op. P. 88.
Bogomolov V.O. My life, or did I dream about you?.. // Our contemporary. 2005. No. 10-12; 2006. No. 1. http://militera.lib.ru/prose/russian/bogomolov_vo/03.html
From the Political Report on communicating to the personnel the directive of Comrade. Stalin No. 11072 dated April 20, 1945 in the 185th Infantry Division. April 26, 1945 Quote. by: Bogomolov V.O. Decree. op. http://militera.lib.ru/prose/russian/bogomolov_vo/02.html
Quote By: Bogomolov V.O. Decree. op. http://militera.lib.ru/prose/russian/bogomolov_vo/02.html
Right there.
Right there.
State Archives Russian Federation. F. r-9401. Op. 2. D. 96. L.203.
Kopelev L. Decree. op. Ch. 12. http://lib.rus.ec/b/137774/read#t15
Gelfand V.N. Decree. op.
White Osmar. Conquerors" Road: An Eyewitness Account of Germany 1945. Cambridge University Press, 2003. XVII, 221 pp. http://www.argo.net.au/andre/osmarwhite.html
Slutsky B. Decree. op. P. 99.
Right there. P. 71.
Polevoy B. Liberation of Prague // From the Soviet Information Bureau... Journalism and essays of the war years. 1941-1945. T. 2. 1943-1945. M.: APN Publishing House, 1982. P. 439.
Right there. pp. 177-178.
Right there. P. 180.
From an interview with D.F. Zlatkin dated June 16, 1997 // Personal archive.
Quote By: Bogomolov V.O. Decree. op. http://militera.lib.ru/prose/russian/bogomolov_vo/04.html
Right there.
Slutsky B. Decree. op. pp. 180-181.

The article was prepared with the financial support of the Russian Humanitarian Research Foundation, project No. 11-01-00363a.

The design uses a Soviet poster from 1944 “Europe will be free!” Artist V. Koretsky

Let's talk about the trophies of the Red Army, which the Soviet victors took home from defeated Germany. Let's talk calmly, without emotions - only photographs and facts. Then we will touch on the sensitive issue of rape of German women and go through facts from the life of occupied Germany.

A Soviet soldier takes a bicycle from a German woman (according to Russophobes), or a Soviet soldier helps a German woman straighten the steering wheel (according to Russophiles). Berlin, August 1945. (as it actually happened, in the investigation below)

But the truth, as always, is in the middle, and it lies in the fact that in abandoned German houses and shops, Soviet soldiers took everything they liked, but the Germans had quite a bit of brazen robbery. Looting, of course, happened, but sometimes people were tried for it in a show trial at a tribunal. And none of the soldiers wanted to go through the war alive, and because of some junk and the next round of struggle for friendship with the local population, to go not home as a winner, but to Siberia as a condemned man.


Soviet soldiers buy up on the “black market” in the Tiergarten garden. Berlin, summer 1945.

Although the junk was valuable. After the Red Army entered German territory, by order of the USSR NKO No. 0409 dated December 26, 1944. All military personnel on active fronts were allowed to send one personal parcel to the Soviet rear once a month.
The most severe punishment was deprivation of the right to this parcel, the weight of which was established: for privates and sergeants - 5 kg, for officers - 10 kg and for generals - 16 kg. The size of the parcel could not exceed 70 cm in each of three dimensions, but large equipment, carpets, furniture, and even pianos were sent home in various ways.
Upon demobilization, officers and soldiers were allowed to take away everything that they could take with them on the road in their personal luggage. At the same time, large items were often transported home, secured to the roofs of the trains, and the Poles were left to the task of pulling them along the train with ropes and hooks (my grandfather told me).
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Three Soviet women kidnapped in Germany carry wine from an abandoned wine store. Lippstadt, April 1945.

During the war and the first months after its end, soldiers mainly sent non-perishable provisions to their families in the rear (American dry rations, consisting of canned food, biscuits, powdered eggs, jam, and even instant coffee, were considered the most valuable). The Allied medicinal drugs, streptomycin and penicillin, were also highly valued.
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American soldiers and young German women combine trading and flirting on the “black market” in the Tiergarten garden.
The Soviet military in the background in the market has no time for nonsense. Berlin, May 1945.

