POW = Prisoner Of War, Sotavanki
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoner_of_war
-ja sitten palaan taas historian puolelle
( katselen Ension tuomaa karttaa maailman sodan ajoilta. Kartasta löydän Ze
ven- kylän.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoner_of_war
- POW läpikulkuleiri löytyy Zeven nimisen kylän lähistöllä siitä länteen. Niedersachsenissa Sandpostel-nimisessä paikassa
-ja sitten palaan taas historian puolelle
( katselen Ension tuomaa karttaa maailman sodan ajoilta. Kartasta löydän Ze
ven- kylän.
Koetan löytää
Neuenkirchenin suunnalta senaikaisia karttanimiä kohti
Quackenbrückiä, kun luen Renate rangermannin kirjaa
Quakenbråuckin kylän historiasta. Vanhasta kartasta siten lötyy
asemakylä Zeven, Weser joen yhden itähaaran aluetta,Teufelmoore
Weseristä itään, sen Zeven-kylästä länteen- Zeven kylässä
on ainakin nykyään asema ja bussilinja esim Bremen Zeven välillä.
Ala olevassa kertomuksessa mainitaan Zeven- tällaisessa
yhteydessä:
-
The Sandbostel )camp was liberated on 29 April 1945 by the British Armed Forces of XXX Corps following fighting with the German 15th Panzergrenadier-Division. The camp commandant, however, realizing that the end of the war was close, had already agreed to hand over control of the camp to the prisoners, led by the French Colonel Marcel Albert. On 21 April, the same day that the officer ordered to take control of the camp complained to his superiors about conditions there (see picture), two prisoners carried the call for assistance from the camp to the Guards Armoured Division at Zeven. Two armoured units were sent to Sandbostel but fighting delayed their arrival until 29 April.[6]
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The British discovered around 15,000 surviving POWs in the camp, as well as around 8,000 KZ-inmates.[6]
Tästä artikkelista
löytyy runsaasti POW leirejä. Otan wikipediasitaatin.
POW-leirin nimi oli Stalag X-B. Mitä siellä tapahtui?
Leiri STALAG X-B
toimi saksalaisten ottamien sotavankien läpikulkuleirinä 1939-
1945. ja se sijaitsei lähellä sStandbostel nimistä paikkaa
Ala-Saksenissa. Lounais-saksassa. Satoja tuhansia POW vankeja 55
kansasta kulki tämä-n leirin läpi. Tuhannet kuolivat kurjien
olosuhteiden takia siellä nälkään, tauteihin tai vartijoiden
surmaamina. Kuolleitten määrä on vain arvio: 8000- jopa 50 000
välillä. Siis tuntematon määrä.
-
Stalag X-B was a World War II German Prisoner-of-war camp located near Sandbostel in Lower Saxony in north-western Germany. Between 1939 and 1945 several hundred thousand POWs of 55 nations passed through the camp. Due to the bad conditions in which they were housed, thousands died there of hunger, disease, or were killed by the guards. Estimates of the number of dead range from 8,000 to 50,000.
Contents
Establishment and operation
Sandbostel lies 9 km
south of Bremervörde,
43 km northeast of Bremen.
In what was then the Province
of Hanover, the Lutheran
Church of the State of Hanover opened a camp for out of work
singles and employed them in public works (roadworks, amelioration)
in 1932, during the Great
Depression.[citation
needed]
In 1933, the
Reichsarbeitsdienst
took over the camp and used it later as a Nazi internment camp
for undesirables.[citation
needed]
In August 1939, a commission of Heeresbauamt Bremen
(military construction department) decided to create a
Mannschafts-Stammlager (POW camp) for the local
Wehrkreis X.
In September, construction of the camp began between the village of
Sandbostel and the Arbeitsdienstlager in the
Teufelsmoor.
