What did the Nazis do with the women of the Red Army. Women captured by the Germans

The most interesting documents were recently published by the blogger http://komandante-07.livejournal.com/, testifying to the atrocities of Ukrainian nationalists from the OUN-UPA against the Poles in the 1940s. True evidence that now European and American politicians and officials who support the Kyiv junta are trying in every way to ignore, in fact the regime of the descendants of those fascist Ukrainian radicals who bled Eastern Europe 70 years ago. Look, and who can, show this to the Europeans and Americans - whom they brought to power in Kyiv and to whom they are ready to provide military assistance! This is madness…

And of course, the most inexplicable absurdity is that Poland, as the country most affected by the OUN-UPA, now openly supports the descendants of Ukrainian radicals, the same ones who tortured and killed thousands of Poles less than a century ago - women, children and the elderly! Is it possible that the historical memory of the Polish people no longer works, or did national wounds heal after a terrible tragedy, in just some 70 years!?


Children in the foreground - Janusz Beławski, 3 years old, Adele's son; Roman Belavsky, 5 years old, son of Cheslava, as well as Jadwiga Belavska, 18 years old and others. These listed Polish victims are the result of a massacre committed by the OUN-UPA.


LIPNIKI, Kostopol county, Lutsk voivodeship. March 26, 1943.
The corpses of the Poles, victims of the massacre committed by the OUN-UPA, were brought for identification and burial. Standing behind the fence is Jerzy Skulski, who saved a life with the firearm he had (seen in the photo).




Two-handed saw - good, but long. An ax is faster. The picture shows a Polish family hacked to death by Bandera in Maciew (Lukov), February 1944. Something lies on a pillow in the far corner. It's hard to see from here.


And lie there - severed human fingers. Before they died, Bandera tortured their victims.

LIPNIKI, Kostopol county, Lutsk voivodeship. March 26, 1943.
The central fragment of the mass grave of the Poles - victims of the Ukrainian massacre committed by the OUN - UPA (OUN - UPA) - before the funeral near the People's House.

KATARZYNÓWKA, Lutsk county, Lutsk voivodship. May 7/8, 1943.
There are three children on the plan: two sons of Piotr Mekal and Aneli from Gvyazdovsky - Janusz (3 years old) with broken limbs and Marek (2 years old), stabbed with bayonets, and in the middle lies the daughter of Stanislav Stefanyak and Maria from Boyarchuk - Stasya (5 years old) with cut and open tummy and insides out, as well as broken limbs.

VLADINOPOL (WŁADYNOPOL), region, Vladimir county, Lutsk voivodeship. 1943.
In the photo, a murdered adult woman named Shayer and two children - Polish victims of the Bandera terror attacked in the house of the OUN - UPA (OUN - UPA).
Demonstration of the photograph marked W - 3326, courtesy of the archive.


One of the two Kleshchinsky families in Podyarkovo was tortured to death by the OUN - UPA on August 16, 1943. The photo shows a family of four - a wife and two children. Victims had their eyes gouged out, they were hit on the head, their palms were burned, they tried to cut off the upper and lower limbs, as well as the hands, stab wounds were inflicted all over the body, etc.

PODYARKOV (PODJARKÓW), Bobrka County, Lviv Voivodeship. August 16, 1943.
Kleshchinska, a member of a Polish family in Podiarkovo, was the victim of an OUN-UPA attack. The result of the attacker's blow with an ax, who tried to cut off his right hand and ear, as well as the torment inflicted, was a round stab wound on the left shoulder, a wide wound on the forearm of the right hand, probably from its cauterization.

PODYARKOV (PODJARKÓW), Bobrka County, Lviv Voivodeship. August 16, 1943.
View inside the house of the Polish Kleshchinsky family in Podyarkovo after the attack of the OUN-UPA terrorists on August 16, 1943. The photograph shows the ropes, called “krepulets” by Bandera, used for sophisticated infliction of torment and strangulation of Polish victims.

January 22, 1944, a woman with 2 children was killed in the village of Bushe (Polish family Popiel)

LIPNIKI (LIPNIKI), Kostopil County, Lutsk Voivodeship. March 26, 1943. View before the funeral. Polish victims of the night massacre committed by the OUN-UPA brought to the People's House.


OSTRÓWKI and WOLA OSTROWIECKA, Luboml powiat, Lutsk voivodeship. August 1992.
The result of the exhumation of the victims of the massacre of Poles in the villages of Ostruvki and Volya Ostrovetska, carried out on August 17 - 22, 1992, committed by terrorists of the OUN - UPA (OUN - UPA). Ukrainian sources from Kyiv from 1988 report the total number of victims in the two villages listed - 2,000 Poles.
Photo: Dziennik Lubelski, Magazyn, nr. 169, Wyd. A., 28 - 30 VIII 1992, s. 9, za: VHS - Produkcja OTV Lublin, 1992.

