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List of captured soldiers who fell under Stalingrad. Food fights, theft, glitches. The life of the captured Germans of Stalingrad in the Soviet camps (2 photos). Pool and buckwheat porridge

The fate of the German prisoners of war who found themselves in the encircled Stalingrad is tragic. A few, after many years, were able to return to Germany. The bones of the others are scattered throughout the Soviet Union.

It should be said right away that no one knows for sure how many soldiers of the enemy's armies were captured by the Soviets after the end of the Battle of Stalingrad. It is customary to call the figure of 93 thousand people. However, the archives contain reports of the NKVD, which report about 138 thousand prisoners.

Most of the prisoners were concentrated in Stalingrad and the settlements of the region. The tiny village of Beketovka was literally packed with captured Germans, for which there were enough rooms to accommodate.

The note of the head of the Main Directorate of Internal Troops of the NKVD, contained information about the stay of prisoners in Beketovka (Stalingrad) and the Panshino farm on February 3, 1943: “At the Beketovka reception center, 49,000 and Panshino 10,000 prisoners of war are concentrated. Prisoners in Panshino are located in the open air. The sick and wounded lag behind and freeze on the way. "

It should be noted that the prisoners on foot covered distances of 150-200 kilometers to get to the camp. On the way, they did not receive food for 6-7 days. At the same time, the prisoners did not differ in special health. 70 percent had dystrophy, two thirds of the soldiers had frostbite. Some of them did not have the strength to reach the camp. The Soviet convoy used to shoot the fallen German soldiers.

Documents of those years report the robbery of prisoners by everyone who came across them on the way. The NKVD officers noted that the German soldiers reached the camp with their shoes on and undressed. Even statistics were given: 75 percent of the prisoners were barefoot, 25-30 percent were naked. Recall that we are talking about February 1943.

However, not all reached, many were shot by the commanders and soldiers of the Red Army for fun, just like that. In one of the documents of the NKVD, the following facts are cited: “The commanding staff comes to meet, asks the convoy for a couple of Fritzes. The convoy gives out, and they shoot them right there. In the Logistics Directorate, 38 armies shot 32 people. "

Those who nevertheless reached the camp had to relive the horrors of hunger. The head of the reception center No. 48 of the Voronezh Front reported in March 1943: “The food situation is extremely difficult. For 13 days there is neither bread nor crackers. "


However, the prisoners of war were immediately used by the civilian authorities of Stalingrad. For example, on February 8, 6 days after the end of the street fighting, the Stalingrad Defense Committee issued a decree on the use of prisoners of war to restore the destroyed workshops of industrial enterprises. Metallurgical plant "Red October", StalGRES, Sawmill named after Yerman, Stalingrad tractor and many others received their share of prisoners of war.

On February 15, the authorities of Stalingrad decided to send 500 prisoners of war to work on the burial of corpses and "cleaning the city of other sewage."

The captured German soldiers were not angels. Only in February - March 1943, who escaped from the camps, they committed a number of terrible crimes in the Stalingrad region. On February 10, the Kochkin family was massacred - a mother and two children. The son was 16 years old, the daughter - 15. They were hacked to death with an ax by three captured Germans. Before their death, mother and daughter were also raped.

Czech Mozik and German Varde escaped from the camp and entered the house of collective farmer Bondarenko, which was located two kilometers from the "zone". They robbed and beat the owner and his two children. A detachment of the NKVD troops arrived at the scene, both German soldiers were shot on the spot.

The Stalingrad prisoners had years of captivity ahead. The last of them were released from the camps only in 1955. Some German historians claim that out of more than one hundred thousand Stalingrad prisoners, only about 5,000 people survived and returned home.

News on Bloknot-Volgograd The mortality rate among prisoners on the eastern front in the camps of the USSR was less than 15%, in the war with Japan - less than 10% (in contrast to almost 60% in the Nazi camps). The answer to the question why half of the Nazis died before 44 is given below ...
Grigory Pernavsky

Why did the Stalingrad prisoners die?
From time to time on the Internet and in periodicals, in articles dedicated to the next anniversary of the defeat of the Germans at Stalingrad, there are references to the sad fate of German prisoners of war. Their fate is often compared to the fate of millions of Red Army soldiers tortured to death in German camps. In this way, unscrupulous propagandists are trying to demonstrate the identity of the Soviet and Nazi regimes. About attitude
Hmmm. (February 1943, quite a lot of Germans have been written to Soviet prisoners of war. As for the Soviet side, the USSR, which at one time did not sign the 1929 Geneva Convention "On the Maintenance of Prisoners of War" (the reasons for not signing it are known, but are not the subject of this article), announced that it would comply with it in the very first days after the start of the Great Patriotic War.
At the initial stage of the war, there were no difficulties with the maintenance of prisoners of war for the simple reason that there were too few of them. From June 22 to December 31, 1941, the Red Army captured 9,147 people, and by November 19, 1942, when the counter-offensive at Stalingrad began, an additional 10,635 enemy soldiers and officers had entered the rear prisoner-of-war camps ...
In the leaflets, which were addressed to the German and Finnish soldiers, they were guaranteed life and good treatment. However, Soviet propaganda did not have any noticeable influence on the enemy. One of the reasons for this failure was the repeated killing of German prisoners by the Red Army. There were relatively few such cases, but the facts of the inhumane attitude of Soviet soldiers towards German prisoners were immediately widely "promoted" by Nazi propaganda. Subsequently, it was the fear of death at the hands of the "ruthless enemy" that caused the death of many Wehrmacht soldiers, who preferred death from hunger and typhus to Soviet captivity.
The first large encirclement, which the Red Army was able to bring to the end, was the encirclement of the German 6th Army at Stalingrad. On November 19, 1942, the Soviet counteroffensive began. ..
It is worth noting that problems with the supply of Paulus's group began long before the start of the Soviet operation "Uranus". In September 1942, the actual food ration that the soldiers of the 6th Army received was about 1,800 calories per day, with the need taking into account the loads - 3,000-4,000. In October 1942, the command of the 6th Army informed the OKH that, since August, "living conditions throughout the entire range of the 6th Army are equally bad." The organization of additional food supplies due to the requisition of local sources was further impossible (in other words, everything that the soldiers of the valiant Wehrmacht plundered from the civilian population was eaten). For this reason, the command of the 6th Army requested an increase in the daily bread ration from 600 to 750 grams. The constantly growing physical and mental exhaustion of soldiers and officers was superimposed on the difficulties with supply. By the time the Soviet counteroffensive began, they seemed terrifying, but the real horror began after November 19. Continuous battles with the advancing Red Army, a slow retreat to Stalingrad, fear of death, which seemed more and more inevitable, constant hypothermia and malnutrition, which gradually turned into hunger, quickly eroded morality and discipline.
Malnutrition was the biggest problem. Since November 26, the food ration in the "cauldron" has been reduced to 350 grams. bread and 120 gr. meat. On December 1, the bread distribution rate had to be reduced to 300 grams. On December 8, the bread dispensing rate was reduced to 200 grams. It is worth recalling that the minimum bread rate given to workers in besieged Leningrad in November-December 1941 was 250 grams. However, for some time the Germans received horse meat welds for their skinny rations.
A hungry person quickly loses the ability to think, falls into apathy and becomes indifferent to everything. The defense capability of the German troops was rapidly falling. On December 12 and 14, the command of the 79th Infantry Division reported to the headquarters of the 6th Army that, due to prolonged fighting and insufficient food supplies, it was no longer able to hold its positions.
For Christmas, for several days, the front line soldiers were given an additional 100 grams. It is known that at the same time, some soldiers in the "cauldron" received no more than 100 grams. of bread. (For comparison: the same amount is the minimum that the children and dependents of Oranienbaum received in besieged Leningrad). Even if this is not the case, such a "diet" for a long enough time for thousands of adult men who experienced extreme physical and mental stress, meant only one thing - death. And she did not keep herself waiting. From November 26 to December 22, 56 deaths were recorded in the 6th Army, "in which nutritional deficiencies played a significant role."
By December 24, there were already 64 such cases. On December 20, a report was received from the IV Army Corps that "two soldiers died due to the loss of strength." It is worth noting that hunger kills adult men even before they become completely dystrophied. They generally endure hunger worse than women. On January 7, the registered mortality from hunger was already 120 people a day.
Paulus and his subordinates were well aware of the catastrophic situation their troops were in. On December 26, the chief of the rear of the encircled group, Major von Kunovski, in a telegraphic conversation with Colonel Fink, the head of the rear of the 6th Army, who was outside the ring, wrote:
"I ask by all means to ensure that tomorrow 200 tons are delivered to us by planes ... I have never sat so deep in shit in my life."

