Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 26 – There are many
Stalinist crimes Russian writers either pass over in silence or minimize, but
one that is especially rarely discussed is the fate of those Russians who
fought on the side of the Germans against the Soviet Union and of White Russian
emigres who were lumped together with them and forcibly returned to Moscow by
the Western allies.
Many Russians and indeed many in the
West feel that the decision of the allies to send these people to the USSR and
that any punishments that Moscow meted out to them were justified. As a result,
their fate has rarely been discussed in the West either, and it is no surprise
that Lord Nicholas Bethell entitled his 1974 study of this process, The Last Secret.
That makes the appearance of an
article by Pavel Zhukov in this week’s Diletant
especially important because it calls Russian attention to this neglected
chapter and signals how at least some Russians now view the fate of those that
they have long been accustomed to view exclusively as Nazi hirelings and
traitors (diletant.media/articles/36258023/).
Few of the Soviet citizens who
fought for Hitler wanted to be returned to the USSR, but as Zhukov points out,
the Western allies “without a twinge of conscience handed them over.” The most
senior Russian commanders involved were shot more or less immediately. But he
says, “for ordinary soldiers,” the Soviets offered them “unexpectedly” a better
fate.
Fearful that Stalin would not
repatriate Western fliers in the camps in eastern Europe – a fact that Bethell
documents but that Zhukov doesn’t mention – the Western allies quickly handed
the Russian Liberation Army soldiers and many Russian emigres over to Moscow.
Only the French, for a brief time, objected: they wanted to guillotine the
Russians involved.
Those returned or sent to the USSR
had to pass through filtration camps, but those who were judged no longer a
threat were sent to live in special settlements. “A harsh and agony-filled
life,” Zhukov acknowledges, but “all the same a life.” The reason for what he
calls this “soft attitude toward traitors” was the shortage of workers in the
USSR as a result of the war.
“There was a logic in this,” the
Diletant writer says. “By means of heavy physical labor, balancing between life
and death, the former soldiers of the Russian Liberation Army redeemed
themselves.” According to him, “more than 45,000 Vlasovites were distributed in
special settlements throughout Western Siberia.
The officers and White emigres were
settled in a special camp near Kemerovo, a facility that had an especially
notorious reputation. “More than half of
those confined there tried to flee, there was the constant threat of risings,
and the percentage of mortality exceeded all imaginable limits.”
Between 1946 and 1952, Zhukov says,
approximately 9,000 Vlasovite soldiers died in these special settlements. In some places, they were treated especially
harshly; in others, they were treated more or less the same way as the
surrounding Soviet population. They were more restricted in terms of moving to
major cities or western border regions.
The special settlements were
disbanded in 1955, and later in the same year, those Vlasovite soldiers who had
managed to survive, Zhukov says, were given a Soviet passport and the chance “to
begin life anew.”
No comments:
Post a Comment