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Częstochowa massacre

The Częstochowa massacre, also known as the Bloody Monday, was committed by the German Wehrmacht forces beginning on the 4th day of World War II in the Polish city of Częstochowa, between 4 and 6 September 1939.[2] The shootings, beatings and plunder continued for three days in more than a dozen separate locations around the city.[1] Approximately 1,140 Polish civilians (150 of whom were ethnically Jewish), were murdered.[1]

Częstochowa massacre of 1939
A monument commemorating the massacre, on the John Paul II square, near the cathedral where atrocities took place
LocationCzęstochowa, occupied Poland
Coordinates50°48′N 19°07′E / 50.800°N 19.117°E / 50.800; 19.117
Date4–6 September 1939 [1]
TargetPoles, Polish Jews
Attack type
Shooting and stabbing
WeaponsRifles and automatic weapons
Deaths990 Poles and 150 Jews (est.) [1]
PerpetratorsWehrmacht
MotiveAnti-Polish sentiment, antisemitism, Germanisation, pan-Germanism

Background

The city of Częstochowa (population 117,000 in 1931)[3] was overrun by the German Army on 3 September 1939 without a fight, during the German invasion of Poland,[4] as the Polish Army "Kraków" units of the 7th Infantry Division, stationing there, had withdrawn the previous day.[5] Many able-bodied men left the city along with the Polish soldiers.[5] The 42 Infantry Regiment "Bayreuth" of the Wehrmacht's 10th Army entered the city early in the afternoon. On that day, their guns were not loaded, as the Wehrmacht command was more concerned with the risk of "friendly fire" caused by inexperience and nervousness on the part of the troops,[2] than of possible threat from the Polish rear guard.[5] Notably, the German wild shootings caused by fear had broken out elsewhere, often leading to massacres of civilians as in Kajetanowice.[5]

Archived diaries of the German soldiers, as well as the official army reports, reveal that the remaining civilian population of the city acted peacefully and did not obstruct the German army in any way.[5] The evening of 3 September passed without any incidents. Searches of houses and business premises turned up no concealed weapons.[5]

Massacre

 
The Wehrmacht entering the suburbs of Czestochowa

The Regimental headquarters, located 20 km south of the city, received a report on the evening of 4 September from the German units of the 42nd Regiment (46th Infantry Division (Wehrmacht)),[4] alleging that they had been attacked by "Polish partisans" in two different incidents; one in the courtyard of the Technical School where the regiment stationed, and one involving a prisoner column guarded by the 97th Regiment.[5] The German soldiers claimed to have been shot at from one of the houses near where they were.[6]

However, subsequent reports and testimonies of soldiers inform that none of the German witnesses were able to describe the supposed attackers.[5] A search of houses that took place after the massacre failed to turn up any "suspicious persons". According to German historian Jochen Böhler,[5] the shootings were perpetrated by panicking and nervous (most likely under the influence of stimulants)[7][8] German soldiers who then used the imagined or invented "Polish partisans" as an excuse for their rash actions and the massacre that followed.[5] According to a Polish eyewitness of the event, who had been arrested and became part of a column of Polish captives under the German guard, Wehrmacht soldiers fired from a machine gun on the prisoners' column which caused panic among those trying to escape death. Resulting from this, the guards escorting the column began shooting wildly at them. In the shooting, about 200 Polish and Jewish individuals were murdered.[5]

The second part of the massacre took place in a different part of the city after the first wild shootings had stopped. According to the testimony of Helena Szpilman before the Jewish Historical Committee, German soldiers rounded up Polish and Jewish civilians from their homes and forced them to march to the Magnacki Square, in front of the town's cathedral. There they were all forced to lie face down on the ground and told that anyone who moved would be shot. In all there were several thousand individuals including the elderly, children and women. Lt. Col. Ube, who was in charge of the Wehrmacht units carrying out the massacre (and who was the author of the report to regimental command who blamed the shooting on "Polish partisans") estimated that around 10,000 people had been collected in the square.[5] Similar estimates of the number of people rounded up are given by eyewitnesses and survivors.