However, no amount of pleading could correct the continuously deteriorating situation. In the period from January 1 to January 7, in the LI building, a ration of 281 grams was given per person per day. gross, at a rate of 800. But the situation in this building was relatively good. On average for the 6th Army, the distribution of bread was reduced to 50-100 grams. The soldiers on the front line received 200. Amazingly, with such a catastrophic shortage of food, some warehouses inside the "cauldron" literally burst with food and in this form fell into the hands of the Red Army. This tragic curiosity is due to the fact that by the end of December, due to an acute shortage of fuel, the freight transport completely stopped, and the riding horses died or were slaughtered for meat. The supply system inside the "cauldron" turned out to be completely disorganized and often the soldiers died of hunger, not knowing that the saving food was literally a few kilometers away from them. However, in the 6th Army there were fewer and fewer people who could cover such a short distance on foot. In January 20, the commander of one of the companies, which was to make a 1.5-kilometer march, despite the fact that there was no shelling from the Soviet side, told his soldiers: "Whoever lags behind will have to be left lying in the snow, and he will freeze." On January 23, the same company took a four-kilometer march from 6 a.m. to dark.
Since January 24, the supply system in the "boiler" has completely collapsed. According to eyewitness accounts, in some areas of the environment, nutrition improved because there was no longer any record of food distribution. The containers dropped from the planes were stolen, and there was simply no energy to arrange the delivery of the rest. The command took the most draconian measures against the marauders. In the last weeks of the "cauldron" existence, the field gendarmerie shot dozens of soldiers and non-commissioned officers, but most of the encircled people, distraught with hunger, did not care. On the same days, in other areas of the "boiler" soldiers received 38 grams. bread, and a can of "Cola" chocolate (several round bars of tonic chocolate, the size of a palm) was divided into 23 people.

“In connection with the successful operations of the Red Army units on the South-West, Stalingrad and Don fronts, the dispatch of prisoners of war is proceeding with great difficulties, as a result of which there is a large mortality rate among prisoners of war.
The main causes of death are found to be:
1. Romanian and Italian prisoners of war from 6-7 to 10 days before surrender did not receive food due to the fact that all food supplied to the front went primarily to German units.
2. When captured, our units of prisoners of war are driven on foot 200-300 km to the railway, while their supply with rear units of the Red Army is not organized and often for 2-3 days on the way the prisoners of war are not fed at all.
3. Points of concentration of prisoners of war, as well as reception centers of the NKVD should be provided by the Headquarters of the rear of the Red Army with food and uniforms for the route. In practice, this is not done, and in a number of cases, when loading trains, prisoners of war are given flour instead of bread, and there are no dishes.
4. Bodies of military communications of the Red Army serve carriages for sending prisoners of war, not equipped with bunks and stoves, and each carriage is loaded with 50-60 people.
In addition, a significant part of the prisoners of war do not have warm clothes, and the trophy property of the rear services of the fronts and armies is not allocated for these purposes, despite the instructions of Comrade Khrulev on these issues ...
And, finally, contrary to the Regulations on Prisoners of War, approved by the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, and the order of the Chief Military Administration of the Red Army, wounded and sick prisoners of war are not admitted to front-line hospitals and are sent to reception centers. "

This memo gave rise to a rather harsh reaction at the very top of the Red Army command. Already on January 2, 1943, the order of the People's Commissar of Defense No. 001 was issued. It was signed by the Deputy People's Commissar, Chief of the RKKA Quartermaster Service, Colonel-General of the Quartermaster Service A. V. Khrulev, but there is no doubt that this paper did not escape the attention of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief himself:
(Some of the documents have been shortened, as well as a number of other documents have been deleted. The article does not fit into the message in full.) in the book their texts are given in full.
Looking ahead, it makes sense to clarify that throughout 1943, it was not possible to establish a normal evacuation of prisoners of war from the front. It must be assumed that such an important order was issued too late, and it would be foolish to expect that it could be properly executed in less than a month, when a stream of emaciated and sick prisoners of war fell upon the Red Army.

Paulus rejected the ultimatum of the Soviet command (according to Rokossovsky's recollections, the Soviet envoys were fired upon from the German side) and on January 10, 1943, hell broke out on the approaches to Stalingrad ...

“On January 10, at 8:5 am, the Russians begin shelling even more intense than on November 19: for 55 minutes,“ Stalin's organs ”howl, heavy guns are thundering — volley after volley without interruption. Hurricane fire plows the whole earth. The last assault on the boiler began.
Then the gunfire fades away, white-painted tanks approach, followed by submachine gunners in camouflage coats. We leave Marinovka, then Dmitrievka. All living things scurry into the Rossoshka valley. We dig in at Dubinin, and two days later we find ourselves in the area of ​​the Nursery station in Tolovaya, balka. The boiler gradually shrinks from west to east: on the 15th to Rossoshka, on the 18th to the Voroponovo - Nursery - Khutor Gonchara line, on the 22nd to Verkhne-Elshashsh - Gumrak. Then we rent Gumrak. The last opportunity to take out the wounded by airplanes and receive ammunition and food is disappearing.
(…) On January 16, our division ceases to exist (..).
(…) Decay is increasing. Other officers, such as the chief of the operational department of the headquarters of our division, Major Vilutski, flee by plane. After the loss of the Nursery, the planes land in Gumrak, which the Russians are constantly firing at. Some officers, after the disbandment of their units, secretly flee to Stalingrad. More and more officers want to single-handedly break through to the retreating German front. There are those in my battle group (...) "
Soon Steidle himself joined this dreary stream. At that time, street fighting was still going on in Stalingrad, the city was literally packed with soldiers and officers who did not know what to do now. Someone cherished the hope of getting out of the boiler on their own, someone wanted to understand what was happening and receive clear orders, and someone simply hoped to find food and shelter in the city. Neither one nor the other, nor the third, have achieved their goals. Stalingrad in the second half of January turned into an island of despair, shelled from all sides:
“An innumerable number of soldiers are moving along the street in front of the barred windows. For many days they have been moving from one trench to another, rummaging in abandoned cars. Many of them came from fortified cellars on the outskirts of Stalingrad; they were driven out of there by Soviet assault groups; here they are looking for a place to hide. An officer appears here and there. In this commotion, he is trying to gather combat-ready soldiers. However, many of them choose to join a unit as stragglers. Soviet troops attack and move non-stop from one block, garden, factory area to another, capturing position after position. (…) Many are extremely tired to end this on their own and leave this crumbling front. Such people continue to fight, because next to them there are others who intend to defend their lives to the last patron, those who still see the real enemy in the Soviet soldier or who are afraid of retribution.
Around us - the ruins and smoking ruins of a huge city, and behind them flows the Volga. We are being fired on from all sides. Where a tank appears, the Soviet infantry is also visible there, following directly behind the T-34. Shots and the terrible music of the "Stalinist organs" are clearly audible, which at short intervals conduct barrage fire. It has long been known that there is no defense against them. The apathy is so great that it no longer bothers you. It is more important to pull out something edible from the pockets or rusks of the killed and wounded. If someone finds canned meat, he slowly eats it, and he scrubs the box with swollen fingers, as if it depends on these last leftovers whether he survives or not. And here is another ghastly sight: three or four soldiers crouched around a dead horse, ripping off pieces of meat and eating it raw.
This is the situation "at the front", at the forefront. The generals know it as well as we do. They are being "informed" about all this, and they are considering new defensive measures. "
Finally, from February 30 to February 2, the remnants of the German troops defending in the cauldron laid down their arms. To the surprise of the Soviet military (who estimated the encircled grouping at about 86 thousand people), only 91,545 Germans were captured from January 10 to February 22, 1943 (including 24 generals and about 2,500 officers), and there were also tens of thousands of dead. The condition of the prisoners was terrible. More than 500 people were unconscious, 70 percent had dystrophy, almost all suffered from vitamin deficiency and were in a state of extreme physical and mental exhaustion. Pulmonary inflammation, tuberculosis, heart disease and kidney disease were widespread. Almost 60 percent of the prisoners had 2nd and 3rd degree frostbite with complications in the form of gangrene and general blood poisoning. Finally, about 10 percent were so hopeless that there was no way to save them. Among other things, the prisoners entered the troops unevenly, throughout January, and the order to create a large front camp was given on the 26th of this month. Although the camp, or rather several distribution camps, united in the department No. 108, with the center in the village of Beketovka, began to function already in early February, it was certainly not possible to properly equip it.