BŁOŻEW GÓRNA, Dobromil County, Lviv Voivodeship. November 10, 1943.
On the eve of November 11 - People's Independence Day - the UPA attacked 14 Poles, in particular, the Sukhaya family, using various cruelties. On the plan, the murdered Maria Grabowska (maiden name Suhai), 25 years old, with her daughter Kristina, 3 years old. The mother was stabbed with a bayonet, and the daughter's jaw was broken and her tummy was torn open.
The photo was published thanks to the victim's sister, Helena Kobierzicka.

LATACH (LATACZ), Zalishchyky county, Tarnopol voivodeship. December 14, 1943.
One of the Polish families - Stanislav Karpyak in the village of Latach, was killed by a UPA gang of twelve people. Six people died: Maria Karpyak - wife, 42 years old; Josef Karpyak - son, 23 years old; Vladislav Karpyak - son, 18 years old; Zygmunt or Zbigniew Karpyak - son, 6 years old; Sofia Karpyak - daughter, 8 years old and Genovef Chernitska (nee Karpyak) - 20 years old. Zbigniew Czernicki, a one and a half year old wounded child, was hospitalized in Zalishchyky. Visible in the picture is Stanislav Karpyak, who escaped because he was absent.

POLOVETS (POŁOWCE), region, Chortkiv county, Ternopil voivodeship. January 16 - 17, 1944.
A forest near Yagelnitsa, called Rosokhach. The process of identifying 26 corpses of Polish residents of the village of Polovtse, killed by the UPA. The names and surnames of the victims are known. The occupying German authorities officially established that the victims were stripped naked and brutally tortured and tortured. The faces were bloody as a result of cutting off noses, ears, cutting the neck, gouging out the eyes and strangulation with ropes, the so-called lasso.

BUSCHE (BUSZCZE), Berezhany county, Ternopil voivodeship. January 22, 1944.
On the plan, one of the victims of the massacre is Stanislav Kuzev, 16 years old, tortured by the UPA. We see an open belly, as well as stab wounds - wide and smaller round. On a critical day, Bandera burned several Polish courtyards and brutally killed at least 37 Poles, including 7 women and 3 small children. 13 people were wounded.

CHALUPKI (CHAŁUPKI), settlements of the village of Barshchowice, Lviv county, Lviv voivodeship. February 27 - 28, 1944.
A fragment of the Polish courtyards in Khalupki, burned by UPA terrorists after the murder of 24 residents and the robbery of movable property.

MAGDALOVKA (MAGDALÓWKA), Skalat county, Ternopil voivodeship.
Katarzyna Gorvath from Khably, 55 years old, mother of the Roman Catholic priest Jan Gorvath.
View from 1951 after plastic surgery. UPA terrorists almost completely cut off her nose, as well as her upper lip, knocked out most of her teeth, gouged out her left eye and seriously damaged her right eye. On that tragic March night in 1944, other members of this Polish family died a cruel death, and the attackers stole their property, for example, clothes, bed linen and towels.

BIŁGORAJ, Lubelskie Voivodeship. February - March 1944.
View of the county town of Bilgoraj burned in 1944. The result of the extermination action carried out by the SS-Galicia.
The photographer is unknown. The photograph marked W - 1231 is courtesy of the archives.


We see the open stomach and insides from the outside, as well as a brush hanging on the skin - the result of an attempt to cut it off. OUN-UPA case (OUN-UPA).

BELZEC (BEŁŻEC), region, Rava Ruska county, Lviv voivodeship. June 16, 1944.
An adult woman with a visible, more than ten cm wound on the buttock, as a result of a strong blow with a sharp weapon, as well as small round wounds on the body, indicating torture. Nearby is a small child with visible injuries on his face.


Fragment of the place of execution in the forest. Polish child among adult victims killed by Bandera. The mutilated head of a child is visible.

LUBYCZA KRÓLEWSKA, region, Rava Ruska county, Lviv voivodeship. June 16, 1944.
A fragment of the forest near the railway track near Lyubycha Krolevskaya, where UPA terrorists cunningly detained a passenger train on the Belzec - Rava Ruska - Lviv route and shot at least 47 passengers - Polish men, women and children. Previously, they mocked living people, as later on the dead. Violence was used - punches, beatings with rifle butts, and a pregnant woman was nailed to the ground with bayonets. Desecrated dead bodies. They appropriated personal documents of the victims, watches, money and other valuable items. The names and surnames of most of the victims are known.

LUBYCZA KRÓLEWSKA, forest district, Rava Ruska county, Lviv voivodeship. June 16, 1944.
Fragment of the forest - places of execution. On the ground lie Polish victims killed by Bandera. In the central plan, a naked woman is seen tied to a tree.


A fragment of the forest - the place of execution of Polish passengers killed by Ukrainian chauvinists.

