TRANSNISTRIA (WORLD WAR II)

Romania controlled (August 19 1941January 29 1944) the whole "Transnistrian" region between Dniester and Bug rivers and Black Sea coast. The region was divided into 13 judeţe (counties).

'Transnistria', during World War II, was an occupied region of the USSR, under control of Romania, during the maximum eastward expansion of the Axis Powers, from August 19 1941 to January 29 1944. Limited on the west by the Dnister river, on the east by the Southern Bug river, and on the south by the Black Sea, it comprised present-day Transnistria (which compared to the whole was only a small portion along the bank of the Dniester) and territories further east, including the Black Sea port of Odessa, which became the capital of Transnistria during WWII.
In World War II, Romania, persuaded and aided by Nazi Germany, for the first time in history took control of Transnistria. There was never any attempt to formally annex the occupied territory beyond the Dniester (Romanian: ''Nistru'') River: it was generally considered merely a temporary buffer zone between Greater Romania and the Soviet front line. Transnistria had never been considered part of Bessarabia. In August 1941, Adolf Hitler persuaded Ion Antonescu to take control of Transnistria as a substitute for Northern Transylvania, occupied by Horthy's Hungary. Romania did not annex Transnistria, hoping to eventually make the exchange, but due to the developments on the Eastern Front this never happened.
Two preeminent political figures of the day, Iuliu Maniu and Constantin Brătianu declared that "''the Romanian people will never consent to the continuation of the struggle beyond our national borders''."[1]

Contents
Romanian occupation of Transnistria, 1941-1944
Conquest
Organization
The Holocaust in Transnistria under Romanian occupation
Notes and references
External links
See also

Romanian occupation of Transnistria, 1941-1944


Conquest

Until 26 July 1941, Romanian army has pushed back the Soviet Army from Bessarabia, the territory of Romania occupied by the Soviet Union in June 1940. Nazi Germany needed Romania as an ally in the war against the Soviet Union. However Romania was complacent with recovering its own territory. To ease the persuasion of the then dictator of Romania Ion Antonescu, Hitler ordered that the German Army advance in Ukraine from the north to south, following a route east of the Southern Bug river, in order to trap Soviet troops between Dniester and Southern Bug. Antonescu was thus put in the face of a simple task for his army: conquer from the encircled and retreating Red Army troops a precisely delimited area. Antonescu ordered 4th Romanian Army to this task.
In the first week of advance, in mid August 1941, Romanians took over all of the region, except a small area around Odessa without fight. At the time, Romanians had 60,000 solders to conquer the city to 30,000 defenders. However, the organization was so poor, and the command was so superficial that it resulted in a military blunder. Understanding their luck, Soviets have stop evacuating the city by sea and instead sent reinforcements, reaching a strength up to 100,000. Romanians were forced to more than double their number as well. Although occasionally on some small portions of front line, small and medium rank Romanian officers showed clear successes, the general organization of the siege was disastrous, and several generals were dismissed afterwards. Eventually, after 2 months of siege, Romanian army took control of the city at the price of 68,000 KIA and MIA. Only in the Battle of Stalingrad, Romanian casualty figures were higher, but then Romanians would face a numerically and technically superior enemy. Although the Soviets eventually left the city, the whole operation was a success, as they were able with a smaller force to block a larger force of the enemy, and to inflict a great number of casualties. This was especially important, since the Soviet High Command initially ordered to abandon the city. At the end of the war, Odessa received a title of ''Hero-city''.
Once Romanian troops entered Odessa, they established the headquarters of two of their divisions in the NKVD building. However, the building was mined by the Soviets, who blew it up, killing over 100 members of Romanian divisional headquarters, including almost 50 officers, paralyzing the activity of the two divisions for a couple weeks. As a reprisal, Ion Antonescu ordered the arrest and massacre of civilians suspected of aiding the Red Army. When it became clear that identifying individuals directly responsible for the blowing up in the conditions of Odessa in the fall of 1941 would be almost impossible, Antonescu ordered to shoot Jews. The massacre that followed resulted in 19,000 civilians being killed, the absolute majority of whom (including women, children and elderly) having nothing to do with the military action whatsoever. A further number of Odessa Jews were deported to ghettos and concentration camps in the northern half of the region.
A partisan movement, with a strength of 300, was active in the Odessa catacombs all throughout the occupation. It managed to organize an excellent communication with the partisan headquarters in Moscow. Antonescu was advised to use poisonous gas to clear the catacombs, but afraid of the public implications of such an act decided to abstain from it. Eventually, Romanians were able to inflict a high number of casualties on the partisan with the help of some partisans that switched sides and revealed the movement through the catacombs. Yet, the catacombs were never completely cleared, and the partisans have maintained a continuous resistance movement up to the return of the Red Army.
Organization