But first, the prisoners had to be taken out of Stalingrad and somehow delivered to the camps, which were located approximately at a distance from the city, not exceeding the daily march of a military unit consisting of healthy people. Nowadays, Beketovka has already entered the city limits of Volgograd. On a summer day, the walk from the city center to this area takes about five hours. In winter, it will take more time, but for a healthy person, this "journey" will not be too difficult. The Germans, exhausted to the limit, are a different matter. Nevertheless, they had to be urgently withdrawn from Stalingrad. The city was almost completely destroyed. There were no premises suitable for accommodating a huge number of people, the water supply system did not function. Typhus and other infectious diseases continued to spread among the prisoners. Leaving them in Stalingrad meant condemning them to death. Long marches to the camps did not bode well either, but at least left chances of salvation. At any moment, the city could turn into an epidemic focus, and fatal diseases spread to the Red Army, who also gathered in Stalingrad in a huge number. Already 3-4 February, the Germans capable of moving, who were still waiting to be shot, were lined up in columns and began to be taken out of the city.
Some modern researchers compare the withdrawal of prisoners of war from Stalingrad with the "death marches" in Southeast Asia, during which thousands of American and British prisoners of war were killed at the hands of the Japanese. Are there grounds for such comparisons? More likely no than yes. First, the atrocities of the Japanese are supported by concrete and abundant evidence. Secondly, the Americans and the British were captured healthy or relatively healthy (as, by the way, the Red Army soldiers were taken prisoner by the Germans). In the case of Stalingrad, the convoys had to deal with people, a significant part of whom were actually dying. There is anonymous evidence that some, completely exhausted prisoners who could no longer move, were shot by guards. At the same time, the military doctor Otto Rühle, in his book "Healing in Elabuga", says that all the fallen German soldiers were transferred to a sled and taken to the camp. And here is how Colonel Steidle describes his way to the camp:
A group of officers, replenished by several soldiers and non-commissioned officers, was formed in a column of eight people (in eight rows). A march was coming, which demanded from us the exertion of all our forces. We took each other's arms. We tried to restrain the pace of the march. But for those who walked at the end of the column, he was still too fast. The calls and requests to go slower did not stop, and this was all the more understandable since we took with us many with sore legs, and they could hardly move along the well-worn, glistening as a mirror, icy road. What have I not seen as a soldier on these marches! Endless rows of houses, and in front of them - even in small huts - lovingly groomed gardens and kindergartens, and behind them are playing children, for whom everything that happens has either become commonplace or remains incomprehensible. And then endless fields stretched all the time, interspersed with forest belts and steep or gentle hills. The outlines of industrial plants were visible in the distance. For hours we marched or drove along railways and canals. All methods of crossing were tested, including the use of a mountain road at dizzying heights. And then again marches past the smoking ruins, into which the settlements that have existed for centuries have been turned. (…) Snow-covered fields stretched on both sides of our path. At least, so it seemed to us on that January morning, when the frosty air mixed with the descending fog, and the earth seemed to be lost in infinity. Only from time to time could one see the crowded prisoners of war who, like us, made this march, a march of guilt and shame! (…) After about two hours we reached a large group of buildings at the entrance to Beketovka.
At the same time, Steidle emphasizes the correct behavior of the convoy and the fact that the soldiers drove away civilians who were trying to approach the convoy with shots into the air.
Prisoners of war in Stalingrad continued to arrive until February 22, 1943. On this day, in the city and its environs, there were 91,545 enemy servicemen, some of whom were already dead. In the very first days, great problems arose with the placement of prisoners. In particular, the Beketov camp was not equipped with sufficient space. Let's turn to Steidle's memories again:
“We were placed there in all rooms from basement to attic, mostly in groups of eight, ten or fifteen people. Who at first did not seize a place for himself, he had to stand or sit on the landings of the stairs as necessary. But this building had windows, a roof, water and a temporarily equipped kitchen. There were latrines in front of the main building. In the next building there was a sanitary unit with Soviet doctors and nurses. We were allowed to walk around the large courtyard at any time of the day, to meet and talk to each other.
To avoid typhus, cholera, plague, and everything else that could arise with such a crowd, a large campaign for preventive vaccinations was organized. However, for many, this event was belated. Epidemics and serious illnesses were common even in Stalingrad. Those who fell ill would die alone or among their comrades, wherever they had to: in a crowded basement hastily equipped for an infirmary, in some corner, in a snowy trench. Nobody asked why the other died. The overcoat, scarf, jacket of the dead did not disappear - the living needed it. It was through them that a lot of people became infected. And here, in Beketovka, what we considered completely impossible, but which made extremely clear the criminal nature of Hitler's actions, and our own guilt for not fulfilling a long-ripe decision: a physical, mental and spiritual collapse of an unprecedented scale. Many who managed to get out of the stalingrad hell could not stand it and died from typhus, dysentery, or complete exhaustion of physical and mental strength. Anyone who was still alive a few minutes ago could suddenly collapse to the floor and in a quarter of an hour be among the dead. Any step could be fatal for many. A step into the courtyard, from which you will never return, a step for water that you will no longer drink, a step with a loaf of bread under your arm, which you will no longer eat ... Suddenly, the heart stopped working.
Soviet women, doctors and nurses, often sacrificing themselves and not knowing rest, fought against mortality. They saved many and helped everyone. And yet, more than one week passed before it was possible to stop the epidemics. "
Stalingrad prisoners were sent not only to the outskirts of the destroyed city. In general, it was supposed to leave the wounded, the sick and another 20,000 people on the spot, who were supposed to be engaged in the restoration of Stalingrad. Others were to be assigned to camps located in other parts of the country. So, the surviving officers and generals were placed in Krasnogorsk, Elabuga, Suzdal and Ivanovo region near Moscow. It so happened that it was those who were taken out of the Stalingrad region that made up a significant part of the survivors. Most of the prisoners faced a sad fate. First, the wounded died. At the time of captivity, at least 40,000 people needed immediate hospitalization. However, Camp 108 was not originally equipped with hospitals. They began their work only on February 15th. By February 21, 8696 prisoners of war had already received medical assistance, of which 2,775 were frostbitten, and 1969 needed surgical operations due to injuries or illnesses. Despite this, people continued to die.
The general death rate among prisoners of war seriously worried the leadership of the USSR. In March, a joint commission of the People's Commissariat for Health, NGOs, NKVD and the Executive Committee of the Union of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies was formed, which was to examine the camps of the Administration of Camp 108 and determine the causes of such a high mortality rate. At the end of the month, the commission examined the camp in Khrenovoe. The survey report said:
“According to the reports of the physical condition of the prisoners of war who arrived in the camp, they are characterized by the following data: a) healthy - 29 percent, b) sick and exhausted - 71 percent. The physical condition was determined by their appearance; the prisoners of war who could move independently belonged to the healthy group. "
Another commission, which examined the Velsk prisoner of war camp a few days later, wrote in its statement:
“The prisoners of war are shown to be extremely lousy, their condition is very emaciated. 57 percent mortality falls on dystrophy, 33 percent. - for typhus and 10 percent. - for other diseases ... Typhus, lice, vitamin deficiency were noted among German prisoners of war while they were surrounded in the Stalingrad region. "
In the general conclusions of the commission, it was said that many prisoners of war arrived in the camps with diseases that were irreversible. Be that as it may, by May 10, 1943, 35,099 of the first inhabitants of the Beketov camps were hospitalized, 28,098 people were sent to other camps, and another 27,078 people died. Judging by the fact that after the war, no more than 6,000 people who were captured at Stalingrad returned to Germany, among whom there were many officers, whose captivity took place in relatively comfortable conditions, it can be assumed that most of the "Stalingraders" captured by the Red Army did not survive 1943 of the year.
From the mistakes made in the winter of 1943, when the Soviet side had to accept a large group of prisoners of war, conclusions were drawn. Already in mid-May, all the chiefs of the camps were sent a Directive of the NKVD of the USSR on the need to take measures to improve the sanitary and living conditions of prisoners of war.

In the future, excesses similar to Stalingrad did not occur in Soviet prisoner-of-war camps. In total, over the period from 1941 to 1949, more than 580 thousand prisoners of war of various nationalities died or died in the USSR from various reasons - 15 percent of the total number of those taken prisoner. For comparison, the loss of Soviet prisoners of war was 57 percent. If we talk about the main cause of death of the Stalingrad prisoners, then it is obvious - this is Paulus's refusal to sign the surrender on January 8. There is no doubt that in this case, too, many German soldiers did not survive, however, most would have been able to escape. Actually, if a significant part of the captured German generals and officers did not see the indifference with which their own command treats their fate, and then did not feel the dedication with which ordinary Soviet people, their enemies, fought for their health, they would hardly began to participate in the creation of the committee "Free Germany".

Sometimes, in response to reproaches about the millions of Soviet prisoners of war who were tortured to death in Nazi camps, a "symmetrical trump card" is presented: the unprecedented mortality of the soldiers of the Hitlerite coalition captured at Stalingrad. Why, out of almost 100 thousand who surrendered, only 5 thousand returned to their homeland?

Prerequisites for death

Hunger

Malnutrition among the Wehrmacht soldiers began during their stay in the Stalingrad "cauldron". The 1,800 daily calories from the September diet were not enough. Opportunities to rob the civilian population have been exhausted. From November 26, 1942, the bread norm was reduced to 350, from December 8 to 200, 56 hunger deaths were recorded in the period from November 26 to December 22. Two days later, 8 more people died of hunger. Since January 7, 120 people per day have been killed. Bread began to be dispensed 50-100 g per day, and in some places - 38 g. The priority was given to the Germans. Italian and Hungarian fighters were left without food for days. The end of January is marked by cases of cannibalism.

Cold

The Russian winter of 1942–1943 cannot be called extremely frosty, but for an emaciated person, the fight against cold and wind in the absence of fuel in the steppe is doomed to defeat. At first, not everyone had enough cotton sets of uniforms. The extinction of the contingent more than satisfied the need for warm clothing removed from corpses. However, the use of the belongings of the deceased contributed to the spread of lice.

Lice

Already in October, hordes of lice were walking around the German invaders, spreading typhus. German troops tried to deal with the unusual scourge of powdered chemicals, while the Soviet army used weapons approved in the civil war: haircutting, bathing and roasting clothes.

Paulus's refusal to surrender

In January 1943, the commander of Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus was asked to save the personnel from bloodshed and surrender. Rejecting the ultimatum, he doomed the group of the 6th German army, the 3rd and 4th Romanian armies, the 2nd Hungarian army, the 8th Italian army, the Italian alpine corps and the Croatian regiment to defeat. The remnants of the troops laid down their arms by February 2. The number of those who surrendered was staggering: 93 thousand according to Soviet data (of which 24 generals and 2.5 thousand officers) or more than 100 thousand according to German estimates. 40 thousand were in urgent need of hospitalization.

