![]() It’s a different story than the one of the winners or losers of the big war. The fate of the Estonian people in World War II is conveyed through the stories of these two main characters, their comrades in arms and those close to them. By the summer of 1944 Jüri has become an experienced non-commissioned officer who knows that he serves in an army where only those survive who can keep their mouth shut. When an Estonian body of troops – the 8th Estonian Rifle Corps – is formed in the Red Army at the beginning of 1942, it means a narrow escape for Jüri and the rest of the survivors. In late autumn 1941 all the Estonians mobilised into the Red Army are gathered up and sent to labour battalions, where around 12,000 Estonian citizens die of hunger, disease and exhaustion, as their living conditions are worse than in prison camps. When the war breaks out, their unit retreats towards Leningrad. “Without much warning, we ourselves were part of the Red Army only a couple of months later,” he says. In June 1940 his unit watches the Red Army march in. Jüri Jõgi, senior sergeant of the Red Army, is summoned to the Estonian Defence Forces in 1939 to perform his military service. By the summer of 1944 he is an experienced frontline soldier of the Estonian 20th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS. Repressions organised by the Soviet power in the years 19 – arrests of innocent people, deportations and executions – motivate many Estonians to join the German, their all time historic enemy. He has a lucky escape – he’s simply not at home on the day of the deportation. Waffen-SS* volunteer Karl Tammik is seventeen years old, when his parents and younger sister are deported to Siberia in 1941. The war is depicted through the eyes of Estonians fighting on either side, in the German army and in the Red Army. The action of “1944” spans from the Battle of Tannenberg Line in July to the occupation of the Sõrve peninsula by the Red Army at the end of November. The director Elmo Nüganen has created a feature film about the events of war in Estonia in 1944. Estonians are forced to fight brother against brother in a war of others – in a deadly battle between the Soviet Union and the Greater German Reich – where they have nothing to win. In World War II around 55,000 Estonians are mobilised into the Red Army and at least 72,000 into the German armed forces. The Republic of Estonia ceases to exist.Ī hope that surrendering is a way to save Estonia from war turns out to be an illusion. Estonia surrenders without a fight and is occupied. In September 1939 the Soviet Union demands the establishment of Red Army military bases on the Estonian territory. “1944” tells the story of Estonia in World War II A thrilling war movie, full of action, love, tears and laughter takes us back to one of the most controversial events in history. Today 70 years on, the makers of Estonia's biggest ever box-office success “Names in Marble”, try to show the hopes, aims and drama of these men and the ones close to them as objectively as possible. The US Displaced Persons Commission in September 1950 and other decisions by Western Allies have drawn the same distinction. The International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg declared the SS to be a criminal organization, but exonerated the Baltic Waffen-SS units. Estonian men, deported by Stalin in 1939, now brought out of Siberian labour camps and returning home in enemy uniforms. Motivated until they meet their brothers in the Soviet Army. Half of the SS infantry consists of local Estonian conscripts motivated to resist the looming Soviet re-occupation of their small country. ![]() Volunteer infantry battalions from Denmark, East Prussia, Flanders, Holland, Norway and Wallonia within the Waffen-SS fight off Soviet Army's thrust at Germany. As the Soviet forces were constantly reinforced, their overall casualties are estimated by Estonian historian Mart Laar to be 170,000 dead and wounded.The Battle of Tannenberg Line, second to Stalingrad, the bloodiest conflict on the Eastern Front. The German force of 22,250 men held off 136,830 Soviet troops. Roughly half of the infantry consisted of the personnel of the 20th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Estonian). Waffen-SS forces included 24 volunteer infantry battalions from the SS Division Nordland, the SS Division Langemarck, the SS Division Nederland, and the Walloon Legion. The strategic aim of the Soviet Estonian Operation was to reoccupy Estonia as a favorable base for the invasions of Finland and East Prussia. The battle was fought on the Eastern Front during World War II. They fought for the strategically important Narva Isthmus from 25 July–10 August 1944. The Battle of Tannenberg Line ( German : Die Schlacht um die Tannenbergstellung Russian : Битва за линию «Танненберг») or the Battle of the Blue Hills ( Estonian : Sinimägede lahing) was a military engagement between the German Army Detachment Narwa and the Soviet Leningrad Front. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |