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Catacombs
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Creation
Russian: Нерубайские катакомбы or Одесские катакомбы
Odessa is located on land that millions of years ago was covered by the Black Sea. Shells of mollusks combined and formed light yellow shell rock. Examining any of this rock, a person can see that it is composed of millions of shells.
| Sandstone was both the foundation for the city and a primary building material. Easy to dig through, the sandstone allowed for the construction an estimated 2,500 kilometers1 of labyrinths stretching out under the city. Nearly the entire older section of Odessa is built with this stone. Many of these catacombs are underground stone quarries, to obtain construction limestone. Stone quarries compose approximately 95-97% of the entire extent the labyrinth of Odessa catacombs. |
From Yubert at virtualtourist.com |
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Entrance, from Odessa, a guide |
Official Soviet history
See the real history below.
The museum guides tell stories of how the catacombs were used as a refuge for slave traders, who smuggled stolen women out of the port of Odessa to the slave markets of Constantinople.
There are no forests or hills around Odessa, during World War II the only place were the Ukrainian partisans could hide were in the catacombs. The partisans used the tunnels as a base from which to attack the occupying Nazi troops. There were five partisan groups and 45 other groups, for a total of 6,000 people, that operated in these tunnels.
The partisans killed more than 3,000 Nazis, derailed over 30 trains carrying soldiers and military equipment, and they saved thousands of people from becoming slave laborers.
The partisans forced the Nazis to keep a force of 16,000 men in Odessa and surrounding villages.
DANGER: Every year the news reports someone lost in the catacombs. Sometimes rescuers find these people, sometimes they never do. Never go unaccompanied into the catacombs.
Directions to catacombs
| Odessa Bureau of Traveling and Excursions (Одесское Бюро Путешествий И Экскурсий)
Buses leave from the west side of the trainstation Tel: 45-89-47 Home phone of Natalya Ivanovna Shatkovskaya (firm has other excursions of Odessa in Russian) Only 15 Hr. Daily at: 10:30, 12:30, 14:30 (2:30) The easiest way to find the tour is look for a woman with a bullhorn in front of the train station. (Summer only) (For English tours, See tour guides page, for excursions to the Catacombs) |
Nerubaiskoye
The village of Nerubaiskoye (Нерубайские)
The Catacomb Museum is located just outside the city in the village of Nerubaiskoye, thirty minutes by bus or car. Nerubaiskoye was founded at the end of the 18the century as a reward for the Cossacks who took part in storming the Turkish Fortress Yeni-Dunya (New World) during the 1787-1791 Russian-Turkish war.
Catacomb entrance
Nerubaiskoye village is split by a deep gully. In one of these gullies is the entrance to the catacombs.
Over the main entrance to the catacomb is this inscription: "It was here in the catacombs of the Nerubaiskoye village that the partisans commanded by the Hero of the Soviet Union V.A. Molodtsov-Badayev had its underground base. They successfully operated behind enemy lines."
There are natural caves in the shell stone, but they are rare. Ancient animal bones have been found in the catacombs.
Catacomb museum
In 1965 the Odessa government had a group of Young Communist League members study the catacombs, focusing on the Soviet Revolution and World War Two and how the catacombs played a part in both of these wars. These children found many documents about these two periods and the museum was opened with these documents on May 9th, 1969.
The museum is separated into three sections:
- The first section of the museum covers the revolutionary war. In the early 1800's revolutionaries had meetings and stored illegal Marxist literature from abroad in the catacombs.
- The second section covers the 73-day defense of Odessa from Nazi invaders. During the bombing, the Odessites used the catacombs as bomb shelters.
- The third section covers the Nazi occupation of Odessa. The exhibits have weapons, radio receivers, forged passports, and propaganda material.
Yakov Gordienko
One of the sections discusses Vladimir Molodtsov. Molodtsov was sent from Mosow in 1941 to collect information about the Nazis. Molodtsov organized a group of seventy people, half which stayed in the catacombs, and the other half which were spies in Odessa. The museums has pictures of Yakov Gordienko, one of the group.
Yakov informed the resistance about the timetable of a train carrying high ranking nazi officials. The resistance then derailed the train.
Yakov also informed the resistance of a creation of a large fuel dump and found out the time and the route of a planned march of the Nazis to Nikolaev. Because of this information, