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BEIJING, May 8 -- The final chapter in the destruction of Hitler's Third
Reich began on April 16, 1945 when Stalin unleashed the brutal power of 20 armies, 6,300 tanks and 8,500 aircraft
with the objective of crushing German resistance and capturing Berlin. By prior
agreement, the Allied armies (positioned approximately 60 miles to the west)
halted their advance on the city in order to give the Soviets a free hand. The
depleted German forces put up a stiff defense, initially repelling the attacking
Russians, but ultimately succumbing to overwhelming force. By April 24 the
Soviet army surrounded the city slowly tightening its stranglehold on the
remaining Nazi defenders. Fighting street-to-street and house-to-house, Russian
troops blasted their way towards Hitler's chancellery in the city's center.
Inside his underground bunker Hitler lived in a world of fantasy as his
"Thousand Year Reich" crumbled above him. In his final hours the Fuehrer married
his long-time mistress and then joined her in suicide. The Third Reich was dead.
Beginning of the End
Dorothea von Schwanenfluegel was a twenty-nine-year-old wife and mother
living in Berlin. She and her young daughter along with friends and neighbors
huddled within their apartment building as the end neared. The city was already
in ruins from Allied air raids, food was scarce, the situation desperate - the
only hope that the Allies would arrive before the Russians. We join Dorothea's
account as the Russians begin the final push to victory:
"Friday, April 20, was Hitler's fifty-sixth birthday,
and the Soviets sent him a birthday present in the form of an artillery barrage
right into the heart of the city, while the Western Allies joined in with a
massive air raid.
The radio announced that Hitler had come out of his safe bomb-proof bunker
to talk with the fourteen to sixteen year old boys who had 'volunteered' for the
'honor' to be accepted into the SS and to die for their Fuhrer in the defense of
Berlin. What a cruel lie! These boys did not volunteer, but had no choice,
because boys who were found hiding were hanged as traitors by the SS as a
warning that, 'he who was not brave enough to fight had to die.' When trees were
not available, people were strung up on lamp posts. They were hanging
everywhere, military and civilian, men and women, ordinary citizens who had been
executed by a small group of fanatics. It appeared that the Nazis did not want
the people to survive because a lost war, by their rationale, was obviously the
fault of all of us. We had not sacrificed enough and therefore, we had forfeited
our right to live, as only the government was without guilt. The Volkssturm was
called up again, and this time, all boys age thirteen and up, had to report as
our army was reduced now to little more than children filling the ranks as
soldiers."
Encounter with a Young Soldier
"In honor of Hitler's birthday, we received an eight-day ration allowance,
plus one tiny can of vegetables, a few ounces of sugar and a half-ounce of real
coffee. No one could afford to miss rations of this type and we stood in long
lines at the grocery store patiently waiting to receive them. While standing
there, we noticed a sad looking young boy across the street standing behind some
bushes in a self-dug shallow trench. I went over to him and found a mere child
in a uniform many sizes too large for him, with an anti-tank grenade lying
beside him. Tears were running down his face, and he was obviously very
frightened of everyone. I very softly asked him what he was doing there. He lost
his distrust and told me that he had been ordered to lie in wait here, and when
a Soviet tank approached he was to run under it and explode the grenade. I asked
how that would work, but he didn't know. In fact, this frail child didn't even
look capable of carrying such a grenade. It looked to me like a useless suicide
assignment because the Soviets would shoot him on sight before he ever reached
the tank.
By now, he was sobbing and muttering something, probably calling for his
mother in despair, and there was nothing that I could do to help him. He was a
picture of distress, created by our inhuman government. If I encouraged him to
run away, he would be caught and hung by the SS, and if I gave him refuge in my
home, everyone in the house would be shot by the SS. So, all we could do was to
give him something to eat and drink from our rations. When I looked for him
early next morning he was gone and so was the grenade. Hopefully, his mother
found him and would keep him in hiding during these last days of a lost war."