Romanian ''Government of Transnistria'' tried to create at least some level of normality in the region. To this end, it opened all churches, previously forbidden by the Soviets. In 1942-43, 2,200 primary schools were organized in the region, including 1,677 Ukrainian, 311 Romanian, 150 Russian, 70 German and 6 Bulgarian. 117 middle and high schools was opened, including 65 middle schools, 29 technical high schools, and 23 theoretical high schools. Theaters were opened in Odessa and Tiraspol, as well as several museums, libraries, and cinemas throughout the region. On 7 December 1941, the University of Odessa was reopened with 6 faculties - medicine, poli-technical, law, sciences, languages and agricultural engineering.[2]
The Holocaust in Transnistria under Romanian occupation

Many Jews were deported to Transnistria from Bessarabia and Bukovina. During the period 1941–1944, 200,000 Roma people and Jews were victims of the Romanian occupation of Transnistria.[3] Not being Romanian territory, Transnistria was used as a killing field for the extermination of Jews. Survivors say that in comparison with the Holocaust of Nazi Germany, where deportations were carefully planned, the Romanian government did not prepare to house thousands of people in Transnistria, where the deportees stayed. The people were instead placed in crude barracks without running water, electricity or latrines. Those who could not walk were simply left to die.
In Odessa, between 80,000 and 90,000 of the city's roughly 180,000 Jews remained at the time the Germans and Romanians captured the city on October 16, 1941. Six days later, a bomb exploded in the Romanian military headquarters in Odessa, prompting a massacre of Jews; many were burned alive.USHMM In two months alone, October - November 1941, Romanian troops in Odessa killed about 30,000 Jews. Transnistria was the site of two concentration camps and several ''de facto'' ghettos (which the Romanians referred to as "colonies"). In addition, most of the remaining Jews in Bessarabia (84,000 of 105,000) and northern Bukovina (36,000 of 60,000) were herded into these as well.[4] The ''Holocaust Encyclopedia'' (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum) writes that "Among the most notorious of these ghettos… was Bogdanovka, on the west bank of the Bug River… In December 1941, Romanian troops, together with Ukrainian auxiliaries, massacred almost all the Jews in Bogdanovka; shootings continued for more than a week." Similar events occurred at the Domanevka and Akhmetchetkha camps, and (quoting the same source) "typhus-devastated Jews were crowded into the 'colony' in Mogilev." Other camps, also with very high death rates, were at Pechora and Vapniarka, the latter reserved for Jewish political prisoners deported from Romania proper. Many Jews died of exposure, starvation, or disease during the deportations to Transnistria or after arrival. Others were murdered by Romanian or German units, either in Transnistria or after being driven across the Bug River into the German-occupied Ukraine. Most of the Jews who were sent to the camps in Transnistria never returned. Those who survived, around 70,000, returned to Romania in 1945, discovered that they had lost their houses.Kathryn Nelson, "The miracle of survival", ''Minnesota Daily'', December 7, 2006.
Even for the general population, food in Transnistria was very scarce, through lack of Romanian planning. According to one survivor's account, people would gather outside a slaughterhouse and wait for scraps of meat, skin and bones to be thrown out of the slaughterhouse after the cleaning each morning. He remembers that they were fighting for the bones "just like dogs would" and that people were starving to death. Among the survivors was Liviu Librescu.[5]

Notes and references


1. Charles King, ''The Moldovans: Romania, Russia, and the Politics of Culture'', Hoover Institution Press, Stanford, CA, 2000. ISBN 081799792X
2. Anatol Petrenci, "Basarabia în timpul celui de-al doilea război mondial (1939-1945)", Ed. Prut Internaţional, 2006
3. Юлиус Фишер (Julius Fischer), Транснистрия. Забытое кладбище (Transnistria. Forgotten graveyard), Шоа. Информационно-аналитический портал (Shoa. Information-analysis portal), shoa.com.ua, 20 November 2005. The ''Holocaust Encyclopedia'', USHMM, estimates that 150,000 and 250,000 Romanian and Ukrainian Jews were killed in Transnistria.
4. A further 150,000 Bessarabian and Bukovinian Jews retreated (in terrible conditions) from Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina in June-July 1941, before the departure of the Soviet troops. They survived the war, but did so in miserable conditions. 12,000 Jews were also killed in Bessarabia and Norhtern Bukovina during the military action in June-July 1941, mostly, but not only, by German Eisatzcommando D units attached to 11th German Army.
5. Matti Friedman, Holocaust survivor killed in Va shooting, AP, April 17, 2007

External links



Rumania in World War II, 1939-1945, World History at KMLA. Accessed 8 Jan 2006.

★ I. Altman Глава 3 Гетто и Лагеря на Территории СССР ("Chapter 3: Ghettoes and Camps on the territory of the USSR") in "Холокост и Еврейское Сопротивление на Оккупированной Территории СССР" ("Holocaust and Jewish Resistance in the Occupied Territory of the USSR"). TOC. Originally on history.pedclub.ru/shoa; archived on the Internet Archive 21 October 2004; page is encoded in Win-1251.

Romania, ''Holocaust Encyclopedia'', United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Accessed online 19 December 2006

Alexander Dallin - Odessa, 1941-1944: A Case Study of Soviet Territory Under Foreign Rule

Map

See also



History of Transnistria

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