LUBYCZA KRÓLEWSKA, Rava Ruska County, Lviv Voivodeship. June 16, 1944.
Fragment of the forest - places of execution. Polish women killed by Bandera

CHORTKOV (CZORTKÓW), Ternopil Voivodeship.
Two, most likely, Polish victims of the Bandera terror. There are no more detailed data regarding the names and surnames of the victims, nationality, place and circumstances of death.

— Z.D. from Poland: “Those who ran away were shot, chased and killed on horseback. On August 30, 1943, in the village of Gnoino, the headman appointed 8 Poles to work in Germany. and threw them alive into a well, into which a grenade was then thrown."

— Ch.B. from the USA: In Podlesie, that was the name of the village, Bandera tortured four of the miller Petrushevsky's family, and 17-year-old Adolfina was dragged along a rocky rural road until she died.

— E.B. from Poland: "After the murder of the Kozubskys in Belozerka near Kremenets, the Bandera went to the Giuzikhovskys' farm. Seventeen-year-old Regina jumped out the window, the bandits killed her daughter-in-law and her three-year-old son, whom she was holding in her arms. Then they set fire to the hut and left."

— A.L. from Poland: "08.30, 1943, the UPA attacked such villages and killed in them:

1. Kuty. 138 people, including 63 children.

2. Yankovits. 79 people, including 18 children.

3. Island. 439 people, including 141 children.

4. Will Ostrovetska. 529 people, including 220 children.

5. Colony Chmikov - 240 people, among them 50 children.

— M.B. from the USA: "They shot, cut with knives, burned."

— T.M. from Poland: "They hanged Ogashka, and before that they burned his hair on his head."

- M.P. from the USA: "They surrounded the village, set fire to and killed those who were fleeing."

— F.K. from Great Britain: “They took my daughter to a collection point near the church. About 15 people were already standing there - women and children. Centurion Golovachuk and his brother began to tie their hands and feet with barbed wire. The sister began to pray aloud, centurion Golovachuk began to beat her in the face and trample feet."

— F.B. from Canada: "Bandera came to our yard, caught our father and cut off his head with an ax, pierced our sister with a bayonet. Mother, seeing all this, died of a broken heart."

— Yu.V. from the UK: "My brother's wife was Ukrainian and because she married a Pole 18 Bandera raped her. She never recovered from this shock, her brother did not spare her and she drowned herself in the Dniester."

- V. Ch. from Canada: "In the village of Bushkovitsy, eight Polish families were herded into a stodol, where they killed them all with axes and set fire to the stodol."

- Yu.Kh from Poland: "In March 1944, our village of Guta Shklyana was attacked by Bandera, among them was one named Didukh from the village of Oglyadov. They killed five people. They shot, finished off the wounded. Yu. Khorostetsky was cut in half with an ax. A minor was raped" .

— T.R. from Poland: "The village of Osmigovichi. 11. 07. 43, during the service of God, Bandera attacked, killed the worshipers, a week after that they attacked our village. Small children were thrown into the well, and those who were larger were closed in the basement and filled up him. One Banderite, holding a baby by the legs, hit his head against the wall. The mother of this child screamed, she was pierced with a bayonet. "

A separate, very important section in the history of evidence of the mass extermination of Poles carried out by the OUN-UPA in Volyn is the book by Y. Turovsky and V. Semashko "Atrocities of Ukrainian nationalists committed against the Polish population of Volyn 1939-1945". This book is distinguished by its objectivity. It is not imbued with hatred, although it describes the martyrdom of thousands of Poles. This book should not be read by people with weak nerves. It lists and describes the methods of mass murder of men, women, and children on 166 pages of small print. Here are just a few excerpts from this book.

- On July 16, 1942, in Klevan, Ukrainian nationalists committed a provocation, prepared an anti-German leaflet in Polish. As a result, the Germans shot several dozen Poles.

November 13, 1942 Obirki, a Polish village near Lutsk. The Ukrainian police, under the command of the nationalist Sachkovsky, a former teacher, attacked the village because of their cooperation with the Soviet partisans. Women, children and the elderly were herded into one valley, where they were killed and then burned. 17 people were taken to Klevan and shot there.

- November 1942, near the village of Virka. Ukrainian nationalists tortured Jan Zelinsky by placing him bound in a fire.

- November 9, 1943, the Polish village of Parosle in the Sarny region. A gang of Ukrainian nationalists, pretending to be Soviet partisans, misled the villagers, who treated the gang during the day. In the evening, the bandits surrounded all the houses and killed the Polish population in them. 173 people were killed. Only two were saved, who were littered with corpses, and a 6-year-old boy who pretended to be killed. A later examination of the dead showed the exceptional cruelty of the executioners. Infants were nailed to tables with kitchen knives, several people were flayed, women were raped, some had their breasts cut off, many had their ears and noses cut off, their eyes gouged out, their heads cut off. After the massacre, they arranged a booze at the local headman. After the executioners left, among the scattered bottles of samogon and the remnants of food, they found a one-year-old child nailed to the table with a bayonet, and a piece of pickled cucumber, half-eaten by one of the bandits, stuck in his mouth.

