Read The Last Man in Russia: The Struggle to Save a Dying Nation Online
Authors: Oliver Bullough
different culture.
‘When the Germans came here in
1941, they looked at us and said ai-
ai-ai. All these Russian children are
naked. They were a badly fed army,
and they asked my mother for eggs.
And she said there were no eggs,
because there was no grain for the
chickens. They were soldiers just
like ours,’ said Germangenovich.
He could speak a little German
that he had learned at school, so he
often spoke to the soldiers, he said.
They had nothing good to say for
Hitler, or for Stalin. Neither side
wanted to fight. They said they
wanted to grab Hitler and break him
over their knees.
The Germans, he said, took their
pig. Before the Germans came the
whole village had been called out to
dig
anti-tank
defences
around
Unecha. ‘We were digging anti-tank
pits when suddenly there’s a
motorcycle, and then the planes, and
then tanks with the black crosses on
them. It was hot, like today. A
German tank driver comes out, with
a red scarf. He saluted and said
“Guten tag.”
‘Then the general came and told
us not to be scared, that he had come
to free us from the Bolsheviks. Our
people were very glad really, despite
what you read in the history books
now. There would not be a collective
farm again. They gave us our land,
and reopened our churches. And this
general said they would not shoot
Unecha if no one shot at them.
‘The Germans gave us land,
divided up the horses. We started to
grow wheat. In 1942 and 1943 we
had a great harvest, we kept it for
ourselves, and the Germans took
meat, chickens and pigs. They
opened the churches, and people
went to churches to pray. We chose
our own mayors, police. The mayor
was our neighbour. The Germans
made us work sometimes, carrying
wood or resurfacing the road, but it
was not so bad.’
The Germans brought order,
according
to
Germangenovich’s
account, which more or less tallies
with most academic studies I have
read. He described how the Germans
shot one of his neighbours for
stealing a pig. And, he said, they
killed the Jews – a fact he related
deadpan, as if it did not bother him.
That was in November 1941 and
March
1942
when
Sonderkommandos
7b
and
7a
rounded up the Jews in Klintsy,
Oryol and Bryansk.
‘They killed the few Jews that we
had here, and the gypsies. There was
one young Jewish lad, but he left, so
it was just the old ones left behind.
All the Jews worked in the town,
they traded, they didn’t work with
their hands. There were maybe a
hundred in the city – they were
killed.’
In a sudden rush of memory, he
flicked back to the start of the war:
‘The Germans had dropped all these
leaflets on us. They published
newspapers as well. They had
agitators who worked hard. “Destroy
the Yid politicians,” the leaflets said.
They threw leaflets from planes, I
remember.’
Later I decided to look up those
leaflets in the Lenin Library in
Moscow. I found a section –
formerly classified – of ‘special
materials’, newspapers published by
the Germans under occupation,
which people like Germangenovich
would have read. Sure enough there
was a photograph of children and
adults running after airdropped
leaflets tumbling through the air.
Perhaps he was among them.
The newspapers were a glimpse
into a vanished life of a non-Stalinist
Russia in the 1940s. There were
jokes (‘What is the punishment for
bigamy? Two mothers-in-law’), lists
of church services, and accounts of
how the peasants were using their
private land. Every issue had lists of
people missing – wives, children,
mothers – and the names of those
looking for them.
‘Konstantin Mitenkov from the
village of Kamenki . . . informs his
wife that he is alive and healthy,’
said one notice.
Most of the pages, of course,
were
filled
with
orders
and
propaganda. All typewriters were
confiscated and town-dwellers were
banned from venturing into the
countryside. Jews were blamed for
everything,
over
and
over,
particularly for the repression dealt
out by Stalin’s N K V D security
service. A picture of an Orthodox
priest featured the caption: ‘When
the healthy body of the accused
person survived the six weeks of
torment, he had to appear before the
tribunal of the N K V D, which
included in its make-up only Jews.’
Anti-Jewish
campaigns
in
Slovakia,
France,
Norway
and
elsewhere were described in horrible
detail, as was a build-up of anti-
Semitism in the United States.
Russians were exhorted to unite with
the Germans against this supposed
mutual enemy. It was clear that not
everyone swallowed the message. A
decree promised death to anyone
who sheltered Soviet partisans, and
deprivation of rations to anyone who
did not register themselves with the
authorities.
But some Russians did go along
with
the
Nazis.
There
were
photographs of Russians in German
uniform. ‘They know who is really
to blame for the war,’ one paper
said; ‘fighting alongside the German
soldiers and their allies, they are
aiming for one goal: to destroy
Jewish Bolshevism and give peace to
the Russian land.’
