Ciepielów massacre

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Ciepielów massacre
Polish POWs shot by Wehrmacht 1939.jpg
Ciepielów massacre is located in Poland
Ciepielów massacre
Location within modern Poland
Coordinates51°13′21″N 21°35′45″E / 51.22250°N 21.59583°E / 51.22250; 21.59583Coordinates: 51°13′21″N 21°35′45″E / 51.22250°N 21.59583°E / 51.22250; 21.59583
DateSeptember 8, 1939 (1939-09-08)
Attack type
Mass murder
DeathsApproximately 300 Polish prisoners of war
PerpetratorsGerman Army (Wehrmacht)
29th Motorized Infantry Division

The Ciepielów massacre [t͡ɕɛˈpjɛluf] that took place on 8 September 1939 was one of the largest and best documented war crimes of the Wehrmacht during its invasion of Poland. On that day, the forest near Ciepielów was the site of a mass murder of Polish prisoners of war from the Polish Upper Silesian 74th Infantry Regiment. The massacre was carried out by soldiers from the German Wehrmacht 15th Motorized Infantry Regiment, 29th Motorized Infantry Division, under the command of Colonel Walter Wessel.

This event has been described as the "most infamous" war crime committed by Germans during their invasion of Poland. The number of dead has commonly been estimated at 300, although more recent research suggests a revised number of "over 250" instead.[1][2][3]

Background[]

Tactical situation[]

Around September 8, during the invasion of Poland that began on September 1, the German of the 29th Motorized Infantry Division, German 10th Army, engaged the remnants of the Polish Upper Silesian 74th Infantry Regiment of the Polish 7th Infantry Division, Kraków Army, and took a number of prisoners of war.[1] At that time, the Polish forces in the region were already in retreat, with the 7th Division being effectively destroyed on September 3-4 around Częstochowa, with its commander, General Janusz Gąsiorowski, taken prisoner.[4] The 74th Infantry Regiment was commanded by Colonel .[5] The regiment is also considered to have suffered heavy losses during the Częstochowa battle, with some sources describing it as effectively destroyed.[6]

Context of German war crimes[]

During the invasion of Poland, the Wehrmacht committed a number of war crimes, including several prisoner-of-war massacres, of which Ciepielów became the most widely known. Reasons suggested by some historians for the massacres include contempt for Poles and Polish soldiers, encouraged by Nazi propaganda, which described them as German-hating Untermenschen, and lack of preparation, resources, and will to secure surrendered Polish soldiers. However, many other western historians point to plans formulated by the German General Staff, prior to the invasion, which authorized the SS to carry out security tasks on behalf of the army that included the imprisonment or execution of Polish citizens, whether Jewish or gentile.[7] On 19 September, shortly after the onset of hostilities, Franz Halder, Chief of the German General Staff, noted in his diary that he had received information from Reinhard Heydrich. The SS were beginning their campaign to "clean house" in Poland of Jews, intelligentsia, Catholic clergy, and the aristocracy. Halder was aware of the murders but did not object.[8] He dismissed the crimes as aberrations and refused one general's request to pursue the SS and police perpetrators.[9] Further, German officers often treated Polish soldiers of disorganized units captured behind German lines as partisans, not as regular soldiers, and felt justified in ordering their summary execution. This led to several dozen executions of groups of Polish soldiers, in addition to a hard-to-estimate number of murders of individual soldiers.[1]

The largest massacres of prisoners of war by the Germans, (in addition to Ciepielów), took place in Katowice (the Katowice massacre; approximately 80 fatalities), Majdan Wielki (the  [pl]; approximately 42 fatalities), Serock (the  [pl]; approximately 80 fatalities), Sochaczew (the ; approximately 50 fatalities), Szczucin (the  [pl]; approximately 40 fatalities), Zakroczym (the ; approximately 60 fatalities), and Zambrów (the Zambrów massacre; approximately 200 fatalities).[1]

The Soviets, who also occupied portions of Poland during this period, undertook the systematic mass executions of Polish military officers. Of the estimated 22,000 prisoners murdered in the Katyn forest in Russia in the first half of 1940, about 8,000 were Polish military officers imprisoned during the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland, another 6,000 were police officers, and the rest were Polish intelligentsia.[10]

The massacre[]

The massacre was documented in photos and memoirs of an anonymous German soldier, who witnessed an engagement in which Polish soldiers ambushed and killed over a dozen German soldiers from the 11th Company of the 15th Regiment, including the company's commander, Captain Lewinsky. A number of Polish soldiers were then captured, and Oberst (Colonel) Walter Wessel, commander of the German 15th Motorized Infantry Regiment, 29th Motorized Infantry Division, ordered them stripped of their uniforms and declared partisans and had them taken to a secluded location near the village of Dąbrowa (itself near a larger village of Ciepielów), where they were shot. The anonymous author of the memoirs arrived at that location after hearing gunfire, and counted approximately 300 bodies in a roadside ditch. Those documents were received by the  [pl] in West Berlin in 1950.[1][11]

Number of victims[]

In 1970 the  [pl] (Główna Komisja Badania Zbrodni Niemieckich w Polsce) asked the German Central Office of the State Justice Administrations for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes (Zentrale Stelle der Landesjustizverwaltungen zur Aufklärung nationalsozialistischer Verbrechen) to investigate the case further. The German Office stated that Colonel Wessel had died in Italy, that interviews of other surviving soldiers were inconclusive, and concluded with a statement that the battle of Ciepielów resulted in 13 German and 250 Polish casualties.[12]

Some other German accounts have given estimates of the prisoners killed in this massacre as 250[13] or 150, the second account also suggests that an unknown number of further executions took place on September 9.[14]