The state of the captured

Dystrophy - 70%. Avitaminosis - 100%. Frostbite - 60%. Mental exhaustion - 100%. At death - 10%.

Captivity

A camp number 108 was urgently organized near Stalingrad in the village of Beketovka. 35 thousand prisoners were hospitalized, 28 thousand were sent for treatment to other camps. 20 thousand able-bodied people were left for the restoration of Stalingrad. The rest were sent to other areas. Hiking prisoners in the cold to their destination or transportation led to further exhaustion and death along the way. However, it was precisely among those sent outside Stalingrad that there were most survivors. By June, 27 thousand prisoners had died - from wounds, typhus and typhoid fever, dysentery, dystrophy. The Soviet side was not prepared for so many prisoners. From the beginning of the war until November 1942, only about 20 thousand prisoners of war were held in the camps, performing two tasks: serving as a labor force and as a propaganda poster. It was realistic to feed a meager number of prisoners in accordance with the amount of food that roughly corresponded to the norms for local prisoners (about 700 g of bread daily). Providing food for almost a hundred thousand prisoners of war in conditions of limited food supplies is problematic. At first, the Germans were starving - as if surrounded. The daily ration (not always given out) was 120 g of bread. Later, the food returned to normal. Mortality declined after the peak in the first three months. From July 1943 to January 1949, the loss of prisoners after the Battle of Stalingrad amounted to 1777 people. In 1949, POWs, with the exception of war criminals, were sent home.

Causes of death

The defeated opponents were not satisfied with special genocide. Vice versa. The medical board examined the contingent monthly. Doctors treated the wounded and sick. The weakened were given a 25% increase in rations, including 750 g of bread daily. The main cause of death of most of the prisoners of war is Paulus' refusal to lay down arms, plus hunger, cold and disease, which undermined the health of the Wehrmacht soldiers surrounded.

From time to time on the Internet and in periodicals, in articles dedicated to the next anniversary of the defeat of the Germans at Stalingrad, there are references to the sad fate of German prisoners of war. Their fate is often compared to the fate of millions of Red Army soldiers tortured to death in German camps. In this way, unscrupulous propagandists are trying to demonstrate the identity of the Soviet and Nazi regimes. Quite a lot has been written about the attitude of the Germans towards Soviet prisoners of war. As for the Soviet side, the USSR, which at one time did not sign the 1929 Geneva Convention "On the Maintenance of Prisoners of War" (the reasons for not signing it are known, but are not the subject of this article), announced that it would comply with it in the first the same days after the start of the Great Patriotic War.

At the initial stage of the war, there were no difficulties with the maintenance of prisoners of war for the simple reason that there were too few of them. From June 22 to December 31, 1941, 9147 people were taken prisoner by the Red Army, and by November 19, 1942, when the counter-offensive at Stalingrad began, another 10,635 enemy soldiers and officers had entered the rear prisoner-of-war camps. Such an insignificant number of prisoners of war made it possible to easily supply them according to the standards given in the following table.

The prisoners were necessary for the Soviet command not only as a labor force, not only as a source of information, but also as an object and subject of propaganda.

Rates of daily allowance for foreign prisoners of war and Soviet prisoners in the USSR in 1939-1946. (in grams)

Already in one of his first directives on June 24, 1941, the head of the Main Directorate of Political Propaganda of the Red Army, Army Commissar of the 1st Rank Mehlis, demanded:

“... to systematically photograph prisoners, especially paratroopers in their clothes, as well as captured and destroyed by our troops German tanks, planes and other military trophies. The pictures are urgently and regularly sent to Moscow. Send also the most interesting interviews with prisoners and documents. All this will be used for propaganda purposes. "

In the leaflets, which were addressed to the German and Finnish soldiers, they were guaranteed life and good treatment. However, Soviet propaganda did not have any noticeable influence on the enemy. One of the reasons for this failure was the repeated killing of German prisoners by the Red Army. There were relatively few such cases, but it would be a big mistake to keep silent about them or try to find an excuse for them, especially since the facts of the inhumane attitude of Soviet soldiers towards German prisoners were immediately widely "promoted" by Nazi propaganda. Subsequently, it was the fear of death at the hands of the "ruthless enemy" that caused the death of many Wehrmacht soldiers, who preferred death from hunger and typhus to Soviet captivity.

Despite the fact that from December 1941 to the end of April 1942 the Red Army was on an almost continuous offensive, it failed to capture a large number of prisoners of war. This is due to the fact that the Wehrmacht units either retreated in time, or quickly released their encircled units, not allowing the Soviet troops to destroy the "cauldrons". As a result, the first large encirclement that the Red Army managed to bring to an end was the encirclement of the German 6th Army at Stalingrad. On November 19, 1942, the Soviet counteroffensive began. A few days later, the encirclement was closed. The Red Army began the gradual elimination of the "cauldron", at the same time fighting off attempts to break through it from the outside.

By Christmas 1942, the attempts of the German command to break through the Soviet defenses and establish contact with the encircled ended in failure. The chance to break out of the "cauldron" was also missed. There was still the illusion that the inhabitants of the "cauldron" could be supplied by air, but the Stalingrad "cauldron" differed from the Demyansk and Kholmsk ones in size, distance from the front line, and most importantly, in the size of the encircled group. But the most important difference was that the Soviet command learned from its mistakes and took measures to combat the "air bridge". Even before the end of November, the Air Force and anti-aircraft artillery destroyed several dozen transport aircraft. By the end of the Stalingrad epic, the Germans had lost 488 "transports" and bombers, as well as about 1000 flight personnel. At the same time, even on the quietest days, the defenders did not receive the 600 tons of supplies due to them per day.

It is worth noting that problems with the supply of Paulus's group began long before the start of the Soviet operation "Uranus". In September 1942, the actual food ration that the soldiers of the 6th Army received was about 1,800 calories per day, while the demand, taking into account the loads, was 3,000–4,000. In October 1942, the command of the 6th Army informed the OKH that, since August, "living conditions throughout the entire range of the 6th Army are equally bad." The organization of additional food supplies due to the requisition of local sources was further impossible (in other words, everything that the soldiers of the valiant Wehrmacht plundered from the civilian population was eaten). For this reason, the command of the 6th Army requested an increase in the daily bread ration from 600 to 750 grams. The constantly growing physical and mental exhaustion of soldiers and officers was superimposed on supply difficulties. By the time the Soviet counteroffensive began, these difficulties seemed terrifying, but the real horror began after November 19. Continuous battles with the advancing Red Army, a slow retreat to Stalingrad, fear of death, which seemed more and more inevitable, constant hypothermia and malnutrition, which gradually turned into hunger, quickly eroded morality and discipline.

Malnutrition was the biggest problem. Since November 26, the food ration in the "cauldron" has been reduced to 350 g of bread and 120 g of meat. On December 1, the grain delivery rate had to be reduced to 300 g. On December 8, the grain delivery rate was reduced to 200 g. At that time, the Germans received horsemeat welds for their skinny rations.

A hungry person quickly loses the ability to think, falls into apathy and becomes indifferent to everything. The defense capability of the German troops was rapidly falling. On December 12 and 14, the command of the 79th Infantry Division reported to the headquarters of the 6th Army that, due to prolonged fighting and insufficient food supplies, the division was no longer able to hold its positions.

By Christmas, for several days, the soldiers of the front line were given an additional 100 g. It is known that at the same time some soldiers in the "cauldron" received no more than 100 g of bread. (For comparison: the same amount - at least in besieged Leningrad, received the children and dependents of Oranienbaum.) Even if this is not the case, such a "diet" for a sufficiently long time for thousands of adult men who experienced extreme physical and mental stress, meant only one thing - death. And she did not keep herself waiting. From November 26 to December 22, 56 deaths were recorded in the 6th Army, "in which nutritional deficiencies played a significant role."

By December 24, there were already 64 such cases. On December 20, a report was received from the IV Army Corps that "two soldiers died due to the loss of strength." It is worth noting that hunger kills adult men even before they become completely dystrophied. They generally endure hunger worse than women. The first victims of malnutrition in besieged Leningrad, for example, were able-bodied and working men, who received more rations than employees or dependents. On January 7, the registered mortality from hunger was already 120 people a day.

Paulus and his subordinates were well aware of the catastrophic situation their troops were in. On December 26, the chief of the rear of the encircled group, Major von Kunovski, in a telegraphic conversation with Colonel Fink, the head of the rear of the 6th Army, who was outside the ring, wrote:

“I ask by all means to ensure that tomorrow 200 tons will be delivered to us by planes… I have never sat so deep in shit in my life.”

However, no amount of pleading could correct the continuously deteriorating situation. In the period from January 1 to January 7, in the LI building, a daily ration of 281 g gross was given per person, while the norm was 800. But the situation in this building was relatively good. On average, for the 6th Army, the distribution of bread was reduced to 50-100 g. The soldiers on the front line received 200 each. It's amazing, but with such a catastrophic shortage of food, some warehouses inside the "cauldron" literally burst with food and in this form fell into the hands of Red Army. This tragic curiosity is connected with the fact that by the end of December, due to an acute shortage of fuel, the freight transport completely stopped, and the riding horses died or were slaughtered for meat. The supply system inside the "cauldron" turned out to be completely disorganized, and often the soldiers died of hunger, not knowing that the saving food was literally a few kilometers away from them. However, in the 6th Army there were fewer and fewer people who could cover such a short distance on foot. In January 20, the commander of one of the companies, which was to make a 1.5-kilometer march, despite the fact that there was no shelling from the Soviet side, told his soldiers: "Whoever lags behind will have to be left lying in the snow, and he will freeze." On January 23, the same company took a four-kilometer march from 6 a.m. to dark.

Since January 24, the supply system in the "boiler" has completely collapsed. According to eyewitness accounts, in some areas of the environment, nutrition improved because there was no longer any record of food distribution. The containers dropped from the planes were stolen, and there was simply no energy to arrange the delivery of the rest. The command took the most draconian measures against the marauders. In the last weeks of the "cauldron" existence, the field gendarmerie shot dozens of soldiers and non-commissioned officers, but most of the encircled people, distraught with hunger, did not care. On the same days, in other areas of the "cauldron" soldiers received 38 grams of bread, and a can of Cola chocolate (several round palm-sized bars of tonic chocolate) was divided into 23 people.

From January 28, food was provided in an organized manner only to the soldiers on the front line. In the last days of the cauldron's existence, most of the sick and wounded, of whom there were already about 20,000 in December, in accordance with Paulus's order did not receive any food at all. Even taking into account the fact that a significant number of the wounded had managed to be taken out by planes, the headquarters of the 6th Army, which did not control the situation, believed that on January 26 there were 30-40 thousand of them. The walking wounded and sick roamed in droves in search of a shrinking cauldron to eat throughout the territory, infecting soldiers who were not yet sick.

According to unconfirmed reports, cases of cannibalism were observed in the 20th of January.

Another scourge of the army surrounded at Stalingrad was the cold. It cannot be said that the late autumn and winter of 1942-1943. in the Volga steppes were somehow especially extreme. So, on December 5, the air temperature was 0 degrees. On the night of December 10-11, it dropped to minus 9, and on December 15 again rose to zero. It got very cold in January. During the month, the temperature at night ranged from minus 14 to 23 degrees below zero. On January 25-26, when the agony of Paulus's army began, the thermometers dropped to minus 22. The average daily temperature in January ranged from zero to five degrees below zero. At the same time, a sharp and damp cold wind constantly blew through the Stalingrad steppe. Another feature of the Volga steppes, like any others, is the almost complete absence of trees in them. The only place from where it would theoretically be possible to deliver fuel (wood or coal) was Stalingrad. However, there was nothing to deliver it. As a result, another "silent killer" joined the famine. Under normal conditions, when a person can warm up and rest, when he eats normally, a long stay in the cold does not pose any danger to him. The situation in Stalingrad was different. Of course, the German command took into account the lessons of the winter of 1941/42. For the Wehrmacht, warm cotton sets, fur hats with earflaps and a lot of devices for heating dugouts were developed. Part of this wealth ended up in the 6th Army, but all the soldiers did not have enough warm clothes. However, as the inhabitants of the "cauldron" died out, it became easier and easier to get clothes, since the corpses no longer need them. In fact, by the time of Paulus' surrender, the needs of those surrounded in warm clothes were satisfied, and many times over. However, in order to keep warm, a person needs fire, and it turned out to be too difficult to get it. Cold and dampness did their job. Frostbite and frostbite, exacerbation of chronic diseases, problems of the immune system, pneumonia, kidney disease, furunculosis, eczema - this is just a small list of diseases that persistent hypothermia brings to a person. It was especially hard for the wounded soldiers in the cold. Even a minor scratch could turn into gangrene. The horror was that the soldiers, even moderately wounded, were subject to immediate evacuation to the rear. The original concept of "Blitzkrieg Medicine" did not assume that the Wehrmacht would fall into cauldrons from which it was impossible to take out the wounded, and excluded battalion and regimental first aid posts from the evacuation system. On the front line, in the troops, there were only first aid equipment and almost no qualified surgeons. Thus, the wounded were doomed to die.

On December 30, the Deputy People's Commissar of Internal Affairs of the USSR Ivan Serov provided his patron with a memorandum, which said:

“In connection with the successful operations of the Red Army units on the South-West, Stalingrad and Don fronts, the dispatch of prisoners of war is proceeding with great difficulties, as a result of which there is a large mortality rate among prisoners of war.

The main causes of death are found to be:

1. Romanian and Italian prisoners of war from 6-7 to 10 days before surrender did not receive food due to the fact that all food supplied to the front went primarily to German units.

2. When captured, our units of prisoners of war are driven on foot 200-300 km to the railway, while their supply with rear units of the Red Army is not organized and often for 2-3 days on the way the prisoners of war are not fed at all.

3. Points of concentration of prisoners of war, as well as reception centers of the NKVD should be provided by the Headquarters of the Rear Services of the Red Army with food and uniforms for the route. In practice, this is not done, and in a number of cases, when loading trains, prisoners of war are given flour instead of bread, and there are no dishes.

4. Bodies of military communications of the Red Army serve carriages for sending prisoners of war, not equipped with bunks and stoves, and each carriage is loaded with 50-60 people.

In addition, a significant part of the prisoners of war do not have warm clothes, and the trophy property of the rear services of the fronts and armies is not allocated for these purposes, despite the instructions of Comrade Khrulev on these issues ...

And, finally, in spite of the Regulations on Prisoners of War, approved by the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, and the order of the Chief Military Administration of the Red Army, wounded and sick prisoners of war are not admitted to front-line hospitals and are sent to reception centers. "

This memo gave rise to a rather harsh reaction at the very top of the Red Army command. Already on January 2, 1943, the order of the People's Commissar of Defense No. 001 was issued. It was signed by the Deputy People's Commissar, Chief of the RKKA Quartermaster Service, Colonel-General of the Quartermaster Service A.B. Khrulev, but there is no doubt that this paper did not escape the attention of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief himself:

The practice of organizing the direction and support of prisoners of war at the front and on the way to the rear camps establishes a number of serious shortcomings:

1. Prisoners of war are detained for a long time in the units of the Red Army. From the moment of capture until they arrive at the embarkation points, prisoners of war walk 200-300 kilometers and receive almost no food, as a result of which they arrive severely exhausted and sick.

2. A significant part of the prisoners of war, not having their own warm clothes, despite my instructions, are not provided with captured property.

3. Prisoners of war going from the place of capture to the points of embarkation are often guarded by small groups of fighters or not at all, as a result of which they disperse to settlements.

4. The concentration points for prisoners of war, as well as the reception centers of the NKVD, which, in accordance with the instructions of the Headquarters of the Rear Services of the Red Army and the Main Directorate of Food Supply of the Red Army, must be provided with food, material provisions and transport by the fronts, receive them in extremely limited quantities that do not satisfy the minimum needs. This does not allow the provision of prisoners of war according to the established standards of allowance.

5. VOSO fronts untimely and in insufficient quantities allocate rolling stock for sending prisoners of war to the rear camps; in addition, they provide wagons that are completely not equipped for human transportation: without bunks, stoves, toilet bowls, firewood and household equipment.

6. Contrary to the regulations on prisoners of war, approved by the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, and the order of the Glavvoensanupra, wounded and sick prisoners of war are not admitted to front-line hospitals and are sent to reception centers and camps of the NKVD with general stages.

For these reasons, a significant part of the prisoners of war is exhausted and dies even before being sent to the rear, as well as on the way.

In order to decisively eliminate shortcomings in the provision of prisoners of war and preserve them as a labor force, I order:

Front Commander:

1. Ensure the immediate dispatch of prisoners of war by military units to the concentration points. To speed up the dispatch, use all types of transport coming empty from the front.

2. To oblige the commanders of the units to feed the prisoners of war on the way before transferring them to the reception centers of the NKVD in accordance with the norms approved by the Decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR No. 18747874s. Columns of prisoners of war should be provided with field kitchens from captured property and the necessary transport for transporting food.

3. In accordance with the regulations on prisoners of war, approved by the Decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR No. 17987800s of July 1, 1941, timely provide all types of medical assistance to the wounded and sick prisoners of war.

To categorically prohibit the sending in general order of the wounded, sick, frostbitten and severely exhausted prisoners of war and their transfer to the reception centers of the NKVD. These groups of prisoners of war should be hospitalized, followed by evacuation to the rear special hospitals, contenting them according to the standards established for sick prisoners of war.

4. Allocate a sufficient number of military guards to escort prisoners of war from the place of capture to the reception centers of the NKVD.

5. In order to avoid lengthy pedestrian crossings, bring the loading points of prisoners of war as close as possible to the places of their concentration.

6. Unit commanders, when sending prisoners of war, shall hand them over to the convoy according to an act indicating the number of escorted persons, the stock of food provided for the prisoners of war, and the property and transport attached to the convoy-echelon. The act of acceptance of prisoners of war must be presented upon delivery to reception centers.

To the chiefs of the convoys, according to the act, transfer all documents seized from prisoners of war for their delivery to the reception centers of the NKVD.

7. The daily foot crossing of prisoners of war shall be limited to 25-30 kilometers. Every 25-30 kilometers of the pedestrian crossing, arrange halts and overnight stays, arrange for the delivery of hot food, boiling water to prisoners of war and provide the possibility of heating.