- March 11, 1943 the Ukrainian village of Litogoshcha near Kovel. Ukrainian nationalists tortured a Pole teacher, as well as several Ukrainian families who resisted the destruction of the Poles.

- March 22, 1943, the village of Radovichi, Kovelsky district. A gang of Ukrainian nationalists dressed in German uniforms, demanding the issuance of weapons, tortured the father and two Lesnevsky brothers.

- March 1943 Zagortsy, Dubna region. Ukrainian nationalists stole the farm manager, and when he ran away, the executioners stabbed him with bayonets and then nailed him to the ground, "so that he would not get up."

March 1943. In the outskirts of Huta, Stepanskaya, Kostopol region, Ukrainian nationalists stole 18 Polish girls by deception, who were killed after being raped. The bodies of the girls were put in one row and a ribbon was placed on them with the inscription: "This is how Lyashki (Polish women) should die."

- March 1943, the village of Mosty, Kostopol district Pavel and Stanislav Bednazhi had Ukrainian wives. Both were tortured by Ukrainian nationalists. They also killed the wife of one. The second Natalka, escaped.

March 1943, the village of Banasovka, Lutsk region. A gang of Ukrainian nationalists tortured 24 Poles, their bodies were thrown into a well.

- March 1943, the village of Antonovka, Sarnensky district. Jozef Eismont went to the mill. The owner of the mill, a Ukrainian, warned him of the danger. When he was returning from the mill, Ukrainian nationalists attacked him, tied him to a post, gouged out his eyes, and then cut him alive with a saw.

- July 11, 1943, the village of Biskupichi, Vladimir Volynsky district Ukrainian nationalists committed a massacre, driving the residents into a school building. Then the family of Vladimir Yaskula was brutally murdered. The executioners broke into the house when everyone was asleep. Parents were killed with axes, and five children were placed nearby, covered with straw from mattresses and set on fire.

July 11, 1943, Svoychev settlement near Volodymyr Volynsky. Ukrainian Glembitsky killed his Polish wife, two children and his wife's parents.

July 12, 1943 colony Maria Volya near Volodymyr Volynsky Around 15.00 Ukrainian nationalists surrounded it and began to kill Poles using firearms, axes, pitchforks, knives, dryuchki About 200 people (45 families) died. Some of the people, about 30 people, were thrown into the kopodets and there they were killed with stones. Those who ran away were hunted down and killed. During this massacre, the Ukrainian Vladislav Didukh was ordered to kill his Polish wife and two children. When he did not comply with the order, they killed him and his family. Eighteen children aged 3 to 12, who hid in the field, were caught by the executioners, put on a cart, brought to the village of Chesny Krest and killed everyone there, pierced with pitchforks, chopped with axes. The action was led by Kvasnitsky...

- August 30, 1943, the Polish village of Kuty, Lubomlsky district. In the early morning, the village was surrounded by UPA archers and Ukrainian peasants, mainly from the village of Lesnyaki, and carried out a massacre of the Polish population. Pavel Pronchuk, a Pole who tried to protect his mother, was laid on a bench, his arms and legs were cut off, leaving him to be martyred.

- August 30, 1943, the Polish village of Ostrowki near Luboml. The village was surrounded by a dense ring. Ukrainian emissaries entered the village, offering to lay down their arms. Most of the men gathered at the school where they were locked up. Then five people were taken outside the garden, where they were killed with a blow to the head and thrown into dug pits. The bodies were piled in layers, sprinkled with earth. Women and children were gathered in the church, ordered to lie down on the floor, after which they were shot in the head in turn. 483 people died, including 146 children.

UPA member Danilo Shumuk cites in his book the story of a Ukrainian: “In the evening we went out again to these same farms, organized ten carts under the mask of red partisans and drove in the direction of Koryt ... We drove, sang “Katyusha” and from time to time cursed at -Russian..."

- 15.03.42, the village of Kosice. The Ukrainian police, together with the Germans, killed 145 Poles, 19 Ukrainians, 7 Jews, 9 Soviet prisoners;

- On the night of March 21, 1943, two Ukrainians were killed in Shumsk - Ishchuk and Kravchuk, who helped the Poles;

- April 1943, Belozerka. These same bandits killed Ukrainian Tatyana Mikolik because she had a child with a Pole;

- 5.05.43, Klepachev. Ukrainian Petro Trokhimchuk and his Polish wife were killed;

- 30.08.43, Kuty. The Ukrainian family of Vladimir Krasovsky with two small children was brutally murdered;

- August 1943, Yanovka. Bandera killed a Polish child and two Ukrainian children, as they were brought up in a Polish family;

- August 1943, Antolin. Ukrainian Mikhail Mishchanyuk, who had a Polish wife, received an order to kill her and a one-year-old child. As a result of his refusal, he and his wife and child were killed by neighbors.

