Location of the Hegewald colony, situated directly south of Zhytomyr

Hegewald was a short-lived German colony during World War II, situated near Zhytomyr in Reichskommissariat Ukraine. It was repopulated in late 1942 and early 1943 by Volksdeutsche settlers transferred from occupied territories of Poland, Croatia, Bessarabia, and the Soviet Union to an area earmarked for the projected Germanization of the Ukrainian lands. Plans were prepared months in advance by the SS, RKFDV and VoMi, but major problems with supplies occurred right from the region's initial establishment.[1] Himmler's original plans to recruit settlers from Scandinavia and the Netherlands were unsuccessful.[2]

History

The initial plans were difficult to implement for a number of reasons, including the reluctance and fear among many Volksdeutsche owing to partisan activities in the area. Elaborate guidelines were set up to prepare the locations.[3] The new settlers were to receive the homes of killed or evicted Ukrainian peasants, as well as their furniture, livestock, and food, and schools were to be built.[3] This required a massive deportation effort, mostly on foot.[4] Most homes were in terrible shape by German standards. There was a considerable shortage of lumber, and general lack of winter clothing and shoes.[5]

The Ukrainian and Polish Germans arrived by train, having been forcibly removed from their homes, to be doled out plots of land and informed of their quotas.[6] They received use, but not ownership, of the land assigned to them.[7]

Neither the deported Ukrainians nor the ethnic Germans received more than a few hours' notice of their relocation.[7] Despite damage to the houses, most could be made functional before snowfall.[8] Elaborate Christmas pageants were set up, deliberately irreligious, to celebrate the return of light and link it to the "dark powers" surrounding Germany, and gifts and food were provided.[9]

All did not go as planned. The intended preparations were undermined by filching of craftsmen, and neither food nor clothing arrived as promised.[10] Furthermore, many evicted Ukrainians returned to the area.[11] Efforts were made to continue, with League of German Girls members being sent even when they had to receive gas masks and soldier escorts, but by November 1943, the inhabitants were in flight before the Red Army.[11] These were the first of massive flights from Eastern Europe.[12]

Villages

The colony consisted of 27 villages, all renamed in German; they were situated along the Zhytomyr-Berdychiv road. The villages reverted to their Ukrainian names after the war.[13]

  • Schröbelesberg – Zarichany (Зарічани)
  • Neuheimat – Pryazhiv (Пряжів)
  • Bubenhausen – Volytsya (Волиця)
  • Neubiesing – Holovenka (Головенка)
  • Pfenningstadt – Vyshneve (Вишневе)
  • Heimkehr – Stavetsʹke (Ставецьке)
  • Troja – Troyaniv (Троянів)
  • Reichstreu – Ozeryanka (Озерянка)
  • Preuersdorf – Rizhky (Ріжки)
  • Arbeit – Solotvyn (Солотвин)
  • Fleiß – Hlynivtsi (Глинівці)
  • Au – Stepok (Степок)
  • Zehnhub – Vershyna (Вершина)
  • Neuposen – Kodnya (Кодня)
  • Altposen – Kodnya (Кодня)
  • Bosfershof – Pavlenkivka (Павленківка)
  • Wertingen – Vertokyyivka (Вертокиївка)
  • Heinrichsfeld – Ivankivtsi (Іванківці)
  • Reinharding – Horodyshche (Городище)
  • Am Hügel – Luka (Лука)
  • Klein Lüneburg – Lishchyn (Ліщин)
  • Neu Trudering – Lishchyn (Ліщин)
  • Mödersdorf – Mlynyshche (Млинище)
  • Tiefenbach – Pisky (Піски)
  • Sachsenhard – Skomorokhy (Скоморохи)
  • Maienfeld – Sinhury (Сінгури)
  • Ichstingen – Myrolyubivka (Миролюбівка)

See also

Notes

  1. Lynn H. Nicholas, Cruel World: The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web pp. 336, 473, ISBN 0-679-77663-X.
  2. Lynn H. Nicholas, Cruel World: The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web p 330-1, ISBN 0-679-77663-X
  3. 1 2 Nicholas, pp. 331, 474.
  4. Nicholas, p 331-2
  5. Nicholas, p. 474.
  6. Heather Pringle, Heinrich Himmler: The Nazi Leader's Master Plan Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  7. 1 2 Karel C. Berkhoff, Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule p 45 ISBN 0-674-01313-1
  8. Nicholas, p 336
  9. Nicholas, p 336-7,
  10. Nicholas, p 338
  11. 1 2 Nicholas, p 339
  12. Nicholas, p 434
  13. Lower, Wendy: Nazi empire-building and the Holocaust in Ukraine, p. 176. University of North Carolina Press, 2005.

References

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