Saturday, October 21, 2023

Basya Melnyk in October, 1942: Mistress of Armor Mountain

From the Facebook page of Vasily Sarychev. In search of lost time

Translated. Edited.

Posted here for archival reasons, because Facebook wants to remove it.

The girl in the picture is Brest resident Basya Melnik. After her, there were no diaries or anyone’s memories left - only this photo from the German registration sheet. Basya was killed in the Bronnaya Gora tract in October 1942, among 17,000 prisoners of the Brest ghetto (in total, about 50,000 were shot here). 

Another 10,000 Jews of the city died earlier, in the first year of the occupation. Of the entire huge Brest community imprisoned in the ghetto, nineteen people survived.

The most terrible document ever seen is a sheet of the Book of Registration and Control of Population Movements of Brest, kept in the regional archive, which was kept by the city government during the occupation. The line dated October 15, 1942 says: Poles - 15,829, Belarusians - 4,709, Russians - 2,342, Ukrainians - 1,169, Jews - 16,934, various - 88. 

The next day there were no Jews. The clerk's hand automatically brought up the usual list of ghetto residents, but he was corrected. Behind this number crossed out with two horizontal lines is the entire horror of what happened. Further and until the end of the book, a dash was placed under the column “Jews”. 

October 16, 1942 - DAY TO DAY 75 YEARS AGO - the Jewish population of Brest ceased to exist.

Freight trains packed with people were sent from the siding between the city and the fortress. The echelons moved to the Bronnaya Gora station and then along the branch line allocated by the Germans several hundred meters to the northwest. The Nazis forced those leaving the carriages to take off their clothes and take them along a narrow corridor of barbed wire to a clearing with already dug holes...

This carefully fenced clearing was already being talked about in the surrounding villages: it could only be that the Germans were preparing to build a secret facility. Signs were posted at the approaches: “Danger to life! It is prohibited to go further! Patrols shoot without warning! In the summer, villagers were driven into the forbidden territory and ordered to dig several huge rectangular holes. Those who dug had no idea what these pits were intended for...

Witness Roman Novis worked as the head of the Bronnaya Gora railway station before the war; during the occupation he was transferred by the Germans to the position of switchman. 

From his testimony:

“...The carriages of the arriving trains were closed. All 5 trains were supplied to the branch line, which departs from the Bronnaya Gora station... at a distance of 250-300 meters from the central road. Near the branch, where 6 large pits were prepared in advance, each approximately 25 to 30 meters long, 10-12 meters wide and 4 meters deep, citizens were unloaded. Corpses were also thrown out of the carriages. I believe that the dead could only appear from exhaustion and severe pressure, especially with little air access.

Citizens unloaded from the carriages were forced to take off their outer and underwear, i.e. Everyone, men, women and children, stripped naked. After this, the fingers were examined and the rings were removed. After such a thorough check, the naked people were taken one by one to the pits and lowered down the stairs. In the pits they were placed face down, close to each other, and when the row was completely filled, they were shot from machine guns. After this, the second and third rows were placed in the same way until the hole was filled. I personally saw all the bullying and executions of citizens, I heard their groans, the screams of children, women, men: the railway switches and the booth where I was were no further than 250 meters from the pits...

...In March 1944, the Germans brought about 100 free citizens on foot. I don't know where they come from. They were placed in a camp at the Bronnaya Gora station and were kept under strict surveillance. At the beginning of May 1944, these people excavated holes near the railway line, in which the executed citizens, previously delivered by train, were placed. During excavations, corpses were burned on site. The Germans dismantled 48 military barracks to burn the corpses. In addition, they apparently used some kind of liquid. I conclude from the fact that when observed at night, a blue fire was visible. During the burning of corpses, an unbearable smell was felt in the village of Bronnaya Gora... The burning continued for 13-14 days. They burned continuously, day and night.

...After finishing the work of excavating and burning the corpses of the party of 100 driven citizens, I did not see anyone. I believe that they were also shot and burned.

In total, 186 carriages with Soviet citizens arrived at the Bronnaya Gora station and were shot. The trains were sent back to their place of departure. On the way back, the carriages contained clothes from those who had been shot.