After separating the men from the women, the men were searched and any found with a shaving razor or a pocket knife were shot on the spot. The remaining men were told to enter the church, but as they began moving to do so German soldiers opened fire on them from machine guns and hand-held weapons. According to the testimony of Henoch Diamant, who was wounded in the shooting, several hundred people were killed on the spot and about 400 were wounded as a result. The unfolding of the massacre in front of the cathedral was captured in narrative form by a German photographer, from the initial round-up to the Poles and Jews awaiting their fate, to photos of corpses strewn across the city's streets and the cathedral square.[9] This collection of photos was acquired by an American soldier from a captured German machine gunner near the end of the war.[9]

Death count

According to the official report written by Lt. Col. Ube: in course of the "punishment action for partisan activity" 3 women and 96 men had been killed. However, in the spring of 1940, the German mayor of Czestochowa, Richard Wendler, gave permission for the exhumation of the bodies by the town council. Some 227 corpses were unearthed,[10] including 194 men, 25 women, and 8 children; 22 victims were identified as Jewish. The bodies were exhumed in several locations including at Krakowska Street (54), at Garncarska (40), by the city hall (48), and at Piotrkowska Street (4).[10] There were also several smaller scale murders carried out at various points in the city, including of patients at a military hospital which was run by the Red Cross.[4]

According to the Center for Documentation of Częstochowa History, at least 600 people were killed in the city overall on that day. Some estimates of victims put the number at more than 1,000; 990 ethnic Poles and 110 Jews[11] (more than 40,000 Jews were later murdered after the liquidation of the Częstochowa Ghetto).[12]

Similar incidents

One of the regiments that carried out the massacres in Częstochowa was two days later involved in a very similar incident in the Polish village of Kajetanowice, although on a smaller scale. Once again, unknown shots were fired at the regiment (again most likely due to friendly fire) which caused nervous soldiers to begin shooting wildly. "They blindly shot up the houses", according to eyewitnesses, and then ordered all men of the village to gather in an open field. There, those that complied with the order were executed. In all 72 victims of the Kajetanowice massacre were identified (one-third of the village's inhabitants),[4] including an infant, five little children, fourteen teenagers, twelve women and six elderly persons.[5] One of the soldiers involved in the action told eyewitness Wiktoria Czech that he knew the villagers were innocent but that the regiment had received orders to kill all civilians. Another soldier commented that "Poles should be murdered when they're still in the crib". Subsequently, the entire village was burned to the ground.[5]

The "losses" of the German units of the 42nd regiment in Kajetanowice consisted of two dead horses, both most likely shot by friendly fire. The official report of the unit stated that the massacre and burning of the village was carried out as revenge for the shooting of two German horses.[5]

Postwar investigations

An investigation of the massacre was carried out in Bayreuth, Germany, in 1985, regarding former soldiers of the 42nd Infantry Regiment. Most of them still claimed to have been shot at from nearby houses prior to the massacre but none could describe the supposed attackers. One former soldier even admitted that he had no idea if the supposed attackers were "soldiers, partisans or civilians". Several former soldiers admitted that a general panic had broken out among German troops, with everyone running to get their weapons, stumbling over each other and shooting wildly. One of the officers of the regiment recalled that he had been furious at his soldiers for their complete lack of discipline.[5]

Former soldiers of the unit also admitted that in the search that followed they did not find any weapons, or for that matter, able-bodied men, only a few women with children and some elderly persons. Former soldier Hans M. stated "I never saw any partisans in Częstochowa with my own eyes".[5]

In regard to the second massacre near the cathedral, former Wehrmacht soldier Fritz S. in an initial statement claimed that after the wild shooting stopped he was ordered to politely ask the civilians to leave their houses and gather in a church. However, Fritz S. voluntarily returned to the investigators several days later and changed his statement. He stated that the order was to forcible remove civilians from their homes and line them up face down on the ground. He added that "I want to emphasize that I never politely asked any civilians to leave their homes. In fact, we threw them out".[5]

