Eichenfeld massacre | |
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Part of the Ukrainian War of Independence | |
Location | Eichenfeld (now Novopetrivka), Ukraine |
Coordinates | 48°03′59″N34°59′02″E / 48.06639°N 34.98389°E |
Date | 8 November 1919 |
Target | Landowners and their adult sons |
Attack type | Massacre |
Deaths | 136 |
Victims | Ukrainian Mennonites |
Perpetrators | Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine |
Motive | Anti-German sentiment, class conflict |
Part of a series on the |
Makhnovshchina |
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The Eichenfeld massacre was a 1919 attack against the Mennonite colonists of Eichenfeld by the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine. Rising tensions between the native Ukrainian peasantry and Mennonite landowners had culminated with attacks on the latter, as insurgents took control of southern Ukraine and began carrying out reprisals against those that had collaborated with the Central Powers and the White movement.
In October 1919, Eichenfeld, a village of the Jasykowo sub-colony that had previously played host to a notable Selbstschutz detachment, was targeted for reprisals by the insurgents and local collaborators. The insurgents carried out a campaign of executions against the village's landowners and their adult sons, starting a series of anti-Mennonite massacres perpetrated by the insurgents until their defeat at the hands of the Red Army, which brought an end to the violence.
During the late 1780s, Mennonites began to emigrate from Prussia and Poland to Ukraine, where they established the colonies of Chortitza and Molotschna, under the protection of the Russian Empire. [1] In 1868, the Chortitza Colony purchased some land from a member of the Russian nobility in order to provide more to its increasingly landless community. The following year, they established the sub-colony of Jasykowo on this land, which was about 50-kilometers south of Katerynoslav. According to the census of 1873, six villages had been established on this land, which counted a total population of 957. By 1910, the colony had diversified, as 461 Orthodox, 210 Lutherans and 61 Catholics were counted among the population, but all of these minorities were kept landless. By 1911, the size of the colony had grown from 8,012 to 10,621 hectares, divided into farms, each about 35 hectares in size, while a further 2,460 hectares was owned privately by Mennonite landlords. [2] Local Ukrainian villages, such as Fedorivka, were brought under leasing agreements for access to Mennonite-owned lands in Jasykowo. [3]
In the years leading up to the 1917 Revolution, some Mennonites even began to note the vast economic inequality between well-off Mennonite families and the neighbouring Ukrainian peasants. [4] Anti-German sentiment also grew following the outbreak of World War I and continued after the establishment of the Ukrainian People's Republic and the seizure of power by the Bolsheviks during the October Revolution. Revolutionary rhetoric of the period stoked class conflict against the Mennonite landowners. [5] Following the invasion of Ukraine by the Central Powers, many Mennonite colonists expressed support for the occupation forces, as it put an end to the expropriations by the revolutionary socialists. [6] Although they were previously pacifists, Mennonites formed their own armed Selbstschutz detachments to protect their communities from further expropriation and violence. In some instances individual Mennonites accompanied Austrian and German units on punitive expeditions into Ukrainian villages. [7] Despite protests by committed pacifists, by the autumn of 1918, Jasykowo had drafted 250 men into the Selbstschutz, including 18 in Eichenfeld, led by Heinrich Heinrich Heinrichs. Tensions between Mennonite settlers, Ukrainian peasants, and military forces increased throughout the occupation period and into 1919. [8]
After an insurgent detachment led by Nestor Makhno and Fedir Shchus defeated the Austro-Hungarian Army at the battle of Dibrivka, the subsequent counterattack against the village of Velykomykhailivka by the occupation forces and accompanying German colonist units provoked fierce insurgent reprisals against Mennonites in the region. [9] The burning of Velykomykhailivka acted as a catalyst for insurgent raids against Mennonite colonies. [10] Makhno himself failed to prevent this escalation of violence against Mennonites. In one instance in 1919, Makhno threatened Fedir Shchus with execution for murdering German colonists at Silbertal, but did not take any further action on the matter. [11] Despite orders from Makhno that any insurgents caught looting would be shot, the Mennonite colonies of Schönfeld in autumn 1918 were hit particularly hard during the raids, as insurgents confiscated supplies, burned down a number of the villages, and killed over 80 Mennonites. [12] Schönfeld became the base of operations for Simeon Pravda, who used the colony as a headquarters for raiding surrounding villages. [13]
Most of the Schönfelder Mennonites fled to the colony of Molotschna, where a number of them joined up with the Selbstschutz. [14] By December 1918, anti-Mennonite raids hit Jasykowo, where the local Selbstschutz resisted attacks by units of the Ukrainian People's Army under Trifon Gladchenko and the subsequent Soviet invasion of Ukraine. [15] The Selbstschutz then formed a common front with the White movement against the insurgents, [16] but by March 1919, the Red Army, allied with Makhno, had overrun and occupied the Mennonite colony of Molotschna, where they engaged in a systematic purge of former Selbstschutz members, subjecting many of the villagers to cordon and search operations. [17]
In the wake of their victory over the Volunteer Army at the battle of Peregonovka, the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine initiated a counteroffensive that expanded the reach of the Makhnovshchina throughout southern and eastern Ukraine, bringing the Mennonite colonies of Chortitza, Molotschna, Jasykowo and Sagradovka under Makhnovist occupation. [18] Before leaving Oleksandrivsk for the insurgent headquarters at Katerynoslav, on 5 November, Makhno issued a citizens' address in The Road to Freedom which called for the death of the "bourgeoisie". [19] The address circulated among the rank-and-file of the insurgent army at a time when attacks against Mennonites were already intensifying, as the insurgents rapidly embraced the new campaign of terror. On the same day as the address was published, one Mennonite called Dietrich Neufeld wrote in his diary of the increasingly dangerous environment in the colonies: [20]
We feel as if we have been condemned to death and are now simply waiting for the executioner to come. Those who are not sunk in apathy are thinking of escape. But we have been notified that anyone caught three steps from his house will be shot without warning. Actually there are so many armed riders around that any attempt to escape would mean certain death.
One of the Mennonite settlements that came under attack from the Makhnovists was Eichenfeld (Russian : Дубовка, romanized: Dubovka), a village of 306 people, not far from the Ukrainian village of Fedorivka. [4] Tensions over land rights between the native Ukrainians and Mennonite settlers had reached a boiling point, with some Ukrainians from neighboring Lukaschowo even attempting to warn the Eichenfelders of an impending premeditated attack by the insurgent forces and sympathetic local peasants. [21]
On 8 November 1919, thousands of insurgent troops passed through the Jasykowo colony, on their way to Katerynoslav. At 10am, a number of the insurgents stopped in Eichenfeld, where they assassinated Heinrich Kornelius Heinrichs, the father of the local Selbstschutz leader. That same afternoon, the insurgents then targeted six tent missionaries that were preaching in the village. [22] Despite having been granted permission to carry out their evangelical mission by Makhno himself, these Shtundists had been identified by the insurgents as "servants of Capital" and were subsequently murdered. [23] By 4pm, the violence had largely abated, but after the sunset, the insurgents returned. [22]
That night, an insurgent cavalry squadron surrounded Eichenfeld and attacked its inhabitants. [24] Going from door-to-door, the insurgents executed the village's landowners and their adult sons. [25] After interrogating them about their property holdings, those that were found to own land were systematically murdered, while the landless peasants were left alive. [26] The insurgents appeared to be under orders to specifically target landowning men, in an attempt to eliminate Mennonite property claims and the possibility of inheritance. [27] After the men were dispensed with, the insurgents then raped many of the women and girls that were left over, [25] infecting them with a number of venereal diseases. [28] The exact number of rapes that occurred during the massacre are not known, in part due to the stigma associated with sexual assault and the trauma involved in recounting the experience. [29]
Houses were burnt down and belongings looted before the insurgents left the village, where 75 people had been killed, while 61 more people were killed in the surrounding area. [24] After the massacre was over, Ukrainian peasants from nearby villages took part in the looting, reportedly even taking the doors and windows off buildings. [30] Survivors of the massacre fled to Adelsheim, a neighboring Mennonite village. They stayed there until 11 November, when some returned to Eichenfeld and buried their dead in unmarked graves. [31] Some survivors indicated a belief that the prior actions of the Eichenfeld Selbstschutz had motivated the perpetrators of the massacre, who desired to carry out retribution for attacks against one of their bands. [32]