8. Leave clothes, shoes, linen, bedding and dishes with prisoners of war. If prisoners of war do not have warm clothing, shoes and individual utensils, it is imperative to issue the missing items from the captured property, as well as from the belongings of killed and deceased enemy soldiers and officers.

9. Commander of fronts and military districts:

a) in accordance with the orders of the headquarters of the Main Directorate of Logistics of the Red Army No. 24/103892 dated 30.11.42 and the Main Directorate of Food Supply of the Red Army No. 3911 / sh dated 10.12.42, immediately check the provision of reception points of the NKVD and food distribution camps, to create the necessary supplies at points and in distribution camps for uninterrupted food for prisoners of war;

b) fully provide the reception centers and distribution camps of the NKVD with transport and household inventory. In the event of a massive influx of prisoners of war, immediately allocate additional necessary transport and equipment to the points and camps.

10. To the head of the VOSO of the Red Army:

a) ensure the supply of the required number of wagons for the immediate dispatch of prisoners of war to the camps; equip wagons with bunks, stoves, toilet bowls and uninterruptedly supply fuel along the route; to use for the evacuation of prisoners of war to the rear echelons released from the combat personnel;

b) ensure the rapid advancement of echelons along the way along with military transport;

c) to organize in the VOSO Directorate of the Red Army dispatch control over the advancement of echelons with prisoners of war;

d) establish norms for loading prisoners of war: in two-axle cars - 44-50 people, four-axle - 80-90 people. Echelons of prisoners of war to form no more than 1,500 people in each;

e) to ensure uninterrupted hot meals for prisoners of war and replenishment of the travel stock of food at all military food and nutrition points according to certificates issued by military units, reception centers and NKVD camps;

f) to organize a reliable supply of drinking water to prisoners of war, to provide each two-axle carriage with three and four-axle - five buckets.

11. To the chief of the Glavsanupra of the Red Army:

a) to ensure the hospitalization of the wounded, sick, frostbitten and severely exhausted prisoners of war in the medical institutions of the Red Army at the front and in the front line;

b) organize their immediate evacuation to the rear special hospitals;

c) to provide the necessary medical personnel with a supply of medicines for the medical and sanitary services of prisoners of war on the way. For these purposes also to use medical personnel from prisoners of war;

d) organize at the evacuation points a review and inspection of the passing trains with prisoners of war and the provision of medical assistance to the sick. Those who cannot follow due to health reasons are immediately removed from the echelons and hospitalized in the nearest hospitals with subsequent re-shipment to the rear special hospitals;

e) to carry out sanitary treatment of prisoners of war with disinfection of their personal belongings on the route of the echelons;

f) organize a complex of anti-epidemic measures among prisoners of war (before transferring them to the NKVD camps).

12. To prohibit the sending of prisoners of war in not equipped for human transportation and non-insulated wagons, without the necessary supplies of fuel, travel supplies of food and household equipment, as well as undressed or bare for the season.

Deputy People's Commissar of Defense Colonel-General of the Quartermaster Service A. Khrulev.

Looking ahead, it makes sense to clarify that throughout 1943 it was not possible to establish a normal evacuation of prisoners of war from the front. It must be assumed that such an important order was issued too late, and it would be foolish to expect that it could be properly executed in less than a month, when a stream of emaciated and sick prisoners of war fell upon the Red Army.

In the first days of January 1943, the commander of the Don Front, Colonel-General Rokossovsky, together with the representative of the Headquarters, Colonel-General of Artillery Voronov, recalled ancient times and two days before the start of the operation to eliminate the "cauldron", with the approval of Moscow, they turned to the commander of the German 6- 1st Army to Colonel-General Paulus with an ultimatum as follows.

“The 6th German Army, the formations of the 4th Panzer Army and the reinforcement units attached to them have been in complete encirclement since November 23rd, 1942. Units of the Red Army surrounded this group of German troops in a dense ring. All hopes for the salvation of your troops by the offensive of the German troops from the south and southwest did not come true. The German troops hurrying to help you are defeated by the Red Army, and the remnants of these troops are retreating to Rostov. German transport aircraft transporting you a hungry ration of food, ammunition and fuel, due to the successful, rapid progress

The Red Army is often forced to change airfields and fly to the location of the encircled troops from afar. In addition, the German transport aviation suffers huge losses in aircraft and crews from the Russian aviation. Her help to the encircled troops becomes unrealistic.

The position of your encircled troops is dire. They experience hunger, disease and cold. The harsh Russian winter is just beginning; severe frosts, cold winds and blizzards are still ahead, and your soldiers are not provided with winter uniforms and are in difficult unsanitary conditions.

You, as the Commander, and all the officers of the encircled troops understand perfectly well that you have no real possibilities to break through the encirclement ring. Your position is hopeless and further resistance makes no sense.

In the current desperate situation for you, in order to avoid unnecessary bloodshed, we suggest that you accept the following terms of surrender:

1. All the German encircled troops, led by you and your headquarters, cease resistance.

2. To you in an organized manner to transfer to our disposal all personnel, weapons, all military equipment and military property in good condition.

We guarantee life and safety to all officers, non-commissioned officers and soldiers who have ceased resistance, and after the end of the war, return to Germany or any country where prisoners of war wish.

We keep military uniforms, insignia and orders, personal belongings, values ​​for all personnel of the surrendered troops, and cold for the higher officers.

All surrendered officers, non-commissioned officers and soldiers will immediately be provided with normal food. All the wounded, sick and frostbitten will receive medical assistance.

Your reply is expected at 15:00 Moscow time on January 9, 1943 in writing through your personally appointed representative, who must be followed in a car with a white flag on the road from KONNY to KOTLUBAN station.

Your representative will be met by trusted Russian commanders in area "B" 0.5 km southeast of junction 564 at 15:00 on January 9, 1943.

If you reject our proposal of surrender, we warn you that the troops of the Red Army and the Red Air Fleet will be forced to deal with the destruction of the encircled German troops, and you will be responsible for their destruction. "

Paulus rejected the ultimatum (according to Rokossovsky's recollections, Soviet envoys were fired upon from the German side), and on January 10, 1943, hell broke out on the approaches to Stalingrad ...

“On January 10, at 8:5 am, the Russians begin an even stronger artillery attack than on November 19: for 55 minutes,“ Stalin's organs ”howl, heavy guns are thundering — volley after volley without interruption. Hurricane fire plows the whole earth. The last assault on the boiler began.

Then the gunfire fades away, white-painted tanks approach, followed by submachine gunners in camouflage coats. We leave Marinovka, then Dmitrievka. All living things scurry into the Rossoshka valley. We dig in at Dubinin, and two days later we find ourselves in the area of ​​the Nursery station in Tolovaya Balka. The boiler is gradually shrinking from west to east: on the 15th to Rossoshka, on the 18th to the Voroponovo - Nursery - Khutor Gonchara line, on the 22nd to Verkhne-Elshashsh - Gumrak. Then we rent Gumrak. The last opportunity to take out the wounded by airplanes and receive ammunition and food is disappearing.

(…) Decay is increasing. Other officers, such as the chief of the operational department of the headquarters of our division, Major Vilutski, flee by plane. After the loss of the Nursery, the planes land in Gumrak, which the Russians are constantly firing at. Some officers, after the disbandment of their units, secretly flee to Stalingrad. More and more officers want to single-handedly break through to the retreating German front. There are such people in my battle group (…) ”.

Soon Steidle himself joined this dull stream. At that time, street fighting was still going on in Stalingrad, the city was literally packed with soldiers and officers who did not know what to do now. Someone cherished the hope of getting out of the cauldron on their own, someone wanted to understand what was happening and receive clear orders, and someone simply hoped to find food and shelter in the city. Neither one nor the other, nor the third have achieved their goals. Stalingrad in the second half of January turned into an island of despair, shelled from all sides.

“An innumerable number of soldiers are moving along the street in front of the barred windows. For many days they have been moving from one trench to another, rummaging in abandoned cars. Many of them came from fortified cellars on the outskirts of Stalingrad; they were driven out of there by Soviet assault groups; here they are looking for a place to hide. An officer appears here and there. In this commotion, he is trying to gather combat-ready soldiers. However, many of them choose to join a unit as stragglers. Soviet troops attack and move non-stop from one block, garden, factory area to another, seizing position after position. (...) Many are extremely tired to end this on their own and leave this crumbling front. Such people continue to fight, because next to them there are others who intend to defend their lives to the last patron, those who still see the real enemy in the Soviet soldier or who are afraid of retribution.

Around us - the ruins and smoking ruins of a huge city, and behind them flows the Volga. We are being fired on from all sides. Where a tank appears, the Soviet infantry is also visible there, following directly behind the T-34. Shots and the terrible music of the "Stalinist organs" are clearly audible, which at short intervals conduct barrage fire. It has long been known that there is no defense against them. The apathy is so great that it no longer bothers you. It is more important to pull out something edible from the pockets or rusks of the killed and wounded. If someone finds canned meat, he slowly eats it, and he scrubs the box with swollen fingers, as if it depends on these last leftovers whether he survives or not. And here is another ghastly sight: three or four soldiers crouched around a dead horse, ripping off pieces of meat and eating it raw.