“A member of the leadership of the Wire (OUN Bandery - V.P.) Maksim Ryban (Nikolay Lebed) demanded from the Main Team of the UPA (that is, from Tapaca Bulba-Borovets - V.P.) ... to understand all the rebel activity from the Polish population .. ."

* Oleksandr Gritsenko: “Armiya 6ez depzhavy”, in the image “Tydi, de 6iy for freedom”, London, 1989, p. 405

“Already during the negotiations (between N. Lebed and T. Bulba-Borovets - V.P.), instead of carrying out an action along a jointly drawn line, the military departments of the OUN (Bandera - V.P.) ... began to destroy in a shameful way, the Polish civilian population and other national minorities ... No party has a monopoly on the Ukrainian people ... Is it possible for a true revolutionary-sovereign to obey the line of the party, which begins the construction of the state with the massacre of national minorities or the senseless burning of their homes? Ukraine has more formidable enemies than the Poles... What are you fighting for? For Ukraine or your OUN? For the Ukrainian State or for the dictatorship in that state? For the Ukrainian people or just for your party?”

* "Bidkritiy list (Tapaca Bulbi - V.P.) to the members of the Wire Opranization of Ukrainian Nationalists Stepan Bandery" view 10 September 1943 p., for: "Ukrainian Historian, vol. 114-119.

“The one who evaded their (OUN Bandera - V.P.) instructions about mobilization was shot with his family and his house was burned down ...”

* Maksim Skoprypsky: “At the offensive and the offensive”, Chicago, 1961, after: “Tudi, debiy for the will”, Kiev, 1992, p. 174.

“The Security Council began a mass purge among the population and in the departments of the UPA. For the least offense, and even at personal expense, the population was punishable by death. In the departments, the skhidnyaks (people from Eastern Ukraine - Ed.per) suffered the most ... In general, the Security Service with its activities - it was the blackest page in the history of those years ... The security service was organized in the German manner. Most of the SB commanders were former cadets of the German police in Zakopane (from 1939-40). They were predominantly Galicians.

* There wc, cc. 144.145

“The order came to destroy the entire unconvinced element, and now the persecution of everyone who seemed suspicious to one or another stanitsa began. The prosecutors were the Bandera stanitsa, and no one else. That is, the liquidation of "enemies" was carried out exclusively on the basis of the party principle ... Stanichny cooked up a list of "suspicious" and handed over to the Security Council ... marked with crosses - should be liquidated ... But the most terrible tragedy broke out with the prisoners of the Red Army, who lived and worked in thousands of the villages of Volyn ... Bandera came up with such a method. They came to the house at night, took a prisoner and declared that they were Soviet partisans and ordered him to go with them ... they destroyed such ... "

* O. Shylyak: “I am true to them”, for: “Come, dey for freedom”, London, 1989, pp. 398,399

An eyewitness to the events of that time in Volyn, a Ukrainian evangelical pastor, assesses the activities of the OUN-UPA-SB as follows: “It got to the point that people (Ukrainian peasants - V.P.) rejoiced that somewhere nearby the Germans ... defeated the rebels (UPA - B.P.). Bandera, in addition, collected tribute from the population ... 3a any resistance of the peasants was punished by the Security Council, which was now the same horror as the NKVD or the Gestapo once were.”

* Mikhaylo Podvornyak: "Biter z Bolini", Binnipeg, 1981, p. 305

In the period after the liberation of Western Ukraine by the Soviet Army, the OUN put the population of that region in a hopeless situation: on the one hand, the legal Soviet authorities conscripted men into the army, on the other hand, the UPA prohibited them from joining the Soviet Army under pain of death. Many cases are known when the UPA-SB brutally destroyed conscripts and their families - parents, brothers, sisters.

* Center. apxi in Min. defend the CPCP, f. 134, op. 172182, n. 12, ll. 70-85

Under the conditions of the OUN-UPA-SB terror, the population of Western Ukraine could not, without risking their lives, not help the UPA, at least in the form of a glass of water or milk, and, on the other hand, the reigning Stalinist terror applied cruel repressions for such actions in the form of deprivation freedom, exile to Siberia, deportations.

A woman of Belarusian-Lithuanian origin witnessed how a deserter from the UPA, who “did not know how to kill”, was seized by the Security Council, tortured, broke his arms and legs, cut off his tongue, cut off his ears and nose, and finally killed him. This Ukrainian was 18 years old.

OUN - UPA against Ukrainians:

According to the summary data of the Soviet archives, for 1944-1956, as a result of the actions of the UPA and the armed underground of the OUN, the following died: 2 deputies of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR, 1 head of the regional executive committee, 40 heads of city and district executive committees, 1454 heads of rural and settlement councils, 1235 other Soviet workers , 5 secretaries of city and 30 district committees of the Communist Party of the Ukrainian SSR, 216 other workers of party bodies, 205 Komsomol workers, 314 heads of collective farms, 676 workers, 1931 intellectuals including 50 priests, 15,355 peasants and collective farmers, children of the elderly, housewives - 860.