I was on good terms with the station chief, Hailem, and he shared a few things with me during conversations. So he said that in total more than 48 thousand Soviet citizens were brought and shot. Heil also reported that the Germans sent 2 large passenger cars containing gold coins and gold items from the scene of the execution in 1943.”

The destruction of the Brest community took place not only on Bronnaya Gora. The executions were carried out directly in the Brest ghetto (along Karbysheva Street), in the southern suburbs, in the fortress, on Rechitsa in the area of ​​the eighth fort... Random witnesses who managed to survive revealed the terrible truth to people.

It is a known fact that 200 girls from the Brest ghetto were brought to Belsky’s estate (the area of ​​the current Leninsky village near Zhabinka). Young Jewish women were settled in barracks and used in peat mining and in the fields. In the fall of 1942, a large group of German soldiers arrived. The estate was surrounded by a tight ring, the girls and several dozen other Jewish families brought in the car were brought to a huge freshly dug hole at the end of the alley, forced to strip naked and began to be shot...

The non-Jewish population behaved differently towards Jews. This was a certain moment of truth, a manifestation of the measure of the soul. Brest residents Pyotr Grigoriev, Pelageya Makarenko, the Golovchenko spouses, Floria Budishevskaya, the Kurianovich spouses and many others who remained unknown, risking their lives, hid and looked after the doomed. “He who saves one life saves the whole world,” is a saying from the Hebrew Bible engraved on the Righteous Among the Nations medal.

There were examples of the opposite kind. 

From the report of the Brest-Litovsk gendarmerie dated November 8, 1942: 

“...The sympathy of the local population for the Jews during the action against them in October 1942 was very great. Over the past month, it has been established that the population no longer fears execution. (Rumors spread throughout the city that after the Jews they would deal with the Russians, and then with the Poles and Ukrainians. - V.S.) Now the local population is especially diligent in helping to locate the Jews who have taken refuge in the forests.”

That autumn, the extermination of the Jewish population was carried out everywhere in the occupied territories of the Brest region. During the days of the Kobrin punitive expedition, when the doomed were driven through the streets, several children escaped from the column. 

Miraculously, they bypassed the chain of encirclement, dived into the opening of a stone fence and disappeared. The children hid in the park next to the church on Pervomaiskaya Street, where priests discovered them at night. Seven more frightened children were holding onto the coattails of a boy of about eight years old. The priests sheltered them in their plebania.

The rumor that Jewish children were being hidden in the church spread to nearby houses. Parishioners carried food and clothes. But someone betrayed the compassionate priests. They were shot right at the walls of the church - priests Vladislav Grobelny, Jan Volsky and eight children, to whom the ministers gave several days of life at such a high price.

Another terrible fact was told by a random witness to the extermination of Jews near Chernavchitsy. The execution was over, everyone was dead, and the wind blew across the field the photographs that the victims carried with them as their most precious possessions.

©Vasily Sarychev

#brest #in_search_of_lost_time #history #sarychev #vasily_sarychev #old_brest 

Tuesday, October 17, 2023

List of Arma 3 Scenarios by Type and Location

 Mobile Warfare (Summer) (Motorized Rifle Battalion   Wide Area Operations)

Rosche 

Rosche

Leskovets (2)

Leskovets

Werferlingen (2)

Zagorsk

Korsac 

South Chernarus

Mobile Warfare (Winter) (MRB   WAO)

Werferlingen (2)

South Chernarus

Light Infantry

Chernarus (2)

Livonia

Summa

Beketov (2)

Gabreta

Sumava

Light Infantry (Winter)

Chernarus (2)

Summa

Amphibious Naval Infantry

Altis

Maksnieki

Virolahti

Armavir

Amphibious Naval Infantry (Winter)

Altis

Parachute/Air Assault

Malden

Saturday, October 14, 2023

NOBODY AND NOTHING... “WE WILL STAND TO THE DEATH”

 Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited.