Between 8 November and 18 December 1919, 827 Mennonites were murdered in the insurgent-occupied colonies, accounting for two-thirds of all Mennonites murdered during the war. [33] Further massacres were documented at Blumenort, [34] in Sagradowka, where insurgents indiscriminately killed over 200 Mennonite men, women and children, [35] and Borosenko, where no Selbstschutz unit had ever been present. [36] The massacres were finally brought to an end in 1920, after the defeat of the insurgents and subsequent conquest of Ukraine by the Red Army, [37] but hundreds more Mennonites would starve to death during the famine of 1921–1922 that followed. [38]
Mennonite historiography has attributed responsibility for the massacre to Nestor Makhno, the commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Insurgent Army, while Makhnovist historiography has paid little attention to any of the insurgent massacres against the Mennonites. [39] Analysis of first-hand sources have found no evidence of direct involvement in the massacre by Makhno himself, who at the time was stationed in Katerynoslav, which was under siege by the Whites. [27] Makhnovist historiography would go onto characterise these attacks as a symptom of class conflict. [40]
Peter Andreyevich Arshinov, was a Russian anarchist revolutionary and intellectual who chronicled the history of the Makhnovshchina.
Nestor Ivanovych Makhno, also known as Bat'ko Makhno, was a Ukrainian anarchist revolutionary and the commander of the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine during the Ukrainian War of Independence. He established the Makhnovshchina, a mass movement by the Ukrainian peasantry to establish anarchist communism in the country between 1918 and 1921. Initially centered around Makhno's home province of Katerynoslav and hometown of Huliaipole, it came to exert a strong influence over large areas of southern Ukraine, specifically in what is now the Zaporizhzhia Oblast of Ukraine.
The Russian Mennonites are a group of Mennonites who are the descendants of Dutch and North German Anabaptists who settled in the Vistula delta in West Prussia for about 250 years and established colonies in the Russian Empire beginning in 1789. Since the late 19th century, many of them have emigrated to countries which are located throughout the Western Hemisphere. The rest of them were forcibly relocated, so very few of their descendants currently live in the locations of the original colonies. Russian Mennonites are traditionally multilingual but Plautdietsch is their first language as well as their lingua franca. In 2014, there were several hundred thousand Russian Mennonites: about 200,000 live in Germany, 74,122 live in Mexico, 150,000 in Bolivia, 40,000 live in Paraguay, 10,000 live in Belize, tens of thousands of them live in Canada and the US, and a few thousand live in Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil.
Selbstschutz is the name given to different iterations of ethnic-German self-protection units formed both after the First World War and in the lead-up to the Second World War.
Chortitza Colony was a volost, a subdivision of the Yekaterinoslav uezd within the Yekaterinoslav Governorate. During the times of Catherine the Great, the area was annexed by the Russian Empire after liquidation of the Zaporozhian Sich. It was granted to Plautdietsch-speaking settlers for colonization northwest of Khortytsia Island. The territory of the former colony is now split between the city of Zaporizhzhia and its adjacent Zaporizhzhia Raion, within Zaporizhia it is part of Voznesenskyi and Khortytskyi districts.
The Makhnovshchina was a mass movement to establish anarchist communism in southern and eastern Ukraine during the Ukrainian War of Independence of 1917–1921. Named after Nestor Makhno, the commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine, its aim was to create a system of free soviets that would manage the transition towards a stateless and classless society.
Molotschna Colony or Molochna Colony was a Russian Mennonite settlement in what is now Zaporizhzhia Oblast in Ukraine. Today, the central village, known as Molochansk, has a population less than 10,000. The settlement is named after the Molochna River which forms its western boundary. The land falls mostly within the Tokmatskyi and Chernihivskyi Raions. The nearest large city is Melitopol, southwest of Molochansk.
