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Not well known mass execution of Soviet soldiers commemorated in Amersfoort, the Netherlands
Their graves are anonymous, their stories little known. The 101 Soviet soldiers who are commemorated tomorrow [April 9th] at Camp Amersfoort. Defeated on the battlefield, brought to the Netherlands as living propaganda material, beaten and killed.
"It was the second-largest mass execution of the war in the Netherlands", says Remco Reiding of the Russian Field of Honor Foundation. "You would expect that people would like to know."
Tomorrow [April 9th] is the 75th anniversary of the Nazis ended the brutal journey of the Soviets with shots to the back of the neck. Around a monument at Camp Amersfoort at dawn candles will be lit for the victims. It's only the fifth time Reiding organizes the ceremony; previously there was little attention to the group.
"During the Cold War, it was not customary to commemorate soldiers from a country that was 'our new enemy'," Reiding explains. "Moreover, these boys came from a far away country, and we have no information whatsoever about their identity. So, there are no family members can visit a grave. Therefore, the story never came to life and increasingly forgotten."
The SS bastards caught bone.
Excerpt from 'The truth' (former Dutch communist resistance newspaper)
The soldiers arrived in September 1941 in cattle cars in Amersfoort, after a two week journey. Prisoner of war from the Eastern Front, probably Uzbeks. They must have felt completely lost: displaced, starved, beaten, in a country where they did not speak the language.
"The Nazis brought them to the Netherlands to make us see kind of 'untermenschen' (subhumans) they were. They were put on public display: they were made to walk as a group through hedgerows of people, through the city all the way to the camp. In the camp too, they were made to spend days outdoors, as an example for the Dutch prisoners there."
The plan fails immediately because the shocked Dutch were prompted to give water, fruit and bread to the vanquished soldiers - something that the Germans did not allow, of course. An attempt to pit the soldiers against each other also failed. "There was a German film crew there to document how they would fight each other for a piece of bread but when the bread was thrown over the fence, exactly the opposite happened: It was divided neatly into pieces by the men, although they were all terribly hungry."
"The bastards of the SS caught bone", expressed [illegal] resistance newspaper The Truth in its day. "At no time did they manage to establish discord between the Dutch and Russian prisoners."
Skulls on desk
It seems that the Nazis wanted the Soviet soldiers to die of hardships. By disease, malnutrition and mistreatment 24 soldiers died within six months. Finally, in consultation with Berlin, a mass execution of the rest of the group was decided on. The men were told that they would be transported to France, but after a short drive ended up in front of a firing squad.
"You could say that they had no usefulness anymore. The propaganda story had not worked and eventually the Nazis did not know what to do with them anyore. Then it was decided to shoot them." Two skulls of the prisoners ended up on the desk of the camp doctor, as a curiosity.
The place where the men were reburied after the war became known as the Russian Field of Honor [ http://russisch-ereveld.nl/ ], where Soviet soldiers who died in captivity in Germany were buried o. Reiding spent a lot of time [ http://nos.nl/artikel/2034792-poetin-bedankt-nederlandse-onderzoeker.html ] trying to figure out the identity of these war dead, but the 101 of Amersfoort will likely forever remain anonymous: the Germans destroyed all information about these men.
"That makes us morally responsible for these guys," says Reiding. "Far away from home without the family knowing, slaughtered like beasts. That's something we should keep in mind, even if only once a year."
"Yesterdays war victims, nota bene allies at that time, should not suffer from contemporary politics."
Remco Reiding
Yet Reiding too notes that tensions in the relations with Russia are once again raises by bickering over MH17, European embargoes and reports of Russian fake news. "A difficult relationship between the Netherlands and Russia is felt at all levels, so we feel that too. But what we do is a-political. The war victims of yesterday, which were our allies then, should not suffer contemporary politics."
With 150 visitors tomorrow morning, Reiding expects double the number of people that came last year, and more than ever to date. "Of course, it is early in the morning and we have a relatively new tradition, but still, it is quite a nice result. We are very happy that for the first time a school will attend, with fifty pupils and their parents. It would be a nice tradition to continue."
On April 22 Other Times pays attention to the story of the murdered Soviet soldiers , at 21.20 on NPO 2.
Translated from http://nos.nl/artikel/2167211-onbek...an-sovjetsoldaten-herdacht-in-amersfoort.html
See also
https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russisch_ereveld_Leusden
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amersfoort_concentration_camp
https://www.tracesofwar.com/sights/1544/Russian-War-Cemetery-Amersfoort.htm
https://www.its-arolsen.org/en/late...suing-the-traces-of-russian-prisoners-of-war/
https://www.landmarkscout.com/camp-amersfoort/
May they rest in peace and be honored for all eternity.