From the V Kontakte page of THE GREAT PATRIOTIC WAR

three hours ago · from Sergey Veter

NOBODY AND NOTHING......

“WE WILL STAND TO THE DEATH”

In memory of those who defended Moscow in all directions

The situation in the main strategic direction, to the west of Moscow, was expressed by the Supreme Commander-in-Chief in his radiogram,sent on October 8, 1941 to the surrounded troops, but essentially nowhere, as follows: “...There is no one and nothing to defend Moscow. I repeat: there is no one and nothing.”

The Red Army in this direction ceased to exist. She was - and she is not! Moscow was left without protection. It would seem that’s it! Catastrophe! Twice in Russian history of the 17th - 19th centuries, foreign hordes visited Moscow. But these, as they say, were flowers. Moscow was revived again and again, and its shrines were preserved. Now, according to Hitler's directive, Moscow and its population had to be wiped off the face of the earth - flooded. Fortunately (for the Germans, of course), German engineers participated in the creation of the Moscow “Big Volga” Hydraulic System in the 30s. They may have suggested this sacramental thought to the Fuhrer.

And now Moscow stands on the brink of destruction. It would have been enough for the 41st Motorized Corps from Reinhardt’s Third Tank Group, which was not busy blocking the Soviet troops surrounded in the “cauldron,” to move along the Volokolamsk Highway to Moscow, and it would have entered it. Even before the liquidation of the “cauldron”, this corps captured Sychevka on October 10th. From there, in principle, there were two ways: one - to Staritsa and then through Zubtsov to Kalinin. the other - to Pogoreloye Gorodishche, Shakhovskaya, Volokolamsk and Moscow.

Let's imagine this scenario for a moment. From Sychevka the Germans moved to Pogoreloe Gorodishche, then through Shakhovskaya they reached Volokolamsk. The unfinished Volokolamsk Fortified Region (UR) was at that time still, essentially, under the control of the Moscow Military District. On October 10, the order to create the 5th Army, intended to fill the Mozhaisk defense line, was still being prepared. General Rokossovsky had just, on October 9, been flown out from near Gzhatsk. His headquarters, that is, the headquarters left in the encirclement of the 16th Army, continued to emerge from the encirclement, and he only emerged from the encirclement on October 12th. For three days Rokossovsky was an army commander without a headquarters. On the 13th, after the headquarters of the 16th Army left the encirclement, Zhukov assigned the Volokolamsk UR to the 16th Army. And only on the 14th the formation of the new 16th Army began. In Volokolamsk, the 316th Infantry Division, arriving here from the Northwestern Front, was unloading from its trains. She fully arrived in Volokolamsk on October 12th. And she still had to urgently equip at least field fortifications in the unfinished fortified area. And there was no 16th Army here yet - it had to be created anew.

The German 41st Motorized Corps is a corps with tank and motorized divisions moving in front.

And he, quite possibly, could unexpectedly appear in Moscow in a day or two. The commander of the Moscow Military District, General Artemyev, sent an infantry school regiment, a battalion of the 108th reserve regiment, and two batteries of anti-aircraft guns to the Volokolamsk UR. He had nothing else. Could they have been a serious obstacle to the German motorized corps? In Moscow, German tanks could appear as unexpectedly as they appeared in Yukhnov and Vyazma. Further, the German corps could act according to circumstances. Could get a foothold on the highway. And two days later, having completed the liquidation of the “cauldron”, more reinforcements would arrive - tanks, first from the 6th, 7th tank divisions of the 3rd tank group, and then from the 2nd, 5th, 10th. 11th. divisions. Well, I don’t even want to imagine what’s next. But the disaster did not happen!

There was such a case in our history. In October 1812, Napoleonic hordes settled in Moscow. When there was no longer anything to plunder in the capital, they remembered the Trinity-Sergius Lavra. Napoleon instructed his chief of staff, Marshal Berthier, to send a detachment there. There were no Russian troops at the Lavra. On October 1 (!) the detachment of Colonel Duke de Montemar moved towards the Lavra. Twice the French went to capture the monastery - and did not reach it. The first time we walked about 10 miles and got lost. We returned to Moscow. Napoleon was very unhappy. A week later we were on our way again. But such a thick fog fell that nothing could be seen two steps away. The further we walked, the thicker the fog became. The fog stayed all day and the next. This time Napoleon, only with sarcasm, spoke about the Russian climate. That was the end of the matter.