The Nabat Confederation of Anarchist Organizations, better known simply as the Nabat, was a Ukrainian anarchist organization that came to prominence during the Ukrainian War of Independence. The organization, based in Kharkiv, had branches in all of Ukraine's major cities. Its constitution was designed to be appealing to each of the different anarchist schools of thought.
The Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine, also known as Makhnovtsi, named after their founder Nestor Makhno, was an anarchist army formed largely of Ukrainian peasants and workers during the Russian Civil War. They protected the operation of "free soviets" and libertarian communes by the Makhnovshchina, an attempt to form a stateless anarcho-communist society from 1918 to 1921 during the Ukrainian War of Independence.
Agafya "Halyna" Andriivna Kuzmenko was a Ukrainian teacher and anarchist revolutionary. After moving to southern Ukraine, she became a prominent figure within the ranks of the Makhnovshchina, a mass movement to establish a libertarian communist society. Kuzmenko spearheaded the movement's educational activities, promoted Ukrainization and acted as an outspoken advocate of women's rights. Along with her husband, the anarchist military leader Nestor Makhno, in 1921 she fled into exile from the political repression in Ukraine. While imprisoned for subversive activities in Poland, she gave birth to her daughter Elena Mikhnenko, whom she brought with her to Paris. Following the death of her husband, the outbreak of World War II saw her deportation for forced labour, first by the Nazis and then by the Soviets. After her release, she spent her final days with her daughter in Kazakh SSR.
Nehrungisch is a subdialect of Low Prussian, belonging to the Low German language variety. It was spoken in East Prussia and West Prussia, in the region around the Vistula Spit near Danzig. The easternmost locality where this variety was spoken was Narmeln, and it was spoken from Narmeln to Krakau (Krakowiec). Its Eastern border was to Mundart der Elbinger Höhe,a Low Prussian variety. The dialect survives in Chortitza- Plautdietsch, a dialect of Plautdietsch brought to Ukraine by migrants from the Vistula region. The distinguishing Chortitza features were present in the Northeast of the Vistula delta.
Werdersch is a subdialect of Low Prussian, which itself is a subdialect of Low German. This dialect is spoken in Poland and was spoken in the former province of West Prussia. Werdersch is closely related to Nehrungisch and Plautdietsch.
Oleksiy Vasylovych Chubenko was a diplomat for the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine.
The Regional Congresses of Peasants, Workers and Insurgents represented the "highest form of democratic authority" within the political system of the Makhnovshchina. They brought together delegates from the region's peasantry, industrial workers and insurgent soldiers, which would discuss the issues at hand and take their decisions back with them to local popular assemblies.
The flags of the Makhnovshchina consisted of a number of different black and red flags, each emblazoned with anarchist and socialist slogans.
The Battle of Dibrivka was a military conflict between Ukrainian insurgents, led by Nestor Makhno and Fedir Shchus, and the Central Powers that were occupying southern Ukraine. It took place on 30 September 1918, towards the end of World War I. The battle began when Makhno, Shchus, and a group of anarchist supporters ambushed Austrian and Ukrainian detachments stationed in Dibrivka. The anarchists were armed with machine guns and were assisted by local peasants, who together captured ammunition, arms, and prisoners of war. It resulted in an insurgent victory and the establishment of an autonomous territory in the region, following the subsequent defeat of the Central Powers.
The Polonsky conspiracy, also known as the Polonsky plot or Polonsky affair, was an attempt by Ukrainian Bolsheviks to overthrow the Makhnovshchina during the autumn of 1919.
Simeon Pravda was a Ukrainian military commander, known mainly for his persecution of the Mennonite colonists of Schönfeld, which preceded the Eichenfeld massacre.
The Kontrrazvedka was the counterintelligence division of the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine. Its main functions were to carry out military reconnaissance, the prosecution of captured enemies and counter-insurgency operations.
The Bolshevik–Makhnovist conflict was a period of political and military conflict between the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic and the Makhnovshchina, for control over southern Ukraine. The Bolsheviks aimed to eliminate the Makhnovshchina and neutralise its peasant base. In turn, the Makhnovists fought against the implementation of the Red Terror and the policy of war communism.