Their graves are anonymous, their stories little known. The 101 Soviet soldiers who are commemorated tomorrow [April 9th] at Camp Amersfoort. Defeated on the battlefield, brought to the Netherlands as living propaganda material, beaten and killed.
"It was the second-largest mass execution of the war in the Netherlands", says Remco Reiding of the Russian Field of Honor Foundation. "You would expect that people would like to know."
Tomorrow [April 9th] is the 75th anniversary of the Nazis ended the brutal journey of the Soviets with shots to the back of the neck. Around a monument at Camp Amersfoort at dawn candles will be lit for the victims. It's only the fifth time Reiding organizes the ceremony; previously there was little attention to the group.
"During the Cold War, it was not customary to commemorate soldiers from a country that was 'our new enemy'," Reiding explains. "Moreover, these boys came from a far away country, and we have no information whatsoever about their identity. So, there are no family members can visit a grave. Therefore, the story never came to life and increasingly forgotten."
The SS bastards caught bone.
Excerpt from 'The truth' (former Dutch communist resistance newspaper)
The soldiers arrived in September 1941 in cattle cars in Amersfoort, after a two week journey. Prisoner of war from the Eastern Front, probably Uzbeks. They must have felt completely lost: displaced, starved, beaten, in a country where they did not speak the language.
"The Nazis brought them to the Netherlands to make us see kind of 'untermenschen' (subhumans) they were. They were put on public display: they were made to walk as a group through hedgerows of people, through the city all the way to the camp. In the camp too, they were made to spend days outdoors, as an example for the Dutch prisoners there."
The plan fails immediately because the shocked Dutch were prompted to give water, fruit and bread to the vanquished soldiers - something that the Germans did not allow, of course. An attempt to pit the soldiers against each other also failed. "There was a German film crew there to document how they would fight each other for a piece of bread but when the bread was thrown over the fence, exactly the opposite happened: It was divided neatly into pieces by the men, although they were all terribly hungry."
"The bastards of the SS caught bone", expressed [illegal] resistance newspaper The Truth in its day. "At no time did they manage to establish discord between the Dutch and Russian prisoners."
Skulls on desk
It seems that the Nazis wanted the Soviet soldiers to die of hardships. By disease, malnutrition and mistreatment 24 soldiers died within six months. Finally, in consultation with Berlin, a mass execution of the rest of the group was decided on. The men were told that they would be transported to France, but after a short drive ended up in front of a firing squad.
"You could say that they had no usefulness anymore. The propaganda story had not worked and eventually the Nazis did not know what to do with them anyore. Then it was decided to shoot them." Two skulls of the prisoners ended up on the desk of the camp doctor, as a curiosity.
The place where the men were reburied after the war became known as the Russian Field of Honor [ http://russisch-ereveld.nl/ ], where Soviet soldiers who died in captivity in Germany were buried o. Reiding spent a lot of time [ http://nos.nl/artikel/2034792-poetin-bedankt-nederlandse-onderzoeker.html ] trying to figure out the identity of these war dead, but the 101 of Amersfoort will likely forever remain anonymous: the Germans destroyed all information about these men.
"That makes us morally responsible for these guys," says Reiding. "Far away from home without the family knowing, slaughtered like beasts. That's something we should keep in mind, even if only once a year."
"Yesterdays war victims, nota bene allies at that time, should not suffer from contemporary politics."
Remco Reiding
Yet Reiding too notes that tensions in the relations with Russia are once again raises by bickering over MH17, European embargoes and reports of Russian fake news. "A difficult relationship between the Netherlands and Russia is felt at all levels, so we feel that too. But what we do is a-political. The war victims of yesterday, which were our allies then, should not suffer contemporary politics."
With 150 visitors tomorrow morning, Reiding expects double the number of people that came last year, and more than ever to date. "Of course, it is early in the morning and we have a relatively new tradition, but still, it is quite a nice result. We are very happy that for the first time a school will attend, with fifty pupils and their parents. It would be a nice tradition to continue."
On April 22 Other Times pays attention to the story of the murdered Soviet soldiers , at 21.20 on NPO 2.
Translated from http://nos.nl/artikel/2167211-onbek...an-sovjetsoldaten-herdacht-in-amersfoort.html
See also
https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russisch_ereveld_Leusden
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amersfoort_concentration_camp
https://www.tracesofwar.com/sights/1544/Russian-War-Cemetery-Amersfoort.htm
https://www.its-arolsen.org/en/late...suing-the-traces-of-russian-prisoners-of-war/
https://www.landmarkscout.com/camp-amersfoort/
May they rest in peace and be honored for all eternity.
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