During the very first battles with the Red Army, the Germans faced an "unexpected problem." The fact is that in our army, unlike the armies that the Wehrmacht had to deal with until now, quite a lot of women served. What to do with them when they were captured was not entirely clear.

On June 29, 1941, the commander of the 4th field army, Kluge, without any fuss, gave the order - all women in military uniform - to be shot. True, already on 1/7/1941 from the OKH he was pulled up, even for the Germans it was too much.

How many female soldiers of the Red Army ended up in German captivity is unknown. Torture, bullying, violence and executions were commonplace.

Below are a few examples of the treatment of "civilized" Germans with female prisoners - military personnel.

In August 1941, on the orders of Emil Knol, commander of the field gendarmerie of the 44th Infantry Division, a prisoner of war, a military doctor, was shot.

In the city of Mglinsk, Bryansk Region, in 1941, the Germans captured two girls from the medical unit and shot them.

After the defeat of the Red Army in the Crimea in May 1942, an unknown girl in military uniform was hiding in the Mayak fishing village near Kerch in the house of a resident of Buryachenko. On May 28, 1942, the Germans discovered her during a search. The girl resisted the Nazis, shouting: “Shoot, bastards! I am dying for the Soviet people, for Stalin, and you, fiends, will be dog's death! The girl was shot in the yard.

At the end of August 1942, a group of sailors was shot in the village of Krymskaya in the Krasnodar Territory, among them there were several girls in military uniform.

In the village of Starotitarovskaya, Krasnodar Territory, among the executed prisoners of war, a corpse of a girl in a Red Army uniform was found. She had a passport with her in the name of Mikhailova Tatyana Aleksandrovna, born in 1923 in the village of Novo-Romanovka.

In the village of Vorontsovo-Dashkovskoye, Krasnodar Territory, in September 1942, captured military assistants Glubokov and Yachmenev were brutally tortured.

On January 5, 1943, not far from the Severny farm, 8 Red Army soldiers were captured. Among them is a nurse named Lyuba. After prolonged torture and abuse, all the prisoners were shot.

Divisional intelligence translator P. Rafes recalls that in the village of Smagleevka, liberated in 1943, 10 km from Kantemirovka, residents told how in 1941 “a wounded lieutenant girl was dragged naked onto the road, her face, hands were cut, her breasts were cut off ... »

Often captured women were raped before they died. Hans Rudhoff, a soldier from the 11th Panzer Division, testifies that in the winter of 1942 “... Russian nurses lay on the roads. They were shot and thrown on the road. They lay naked... On these dead bodies... obscene inscriptions were written.

Women prisoners of war were held in many camps. According to eyewitnesses, they made an extremely miserable impression. In the conditions of camp life, it was especially difficult for them: they, like no one else, suffered from the lack of basic sanitary conditions.

In the autumn of 1941, K. Kromiadi, a member of the commission for the distribution of labor force, who visited the Sedlice camp, talked with the captured women. One of them, a female military doctor, admitted: "... everything is bearable, except for the lack of linen and water, which does not allow us to change clothes or wash ourselves."

Nurses Olga Lenkovskaya and Taisiya Shubina were captured in October 1941 in the Vyazemsky encirclement. At first, women were kept in a camp in Gzhatsk, then in Vyazma. In March, when the Red Army approached, the Germans transferred the captured women to Smolensk in Dulag No. 126. There were few prisoners in the camp. They were kept in a separate barracks, communication with men was forbidden. From April to July 1942, the Germans liberated all women with the "condition of a free settlement in Smolensk."

After the fall of Sevastopol in July 1942, about 300 female health workers were taken prisoner: doctors, nurses, nurses. At first they were sent to Slavuta, and in February 1943, having gathered about 600 female prisoners of war in the camp, they were loaded into wagons and taken to the West. February 23, 1943 brought to the city of Zoes. Lined up and announced that they would work in military factories. Evgenia Lazarevna Klemm was also in the group of prisoners. Jewess, teacher of history at the Odessa Pedagogical Institute, posing as a Serb. She enjoyed special prestige among women prisoners of war. E.L. Klemm, on behalf of everyone in German, declared: “We are prisoners of war and will not work in military factories.”

In response, they began to beat everyone, and then drove them into a small hall, in which, because of the crowding, it was impossible to sit down or move. It stayed that way for almost a day. And then the rebellious were sent to Ravensbrück. This women's camp was established in 1939. The first prisoners of Ravensbrück were prisoners from Germany, and then from European countries occupied by the Germans. All the prisoners were shaved bald, dressed in striped (blue and gray striped) dresses and unlined jackets. Underwear - shirt and shorts. There were no bras or belts. In October, a pair of old stockings was given out for half a year, but not everyone managed to walk in them until spring. Shoes, as in most concentration camps, are wooden blocks.