The latter area was now used as barracks to house the Wehrmacht
guards.[1][2]
Beginning in September 1939, Polish POWs were used to expand the
camp. Initially, huts for around 10,000 prisoners were built. Once it
began operating, the camp was divided into several sub-camps:[1]
-
a Stalag holding enlisted men from the occupied countries (Poland, Belgium, the Netherlands, France, Southeastern Europe and Italy after the armistice)
-
an officers' camp ( Oflag ) for officers from the occupied countries. In 1941, this part of the camp was merged with Oflags elsewhere
-
a Marinelager ( Marlag ), controlled by the Kriegsmarine, holding British sailors, marines and officers. In the fall of 1941, this part of the camp was moved to Westertimke
-
an Internierungslager ( Ilag ), or internment camp for civilian citizens of enemy nations, including members of the British merchant marine. This section was also moved in 1941 to Westertimke[1] (see: Marlag und Milag Nord)
At first, prisoners were housed in tents, but from spring 1940
inmates constructed masonry huts. Later, prefabricated wooded huts
were added. By 1941, there were over 100 huts housing prisoners as
well as latrines, kitchens, buildings for punishment confinement and
the commandant's office. In addition, there was a hospital
(Reservelazarett X-B) and a punishment work camp of two huts
inside the moor.[1]
By 1940, after the German
victory over France, the camp was filled beyond capacity. Stalag
X-B was then expanded to house a total of 30,000 prisoners.[1]
From the fall of 1941, sections of the camp were cleared or moved to
make room for Soviet
prisoners taken during "Operation
Barbarossa". The camp now administered hundreds of
Arbeitskommandos each made up of around 30 forced labourers.
These were supplied to local farmers and industry.[1][3]
There was a clear hierarchy among prisoners. At the top were British
and American POWs, generally treated correctly according to the
Geneva
Convention and receiving numerous aid packages from the
International
Red Cross. As a consequence, they were well-fed until the very
end of the war, when transportation and supply links broke down.
Prisoners from western Europe (French, Belgians) were also treated as
POWs but received less outside help and were not as well-nourished.
However, they were in contact with international help organisations.
Serbian and Polish nationals were denied access to outside observers.
Italians, who came here after September 1943, were deemed traitors by
both the German guards and the other prisoners and were at the low
end of the hierarchy. They were ill-fed and from the fall of 1944
forced to work with the Wehrmacht or be treated as civilian forced
labour. Worst-off of all were the Soviet POWs. They were denied POW
status, received no outside food, and were not allowed access to
international observers. Guards had a special shoot-to-kill policy
for them. Due to the ill-treatment of the Soviets and a lack of
shelter, several epidemics broke out among them. Thousands of them
died from disease, starvation and brutal treatment by guards. They
were buried in mass graves on the camp graveyard (today's war
cemetery).[1]
Among the Italian prisoners, who were mostly soldiers who did not
surrender to the German army after the Cassibile
armistice, was journalist and writer Giovannino
Guareschi, who wrote La favola di Natale ("A
Christmas Fable") there on Christmas 1944. The Canadian
Neurologist Charles
Miller Fisher, who served as a Lieutenant Commander in the
Canadian navy, was interned in this camp after being torpedoed and
rescued by a German ship.[4]
In August 1944, all POW camps were removed from Wehrmacht control and
were assigned to Heinrich
Himmler's Schutzstaffel
(SS). Although this was without immediate consequences at Sandbostel,
in January 1945 POWs were evacuated here from other camps closer to
the frontline. In the final phase of the war, concentration
camp prisoners were relocated to Sandbostel. Around 9,000 former
inmates of Neuengamme
concentration camp and its subcamps were transferred to Stalag
X-B in April 1945.[1]
They were housed in the former Marlag and guarded well but
otherwise left to their own devices: they received no medical help
despite rampant diseases, sanitary conditions were dire and the
inmates went virtually without food. On 20 April, most of the SS
members guarding that section of Stalag X-B marched out of the camp
with several hundred prisoners. After that, the POWs were allowed to
help the remaining former concentration camp inmates with some of
their own food.[5]
Liberation
Letter dated 21
April 1945 about the handover of the camp, exhibited at Neuengamme
concentration camp.
The camp was liberated on 29 April 1945 by the British
Armed Forces of XXX
Corps following fighting with the German 15th
Panzergrenadier-Division. The camp commandant, however,
realizing that the end of the war was close, had already agreed to
hand over control of the camp to the prisoners, led by the French
Colonel Marcel Albert. On 21 April, the same day that the officer
ordered to take control of the camp complained to his superiors about
conditions there (see picture), two prisoners carried the call for
assistance from the camp to the Guards
Armoured Division at Zeven.
Two armoured units were sent to Sandbostel but fighting delayed their
arrival until 29 April.[6]
The British discovered around 15,000 surviving POWs in the camp, as
well as around 8,000 KZ-inmates.[6]
The camp was divided into three sections when liberated. The first
contained allied
prisoners in unsatisfactory conditions, but generally in compliance
with the International Red Cross Convention. Soviet prisoners,
without the Convention's protection, were in substantially worse
conditions. In the third section were around 8,000 civilian prisoners
in appalling conditions, described in the Army medical history as
"utterly horrifying"; "everywhere the dead and dying
sprawled amid the slime of human excrement."[7]
According to members of the British forces present at the liberation,
conditions were so bad, they referred to the Stalag as "Little
Belsen" in a reference to Bergen-Belsen
concentration camp.[3]
The commander of the British Forces in north-western Germany, General
Brian
Horrocks, was called in and ordered local German civilians and
medical orderlies to help with the clean-up, and to bury the numerous
dead bodies. Like at Bergen-Belsen, despite the best efforts of the
British, hundreds of inmates died every day immediately following the
liberation as a result of starvation, typhus
and other diseases.[6]
Estimates of the total number of people who died here in 1939-45
range between 8,000 and 50,000.[2]
There is evidence of at least 5,162 dead. Claims of up to 46,000
killed Soviets alone were made by the Soviet Union but are considered
to be exaggerated.[3]
Inmates were cleaned and transferred to an improvised hospital
outside the camp and thence to convalescence camps. The former Marlag
was burned between 16 and 25 May to prevent a typhus epidemic and the
last 350 patients left the hospital on 3 June.[7]
Other, more serviceable, huts were used by the British to house
imprisoned Nazis and SS members, who were awaiting trial.[6]
Cemeteries
POW camps were required by Wehrmacht regulations to have a cemetery
close-by. Initially, the dead of Stalag X-B were buried in the war
cemetery at Parnewinkel, where a World War I POW camp had been
located previously. As the number of dead rose in 1940, a second
cemetery was established near Sandbostel, about 1.2 kilometres from
the camp.[2][8]
Non-Soviet and Soviet POWs were treated differently even in death.
The former were buried with military honours in individual graves,
the latter in 70 mass graves.[8]
At Sandbostel, the cemetery has two sections. Gräberfeld 1
includes the mass graves. In 1954-56 Gräberfeld 2 received
the roughly 2,400 dead among the former concentration camp inmates
who could not be identified.[9]
Post-war use
British internment camp
As early as 8 July 1945, the British military authorities established
one of nine civilian internment camps in a part of the former Stalag
X-B. At "No. 2 Civil Internment Camp" or "No. 2 CIC"
around 5,000 males, including SS members, were interned. Soon,
inmates were subject to "re-education", intended to turn
Nazi supporters in democrats. To further this goal, internees were
allowed to publish their own newspaper Der Windstoss.[10]
In June 1947, the trials began at the Spruchkammergericht at
Stade. Internees
were not charged with individual crimes but with membership in a
criminal organisation, as defined by the Nuremberg
trials. The court handed down 3,500 verdicts, ranging from
several months to six years imprisonment. However, the time of
internment was counted as time served, so many of the defendants were
released immediately following the trial.[10]
After the last inmates were released on 9 March 1948, the British
closed the camp on 1 August 1948.[10]
Prison
In March 1948, the Justice Department of the State of Lower Saxony
established the Strafgefängnis Lager Sandbostel at the site
of the Stalag. This prison soon housed around 600 male inmates,
imprisoned for periods between two months and two years, mostly for
property-related crimes, in six large huts.[11]
The prison featured a small hospital, workshops and a Protestant
church. Around 110 people worked there, mostly German refugees from
the eastern territories lost after WW II. In 1952, the prison was
dissolved due to falling numbers of incarcerated.[11]
Camp for refugees from the GDR
Beginning in 1952, parts of the camp were used as an emergency
reception centre for refugees from communist Eastern Germany or GDR.