And it was possible to get it only on the “black market”, which instantly appeared in every German city. At flea markets you could buy everything from cars to women, and the most common currency was tobacco and food.
The Germans needed food, but the Americans, British and French were only interested in money - in Germany at that time there were Nazi Reichsmarks, occupation stamps of the victors, and foreign currencies of the allied countries, on whose exchange rates big money was made.
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An American soldier bargains with a Soviet junior lieutenant. LIFE photo from September 10, 1945.

But the Soviet soldiers had funds. According to the Americans, they were the best buyers - gullible, bad bargainers and very rich. Indeed, since December 1944, Soviet military personnel in Germany began to receive double pay, both in rubles and in marks at the exchange rate (this double payment system will be abolished much later).
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Photos of Soviet soldiers bargaining at a flea market. LIFE photo from September 10, 1945.

The salary of Soviet military personnel depended on the rank and position held. Thus, a major, deputy military commandant, received 1,500 rubles in 1945. per month and for the same amount in occupation marks at the exchange rate. In addition, officers from the position of company commander and above were paid money to hire German servants.
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For an idea of ​​prices. Certificate of purchase by a Soviet colonel from a German of a car for 2,500 marks (750 Soviet rubles)

The Soviet military received a lot of money - on the “black market” an officer could buy himself whatever his heart desired for one month’s salary. In addition, the servicemen were paid their debts in salary for past times, and they had plenty of money even if they sent home a ruble certificate.
Therefore, taking the risk of “getting caught” and being punished for looting was simply stupid and unnecessary. And although there were certainly plenty of greedy marauding fools, they were the exception rather than the rule.
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A Soviet soldier with an SS dagger attached to his belt. Pardubicky, Czechoslovakia, May 1945.

The soldiers were different, and their tastes were also different. Some, for example, really valued these German SS (or naval, flight) daggers, although they had no practical use. As a child, I held one such SS dagger in my hands (my grandfather’s friend brought it from the war) - its black and silver beauty and sinister story, were mesmerizing.
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Veteran of the Great Patriotic War Pyotr Patsienko with a captured Admiral Solo accordion. Grodno, Belarus, May 2013

But the majority of Soviet soldiers valued everyday clothes, accordions, watches, cameras, radios, crystal, porcelain, with which the shelves of Soviet thrift stores were littered for many years after the war.
Many of those things have survived to this day, and do not rush to accuse their old owners of looting - no one will know the true circumstances of their acquisition, but most likely they were simply and simply bought from the Germans by the winners.

On the question of one historical falsification, or about the photograph “A Soviet soldier takes away a bicycle.”

This well-known photograph is traditionally used to illustrate articles about the atrocities of Soviet soldiers in Berlin. This topic comes up with amazing consistency year after year on Victory Day.
The photo itself is published, as a rule, with a caption "A Soviet soldier takes a bicycle from a Berlin resident". There are also signatures from the cycle "Looting flourished in Berlin in 1945" etc.

There is heated debate about the photograph itself and what is captured on it. The arguments of opponents of the version of “looting and violence” that I have come across on the Internet, unfortunately, do not sound convincing. Of these, we can highlight, firstly, calls not to make judgments based on one photograph. Secondly, an indication of the poses of the German woman, the soldier and other persons in the frame. In particular, from the calmness of the supporting characters it follows that this is not about violence, but about an attempt to straighten some bicycle part.
Finally, doubts are being raised that it is a Soviet soldier who is captured in the photograph: the roll over the right shoulder, the roll itself is of a very strange shape, the cap on the head is too large, etc. In addition, in the background, right behind the soldier, if you look closely, you can see a military man in a clearly non-Soviet uniform.

But, let me emphasize once again, all these versions do not seem convincing enough to me.

In general, I decided to look into this story. The photograph, I reasoned, clearly must have an author, must have a primary source, the first publication, and - most likely - an original signature. Which may shed light on what is shown in the photograph.

If we take literature, as far as I remember, I came across this photograph in the catalog of the Documentary Exhibition for the 50th anniversary of the German attack on the Soviet Union. The exhibition itself was opened in 1991 in Berlin in the “Topography of Terror” hall, then, as far as I know, it was exhibited in St. Petersburg. Its catalog in Russian, “Germany’s War against the Soviet Union 1941-1945,” was published in 1994.

I don’t have this catalogue, but luckily my colleague did. Indeed, the photograph you are looking for is published on page 257. Traditional signature: "A Soviet soldier takes a bicycle from a Berlin resident, 1945."

