"Finnish SS-Volunteers and Atrocities against Jews," Topic
3 Posts
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Tango01 | 02 Mar 2020 9:49 p.m. PST |
…. Civilians and Prisoners of War in Ukraine and the Caucasus Region 1941-1943 "In the spring of 1941, Finland began to recruit volunteers to serve in the German Waffen-SS. After the perils of the Winter War of 1939-40, the Finnish government and the military high command wanted support against the continuing existential threat posed by the Soviet Union, even in the wake of the signing of the Moscow Peace Treaty. Only Germany had the means to provide such support in a situation where the Soviet Union had already occupied the three Baltic States (in June 1940) after seizing Eastern Poland the previous autumn. Germany, meanwhile, had annexed and occupied Denmark and Norway, and had earlier taken the other half of Poland. Without a solution like this, Finland would have found herself alone and acutely vulnerable in the European war being waged. The Finnish volunteers were placed in the Waffen SS-Division "Wiking", which fought the Red Army in Ukraine and the Caucasus between 1941 and 1943. A total of 1,408 Finnish volunteers served in the various Wiking units. Of these, 256 were killed in action, 686 were wounded, and 14 were listed as missing. In the spring of 1943, the Finnish volunteer Battalion was disbanded, and the officers and men returned to Finland. In the latter stages of Finland's Continuation War with the Soviet Union and in the short Lapland War of 1944-45, a further 113 of those who served in SS-Division Wiking were listed among the fallen."
Main page link Amicalement Armand
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deadhead | 14 Apr 2020 9:24 a.m. PST |
Just chanced upon this and thought I would look further into this. I was surprised that Finland let any young men disappear out of the homeland, when so directly threatened by the Soviets. Sure enough they were all brought back home in 1943. Now I suspect they were, by definition, not exactly paragons of liberal tendency, but there seems very little evidence of participation in atrocities i.e. massacres of POWs or civilians. Or let us say there is no evidence that they were any worse than any Wehrmacht unit, where witnessing such, at least, seemed all too common. What I found far more interesting, having never even considered it before, was how many Jewish men fought in the Finnish Army, but would refuse German medals and decorations. Reminds me of reading that the Japanese would have nothing to do with anti-Semitism, despite their track record elsewhere! |
Tango01 | 15 Apr 2020 9:52 p.m. PST |
Thanks!. Amicalement Armand |
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