This is the situation "at the front", at the forefront. The generals know it as well as we do. They are being "informed" about all this, and they are considering new defensive measures. "

Finally, from January 30 to February 2, the remnants of the German troops defending in the cauldron laid down their arms. To the surprise of the Soviet military (who estimated the encircled grouping at about 86 thousand people), only 91,545 Germans were captured from January 10 to February 22, 1943 (including 24 generals and about 2,500 officers), and there were also tens of thousands dead. The condition of the prisoners was terrible. More than 500 people were unconscious, 70 percent had dystrophy, almost all suffered from vitamin deficiency and were in a state of extreme physical and mental exhaustion. Pneumonia, tuberculosis, heart disease and kidney disease were widespread. Almost 60 percent of the prisoners had 2nd and 3rd degree frostbite with complications in the form of gangrene and general blood poisoning. Finally, about 10 percent were so hopeless that there was no way to save them. Among other things, the prisoners entered the troops unevenly, throughout January, and the order to create a large front camp was given on the 26th of this month. Although the camp, or rather several distribution camps, united into administration No. 108, with its center in the village of Beketovka, began to function already in early February, it was certainly not possible to properly equip it.

But first, the prisoners had to be taken out of Stalingrad and somehow delivered to the camps, which were located approximately at a distance from the city, not exceeding the daily march of a military unit consisting of healthy people. Nowadays, Beketovka has already entered the city limits of Volgograd. On a summer day, the walk from the city center to this area takes about five hours. In winter, it will take more time, but for a healthy person, this "journey" will not be too difficult. The Germans, exhausted to the limit, are a different matter. Nevertheless, they had to be urgently withdrawn from Stalingrad. The city was almost completely destroyed. There were no premises suitable for accommodating a huge number of people, the water supply system did not function. Typhus and other infectious diseases continued to spread among the prisoners. Leaving them in Stalingrad meant condemning them to death. Long marches to the camps did not bode well either, but at least left chances of salvation. At any moment, the city could turn into an epidemic focus, and fatal diseases spread to the Red Army, who also gathered in Stalingrad in a huge number. Already on February 3-4, the Germans capable of moving, who were still waiting to be shot, were lined up in columns and began to be taken out of the city.

Some modern researchers compare the withdrawal of prisoners of war from Stalingrad with the "death marches" in Southeast Asia, during which thousands of American and British prisoners of war were killed at the hands of the Japanese. Are there grounds for such comparisons? More likely no than yes. First, the atrocities of the Japanese are supported by concrete and abundant evidence. Secondly, the Americans and the British were captured healthy or relatively healthy (as, by the way, the Red Army soldiers were taken prisoner by the Germans). In the case of Stalingrad, the convoys had to deal with people, a significant part of whom were actually dying. There is anonymous evidence that some, completely exhausted prisoners who could no longer move, were shot by guards. At the same time, the military doctor Otto Rühle, in his book "Healing in Elabuga", says that all the fallen German soldiers were transferred to a sled and taken to the camp. And here is how Colonel Steidle describes his way to the camp:

“A group of officers, replenished by several soldiers and non-commissioned officers, was formed in a column of eight people (in eight rows). A march was coming, which demanded from us the exertion of all our forces. We took each other's arms. We tried to restrain the pace of the march. But for those who walked at the end of the column, he was still too fast. The calls and requests to go slower did not stop, and this was all the more understandable since we took with us many with sore legs, and they could hardly move along the well-worn, glistening as a mirror, icy road. What have I not seen as a soldier on these marches! Endless rows of houses, and in front of them - even in small huts - lovingly groomed gardens and kindergartens, and behind them are playing children, for whom everything that happens has either become commonplace or remains incomprehensible. And then endless fields stretched all the time, interspersed with forest belts and steep or gentle hills. The outlines of industrial plants were visible in the distance. For hours we marched or drove along railways and canals. All methods of crossing were tested, including the use of a mountain road at dizzying heights. And then again marches past the smoking ruins, into which the settlements that have existed for centuries have been turned. (…) Snow-covered fields stretched on both sides of our path. At least, so it seemed to us on that January morning, when the frosty air mixed with the descending fog, and the earth seemed to be lost in infinity. Only from time to time could one see the crowded prisoners of war who, like us, made this march, a march of guilt and shame! (…) After about two hours we reached a large group of buildings at the entrance to Beketovka. "

At the same time, Steidle emphasizes the correct behavior of the convoy and the fact that the soldiers drove away civilians who were trying to approach the convoy with shots into the air.

Prisoners of war in Stalingrad continued to arrive until February 22, 1943. On this day, there were 91,545 enemy servicemen in the city and its environs, some of whom were already dead. In the very first days, great problems arose with the placement of prisoners. In particular, the Beketov camp was not equipped with sufficient space. Let's turn to Steidle's memories again:

“We were placed there in all rooms from basement to attic, mostly in groups of eight, ten or fifteen people. Who at first did not seize a place for himself, he had to stand or sit on the landings of the stairs as necessary. But this building had windows, a roof, water and a temporarily equipped kitchen. There were latrines in front of the main building. In the next building there was a sanitary unit with Soviet doctors and nurses. We were allowed to walk around the large courtyard at any time of the day, to meet and talk to each other.

To avoid typhus, cholera, plague, and everything else that could arise with such a crowd, a large campaign for preventive vaccinations was organized. However, for many, this event was belated. Epidemics and serious illnesses were common even in Stalingrad. Those who fell ill would die alone or among their comrades, wherever they had to: in a crowded basement hastily equipped for an infirmary, in some corner, in a snowy trench. Nobody asked why the other died. The overcoat, scarf, jacket of the dead did not disappear - the living needed it. It was through them that a lot of people became infected. And here, in Beketovka, what we considered completely impossible, but which made extremely clear the criminal nature of Hitler's actions, and our own guilt for not fulfilling a long-ripe decision: a physical, mental and spiritual collapse of an unprecedented scale. Many who managed to get out of the stalingrad hell could not stand it and died from typhus, dysentery, or complete exhaustion of physical and mental strength. Anyone who was still alive a few minutes ago could suddenly collapse to the floor and in a quarter of an hour be among the dead. Any step could be fatal for many. A step into the courtyard, from which you will never return, a step for water that you will no longer drink, a step with a loaf of bread under your arm, which you will no longer eat ... Suddenly, the heart stopped beating.

Soviet women, doctors and nurses, often sacrificing themselves and not knowing rest, fought against mortality. They saved many and helped everyone. And yet, more than one week passed before it was possible to stop the epidemics. "

Stalingrad prisoners were sent not only to the outskirts of the destroyed city. In general, it was supposed to leave the wounded, the sick and another 20,000 people on the spot, who were supposed to be engaged in the restoration of Stalingrad. Others were to be assigned to camps located in other parts of the country. So, the surviving officers and generals were placed in Krasnogorsk, Elabuga, Suzdal and Ivanovo region near Moscow. It so happened that it was those who were taken out of the Stalingrad region that made up a significant part of the survivors. Most of the prisoners faced a sad fate. First, the wounded died. At the time of capture, at least 40,000 people needed immediate hospitalization. However, Camp 108 was not initially equipped with hospitals. They began their work only on February 15th. By February 21, 8696 prisoners of war had already received medical assistance, of which 2,775 were frostbite, and 1969 needed surgical operations due to injuries or illnesses. Despite this, people continued to die.

The general death rate among prisoners of war seriously worried the leadership of the USSR. In March, a joint commission of the People's Commissariat for Health, NGOs, NKVD and the Executive Committee of the Union of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies was formed, which was to examine the camps of the Administration of Camp 108 and determine the causes of such a high mortality rate. At the end of the month, the commission examined the camp in Khrenovoe. The survey report said:

“According to the acts of physical condition of the prisoners of war who arrived at the camp, they are characterized by the following data: a) healthy - 29 percent,

b) sick and malnourished - 71 percent. The physical condition was determined by their appearance; the prisoners of war who could move independently belonged to the healthy group. "

Another commission, which examined the Velsk prisoner of war camp a few days later, wrote in its statement:

“The prisoners of war are shown to be extremely lousy, their condition is very emaciated. 57 percent

mortality falls on dystrophy, 33 percent. - for typhus and 10 percent. - for other diseases ... Typhus, lice, vitamin deficiency were noted among German prisoners of war while they were surrounded in the Stalingrad region. "

In the general conclusions of the commission, it was said that many prisoners of war arrived in the camps with diseases that were irreversible. Be that as it may, by May 10, 1943, 35,099 of the first inhabitants of the Beketov camps were hospitalized, 28,098 people were sent to other camps, and another 27,078 people died. Judging by the fact that after the war, no more than 6,000 people who were captured at Stalingrad returned to Germany, among whom there were many officers whose stay in captivity took place in relatively comfortable conditions, it can be assumed that most of the "Stalingradians" captured by the Red Army did not survive 1943 From the mistakes made in the winter of 1943, when the Soviet side had to accept a large group of prisoners of war, conclusions were drawn. Already in mid-May, all the chiefs of the camps were sent a Directive of the NKVD of the USSR on the need to take measures to improve the sanitary and living conditions of prisoners of war.

Sov. secretly

To the head of the NKVD _ t.

Copy: Chief of the _____ POW camp

T. __________________

Considering that the bulk of prisoners of war captured in the winter of 1942/43, by the time of capture, turned out to be extremely exhausted, sick, wounded and frostbitten, and therefore work to restore the physical condition of prisoners of war and the elimination of cases of morbidity and mortality of prisoners of war until recently gave the proper results, the NKVD of the USSR, in addition to the previously given directives, suggests:

1. To take the necessary measures to improve the living conditions of prisoners of war. Bring living quarters and camp grounds to an exemplary sanitary condition. Ensure sufficient throughput of baths, disinfection chambers and laundries, completely eliminate lice among prisoners of war.

2. To improve the treatment of each individual prisoner of war.

3. To organize differentiated nutritional therapy for the malnourished and sick.

4. To pass the entire contingent of prisoners of war through the medical commission and release the weakened from work with enrollment in the health teams, giving them 750 grams of bread a day and a 25% increase in food until they are fully restored to working capacity. For prisoners of war with limited working capacity, establish a 25-50% reduction in the production rate with the issuance of a full food rate to them.

Medical examination of prisoners of war shall be carried out at least once a month.

5. To take measures to ensure the full and timely supply of POW camps with all kinds of food, in particular vegetables, vitamin products and food for the diet.

6. Provide the camp with underwear and bedding as needed. To ensure the implementation of these measures to prevent mortality and the establishment of medical and sanitary services for prisoners of war, the head of the UNKVD t ._______ personally go to the site and take measures to provide assistance to the camp.

On the state of the prisoner of war camp and the implementation of this directive, the head of the UNKVD, t ._______, should regularly report to the NKVD of the USSR through the head of the Prisoners of War Department, Major General Petrov.

Deputy Commissar Comrade Kruglov to systematically check the implementation of this directive.

People's Commissar of Internal Affairs of the USSR

General Commissioner for State Security L. Beria ".

In the future, excesses similar to Stalingrad did not occur in Soviet prisoner-of-war camps. In total, over the period from 1941 to 1949, more than 580 thousand prisoners of war of various nationalities died or died in the USSR from various reasons - 15 percent of the total number of those taken prisoner. For comparison, the loss of Soviet prisoners of war was 57 percent. If we talk about the main cause of death of the Stalingrad prisoners, then it is obvious - this is Paulus's refusal to sign the surrender on January 8. There is no doubt that in this case, too, many German soldiers did not survive, but most would have been able to escape. Actually, if a significant part of the captured German generals and officers did not see the indifference with which their own command treats their fate, and then did not feel the dedication with which ordinary Soviet people, their enemies, fought for their health, it is unlikely that they would become to participate in the creation of the Free Germany committee.

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For 70 years, my mother's family album has kept photographs of German women and children whom she had never seen, and who had not the slightest idea about the existence of a Muscovite Evgenia Mikhailovna Cherkashina (Sokolova). And, nevertheless, she keeps these photos of people completely unknown to her. What for?

February 1943 ... The Sixth Army of General Paulus froze to death at Stalingrad. Warm clothes were collected all over Germany. Even a historical relic - the fur coat of Bismarck himself - was donated to the fund for winter clothing. To maintain the military spirit, Colonel-General von Paulus was awarded the rank of field marshal. But already nothing could save the grouping of German troops at Stalingrad - neither Bismarck's fur coat, nor Paulus's field marshal's baton ...

“In January 1943,” a military historian testifies, “13 distribution camps for prisoners of Nazi soldiers and officers were formed on the territory of the city ... The largest number of prisoners of war fell on February 2 - 91,545. 27,078 Hitlerites died of wounds, frostbite and exhaustion received in the encirclement. "

In February 1943, we, a group of graduates of the 1st Moscow Medical Institute, were summoned to the Lubyanka, - says Evgenia Mikhailovna. “We entered this massive house, from the height of which, according to rumor, Siberia was visible, with caution. And although no one knew any guilt for themselves, nevertheless, goose bumps ran through the skin every time another sentry in the corridor checked our documents. There was a very heavy aura in this Big House ...

At the Lubyanka, we were informed, - continues Evgenia Mikhailovna, - that we are in the Office for Prisoners of War and Internees, and that our group is to fly to Stalingrad, where Soviet troops captured many German soldiers. And although we have not yet received our diplomas, we were assigned to prisoner-of-war camps as ordinary doctors. On one of the last days of winter, we flew on a Douglas plane to Stalingrad. This was my first flight in an airplane and in the military sky. We flew for a long time with many landings. Before the flight we were well fed, there was even such a forgotten delicacy as sandwiches with cheese, hot strong tea with sugar. But, alas, such rare dishes did not linger long in our stomachs: turbulence and air sickness did their job. True, I endured the hardships of the road quite tolerably, and therefore in the very first postcard I told my mother that I had endured the flight well, but almost everyone had to “fly to Riga”. “Run to Riga” - they used to say in the village when they wanted to say that someone had vomited. My simple-minded mother understood this allegory literally and decided that our plane was landed in Riga, occupied by the Germans. She cried for a whole week until my letter arrived from Stalingrad.

I will not describe the ruins of this city. Everything around for many miles was turned into a desert, covered with snow. This is exactly what Camp 108/20 for prisoners looked like, where I was sent with three classmates from the local NKVD administration.
Steppe and steppe all around ... Before the war, there was a subsidiary farm of the tractor plant. The Germans were sitting in large concrete vats, where they used to pickle cucumbers and cabbage. They were lucky, because they, at least, sheltered, if not from the frost, then from the piercing icy wind. Others huddled under the canopies of the former potato heaps, some simply huddled in flocks to cover at least their backs. There were Germans, Italians, Hungarians and Romanians. Romanians were rescued by black fur hats like papas. And many Germans were in summer field caps tied with all kinds of rags. It was a pity to look at them. Although the invaders of our land, but still people. Moreover, many came to these steppes by someone else's will.

In the miraculously survived gatehouse, the camp administration and our "medical unit" were located.

I never thought that my first patients would be Germans, captured soldiers ... In a white coat over a padded jacket, I descended a rope ladder to the bottom of stinking concrete cauldrons, where people were filled, indeed, like herring in a barrel. There was no guard next to me, of course I was afraid: you never know what could come to the head of yesterday's "supermen", and now people who are almost mad with suffering and doom? However, they were terribly happy about my visits - at least someone shows concern for them. I bandaged the wounded, gave pills to the sick, but most often I had to ascertain - death, death, death ... Death from blood poisoning, death from exhaustion, death from typhus ...

No one deliberately starved them in revenge, as some Western journalists later argued decades later. It's just that everything around was destroyed by the war - scorched earth lay for hundreds of miles. Even their wounded were not always able to provide shelter, warmth, food, medicine ...
For them, who found themselves at the bottom of hellish cauldrons during their lifetime, even though they were made of concrete, the appearance of a Russian girl in a white coat was tantamount to the descent of an angel into purgatory. They called her "Fraulein Engel". The dying pushed photographs of their wives and children into her hands, hoping for a miracle to return to them. Each tried to attract her attention with him, stuffed soldiers' crafts, homemade cigarette cases, harmonicas into the pockets of the dressing gown ... She studied German at school and at the institute, so at the very least she could communicate with her patients.

Once, after another round, more precisely, a "region" of concrete vats, Sokolova found a small bundle in her pocket, tightly wrapped in a dirty bandage. Unfolded - a cupronickel teaspoon fell on my knees. On the scoop, in colored enamel, was an image of an ocean liner, from all the pipes of which black smoke poured. It was impossible to find out who and in which of the "cauldrons" put this gift into her pocket. She hid the spoon along with the photographs at the bottom of the field bag.

Willingly or unwillingly, the girls-doctors were ready to share the fate of those who were being treated for typhus. Each time after going around the sick, they removed typhoid lice from each other. The first to fall was Zhenya Sokolova.

Together with other patients, I was taken in an open truck back to the hospital. The journey took several hours. I was lying on the edge at the very edge, I blew well, and in addition to typhus, I caught pneumonia. There was practically no chance of survival with such a “bouquet”. But I survived. Probably, someone prayed for me very much. Who? Mom, of course ...

However, it was not only her mother who prayed for her ... In one of the concrete vats they learned that "Fraulein Engel" would not come to them again - she fell with typhus. Among the soldiers sitting there was a regimental chaplain, who invited everyone to pray for the health of the Russian girl. And he began to read a prayer. All the others echoed him out of tune. The prayers of the sufferers are always intelligible. And heaven heeded the intercession of these doomed people who did not ask for themselves ... She learned about this prayer service from the bottom of her life ten years later, when she arrived in Berlin with her husband, an officer who served in the occupation troops. Once, in a crowded square, a stranger approached her and asked in German: “Frau Engel? Stalingrad ?! " She nodded back. The man disappeared and a minute later caught up with her with flowers in his hands. He handed her a bunch of violets and told her how "Alles Zuber", the whole vat prayed for her health ...


After Stalingrad, Evgenia Mikhailovna Cherkashina worked as a doctor in the Moscow evacuation hospital EG 5022 and treated the Soviet wounded, who also gave her their photographs and their gratitude for the healing.

Today my mother, a retired captain of the medical service, is 94 years old. She has three grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. And we all pray for her health and longevity. And, thank God, she has the strength and clear memory. And he keeps photographs about the war and Stalingrad.

And I, being in Volgograd last year, tried to find traces of that prisoner of war camp and found it! The old-timers showed the way: the village of Beketovka (now included in the city limits). Only there is now not a vegetable storehouse, but trade warehouses. The last vats in which the Germans were sitting were broken down about ten years ago, and the stainless steel lining was scrapped. But history cannot be scrapped ...

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