The massacre was also investigated by the Jewish Historical Committee and Czestochowa's government. In 2009, the Polish Institute of National Remembrance found mass graves near the Stradom railway station containing about 2000 corpses, although it is unclear at this stage if the bodies are related to this massacre or to later killings by the Nazis.[13] Also in 2009, the diaries of Bolesław Kurkowski were discovered. Kurkowski witnessed the massacres and later took part in the 1940 exhumation of some of the bodies, as a forced laborer (the existence of the diaries had been known beforehand from several available fragments).[14]

On the 70th anniversary of the German invasion of Poland, September 2009, the German public broadcaster Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg was planning to shoot a documentary film on the subject of the massacre in Częstochowa, since the war atrocities of the Wehrmacht were not widely known in Germany (in contrast to war atrocities of the SS and those committed after Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union).[15]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Adam Marczewski; Miłosz Gudra; Aleksandra Król; Martyna Rusiniak-Karwat (2009). . Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich POLIN. pp. 1, 2. Archived from the original on 6 January 2014. Masowe egzekucje były połączone z licznymi przypadkami pobić, gwałtów i rabunku żydowskiego mienia ... rozstrzelano ok. 990 Polaków i 150 Żydów.
  2. ^ a b Martin Gilbert (1987). The Holocaust: a history of the Jews of Europe during the Second World War. Macmillan. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-8050-0348-2 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Kielce Voivodeship (1919–39), Spis powszechny, 1931; PDF. Commons. Główny Urząd Statystyczny Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej, p. 32 / 543 in PDF. M.Częstochowa. Ludność: ogółem. 117,179 (53,954 men) as compared with 88,894 (40,343 men) in the 1921 census.
  4. ^ a b c d Yad ṿa-shem, rashut ha-zikaron la-Shoʼah ṿela-gevurah, Yad Vashem studies, Volume 35, Part 2", Wallstein Verlag, 2007, pg. 196.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Jochen Böhler (2009). [War Crimes of the Wehrmacht in Poland] (PDF). Znak. pp. 106–116. ISBN 978-83-240-1225-1. See also: Verbrechen der Wehrmacht in Polen September-Oktober 1939 : Ausstellungskatalog 2005. Archived from the original on 13 October 2013.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^ John Mosier, Cross of Iron: The Rise and Fall of the German War Machine, 1918-1945, Macmillan, 2007, pg. 237.
  7. ^ Andreas Ulrich (6 May 2005). "The Nazi Death Machine: Hitler's Drugged Soldiers". Der Spiegel. SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg, Germany. Pervitin, a stimulant commonly known as speed today, was the German army's – the Wehrmacht's – wonder drug.
  8. ^ Tony Paterson (13 September 2015). "Hitler's all-conquering stormtroopers 'felt invincible because of crystal meth-style drug Pervitin'". The Independent. Hitler's armies carried out their "Blitzkrieg" invasions of Poland and France while high on a version of crystal meth which kept them wide awake, feeling euphoric and invincible, says a new book about the Nazis' use of drugs during the Second World War.
  9. ^ a b Janina Struk, "Photographing the Holocaust: interpretations of the evidence", I.B.Tauris, 2004, pg. 63, [1]
  10. ^ a b Ryszard Baranowski. "4 września 1939. Krwawy poniedziałek Częstochowy" [Bloody Monday, 4 September 1939]. Teksty. Zbrodnia w Częstochowie. Institute of National Remembrance.
  11. ^ Muzeum Historii Zydow Polskich (Museum of the History of Polish Jews), Virtual Sztetl, "Tablica pamiątkowa (ul. Olsztyńska)" (Commemorative tablet (Olszynska St.), Częstochowa.
  12. ^ The World Society of Czestochowa Jews, "Ghetto w Czestochowie" 18 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "IPN znalazł masowe groby w Częstochowie" (IPN found mass graves in Czestochowa), Gazeta Wyborcza/Czestochowa, 2009-07-07, [2][permanent dead link]
  14. ^ "Znalazły się zapiski z Krwawego Poniedziałku" (A diary of Bloody Monday has been found), Gazeta Wyborcza/Czestochowa, 2009-09-04, [3]
  15. ^ Gazeta Wyborcza (2009-06-01), "Niemcy nakręcą film o krwawym poniedziałku" [A German film about Bloody Monday is to be made]. Czestochowa.