The Soviet troops returned to
Unecha on 23 September 1943.
‘I went to church. I was in the
choir during the occupation,’ said
Germangenovich. ‘Then the reds
came back and closed the church and
took the priest away and killed him.
The priest was old, old, but he was
taken away immediately when the
reds came back. They took away our
police too, and our mayor. Some got
shot, some got sent to the north to
die of hunger. All of us young
people got conscripted into the
army.’
It must have been a strange
liberation for men like Father Dmitry
and Germangenovich. Occupation
had been – although fraught and
dangerous – a time of unprecedented
freedom and prosperity. Hitler’s
government hated the Russians, but
the German army was keen to
protect its rear and secure food
supplies, so it treated civilians better
than Hitler ordered it to do. It
provided
building
material
for
churches, and doubled the size of the
peasants’ personal plots of land
where they grew their food.
I
wondered,
after
hearing
Germangenovich, how much the
German
propaganda,
with
its
relentless slurs against the Jews and
the communists, had affected him.
‘After the war if people had
asked how the Germans were I
would have said they were good.
But no one ever asked me.’
Germangenovich
and
Father
Dmitry
were
all
immediately
conscripted into the Soviet army,
with its relentless demand for new
soldiers. Father Dmitry arrived at the
front as the rawest of recruits
directly after the Soviet army had
liberated Berezina. This was after
Stalingrad, when the Soviets had
broken the Nazis’ back. But there
was a lot of fighting still to come and
the soldiers would need to march all
the way to Berlin. That march was
chaotic and brutal, as the Soviet
troops
delighted
in
avenging
themselves on the Germans who had
killed their comrades and destroyed
their homes.
Again this is a time that Father
Dmitry did not linger over in his
memoirs, but he did write that he
was revolted by the mass rape of
women in newly taken towns, and
by the obscene language used by his
fellows. He wrote not of battle but of
saving
an
icon
from
being
destroyed, and about how soldiers at
night cough like sheep. He refused
to join the Komsomol, the Young
Communist League, because he was
a believer. He claimed never to have
fired a shot in anger. Then he was
injured. A shell fragment entered his
leg and, while in hospital, he
contracted typhus fever. His military
career was over.
He returned to Berezina, but life
had changed. Stalin was aware of the
role the Orthodox Church had
played in winning support for the
war effort. He allowed the German-
opened churches to remain open, so
there was somewhere for Father
Dmitry to worship.
He was a war veteran with a
pension, but there was no work for
him. Months went by. He reported to
the military commission, but they
had no orders for him. That was
when he saw the advertisement that
changed his life: an Orthodox
seminary was taking applications for
trainee priests in Moscow, the first
such intake for decades. This was
part of Stalin’s bargain with the
Orthodox Church. Father Dmitry
applied, was accepted and left for
Moscow. He was gone by the time
his brother Vladimir returned from
the front.
‘He had gone to Moscow and
gone to study in the seminary. This
was in 1944, when the war was
going on still,’ Vladimir told me
when I was in Berezina. ‘It was very
hard to study there, to get in there.’
I met Vladimir after church in
Berezina one Sunday. I was late for
the service so I sat outside, waiting
for it to end. While I was sitting in
the
morning
sunshine
reading
through Father Dmitry’s memoirs,
the priest unexpectedly stepped out
into the sunshine. He was still
holding the incense and a candle, but
was talking into his mobile phone.
‘We’re still holding the requiem,’
he told his caller, promising to call
back later. He gave me a quizzical
look and turned back inside. A
chicken strutted round from the back
of the church, pecking at the dust on
the path.
At last, the service was over and
the priest came out to ask who I was.
I explained my interest in Father
Dmitry,
and
he
pointed
out
Vladimir. Vladimir in turn called
over his daughter Maria. Maria
hailed Lidiya, daughter of one of
Dmitry’s sisters, perhaps of the
woman he had smashed round the
head and driven out of their garden.
We sat in the church building, which
was deliciously cool now the day
was heating up, and I asked them
what had made Father Dmitry the
man he was. Vladimir’s hearing was
bad, and his accent was thick. Lidiya
had to repeat my question to him,
her accent spongy with the soft ‘g’
of peasant Russia.
‘Our parents were believers, and
they implanted the faith in us
children. I remember my father was
reading the Psalms, I was small, but
I learned Psalm number 50 by heart
because I heard how he read it,’
Vladimir said. He had very clear
blue eyes, like a child’s.
Lidiya filled in for him. She was
born in 1938, so presumably she
was repeating his memories anyway:
‘They took our grandfather’s land,
his horse. They took everything.
Life was bad then, though it’s not
much better now.’