Apparently, this catalog, published in 1994, became the Russian primary source of the photography we needed. At least on a number of old resources, dating back to the early 2000s, I came across this picture with a link to “Germany’s war against the Soviet Union..” and with a signature familiar to us. It looks like that's where the photo is wandering around the internet.

The catalog indicates Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz as the source of the image - Photo Archive of the Prussian Foundation cultural heritage. The archive has a website, but no matter how hard I tried, I could not find the photo I needed on it.

But in the process of searching, I came across the same photograph in the archives of Life magazine. In the Life version it is called "Bike Fight".
Please note that here the photo is not cropped at the edges, as in the exhibition catalogue. New ones are emerging interesting details, for example, on the left behind you can see an officer, and, as it were, not a German officer:

But the main thing is the signature!
A Russian soldier involved in a misunderstanding with a German woman in Berlin, over a bicycle he wished to buy from her.

“There was a misunderstanding between a Russian soldier and a German woman in Berlin over a bicycle that he wanted to buy from her.”

In general, I will not bore the reader with the nuances of further searching using the keywords “misunderstanding”, “German woman”, “Berlin”, “Soviet soldier”, “Russian soldier”, etc. I found the original photo and the original signature underneath it. The photo belongs to the American company Corbis. Here he is:

As it is not difficult to notice, here the photo is complete, on the right and left there are details cut off in the “Russian version” and even in the Life version. These details are very important, as they give the picture a completely different mood.

And finally, the original signature:

Russian Soldier Tries to Buy Bicycle from Woman in Berlin, 1945
A misunderstanding ensues after a Russian soldier tries to buy a bike from a German woman in Berlin. After giving her money for the bike, the soldier assumes the deal has been struck. However the woman doesn't seem convinced.

A Russian soldier tries to buy a bicycle from a woman in Berlin, 1945
The misunderstanding happened after a Russian soldier tried to buy a bicycle from a German woman in Berlin. Having given her the money for the bicycle, he believes that the deal has been completed. However, the woman thinks differently.

That's how things are, dear friends.
All around, wherever you look, lies, lies, lies...

So who raped all the German women?

From an article by Sergei Manukov.

Criminology professor Robert Lilly from the United States checked American military archives and concluded that by November 1945, the tribunals had examined 11,040 cases of serious sexual offenses committed by American military personnel in Germany. Other historians from Great Britain, France and America agree that the Western allies were also “giving up.”
For a long time, Western historians have been trying to place blame on Soviet soldiers using evidence that no court will accept.
The most vivid idea of ​​them is given by one of the main arguments of the British historian and writer Antony Beevor, one of the most famous specialists in the West on the history of the Second World War.
He believed that Western soldiers, especially the American military, did not need to rape German women, because they had plenty of the most popular goods with which it was possible to obtain the Fraulein's consent to sex: canned food, coffee, cigarettes, nylon stockings, etc. .
Western historians believe that the overwhelming majority of sexual contacts between the victors and German women were voluntary, i.e. that it was the most common prostitution.
It is no coincidence that a popular joke was popular in those days: “It took the Americans six years to cope with the German armies, but a day and a bar of chocolate were enough to conquer German women.”
However, the picture was not nearly as rosy as Antony Beevor and his supporters try to imagine. Post-war society was unable to differentiate between voluntary and forced sexual contacts between women who gave themselves up because they were starving and those who were victims of rape at gunpoint or machine gun.


That this is an overly idealized picture was loudly stated by Miriam Gebhardt, a history professor at the University of Konstanz, in southwest Germany.
Of course, when writing a new book, she was least of all driven by the desire to protect and whitewash Soviet soldiers. The main motive is the establishment of truth and historical justice.
Miriam Gebhardt found several victims of the "exploits" of American, British and French soldiers and interviewed them.
Here is the story of one of the women who suffered from the Americans:

Six American soldiers We arrived in the village when it was already getting dark, and entered the house where Katerina V. lived with her 18-year-old daughter Charlotte. The women managed to escape just before the uninvited guests appeared, but they did not think of giving up. Obviously, this was not the first time they had done this.
The Americans began to search all the houses one after another and finally, almost at midnight, they found the fugitives in a neighbor’s closet. They pulled them out, threw them on the bed and raped them. Instead of chocolates and nylon stockings, the uniformed rapists took out pistols and machine guns.
This gang rape took place in March 1945, a month and a half before the end of the war. Charlotte, in horror, called her mother for help, but Katerina could do nothing to help her.
The book contains many similar cases. All of them occurred in the south of Germany, in the zone of occupation of American troops, whose number was 1.6 million people.

In the spring of 1945, the Archbishop of Munich and Freising ordered the priests under him to document all events related to the occupation of Bavaria. Several years ago, part of the archives from 1945 was published.
The priest Michael Merxmüller from the village of Ramsau, which is located near Berchtesgaden, wrote on July 20, 1945: “Eight girls and women were raped, some right in front of their parents.”
Father Andreas Weingand from Haag an der Ampere, a tiny village located on what is now Munich Airport, wrote on July 25, 1945:
“The saddest event during the American offensive was three rapes. Drunk soldiers raped one married woman, one unmarried woman and a girl of 16 and a half years old.
“By order of the military authorities,” wrote priest Alois Schiml from Moosburg on August 1, 1945, “a list of all residents with an indication of age should hang on the door of every house. 17 raped girls and women were admitted to the hospital. Among them are those whom American soldiers raped many times."
From the priests' reports it followed: the youngest Yankee victim was 7 years old, and the oldest was 69.
The book "When the Soldiers Came" appeared on bookstore shelves in early March and immediately caused heated debate. There is nothing surprising in this, because Frau Gebhardt dared to make attempts, and at a time of strong aggravation of relations between the West and Russia, to try to equate those who started the war with those who suffered the most from it.
Despite the fact that Gebhardt’s book focuses on the exploits of the Yankees, the rest of the Western allies, of course, also performed “feats.” Although, compared to the Americans, they caused much less mischief.

The Americans raped 190 thousand German women.

According to the author of the book, British soldiers behaved best in Germany in 1945, but not because of any innate nobility or, say, a gentleman's code of conduct.
British officers turned out to be more decent than their colleagues from other armies, who not only strictly forbade their subordinates to molest German women, but also watched them very closely.
As for the French, their situation, just like in the case of our soldiers, is somewhat different. France was occupied by the Germans, although, of course, the occupation of France and Russia, as they say, are two big differences.
In addition, most of the rapists in the French army were Africans, i.e., people from French colonies on the Dark Continent. By and large, they didn’t care who to take revenge on - the main thing was that the women were white.
The French especially “distinguished themselves” in Stuttgart. They herded the residents of Stuttgart onto the subway and staged a three-day orgy of violence. According to various sources, during this time from 2 to 4 thousand German women were raped.

Just like the eastern allies they met on the Elbe, American soldiers were horrified by the crimes the Germans had committed and embittered by their stubbornness and desire to defend their homeland to the end.
American propaganda also played a role, instilling in them that German women were crazy about liberators from overseas. This further fueled the erotic fantasies of the warriors deprived of female affection.
Miriam Gebhardt's seeds fell into the prepared soil. Following the crimes committed by American troops several years ago in Afghanistan and Iraq, and especially in the notorious Iraqi prison Abu Ghraib, many Western historians have become more critical of the behavior of the Yankees before and after the end of the war.
Researchers are increasingly finding documents in the archives, for example, about the looting of churches in Italy by Americans, the murders of civilians and German prisoners, as well as the rape of Italian women.
However, attitudes towards the American military are changing extremely slowly. The Germans continue to treat them as disciplined and decent (especially compared to the Allies) soldiers who gave chewing gum to children and stockings to women.

Of course, the evidence presented by Miriam Gebhardt in the book “When the Military Came” did not convince everyone. It is not surprising, given that no one kept any statistics and all calculations and figures are approximate and speculative.
Anthony Beevor and his supporters ridiculed Professor Gebhardt’s calculations: “It is almost impossible to get accurate and reliable figures, but I think that hundreds of thousands are a clear exaggeration.
Even if we take the number of children born to German women from Americans as a basis for calculations, we should remember that many of them were conceived as a result of voluntary sex, and not rape. Don’t forget that at the gates of American military camps and bases in those years, German women crowded from morning to night.”
Miriam Gebhardt’s conclusions, and especially her numbers, can, of course, be doubted, but even the most ardent defenders of American soldiers are unlikely to argue with the assertion that they were not as “fluffy” and kind as most Western historians try to make them out to be.
If only because they left a “sexual” mark not only in hostile Germany, but also in allied France. American soldiers raped thousands of French women whom they liberated from the Germans.

If in the book “When the Soldiers Came” a history professor from Germany accuses the Yankees, then in the book “What the Soldiers Did” this is done by the American Mary Roberts, a history professor at the University of Wisconsin.
“My book debunks the old myth about American soldiers, who were generally considered to be always good,” she says. “Americans had sex everywhere and with everyone who was wearing a skirt.”
It is more difficult to argue with Professor Roberts than with Gebhardt, because she did not present conclusions and calculations, but exclusively facts. The main one is archival documents, according to which 152 American military personnel were convicted of rape in France, and 29 of them were hanged.
The numbers are, of course, minuscule compared to neighboring Germany, even if we consider that behind each case lies a human fate, but it must be remembered that these are only official statistics and that they represent only the tip of the iceberg.
Without much risk of error, we can assume that only a few victims filed complaints against the liberators to the police. Most often, shame prevented them from going to the police, because in those days rape was a stigma of shame for a woman.

In France, rapists from overseas had other motives. To many of them, the rape of French women seemed like something of an amorous adventure.
Many American soldiers had fathers who fought in France in World War I. Their stories probably inspired many military men from General Eisenhower’s army to have romantic adventures with attractive French women. Many Americans considered France to be something of a huge brothel.
Military magazines such as Stars and Stripes also contributed. They printed photographs of laughing French women kissing their liberators. They also printed phrases on French, which may be needed when communicating with French women: “I’m not married”, “You have beautiful eyes”, “You are very beautiful”, etc.
Journalists almost directly advised the soldiers to take what they liked. It is not surprising that after the Allied landings in Normandy in the summer of 1944, northern France was overwhelmed by a “tsunami of male lust and lust.”
The liberators from overseas especially distinguished themselves in Le Havre. The city archive contains letters from Havre residents to the mayor with complaints about “a wide variety of crimes that are committed day and night.”
Most often, residents of Le Havre complained of rape, often in front of others, although there were, of course, robberies and thefts.
The Americans behaved in France as if they were a conquered country. It is clear that the attitude of the French towards them was corresponding. Many French residents considered the liberation a “second occupation.” And often more cruel than the first, German one.

They say that French prostitutes often remembered German clients kind words, because Americans were often interested in more than just sex. With the Yankees, girls also had to watch their wallets. The liberators did not disdain banal theft and robbery.
Meetings with the Americans were life-threatening. 29 American soldiers were sentenced to death penalty for the murders of French prostitutes.
In order to cool down the heated soldiers, the command distributed leaflets among the personnel condemning rape. The military prosecutor's office was not particularly strict. They judged only those who were simply impossible not to judge. The racist sentiments that reigned in America at that time are also clearly visible: of the 152 soldiers and officers who were court-martialed, 139 were blacks.

What was life like in occupied Germany?

After World War II, Germany was divided into occupation zones. Today you can read and hear different opinions about how life was lived in them. Often the exact opposite.

Denazification and re-education

The first task that the Allies set for themselves after the defeat of Germany was the denazification of the German population. The entire adult population of the country completed a survey prepared by the Control Council for Germany. The questionnaire "Erhebungsformular MG/PS/G/9a" had 131 questions. The survey was voluntary-compulsory.

Refuseniks were deprived of food cards.

Based on the survey, all Germans are divided into “not involved,” “acquitted,” “fellow travelers,” “guilty,” and “highly guilty.” Citizens of three last groups appeared before the court, which determined the extent of guilt and punishment. The “guilty” and “highly guilty” were sent to internment camps; “fellow travelers” could atone for their guilt with a fine or property.

It is clear that this technique was imperfect. Mutual responsibility, corruption and insincerity of the respondents made denazification ineffective. Hundreds of thousands of Nazis managed to avoid trial using forged documents along the so-called “rat trails.”

The Allies also carried out a large-scale campaign in Germany to re-educate the Germans. Movies about Nazi atrocities were continuously shown in cinemas. Residents of Germany also had to attend sessions mandatory. Otherwise, they could lose the same food cards. The Germans were also taken on excursions to former concentration camps and involved in the work carried out there. For most of the civilian population, the information received was shocking. Goebbels's propaganda during the war years told them about a completely different Nazism.

Demilitarization

According to the decision of the Potsdam Conference, Germany was to undergo demilitarization, which included the dismantling of military factories.
The Western allies adopted the principles of demilitarization in their own way: in their occupation zones they were not only in no hurry to dismantle factories, but also actively restored them, while trying to increase the metal smelting quota and wanting to preserve the military potential of Western Germany.

By 1947, in the British and American zones alone, more than 450 military factories were hidden from accounting.

The Soviet Union was more honest in this regard. According to historian Mikhail Semiryagi, in one year after March 1945, the highest authorities of the Soviet Union made about a thousand decisions related to the dismantling of 4,389 enterprises from Germany, Austria, Hungary and others European countries. However, this number cannot be compared with the number of facilities destroyed by the war in the USSR.
The number of German enterprises dismantled by the USSR was less than 14% of the pre-war number of factories. According to Nikolai Voznesensky, then chairman of the USSR State Planning Committee, supplies of captured equipment from Germany covered only 0.6% of direct damage to the USSR

Marauding

The topic of looting and violence against civilians in post-war Germany is still controversial.
A lot of documents have been preserved indicating that the Western allies exported property from defeated Germany literally by ship.

Marshal Zhukov also “distinguished himself” in collecting trophies.

When he fell out of favor in 1948, investigators began to “dekulakize” him. The confiscation resulted in 194 pieces of furniture, 44 carpets and tapestries, 7 boxes of crystal, 55 museum paintings and much more. All this was exported from Germany.

As for the soldiers and officers of the Red Army, according to the available documents, not many cases of looting were registered. The victorious Soviet soldiers were more likely to engage in applied “junk,” that is, they were engaged in collecting ownerless property. When the Soviet command allowed parcels to be sent home, boxes with sewing needles, fabric scraps, and working tools went to the Union. At the same time, our soldiers had a rather disgusting attitude towards all these things. In letters to their relatives, they made excuses for all this “junk.”

Strange calculations

The most problematic topic is the topic of violence against civilians, especially German women. Up until perestroika, the number of German women subjected to violence was small: from 20 to 150 thousand throughout Germany.

In 1992, a book by two feminists, Helke Sander and Barbara Yohr, “Liberators and the Liberated,” was published in Germany, where a different figure appeared: 2 million.

These figures were “exaggerated” and were based on statistical data from only one German clinic, multiplied by a hypothetical number of women. In 2002, Anthony Beevor's book “The Fall of Berlin” was published, where this figure also appeared. In 2004, this book was published in Russia, giving rise to the myth of the cruelty of Soviet soldiers in occupied Germany.

In fact, according to the documents, such facts were considered “extraordinary incidents and immoral phenomena.” Violence against the civilian population of Germany was fought at all levels, and looters and rapists were put on trial. Exact numbers there is still no information on this issue, not all documents have yet been declassified, but in the report of the military prosecutor of the 1st Belorussian Front on illegal actions against the civilian population for the period from April 22 to May 5, 1945, there are the following figures: for seven armies of the front on 908.5 thousand people recorded 124 crimes, of which 72 were rapes. 72 cases per 908.5 thousand. What two million are we talking about?

There was also looting and violence against civilians in the western occupation zones. Mortarman Naum Orlov wrote in his memoirs: “The British guarding us rolled chewing gum between their teeth - which was new to us - and boasted to each other about their trophies, raising their hands high, covered in wristwatches...”.

Osmar White, an Australian war correspondent who could hardly be suspected of partiality towards Soviet soldiers, wrote in 1945: “Severe discipline reigns in the Red Army. There are no more robberies, rapes and abuses here than in any other zone of occupation. Wild stories of atrocities emerge from the exaggerations and distortions of individual cases, influenced by nervousness caused by the excess of manners of Russian soldiers and their love of vodka. One woman who told me most of the hair-raising tales of Russian atrocities was finally forced to admit that the only evidence she had seen with her own eyes was drunken Russian officers firing pistols into the air and at bottles..."

The German occupiers' idea of ​​Soviet women was formed on the basis of Nazi propaganda, which claimed that the vast eastern territory was inhabited by semi-wild, dissolute ladies devoid of intelligence who had lost the concept of human virtues.

Having crossed the border of the USSR, Nazi soldiers were forced to admit that the stereotypes imposed on them by the party did not correspond to reality at all.