częstochowa, massacre, also, known, bloody, monday, committed, german, wehrmacht, forces, beginning, world, polish, city, częstochowa, between, september, 1939, shootings, beatings, plunder, continued, three, days, more, than, dozen, separate, locations, aroun. The Czestochowa massacre also known as the Bloody Monday was committed by the German Wehrmacht forces beginning on the 4th day of World War II in the Polish city of Czestochowa between 4 and 6 September 1939 2 The shootings beatings and plunder continued for three days in more than a dozen separate locations around the city 1 Approximately 1 140 Polish civilians 150 of whom were ethnically Jewish were murdered 1 Czestochowa massacre of 1939A monument commemorating the massacre on the John Paul II square near the cathedral where atrocities took placeLocationCzestochowa occupied PolandCoordinates50 48 N 19 07 E 50 800 N 19 117 E 50 800 19 117Date4 6 September 1939 1 TargetPoles Polish JewsAttack typeShooting and stabbingWeaponsRifles and automatic weaponsDeaths990 Poles and 150 Jews est 1 PerpetratorsWehrmachtMotiveAnti Polish sentiment antisemitism Germanisation pan Germanism Contents 1 Background 2 Massacre 2 1 Death count 3 Similar incidents 4 Postwar investigations 5 See also 6 ReferencesBackgroundThe city of Czestochowa population 117 000 in 1931 3 was overrun by the German Army on 3 September 1939 without a fight during the German invasion of Poland 4 as the Polish Army Krakow units of the 7th Infantry Division stationing there had withdrawn the previous day 5 Many able bodied men left the city along with the Polish soldiers 5 The 42 Infantry Regiment Bayreuth of the Wehrmacht s 10th Army entered the city early in the afternoon On that day their guns were not loaded as the Wehrmacht command was more concerned with the risk of friendly fire caused by inexperience and nervousness on the part of the troops 2 than of possible threat from the Polish rear guard 5 Notably the German wild shootings caused by fear had broken out elsewhere often leading to massacres of civilians as in Kajetanowice 5 Archived diaries of the German soldiers as well as the official army reports reveal that the remaining civilian population of the city acted peacefully and did not obstruct the German army in any way 5 The evening of 3 September passed without any incidents Searches of houses and business premises turned up no concealed weapons 5 Massacre nbsp The Wehrmacht entering the suburbs of Czestochowa The Regimental headquarters located 20 km south of the city received a report on the evening of 4 September from the German units of the 42nd Regiment 46th Infantry Division Wehrmacht 4 alleging that they had been attacked by Polish partisans in two different incidents one in the courtyard of the Technical School where the regiment stationed and one involving a prisoner column guarded by the 97th Regiment 5 The German soldiers claimed to have been shot at from one of the houses near where they were 6 However subsequent reports and testimonies of soldiers inform that none of the German witnesses were able to describe the supposed attackers 5 A search of houses that took place after the massacre failed to turn up any suspicious persons According to German historian Jochen Bohler 5 the shootings were perpetrated by panicking and nervous most likely under the influence of stimulants 7 8 German soldiers who then used the imagined or invented Polish partisans as an excuse for their rash actions and the massacre that followed 5 According to a Polish eyewitness of the event who had been arrested and became part of a column of Polish captives under the German guard Wehrmacht soldiers fired from a machine gun on the prisoners column which caused panic among those trying to escape death Resulting from this the guards escorting the column began shooting wildly at them In the shooting about 200 Polish and Jewish individuals were murdered 5 The second part of the massacre took place in a different part of the city after the first wild shootings had stopped According to the testimony of Helena Szpilman before the Jewish Historical Committee German soldiers rounded up Polish and Jewish civilians from their homes and forced them to march to the Magnacki Square in front of the town s cathedral There they were all forced to lie face down on the ground and told that anyone who moved would be shot In all there were several thousand individuals including the elderly children and women Lt Col Ube who was in charge of the Wehrmacht units carrying out the massacre and who was the author of the report to regimental command who blamed the shooting on Polish partisans estimated that around 10 000 