Inside the Rzhev Meatginder. Gennadiy Fedorovich Rusakov

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Название Inside the Rzhev Meatginder
Автор произведения Gennadiy Fedorovich Rusakov
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isbn 9785005909947



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Inside the Rzhev Meatginder

      Gennadiy Fedorovich Rusakov

      Editor Yulia Dmitrievna Gavrilenko

      Proofreader Elena Gennadievna Rusakova

      Proofreader Yuliya Nikolaevna Boyarinova

      Cover designer Yulia Dmitrievna Gavrilenko

      Translator Vsevolod Mikhailovich Petrunev

      © Gennadiy Fedorovich Rusakov, 2022

      © Yulia Dmitrievna Gavrilenko, cover design, 2022

      © Vsevolod Mikhailovich Petrunev, translation, 2022

      ISBN 978-5-0059-0994-7

      Created with Ridero smart publishing system

      Rusakov GenNadiy Fedorovich

      INSIDE THE

      RZHEV MEATGRINDER

      CHILDHOOD

      World War II prose

      1941—1945

      People!

      As long as the hearts are pounding, —

      Remember!

      At what

      Price

      happiness has been won, —

      please remember!

      Requiem (Eternal Glory to the Heroes)

      Robert Rozhdestvensky

      Preface

      To my shame, with three higher educations and 58 years behind me, I knew very little, if nothing at all, about the Rzhev arc (Battles of Rzhev). I vaguely remembered the lines of Alexander Tvardovsky: “I was killed near Rzhev, In a nameless swamp…” and that’s it…

      “Rzhev arc. Childhood” Rusakov Gennady Fedorovich – a teenager of 8 years by the will of fate found himself with his family between two front lines.

      Another facet, a different exposition of the war, no less terrible. After reading the book, I realized that I need to look for information. I typed on the Internet and… the first thing that fell out:

      Rzhev meat grinder, forgotten and hushed up until now.

      “We were advancing on Rzhev through corpse fields”… You crawl over corpses, and they are piled up in three layers, swollen, teeming with worms, emitting a sickening sweet smell of decomposition of human bodies. The explosion of the shell drives you under the corpses, the soil shudders, the corpses fall on you… The millions of victims near Rzhev were diligently hushed up by Soviet historiography and are still being hushed up. It is because of this that many soldiers are not buried until now.’ Pyotr Mikhin – in the book of memoirs: ‘Ahead is the “valley of death”.

      Steeply… I read and look on.

      “This silence negated the heroic efforts, inhuman trials, courage and self-sacrifice of millions of Soviet soldiers, was a desecration of the memory of almost a million dead” … Based on TASS materials

      After the defeat at Moscow in 1942, German units withdrew to the west. The Soviet General Staff is planning a grandiose offensive – the giant pincers of the Kalinin and Western fronts should close in the area of Vyazma, cutting off and burying four German armies in the Rzhev pocket. But… the operation failed. The Red Army was “bogged down” at Rzhev for fifteen months.

      The offensive went down in history as the “Rzhev Meat Grinder”. Rzhev became a symbol of heavy and bloody battles without moving forward.

      According to modern data, the demographic losses of the USSR in the Great Patriotic War amounted to 25—27 million people.

      Of these, died military personnel – 8,668,400

      6,818,300 soldiers died in battles, hospitals and other incidents,

      1,850,100 people did not return from captivity

      civilian population in the occupation zone – 13,684,700

      7,420,400 people deliberately exterminated,

      2,164,300 people died in forced labor in Germany

      4,100,000 people died from starvation, disease and lack of medical care.

      Almost 14 million civilians – think about it – are children, the elderly, women. Unarmed, just killed or starved to death.

      Even if you have nothing to do with the art of war and try to stay away from politics – always remember – “For whom the bell tolls!” in fact.

      The memorial complex to the Soviet soldier near Rzhev was erected near the village of Khoroshevo, Rzhevsky District, Tver Region, visible from the M-9 highway.

      The memorial was erected on the site of bloody battles near Rzhev. It is built on people’s donations. The center of the memorial complex was a 25-meter sculpture of a soldier. The project to create a memorial was implemented by the Russian Military Historical Society with the support of the Union State, the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation and the Government of the Tver Region. Based on the materials: MIC Izvestia.

      We have to go. To bow down....to the family…

      “It’s necessary – not dead! It’s got to be alive!”

      (Requiem. R.Rozhdestvensky)

      Gavrilenko Yulia Dmitrievna

      The text makes a huge impression… And it’s just a documentary narrative, without any attempt to entice with storylines, twists, denouements… Overwhelming… Perhaps the impression is determined by the fact that this is the text of a familiar person, but rather not.

      These memories need to be published everywhere! Marked “must read”!

      Boyarinova Yulia Nikolaevna.

      INSIDE THE

      RZHEV MEATGRINDER

      CHILDHOOD

      World War II prose

      1941—1945

      The 75th anniversary of the Great Victory, this tragic and, at the same time, heroic page in the history of our country and all the peoples who lived then in the vast expanses of a still single, multinational state, is approaching. On my desk is the 46th issue of Evening Moscow dated November 20, 2014, where the scheme of hostilities on the “Rzhevskaya Arc” was published.

      It was there, in the very center of this arc, that our family found itself in 1941 – 1945.

      Chapter 1. The year is 1941. I’m 7 years old.Fire

      I met the beginning of the war in the Moscow region, in the urban-type settlement of Novopetrovskoe, where I lived with my father and mother.

      I was in my eighth year. We lived renting a small room in a private house. We found ourselves in Novopetrovskoe because in 1934, during a thunderstorm, my maternal grandmother’s house was struck by lightning, the house burned to the ground.

      Only my great-grandfather’s elderly father was in the house, he was 104 years old. All the village adults worked in the fields; it was August – the height of the harvesting work. When they saw and realized in the field that he was on fire, his grandmother’s son rode into the village on horseback, but all he managed to do was pull out his grandfather, resting and not understanding what was happening.

      Everything was burned, including the property of our family, because after the wedding, my father and mother lived with their grandmother, my mother’s mother, in this village with the offensive name of Tupitsino. They were still building their house, in another,