Mercy

Among the amazing qualities of Soviet women, the German military especially noted their mercy and lack of hatred towards soldiers of the enemy army.

In the front-line recordings made by Major Küner, there are passages dedicated to peasant women who, despite deprivation and general grief, did not become embittered, but shared their last meager supplies of food with the needy fascists. It is also recorded there that “when we [the Germans] are thirsty during the marches, we go into their huts and they give us milk,” thereby putting the invaders into an ethical impasse.

Chaplain Keeler, who served in the medical unit, by the will of fate, ended up as a guest in the house of 77-year-old grandmother Alexandra, whose heartfelt care for him made him think about metaphysical questions: “She knows that we are fighting against them, and yet she knits socks for me . The feeling of hostility is probably unfamiliar to her. Poor people share their last good with us. Do they do this out of fear or do these people really have an innate sense of self-sacrifice? Or do they do it out of good nature or even love?”

Küner’s true bewilderment was caused by the strong maternal instinct of the Soviet woman, about which he wrote: “How often have I seen Russian peasant women crying over wounded German soldiers, as if they were their own sons.”

Moral

The real shock of the German occupiers was caused by the high morality of Soviet women. The thesis about the promiscuity of oriental ladies, propagated by fascist propaganda, turned out to be just a myth without foundation.

Wehrmacht soldier Michels, reflecting on this topic, wrote: “What did they tell us about the Russian woman? And how did we find it? I think that there is hardly a German soldier who has visited Russia who would not learn to appreciate and respect a Russian woman.”

All representatives of the fair sex, brought to Germany from the occupied territories of the USSR for forced labor, were immediately sent for a medical examination, during which very unexpected details were revealed.

Doctor's assistant Eurich, orderly Gamm, at his village notebook left the following curious note: “The doctor who examined the Russian girls... was deeply impressed by the results of the examination: 99% of girls aged 18 to 35 turned out to be chaste,” and then the addition “he thinks that in Orel it would be impossible to find girls for public Houses..."

Similar data came from various enterprises where Soviet girls were sent, including from the Wolfen factory, whose representatives noted: “One gets the impression that a Russian man pays due attention to a Russian woman, which is ultimately reflected in the moral aspects of life.” .

The writer Ernest Jünger, who fought as part of the German troops, heard from staff doctor von Grewenitz that the data on the sexual debauchery of Eastern women was a complete deception, and realized that his feelings did not let him down. Endowed with the ability to peer into human souls the writer, describing Russian young ladies, noted “the shine of purity that surrounds their face. His light does not have the flickering of active virtue, but rather resembles a reflection moonlight. However, this is precisely why you feel the great power of this light...”

Performance

The German tank general Leo Geyr von Schweppenburg, in his memoirs regarding Russian women, noted their “worthless, without a doubt, purely physical performance.” This trait of their character was also noticed by the German leadership, which decided to use Eastern ladies stolen from the occupied territories as servants in the homes of devoted members of the National Socialist Workers' Party of Germany.

The duties of the housekeeper included thorough cleaning of the apartments, which burdened the pampered German Frau and had a bad effect on their precious health.

Cleanliness

One of the reasons for attracting Soviet women to housekeeping was their amazing cleanliness. The Germans, breaking into the rather modest-looking houses of civilians, were amazed at their imbued with folk motifs interior decoration and neatness.

The fascist soldiers who were waiting to meet the barbarians were discouraged by the beauty and personal hygiene of Soviet women, which was reported by one of the heads of the Dortmund health department: “I was actually amazed by the good appearance workers from the East. The greatest surprise was caused by the teeth of the workers, since so far I have not yet discovered a single case of a Russian woman having bad teeth. Unlike us Germans, they must pay a lot of attention to keeping their teeth in order.”

And chaplain Franz, who, by virtue of his vocation, did not have the right to look at a woman through the eyes of a man, restrainedly stated: “About feminine Russian women (if I can put it that way), I got the impression that with their special inner strength they keep under the moral control of those Russians who can be considered barbarians."

Family bonds

The lies of the fascist agitators who claimed that totalitarian authorities Soviet Union completely destroyed the institution of the family, to which the Nazis sang its praises.

From the front-line letters of German soldiers, their relatives learned that women from the USSR were not robots deprived of feelings, but reverent and caring daughters, mothers, wives and grandmothers. Moreover, the warmth and closeness of their family ties could only be envied. At every convenient opportunity, numerous relatives communicate with each other and help each other.