And now the German motorized corps did not go to Moscow, it went to Kalinin and there got stuck in battles with Vatutin’s operational group and with the 133rd Siberian Rifle Division of General Shevtsov. On October 7th the first snow fell and there were continuous rains and snow. For the attackers, bad weather became a serious obstacle, but it played into the hands of the defenders. It was no longer possible to bypass the pillboxes and bunkers covering the intersections. They had to be taken by attacking head-on. Therefore, the battle for Moscow became a battle not over the entire space, but, basically, for every crossroads on the way to it. The German tricks with detours have come to an end. Next was the Mednovsko-Maryinsky “cauldron” near Kalinin, and after 2 months Kalinin again became Soviet...

Then there was General Panfilov’s division and there were no tanks for the final assault on Moscow...

Werner von Haupt wrote in his memoirs: “Here the Germans encountered fanatical resistance from the new Siberian divisions, which did not want to take a single step back. The Russians were not afraid of tanks with crosses on the towers, they attacked them with close combat and cleared the road only with the dead. Here on the Volokolamsk Highway in the Borodino region - on the battlefield where Emperor Napoleon met his fate 130 years earlier, the 32nd Siberian and 316th Rifle Divisions of the Red Army fought to the death, until the last soldier. We have practically no tanks left for the final push on Moscow.”

On the buckles of German soldiers at all times it was written: GOTT MIT UNS - God is with us. What is noteworthy is the soldiers, not the officers. What was allowed to them by God (not the one to whom they prayed) - they received. But God didn’t allow them to go to Moscow!

German aviation activity decreased sharply due to bad weather. The maneuver capabilities of the ground forces were reduced to a minimum due to the muddy mess that the fields and roads had turned into. The confrontation between the troops went, as they say, head-on, at certain key points on paved roads. The attack on Moscow could now basically continue only in three directions: Volokolamsk, Minsk, Kaluga highways. The forward line of the Mozhaisk defense line blocked them at key points - Volokolamsk, Mozhaisk, Maloyaroslavets. Then, after the capture of Maloyaroslavets, another direction was opened for the offensive - through Narofominsk. Freed from blocking the “cauldron,” the German troops could no longer advance as quickly as before. Now, from the point of view of strategy, everything was decided by time and reserves. And Germany had practically no reserves.

Back on October 5, when the Headquarters finally realized that it was near Moscow that things were taking on threatening proportions, it gave the order to transfer troops to Moscow from the Far Eastern Front and the Transcaucasian Military District.

Paul Karel in his book “Eastern Front” cites the following characteristic episode for the actions of German troops near Moscow in new conditions: “... the commander of the 1st division of the 229th artillery regiment was seriously concerned about the pace of advance of his unit. division, was driven beyond belief, and the horses had difficulty dragging the guns through this endless mess of mud... the captain ordered his men to turn off... in order to get onto the highway... The artillerymen reached the highway... (but) in the section from Gzhatsk to Mozhaisk they were stuck from 2000 to 3000 units of various equipment. Seeing such a sad picture, the artillerymen of the 197th Infantry Division with all haste tried to return back - straight into the mud. The speed of their advance, equal to 45 kilometers per day in the summer, now often dropped to one and a half kilometers and never exceeded five kilometers per day.When night fell, exhausted from battles, exhausted from marches, covered with dirt and lice, hungry and deathly tired, they huddled around the stoves in miserable peasant huts in small villages. On the street, the horses ate the withered frozen straw from the roofs. Inside, the soldiers were drying their uniforms, and if one of them asked: “Does anyone know where we are?”, he received a soldier’s direct and rude answer: “In the very ass of Mother Europe!..”; In the morning they again walked east, day after day, forward, all the time forward behind the motorized divisions to Moscow..."

In the meantime, we will stand here to the death.....