As of 2019, the Polish Commission successor, Institute of National Remembrance – Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation (Instytut Pamięci Narodowej – Komisja Ścigania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu) states that the number of victims of the massacre is "at least 250". It also states that German soldiers from the 29th Division murdered dozens of other individuals, including prisoners of war, as well as Polish and Polish Jewish civilians, in Ciepielów and its vicinity on 8 September and subsequent days.[2]

While the majority of Polish sources set the number of the prisoner of war killed in this event at 300 (for example, this is the description given by 2019 Internet edition of the Polish PWN Encyklopedia[15]), Polish historian has said that number, while commonly accepted and repeated in Polish historiography, is likely exaggerated as the account of the anonymous German diarist and the bodies he observed did not necessarily all come from the execution of prisoners of war; some might have fallen during the battle itself. Germans also carried out a number of other prisoner of war executions at that time and in the vicinity of Ciepielów, such as the murder of prisoners at Cukrówka, and the victims of executions at multiple sites might have been buried in the same place, and the matter is further confused by the fact that post-war exhumations and reburial were done in haste and without sufficient diligence. Finally, Sudoł mentions that some of the photographs associated with the event may in fact come from those similar events that happened in nearby locales and were just grouped in the same category.[1]

Commemoration[]

This event became known as the most infamous war crime committed by Germans during their invasion of Poland,[1] or the most infamous war crime committed by Germans whose victims were regular Polish soldiers.[16]

For many years, on the anniversary of the massacre, the village of Ciepielów has organised a commemoration event, centered on the monument to the victims. The commemoration activities include concerts of patriotic songs including the anthem of Poland, a religious field mass, flower bouquet offering and a speech by the wójt of the Gmina Ciepielów, award ceremony for individuals promoting local history, and the public distribution of the traditional military pea soup.[17][18]

The massacre is also recorded on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Warsaw.[18] The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier is a monument in Warsaw, Poland, dedicated to the unknown soldiers who have given their lives for Poland. It is one of many such national tombs of unknowns that were erected after World War I, and the most important such monument in Poland.[19]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Tomasz Sudoł, ZBRODNIE WEHRMACHTU NA JEŃCACH POLSKICH WE WRZEŚNIU 1939 ROKU, Biuro Edukacji Publicznej IPN
  2. ^ a b Narodowej, Instytut Pamięci. "OKŚZpNP w Lublinie poszukuje osób mających wiedzę dot. zbrodni popełnionych we wrześniu 1939 przez żołnierzy 29 Dywizji Wehrmachtu na terenie Lipska, Ciepielowa i okolic". Instytut Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). Retrieved 2019-06-13.
  3. ^ Mark Levene (19 December 2013). Annihilation: Volume II: The European Rimlands 1939-1953. OUP Oxford. pp. 48–. ISBN 978-0-19-250956-7.
  4. ^ "Rozbicie 7 Dywizji Piechoty pod Częstochową". www.muzeum-slask1939.pl. Retrieved 2019-09-06.
  5. ^ Krwawicz, Marian (1979). Śląska reduta 1939 (in Polish). Książka i Wiedza. p. 88.
  6. ^ "74. Górnośląski Pułk Piechoty". www.muzeum-slask1939.pl. Retrieved 2019-09-06.
  7. ^ Megargee 2006, p. 13.
  8. ^ Rossino 2003, pp. 22, 116, 176.
  9. ^ Smelser & Davies 2008, p. 58.
  10. ^ Małgorzata Kuźniar-Plota – Prosecutor – Departmental Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation (November 30, 2004). "Decision to commence investigation into Katyn Massacre". (Polish) Institute Of National Remembrance. Retrieved September 15, 2019.
  11. ^ Szymon, Datner (1961). Zbrodnie Wehrmachtu na jeńcach wojennych w II wojnie światowej (in Polish). Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Ministerstwa Obrony Narodowej. pp. 50–51.
  12. ^ Jochen Böhler: Auftakt zum Vernichtungskrieg – Die Wehrmacht in Polen 1939. Frankfurt/Main 2006. S. 172f.
  13. ^ Jochen Böhler: „Tragische Verstrickung" oder Auftakt zum Vernichtungskrieg? – Die Wehrmacht in Polen 1939. In: Klaus-Michael Mallmann, Bogdan Musial (Hrsg.): Genesis des Genozids – Polen 1939–1941. Darmstadt 2004. S. 48f.
  14. ^ Robert Seidel: Deutsche Besatzungspolitik in Polen – Der Distrikt Radom 1939–1945, Paderborn/ München/ Wien/ Zürich 2006, S. 178.
  15. ^ "Ciepielów - Encyklopedia PWN - źródło wiarygodnej i rzetelnej wiedzy". encyklopedia.pwn.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2019-06-13.
  16. ^ Kaliński, Dariusz (2018-09-14). Bilans krzywd (in Polish). Otwarte. p. 10. ISBN 9788324054510.
  17. ^ MAG (2018-08-28). "Gmina Ciepielów. Już 9 września będą obchody 79. rocznicy mordu polskich jeńców wojennych pod Dąbrową z września 1939 roku". Echo Dnia Radomskie (in Polish). Retrieved 2019-06-13.
  18. ^ a b "OBCHODY 78 ROCZNICY MORDU JEŃCÓW WOJENNYCH W DĄBROWIE 11.09.2017". Gmina Ciepielów. Retrieved 2019-06-13.
  19. ^ MON (corporate author) (2005-10-24). "Grób Nieznanego Żołnierza". wojsko-polskie.pl (in Polish). Ministry of National Defence. Archived from the original on April 20, 2013. Retrieved June 13, 2019.

Further reading[]

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