Piety

The fascists were greatly impressed by the deep piety of Soviet women, who, despite the official persecution of religion in the country, managed to maintain a close connection with God in their souls. Moving from one settlement to another, Nazi soldiers discovered many churches and monasteries in which services were held.

Major K. Kühner, in his memoirs, talked about two peasant women he saw who were frantically praying, standing among the ruins of a temple burned by the Germans.

The Nazis were surprised by women prisoners of war who refused to work on the days church holidays, in some places the guards met the religious feelings of the prisoners, and in others a death sentence was imposed for disobedience.

What did the Nazis do with the captured women? Truth and myths regarding the atrocities that German soldiers committed against Red Army soldiers, partisans, snipers and other females. During the Second World War, many volunteer girls were sent to the front; almost a million especially female ones were sent to the front, and almost all signed up as volunteers. It was already much more difficult for women at the front than for men, but when they fell into the clutches of the Germans, all hell broke loose.

Women who remained under occupation in Belarus or Ukraine also suffered a lot. Sometimes they managed to survive the German regime relatively safely (memoirs, books by Bykov, Nilin), but this was not without humiliation. Even more often, a concentration camp, rape, and torture awaited them.

Execution by shooting or hanging

The treatment of captured women who fought in positions in the Soviet army was quite simple - they were shot. But scouts or partisans, most often, faced hanging. Usually after much bullying.

Most of all, the Germans loved to undress captured Red Army women, keep them in the cold or drive them along the street. This comes from the Jewish pogroms. In those days, girlish shame was a very strong psychological tool; the Germans were surprised at how many virgins there were among the captives, so they actively used such a measure to completely crush, break, and humiliate.

Public flogging, beatings, carousel interrogations are also some of the favorite methods of the fascists.

Rape by the entire platoon was often practiced. However, this mainly happened in small units. The officers did not welcome this, they were forbidden to do this, so more often guards and assault groups did this during arrests or during closed interrogations.

Traces of torture and abuse were found on the bodies of murdered partisans (for example, the famous Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya). Their breasts were cut off, stars were cut out, and so on.

Did the Germans impale you?

Today, when some idiots are trying to justify the crimes of the fascists, others are trying to catch up more fear. For example, they write that the Germans impaled captured women on stakes. There is no documentary or photographic evidence of this, and it’s simply unlikely that the Nazis wanted to waste time on this. They considered themselves “cultured,” so acts of intimidation were carried out mainly through mass executions, hangings, or general burning in huts.

From exotic species The only executions that can be mentioned are the gas van. This is a special van where people were killed using exhaust gases. Naturally, they were also used to eliminate women. True, such machines did not serve Nazi Germany for long, since the Nazis had to wash them for a long time after the execution.

Death camps

Prisoners of war to a concentration camp soviet women they ended up on a par with men, but, of course, much less than the initial number reached such a prison. Partisans and intelligence officers were usually hanged immediately, but nurses, doctors, and representatives of the civilian population who were Jewish or related to party work could be driven away.

The fascists did not really favor women, since they worked worse than men. It is known that the Nazis carried out medical experiments on people; women's ovaries were cut out. The famous Nazi sadistic doctor Joseph Mengele sterilized women with X-rays and tested them on the human body’s ability to withstand high voltage.

Famous women's concentration camps are Ravensbrück, Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Mauthausen, Salaspils. In total, the Nazis opened more than 40 thousand camps and ghettos, and executions were carried out. The worst situation was for women with children, whose blood was taken. Stories about how a mother begged a nurse to inject her child with poison so that he would not be tortured by experiments are still horrifying. But for the Nazis, dissecting a living baby and introducing bacteria and chemicals into the child was in the order of things.

Verdict

About 5 million Soviet citizens died in captivity and concentration camps. More than half of them were women, however, there would hardly have been even more than 100 thousand prisoners of war. Basically, representatives of the fair sex in greatcoats were dealt with on the spot.

Of course, the Nazis responded for their crimes, both with their complete defeat and with executions during the Nuremberg trials. But the worst thing was that many, after the Nazi concentration camps, were sent to Stalin’s camps. This, for example, was often done with residents of occupied regions, intelligence workers, signalmen, etc.

 


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