On 1 April 1952, the Federal Ministry for Refugees established the
Notaufnahmelager Sandbostel for young male refugees aged 15 to
24. In September 1952, a similar camp for women was established at
the site of the POW camp at Westertimke. These two camps were under
the supervision of the Durchgangslager Uelzen-Bohldamm and a
committee decided on individuals' admission to Western Germany or to
West-Berlin. Refugees also received help in finding jobs or
apprenticeship positions. Most of the young people were in the camp
for just one or two weeks. At Sandbostel, their number averaged
around 800, at Westertimke around 300. Daily intake at Sandbostel was
up to 100, with roughly the same number leaving each day. In total,
around 250,000 young men and 80,000 young women passed through the
camps.[12]
This use ended around 1960.[2]
Bundeswehr and business park
In 1963, the German
armed forces took over the remaining huts of the camp and used
them to store medical supplies. Ten years later, in 1973, the
Bundeswehr stopped using the facility. The Ministry of Defence for a
while considered building a barracks at the site, but eventually
chose Seedorf as the location.[13]
In 1974, the business park "Immenhain" was established in
the area of the camp not given over to agricultural use. Businesses
set up there included a horse-riding establishment, a reject shop, a
militaria shop and a brothel. This use of the former camp area only
ended with the establishment of the memorial in the 2000s.[13][14]
Memorial
A Soviet memorial erected at the cemetery site in 1945 was dynamited
in 1956 by orders of the Bremervörde district authorities and the
Lower Saxony Ministry of the Interior, due to the memorial's
excessive claims regarding the number of victims. Its inscription had
read "Hier ruhen 46.000 russische Soldaten und Offiziere, zu
Tode gequält in der Nazigefangenschaft" ("Here lie
46,000 Russian soldiers and officers, tortured to death in Nazi
imprisonment").[15]
The remains of most non-Soviet POWs were repatriated to their
countries of origin. The Italians were reinterred at the Italian war
cemetery at Hamburg-Öjendorf. Only around 170 individual graves of
POWs from Poland, Yugoslavia or of unknown nationality remain in the
graveyard at Sandbostel.[2]
A private club was founded in 1992 to work for the maintenance of the
camp site. Since that year, most of the huts were treated as listed
or protected buildings. The creation of a memorial at the site of the
former camp met with substantial local opposition.[16]
In 2004, a foundation (Stiftung Lager Sandbostel) was
established. Following three years of preparations, the Gedenkstätte
Sandbostel was opened in 2007. In April 2013, the permanent
exhibition was opened. Out of a total of around 150 huts, more than
20 remain (largely in the area that used to house the Soviet
prisoners). Some appear mostly as they did in the 1940s, others have
been altered to serve changing needs in the post-war
period.[2][17][18]
References
-
"Kriegsgefangene im Stalag XB (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
-
"Sandbostel camp flyer" (PDF). Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
-
Henkel, Knut (24 April 2013). "Mehr als nur Gedenken in "Klein Belsen" (German)". TAZ. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
-
"KZ-Häftlinge im Stalag X B (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
-
"Die Befreiung der Kriegsgefangenen und der KZ-Häftlinge (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 6 March 2014.
-
"Kriegsgräberstätte Parnewinkel (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
-
"Kriegsgräberstätte in Sandbostel (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
-
"No 2 CIC – Internierungscamp der britischen Armee (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
-
"Strafgefängnis (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
-
"Notaufnahmelager für jugendliche DDR-Flüchtlinge (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
-
"Weitere Nachnutzung (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
-
Bölsche, Jochen (15 January 2010). "Vergessene Orte - Kannibalen im Stalag XB (German)". Spiegel. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
-
"Kriegsgräberstätten als Lernort: "Sandbostel" (German)". Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
-
Rixmann, Solveig (14 March 2011). "Stalag XB nahe Sandbostel (German)". Weser-Kurier. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
-
"Gedenkstätte Lager Sandbostel (German)". Stiftung Lager Sandbostel. Retrieved 6 March 2014.
-
Borgsen, W./Volland, K. (2010), Stalag X B Sandbostel, Edition Temmen, ISBN 9783926958655.
-
Ehresmann, A. (2013), Das Stalag X B Sandbostel. Geschichte und Nachgeschichte eines Kriegsgefangenenlagers (German). In: Gedenkstättenrundbrief Nr. 171 (09/2013), p. 19-31. Available online at [1]
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