Reading about the facts of the savage attitude of the Nazis towards captured Red Army women, I would like to turn to those who tirelessly stamp fakes about supposedly 100,000 German women raped in Germany by Soviet soldiers - shame, gentlemen, shame and not good.

Shot female soldiers of the Red Army:



Alexey Kotov

The Second World War went like a skating rink through humanity. Millions of dead and many more crippled lives and destinies. All the belligerents did truly monstrous things, justifying everything with war.

Of course, in this regard, the Nazis were especially distinguished, and this is not even taking into account the Holocaust. There are many both documented and frankly fictional stories about what the German soldiers did.

One of the high-ranking German officers recalled the briefings they went through. Interestingly, there was only one order regarding female soldiers: “Shoot.”

Most did so, but among the dead, the bodies of women in the form of the Red Army are often found - soldiers, nurses or nurses, on whose bodies there were traces of cruel torture.

Residents of the village of Smagleevka, for example, say that when they had Nazis, they found a seriously wounded girl. And in spite of everything they dragged her onto the road, stripped her and shot her.

But before her death, she was tortured for a long time for pleasure. Her entire body was turned into a continuous bloody mess. The Nazis did the same with female partisans. Before being executed, they could be stripped naked and long time keep in the cold.

Of course, the captives were constantly raped. And if the highest German ranks were forbidden to have an intimate relationship with the captives, then ordinary privates had more freedom in this matter. And if the girl did not die after a whole company used her, then she was simply shot.

The situation in the concentration camps was even worse. Unless the girl was lucky and one of the higher ranks of the camp took her to him as a servant. Although it did not save much from rape.

In this regard, camp No. 337 was the most cruel place. There, the prisoners were kept naked for hours in the cold, hundreds of people were settled in the barracks at once, and anyone who could not do the work was immediately killed. About 700 prisoners of war were destroyed daily in the Stalag.

Women were subjected to the same torture as men, and even much worse. In terms of torture, the Nazis could be envied by the Spanish Inquisition. Very often, girls were bullied by other women, such as the wives of commandants, just for fun. The nickname of the commandant of Stalag No. 337 was "cannibal".

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

In his memoirs, officer Bruno Schneider told what kind of instruction German soldiers went through before being sent to the Russian front. Regarding the women of the Red Army, the order stated one thing: “Shoot!”
This was done in many German units. Among those who died in battles and encirclement, a huge number of bodies of women in Red Army uniforms were found. Among them are many nurses and women paramedics. Traces on their bodies testified that many were brutally tortured and then shot.
Residents of Smagleevka (Voronezh region) told after their liberation in 1943 that at the beginning of the war in their village a young Red Army girl died a terrible death. She was badly injured. Despite this, the Nazis stripped her naked, dragged her onto the road and shot her.
Terrifying marks of torture remained on the body of the unfortunate woman. Before her death, her breasts were cut off, her entire face and hands were completely cut to pieces. The woman's body was a continuous bloody mess. They did the same with Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya. Before the demonstration execution, the Nazis kept her half-naked in the cold for hours.
women in captivity

The Soviet soldiers who were in captivity - and women too - were supposed to be "sorted". The weakest, the wounded and exhausted were to be destroyed. The rest were used for the hardest work in concentration camps.

In addition to these atrocities, Red Army women were constantly subjected to rape. The highest military ranks of the Wehrmacht were forbidden to have intimate relations with the Slavs, so they did it secretly. The rank and file had a certain freedom here. Finding one Red Army woman or a 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 chose the most attractive girls from among the prisoners and took them to their place to “serve”. So did the camp doctor Orlyand in Shpalaga (prisoner of war camp) No. 346 near the city of Kremenchug. The guards themselves regularly raped the prisoners of the women's block of the concentration camp.
So it was in Shpalaga No. 337 (Baranovichi), about which in 1967, during a meeting of the tribunal, the head of this camp, Yarosh, testified.
Shpalag No. 337 was distinguished by particularly cruel, inhuman conditions of detention. Both women and men of the Red Army were kept half-naked in the cold for hours. Hundreds of them were stuffed into the lice-infested barracks. Anyone who could not stand it and fell, the guards immediately shot. More than 700 captured servicemen were destroyed daily in Shpalaga No. 337.
Torture was used for women prisoners of war, the cruelty of which medieval inquisitors could only envy: they were put on a stake, stuffed insides with hot red pepper, etc. Often they were 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 eloquently spoke of her temper.

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We all remember what horrors Hitler and the entire Third Reich committed, but few take into account that the German fascists had Japanese sworn allies. And believe me, their executions, tortures and tortures were no less humane than the German ones. They mocked people not even for some benefit or benefit, but just for fun ...