people had been collected in the square 5 Similar estimates of the number of people rounded up are given by eyewitnesses and survivors After separating the men from the women the men were searched and any found with a shaving razor or a pocket knife were shot on the spot The remaining men were told to enter the church but as they began moving to do so German soldiers opened fire on them from machine guns and hand held weapons According to the testimony of Henoch Diamant who was wounded in the shooting several hundred people were killed on the spot and about 400 were wounded as a result The unfolding of the massacre in front of the cathedral was captured in narrative form by a German photographer from the initial round up to the Poles and Jews awaiting their fate to photos of corpses strewn across the city s streets and the cathedral square 9 This collection of photos was acquired by an American soldier from a captured German machine gunner near the end of the war 9 Death count According to the official report written by Lt Col Ube in course of the punishment action for partisan activity 3 women and 96 men had been killed However in the spring of 1940 the German mayor of Czestochowa Richard Wendler gave permission for the exhumation of the bodies by the town council Some 227 corpses were unearthed 10 including 194 men 25 women and 8 children 22 victims were identified as Jewish The bodies were exhumed in several locations including at Krakowska Street 54 at Garncarska 40 by the city hall 48 and at Piotrkowska Street 4 10 There were also several smaller scale murders carried out at various points in the city including of patients at a military hospital which was run by the Red Cross 4 According to the Center for Documentation of Czestochowa History at least 600 people were killed in the city overall on that day Some estimates of victims put the number at more than 1 000 990 ethnic Poles and 110 Jews 11 more than 40 000 Jews were later murdered after the liquidation of the Czestochowa Ghetto 12 Similar incidentsFurther information War crimes in occupied Poland during World War II and Pacification actions in German occupied Poland One of the regiments that carried out the massacres in Czestochowa was two days later involved in a very similar incident in the Polish village of Kajetanowice although on a smaller scale Once again unknown shots were fired at the regiment again most likely due to friendly fire which caused nervous soldiers to begin shooting wildly They blindly shot up the houses according to eyewitnesses and then ordered all men of the village to gather in an open field There those that complied with the order were executed In all 72 victims of the Kajetanowice massacre were identified one third of the village s inhabitants 4 including an infant five little children fourteen teenagers twelve women and six elderly persons 5 One of the soldiers involved in the action told eyewitness Wiktoria Czech that he knew the villagers were innocent but that the regiment had received orders to kill all civilians Another soldier commented that Poles should be murdered when they re still in the crib Subsequently the entire village was burned to the ground 5 The losses of the German units of the 42nd regiment in Kajetanowice consisted of two dead horses both most likely shot by friendly fire The official report of the unit stated that the massacre and burning of the village was carried out as revenge for the shooting of two German horses 5 Postwar investigationsAn investigation of the massacre was carried out in Bayreuth Germany in 1985 regarding former soldiers of the 42nd Infantry Regiment Most of them still claimed to have been shot at from nearby houses prior to the massacre but none could describe the supposed attackers One former soldier even admitted that he had no idea if the supposed attackers were soldiers partisans or civilians Several former soldiers admitted that a general panic had broken out among German troops with everyone running to get their weapons stumbling over each other and shooting wildly One of the officers of the regiment recalled that he had been furious at his soldiers for their complete lack of discipline 5 Former soldiers of the unit also admitted that in the search that followed they did not find any weapons or for that matter able bodied men only a few women with children and some elderly persons Former soldier Hans M stated I never saw any partisans in Czestochowa with my own eyes 5 In regard to the second massacre near the cathedral former Wehrmacht soldier Fritz S in an initial statement claimed that after the wild shooting stopped he was ordered to politely ask the civilians to