Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 30 – It is sometimes said that it is far easier to show courage when
one has an audience than when one is alone, and it is certainly the case that
some of the greatest heroism is displayed in wars not by those who are fighting
on the front but by those who are behind it or still worse prisoners of the
enemy.
But
that heroism is far less often recalled, let alone celebrated, in Russia or
anywhere else; and that makes a blog post about the fate of 101 Uzbeks who
found themselves prisoners of war in the Netherlands during World War II all
the more unusual and precious because their achievement was to “remain human in
inhuman conditions.”
That
is the judgment of Russian blogger Valery Grachikov first reported on Living
Journal and then republished by Novyye
izvestiya (valerongrach.livejournal.com/729018.html
and newizv.ru/news/society/30-09-2018/ostatsya-lyudmi-kak-veli-sebya-plennye-uzbeki-v-fashistkom-kontslagere).
He
recounts the history of a group of Uzbek soldiers who were taken prisoner in
the first months of the war as were so many others. They were sent to a German
POW camp in the Netherlands, and a Dutch prisoner in the same camp recalled
that “they were completely unlike Russians,” short, with round faces and
different eyes.
Unlike
the other prisoners, their German captors viewed the Uzbeks as true
“untermenschen” and did not put them in a baracks but simply in an open field
surrounded by barbed wire, few them almost nothing, forced them to do the worst
kind of work, and then beat them.
German
propagandists, the Dutch fellow prisoner says, thought they could make use of
the Uzbeks because the latter provided “an ideal contrast” with German
soldiers. And so they sent a film crew to photograph them. The plan was to
throw a loaf of bread into the enclosure and film the starving Uzbeks fighting
like animals over it.
The
plan backfired, however, and no film was ever made. Yes, a German officer did
throw a loaf of bread into the enclosure. But instead of fighting over it, one
Uzbek picked it up, the other Uzbeks sad down, said their prayers, and shared
it equally among all 101, slowly chewing the tiny amount of bread each
received.
In this way and “even in the most hopeless
situation,” the Russian blogger continues, the Uzbek soldiers “remained
human.”
But
in doing so, they suffered even more. Many were beaten right after their
action, and a few months later, those who were still alive were short in a
nearby forest, their graves identified by a Dutch search team.
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