Ostarbeiter games; Parade of SS Galicia in Kolomja; Estonian Waffen SS battalion

Identifier
irn1001382
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 2001.355.1
  • RG-60.3144
Dates
1 Jan 1941 - 31 Dec 1943
Level of Description
Item
Languages
  • Ukrainian
Source
EHRI Partner

Creator(s)

Scope and Content

Several shots of different groups of people on a field, each with a sign indicating their nationality: Protektorat, Kroaten, Franzosen, Belgier, Hollander, Ostarbeiter, Italiener, Bulgaren, Ostarbeiter. The narration indicates that these are work teams living and working in Germany. They go on to engage in athletic competitions, including tug of war, a track race, and a soccer game (France vs. Protektorat, France wins). Military ceremony for the SS Waffen Division Galicia in Kolymyja, Ukraine. Men stand on a wooden platform in a field, surrounded by a crowd. They carry flags and military standards, including what may be a variation on the Lviv coat of arms (or perhaps on the West Ukrainian People's Republic's coat of arms, which itself is likely a variation on the Lviv one), several swastika flags, at least two SS standards, and a banner with sword painted down the middle, reading "For Ukraine, For Freedom, For Honor, For Glory. --- U.G.A. 1918". SS Galiciana men parade through town, some dressed in traditional Ukrainian (and even Cossack or Tatar) clothing, others in civilian clothing, others in military garb. Translation of Ukrainian narration: A sport festival took place in [a German city, name not audible] among European work teams whose members work in Germany. Race. National teams. And the winner is France. A soccer match between France and the Protectorate. The French are wearing bright shirts. And the French team wins 2 to 1. [Kolomyja/Galicia/Western Ukraine.] In Kolomyja, Ukraine, a manifestation of volunteer units took place. This area in Eastern Galicia contributed the largest number of volunteers to the newly formed SS-Galicia division. The governor addressing the manifestation said: "By joining these ranks of volunteers you confirm that you are not keeping apart from the European battle but together with others you accept the battle. You want to serve your homeland and a new Europe. Your fight is for a better and greater future. And this fight will continue until the very end." Shoulder to shoulder with the German soldiers these volunteers are going to fight against the Bolsheviks.

Note(s)

  • Duplicate footage, RG-60.3477 and RG-60.3478, Film ID 2490.

  • SS-Galicia Waffen: Waffen-Grenadier-Division der SS "Galizien" (also known as the 1st Ukrainian Division of the Ukrainian National Army). In 1943/1944 a determined group of young men and women in Galicia - the western area of the Ukraine that borders Poland - volunteered to serve in a combat division destined for eastern front combat. Their goal: to engage and destroy the Soviet hordes menacing their homeland and to counter Nazi Germany's subjugation of their country. Although initially Galicia's volunteers would serve in a German sponsored military formation, in actuality the volunteers of the Galicia division wanted to engage all hostile ideologies - both from the east and west - in order to secure a free independent Ukraine. U.G.A. refers to the Ukrainian Galician Army, which was the regular army of the West Ukrainian People's Republic, established in late 1918 and dissolved by early 1919. It was territory claimed by Ukrainian nationalists who wished to establish a Ukrainian nation following WWI (when Poland finally gained statehood). Much of the area it covered, however, was contested: many Poles (and others) lived throughout the region, which included Galicia, Transcarpathia, and Bukovina, especially in its capital city, Lviv (Lwow), which was, at the time, more Polish and Jewish than it was Ukrainian. Within months, Polish forces pushed Western Ukrainians out of their new capital. Many Ukrainian nationalists saw the Nazis as ideological allies who could help them drive out the Poles and the Soviets, both keys to establishing a post-war Ukrainian nation. Similarly, when recruiting collaborators, Nazis often appealed to already-existing senses of nationalism and ethnic tensions (many of which had only begun to take hold in the past couple of decades). Collaboration was a chance to exact vengeance upon Poles, or Ukrainians, or Soviets. Nazis were careful not to encourage too strong a sense of nationalism in their allies, however; for instance, the Ukrainian SS Division was purposefully named "Galician", not "Ukrainian".

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This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.