The Russians Arrive
"The Soviets battled the German soldiers and drafted civilians street by
street until we could hear explosions and rifle fire right in our immediate
vicinity. As the noise got closer, we could even hear the horrible guttural
screaming of the Soviet soldiers which sounded to us like enraged animals. Shots
shattered our windows and shells exploded in our garden, and suddenly the
Soviets were on our street. Shaken by the battle around us and numb with fear,
we watched from behind the small cellar windows facing the street as the tanks
and an endless convoy of troops rolled by...
It was a terrifying sight as they sat high upon their tanks with their
rifles cocked, aiming at houses as they passed. The screaming, gun-wielding
women were the worst. Half of the troops had only rags and tatters around their
feet while others wore SS boots that had been looted from a conquered SS barrack
in Lichterfelde. Several fleeing people had told us earlier that they kept
watching different boots pass by their cellar windows. At night, the Germans in
our army boots recaptured the street that the Soviets in the SS boots had taken
during the day. The boots and the voices told them who was who. Now we saw them
with our own eyes, and they belonged to the wild cohorts of the advancing Soviet
troops.
Facing reality was ten times worse than just hearing about it. Throughout
the night, we huddled together in mortal fear, not knowing what the morning
might bring. Nevertheless, we noiselessly did sneak upstairs to double check
that our heavy wooden window shutters were still intact and that all outside
doors were barricaded. But as I peaked out, what did I see! The porter couple in
the apartment house next to ours was standing in their front yard waving to the
Soviets. So our suspicion that they were Communists had been right all along,
but they must have been out of their minds to openly proclaim their brotherhood
like that.
As could be expected, that night a horde of Soviet soldiers returned and
stormed into their apartment house. Then we heard what sounded like a terrible
orgy with women screaming for help, many shrieking at the same time. The racket
gave me goosebumps. Some of the Soviets trampled through our garden and banged
their rifle butts on our doors in an attempt to break in. Thank goodness our
sturdy wooden doors withstood their efforts. Gripped in fear, we sat in stunned
silence, hoping to give the impression that this was a vacant house, but
hopelessly delivered into the clutches of the long-feared Red Army. Our nerves
were in shreds."
Looting
"The next morning, we women proceeded to make ourselves look as
unattractive as possible to the Soviets by smearing our faces with coal dust and
covering our heads with old rags, our make-up for the Ivan. We huddled together
in the central part of the basement, shaking with fear, while some peeked
through the low basement windows to see what was happening on the
Soviet-controlled street. We felt paralyzed by the sight of these husky
Mongolians, looking wild and frightening. At the ruin across the street from us
the first Soviet orders were posted, including a curfew. Suddenly there was a
shattering noise outside. Horrified, we watched the Soviets demolish the corner
grocery store and throw its contents, shelving and furniture out into the
street. Urgently needed bags of flour, sugar and rice were split open and
spilled their contents on the bare pavement, while Soviet soldiers stood guard
with their rifles so that no one would dare to pick up any of the urgently
needed food. This was just unbelievable. At night, a few desperate people tried
to salvage some of the spilled food from the gutter. Hunger now became a major
concern because our ration cards were worthless with no hope of any supplies.
Shortly thereafter, there was another commotion outside, even worse than
before, and we rushed to our lookout to see that the Soviets had broken into the
bank and were looting it. They came out yelling gleefully with their hands full
of German bank notes and jewelry from safe deposit boxes that had been pried
open. Thank God we had withdrawn money already and had it at home."
Surrender
"The next day, General Wilding, the commander of the German troops in
Berlin, finally surrendered the entire city to the Soviet army. There was no
radio or newspaper, so vans with loudspeakers drove through the streets ordering
us to cease all resistance. Suddenly, the shooting and bombing stopped and the
unreal silence meant that one ordeal was over for us and another was about to
begin. Our nightmare had become a reality. The entire three hundred square miles
of what was left of Berlin were now completely under control of the Red Army.
The last days of savage house to house fighting and street battles had been a
human slaughter, with no prisoners being taken on either side. These final days
were hell. Our last remaining and exhausted troops, primarily children and old
men, stumbled into imprisonment. We were a city in ruins; almost no house
remained intact."
(Source: CRIENGLISH.com) |