Cannibalism

This terrible fact is very difficult to believe, but there is a lot of written evidence and evidence of its existence. It turns out that the soldiers who guarded the prisoners often went hungry, there was not enough food for everyone and they were forced to eat the corpses of prisoners. But there are also facts that the military cut off body parts for food not only from the dead, but also from the living.

Experiments on pregnant women

"Part 731" is especially notorious for its gruesome bullying. The military was specifically allowed to rape captured women so that they could become pregnant, and then carried out various frauds on them. They were specially infected with venereal, infectious and other diseases in order to analyze how the female body and the fetal body would behave. Sometimes in the early stages, women were "cut open" on the operating table without any anesthesia and the premature baby was removed to see how he copes with infections. Naturally, both women and children died ...

brutal torture

There are many cases when the Japanese mocked prisoners not for the sake of obtaining information, but for the sake of cruel entertainment. In one case, a wounded Marine taken prisoner had his genitals cut off and, after putting them in the soldier's mouth, they let him go to his own. This senseless cruelty of the Japanese shocked their opponents more than once.

sadistic curiosity

Japanese military doctors during the war not only carried out sadistic experiments on prisoners, but often did it without any, even pseudo-scientific purpose, but out of pure curiosity. These were the centrifuge experiments. The Japanese were interested in what would happen to the human body if it was rotated for hours in a centrifuge at great speed. Dozens and hundreds of prisoners fell victim to these experiments: people died from open bleeding, and sometimes their bodies were simply torn apart.

Amputations

The Japanese mocked not only prisoners of war, but also civilians and even their own citizens suspected of espionage. A popular punishment for espionage was the cutting off of some part of the body - most often the legs, fingers or ears. The amputation was carried out without anesthesia, but at the same time they carefully monitored so that the punished survived - and suffered until the end of his days.

Drowning

To immerse the interrogated person in water until he begins to choke is a well-known torture. But the Japanese went further. They simply poured streams of water into the captive's mouth and nostrils, which went straight into his lungs. If the prisoner resisted for a long time, he simply choked - with this method of torture, the score went literally for minutes.

Fire and Ice

In the Japanese army, experiments on freezing people were widely practiced. The limbs of the prisoners were frozen to a solid state, and then skin and muscles were cut from living people without anesthesia in order to study the effect of cold on tissue. In the same way, the effects of burns were studied: people were burned alive with skin and muscles on their arms and legs with burning torches, carefully observing the change in tissues.

Radiation

All in the same infamous part, 731 Chinese prisoners were driven into special chambers and subjected to powerful X-rays, observing what changes subsequently occurred in their bodies. Such procedures were repeated several times until the person died.

Buried alive

One of the most cruel punishments for American prisoners of war for rebellion and disobedience was burial alive. A person was placed vertically in a pit and covered with a pile of earth or stones, leaving him to suffocate. The bodies of the allied troops punished in such a cruel way were discovered more than once.

Decapitation

Beheading an enemy was a common execution in the Middle Ages. But in Japan, this custom survived until the twentieth century and was applied to prisoners during the Second World War. But the worst thing was that by no means all the executioners were experienced in their craft. Often the soldier did not bring the blow with the sword to the end, or even hit the sword on the shoulder of the executed. This only prolonged the torment of the victim, whom the executioner stabbed with a sword until he reached his goal.

Death in the waves

This type of execution, quite typical for ancient Japan, was also used during the Second World War. The victim was tied to a pole dug in the tide zone. The waves slowly rose until the person began to choke, so that finally, after much torment, he would drown completely.

The most painful execution

Bamboo is the fastest growing plant in the world, it can grow by 10-15 centimeters per day. The Japanese have long used this property for an ancient and terrible execution. A man was chained with his back to the ground, from which fresh bamboo shoots sprouted. For several days, the plants tore the body of the sufferer, dooming him to terrible torment. It would seem that this horror should have remained in history, but no: it is known for certain that the Japanese used this execution for prisoners during the Second World War.

Welded from the inside

Another section of the experiments carried out in part 731 is experiments with electricity. Japanese doctors shocked prisoners by attaching electrodes to the head or to the body, immediately giving a large voltage or exposing the unfortunate to a lower voltage for a long time ... They say that with such an impact, a person had the feeling that he was being roasted alive, and this was not far from the truth: some the bodies of the victims were literally boiled.

Forced labor and death marches

The Japanese POW camps were no better than the Nazi death camps. Thousands of prisoners who ended up in Japanese camps worked from dawn to dusk, while, according to stories, they were provided with food very poorly, sometimes without food for several days. And if slave power was required in another part of the country, hungry, emaciated prisoners were driven, sometimes for a couple of thousand kilometers, on foot under the scorching sun. Few prisoners managed to survive the Japanese camps.

The prisoners were forced to kill their friends

The Japanese were masters of psychological torture. They often forced prisoners, under threat of death, to beat and even kill their comrades, compatriots, even friends. Regardless of how this psychological torture ended, the will and soul of a person were forever broken.