leave their houses and gather in a church However Fritz S voluntarily returned to the investigators several days later and changed his statement He stated that the order was to forcible remove civilians from their homes and line them up face down on the ground He added that I want to emphasize that I never politely asked any civilians to leave their homes In fact we threw them out 5 The massacre was also investigated by the Jewish Historical Committee and Czestochowa s government In 2009 the Polish Institute of National Remembrance found mass graves near the Stradom railway station containing about 2000 corpses although it is unclear at this stage if the bodies are related to this massacre or to later killings by the Nazis 13 Also in 2009 the diaries of Boleslaw Kurkowski were discovered Kurkowski witnessed the massacres and later took part in the 1940 exhumation of some of the bodies as a forced laborer the existence of the diaries had been known beforehand from several available fragments 14 On the 70th anniversary of the German invasion of Poland September 2009 the German public broadcaster Rundfunk Berlin Brandenburg was planning to shoot a documentary film on the subject of the massacre in Czestochowa since the war atrocities of the Wehrmacht were not widely known in Germany in contrast to war atrocities of the SS and those committed after Hitler s invasion of the Soviet Union 15 See alsoList of massacres in Poland Massacre in Ciepielow War crimes of the Wehrmacht Battle of Czestochowa 1939 References a b c d Adam Marczewski Milosz Gudra Aleksandra Krol Martyna Rusiniak Karwat 2009 Tablica przy ul Olsztynskiej upamietniajaca ofiary krwawego poniedzialku Muzeum Historii Zydow Polskich POLIN pp 1 2 Archived from the original on 6 January 2014 Masowe egzekucje byly polaczone z licznymi przypadkami pobic gwaltow i rabunku zydowskiego mienia rozstrzelano ok 990 Polakow i 150 Zydow a b Martin Gilbert 1987 The Holocaust a history of the Jews of Europe during the Second World War Macmillan p 87 ISBN 978 0 8050 0348 2 via Google Books Kielce Voivodeship 1919 39 Spis powszechny 1931 PDF Commons Glowny Urzad Statystyczny Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej p 32 543 in PDF M Czestochowa Ludnosc ogolem 117 179 53 954 men as compared with 88 894 40 343 men in the 1921 census a b c d Yad ṿa shem rashut ha zikaron la Shoʼah ṿela gevurah Yad Vashem studies Volume 35 Part 2 Wallstein Verlag 2007 pg 196 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Jochen Bohler 2009 Zbrodnie Wehrmachtu w Polsce War Crimes of the Wehrmacht in Poland PDF Znak pp 106 116 ISBN 978 83 240 1225 1 See also Verbrechen der Wehrmacht in Polen September Oktober 1939 Ausstellungskatalog 2005 Archived from the original on 13 October 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link John Mosier Cross of Iron The Rise and Fall of the German War Machine 1918 1945 Macmillan 2007 pg 237 Andreas Ulrich 6 May 2005 The Nazi Death Machine Hitler s Drugged Soldiers Der Spiegel SPIEGEL ONLINE Hamburg Germany Pervitin a stimulant commonly known as speed today was the German army s the Wehrmacht s wonder drug Tony Paterson 13 September 2015 Hitler s all conquering stormtroopers felt invincible because of crystal meth style drug Pervitin The Independent Hitler s armies carried out their Blitzkrieg invasions of Poland and France while high on a version of crystal meth which kept them wide awake feeling euphoric and invincible says a new book about the Nazis use of drugs during the Second World War a b Janina Struk Photographing the Holocaust interpretations of the evidence I B Tauris 2004 pg 63 1 a b Ryszard Baranowski 4 wrzesnia 1939 Krwawy poniedzialek Czestochowy Bloody Monday 4 September 1939 Teksty Zbrodnia w Czestochowie Institute of National Remembrance Muzeum Historii Zydow Polskich Museum of the History of Polish Jews Virtual Sztetl Tablica pamiatkowa ul Olsztynska Commemorative tablet Olszynska St Czestochowa The World Society of Czestochowa Jews Ghetto w Czestochowie Archived 18 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine IPN znalazl masowe groby w Czestochowie IPN found mass graves in Czestochowa Gazeta Wyborcza Czestochowa 2009 07 07 2 permanent dead link Znalazly sie zapiski z Krwawego Poniedzialku A diary of Bloody Monday has been found Gazeta Wyborcza Czestochowa 2009 09 04 3 Gazeta Wyborcza 2009 06 01 Niemcy nakreca film o krwawym poniedzialku A German film about Bloody Monday is to be made Czestochowa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Czestochowa massacre amp oldid 1218558090, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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