German prisoners of war in Azerbaijan

German prisoners of war in Azerbaijan (German: Deutsche Kriegsgefangene in Aserbaidschan) are former servicemen of Nazi Germany captured by Soviet troops during World War II and kept on the territory of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic.

History of the prisoners of war in Azerbaijan

Arrival and accommodation

According to the historian Tair Behbudov, who is studying the fate of the German prisoners of war arrived to Azerbaijan, there were about 42 thousand German prisoners of war arrived to Baku.[1] As noted by the historian Javid Bagirzadeh, the dispatch of the German prisoners of war to Azerbaijan consisted of two stages: the first group of the German prisoners of war arrived in 1944, the second in 1945.[2] The latest arrived in the early 1945 from the central regions of Russia.[citation needed] Wounded prisoners of war were sent to Baku, some of whom later died due to their wounds.[3]

As of January 1947, in Azerbaijan there were 23,266 Axis prisoners of war of various nationalities (Germans, Austrians, Hungarians, Romanians). According to the archival data, as of 1 January 1947, in the operational service of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Azerbaijan SSR there were 3 prisoner of war camps numbered 223, 328, 444, hospitals for prisoners of war numbered 1552, 5030 and medical units numbered 468, 498.[4][5] These objects were located in Baku (German Stadtlager), Kirovabad, Sumgait (German Zweiglager), Mingachevir (German Kura-Stauseelager), Nukha (German Zweiglager), Khanlar (German Berglager Gil-Gil) and Salyan (German Wüstenlager).[6]

The daily ration for one prisoner of war was 90 g of vermicelli, 10 g of fish, 15 g of lard, 15 g of butter, 30 g of salt, 600 g of potatoes and 320 g of vegetables. On large construction sites, there were additional rations allocated from the facility fund for the prisoners of war, and in order to maintain the health of the prisoners of war, the NKVD of Azerbaijan sometimes sent them for extra work to vegetable and food warehouses. Nevertheless, the health of most of the prisoners of war was seriously affected, they suffered from tuberculosis, dysentery, pleurisy and other diseases. The residents of Baku and Mingachevir, despite the ban, fed the weakened German prisoners of war walking along the street or working on sites.[citation needed] So, the actor and film director Vladimir Menshov recalls that, as a child, he exchanged bread for wooden toys with German prisoners of war who worked on the construction site of the Government House.[7]

Participation in construction works

The prisoners of war in Azerbaijan were involved in various construction work. They worked on the construction of civil buildings, large industrial facilities and special closed facilities.[1]

German prisoners of war played an important role in the construction of the city of Mingachevir itself. Here, with their help were built parks, squares, five-story and two-story residential areas, a palace of culture, government institutions, etc. In the city of Guba, the German prisoners of war built a cinema and an open-air cinema, as well as a terrace of 40 steps connecting the city center with the village Krasnaya Sloboda.[8]

In Baku, the prisoners of war participated in the construction of buildings such as the Government House, the residential building of the Buzovnyneft trust, the actors residential house on Bakikhanov Street, the Bolshoy Dvor residential area complex on Stroiteley Avenue, etc.[citation needed] In particular, in the construction of the Government House, according to Behbudov, about 150 prisoners of war took part, performing the roles of civil engineers, carpenters, stone cutters, facade craftsmen, etc. According to the archival data, to which Behbudov refers to, the prisoners of war were led to the construction site every day on foot from prison, located in the Black City, where they returned in the evening.[1]

Repatriation of the prisoners of war

The adoption of such documents as the UN General Assembly Resolution on the Extradition of the Prisoners of War and the Punishment of War Criminals (13 February 1946), the 1947 Treaty on Peace Agreements of the Anti-Hitler Coalition with Italy, Finland, Romania, Hungary and Bulgaria, the 1949 Geneva Convention, was the main reason for repatriation of the German prisoners of war. Consequently, in the USSR, the full-scale release of the prisoners of war began. First of all, the anti-fascists and the leaders of production were released, then - the weakened, chronically ill and disabled.[citation needed]

In Azerbaijan, the process of releasing the prisoners of war and returning them to their homeland, according to the reports of the NKVD of Azerbaijan, began partially already in 1945. However, since 1946, their repatriation has become more active. In January and February 1947, 2000 weakened and sick Germans were removed from Azerbaijan. According to the Minister of Internal Affairs of the USSR Sergei Kruglov Order No. 001078, issued on 15 October 1947, 1750 prisoners of war in Azerbaijan were subject to repatriation (1,000 of them from camps, 400 from the Individual Workers’ Battalions, 350 from special hospitals).[9] By the decision of the Council of Ministers of the USSR No. 396-152ss of 1948, 3500 German prisoners of war, who suffered greatly from dystrophy, were selected in the camps of the NKVD of Azerbaijan to be sent from Azerbaijan to their homeland. From May 1948 to August of the same year, 1800 prisoners of war were repatriated from the construction sites of the Mingachevir hydroelectric power station, 550 from the Sumgait pipe-rolling plant, 300 from Dashkesanstroy, and 950 from Glavneftestroy.[citation needed]

Cemeteries for German prisoners of war

The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Germany, Klaus Kinkel, lays a wreath at the memorial located at cemetery of German prisoners of war in Baku. 22 December 1995

Today in different places of Azerbaijan there are located cemeteries of German prisoners of war. These cemeteries mainly arose where prisoners of war were involved in construction works.[citation needed] On 22 December 1995, the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan, Hasan Hasanov, and Germany, Klaus Kinkel, signed an agreement on the protection of the graves of the German prisoners of war on the territory of Azerbaijan.[10]

There are cemeteries for German prisoners of war in the cities of Mingachevir, Alat (11 graves), in the Yasamal region of Baku (90 graves), etc. In Baku, there was another cemetery located on the Darnagul highway, which was subsequently filled up. Nowadays, a metal-smelting plant is located on this place. Also, prisoners of war cemeteries are located in the cities of Guba and Khachmaz, but their exact location is unknown.[citation needed]

At the cemetery of Sumgait, where prisoners of war worked at the pipe-rolling plant, there are now the graves of 311 prisoners of war.[11] 828 prisoners of war rest in the cemetery of prisoners of war in Mingachevir, which was restored in 1999. A memorial has also been erected on the territory of this cemetery, it represents a metal cross of 5.5 m high.[12]

A cemetery for prisoners of war with an area of about 1 hectare exists in the city of Goygol. It was renovated in 1996. People of nine nationalities (Germans, Poles, Hungarians, Czechs, Swedes, Slovaks, Italians, French and Austrians) are buried here.[13] In the Goygol region, there are two more cemeteries for prisoners of war, located at the junction of the villages of Balchyly and Bahrambek. On the first one rest about four hundred prisoners of war, and above each grave there is a metal plaque with the number of the prisoner. 160 prisoners of war are buried in the neighboring cemetery.[14]

About 200 prisoners of war were kept in the Jafarkhan village of the Saatli region, in a building called the Laboratory. In the village, they were involved in various kinds of rural work, and later died here and were buried in a separate cemetery that has survived to this day. At the entrance to the cemetery there is a sign in German and Azerbaijani languages Cemetery of World War Prisoners (German: Weltkrieg Kriegsgefangenen Friedhof, Azerbaijani: Dünya müharibəsində əsir düşmüşlərin qəbiristanlığı).[15]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "'Domsovet'in tikintisində işlədilən alman əsirlər nədən şikayət etmişdilər?" (in Azerbaijani). azvision.az. February 16, 2017. Archived from the original on March 1, 2019.
  2. ^ "Release of the program "Sada" about the burials of German prisoners of war in Azerbaijan" (in Azerbaijani). youtube.com. Retrieved May 24, 2021.
  3. ^ Isagizi.D (2001), German cemetery in Azerbaijan on the verge of "extinction" (newspaper), archived from the original on March 6, 2019
  4. ^ "Немецкие военнопленные в Баку / German prisoners of war in Baku" (in Russian). ourbaku.com. Archived from the original on June 9, 2021. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  5. ^ György Dupka (2015). Die Lager und ihre Gefangenen in der Sowjetunion (in German). Pécs/Fünfkirchen: Hier war die Endstation. p. 118. ISBN 978-963-88716-7-1.
  6. ^ Nowey, Waldemar (2009). Kriegsgräber mahnen zum Frieden und erinnern an Krieg – Vertreibung – Gefangenschaft – Heimkehr (PDF). Mering. p. 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-06-09.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ "В Баку обменивали у пленных немцев хлеб на деревянные игрушки - Владимир Меньшов / Bread for wooden toys was exchanged with captured Germans in Baku - Vladimir Menshov" (in Russian). trend.az. August 3, 2011. Archived from the original on March 2, 2019. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  8. ^ "Выпуск передачи телеканала "ARB Şimal" о постройках немецких военнопленных в Губе / Release of the TV program "ARB Şimal" about the buildings of German prisoners of war in Guba" (in Azerbaijani). youtube.com. Retrieved 2019-03-02.
  9. ^ Konasov, Viktor (1996). Судьбы немецких военнопленных в СССР: дипломатические, правовые и политические аспекты проблемы. Очерки и документы. Vologda. p. 151.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ Чернявский, Станислав (2003). Внешняя политика Азербайджанской Республики (1988-2003) / Foreign policy of the Republic of Azerbaijan (1988-2003). Baku: Adiloglu. p. 274.
  11. ^ Elçin Murad, Samir İsayev (April 14, 2017). "Almaniya səfirliyi Sumqayıtdakı əsir məzarlığına şərt qoyub - Fotoreportaj/VİDEO" (in Azerbaijani). teleqraf.com. Archived from the original on March 6, 2019. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  12. ^ "Listenansicht der Kriegsgräberstätten. Mingetschaur" (in German). volksbund.de. Archived from the original on October 15, 2013. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  13. ^ Murad Kohnagala, Shalala Goyturk (August 16, 2017). "Azərbaycan almanları | Doqquz xalqın qəbiristanı və "Nemes parkı"" (in Azerbaijani). azvision.az. Archived from the original on March 6, 2019. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  14. ^ Murad Kohnagala, Shalala Goyturk (September 7, 2017). "Азербайджанские немцы: "Кладбище военнопленных"" (in Russian). vzglyad.az. Archived from the original on July 23, 2018. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  15. ^ "Azərbaycanda ölən Alman əsirləri" (in Azerbaijani). turan.az. December 13, 2018. Archived from the original on December 14, 2018. Retrieved June 9, 2021.

External links

  • Media related to German prisoners of war of World War II in Azerbaijan at Wikimedia Commons
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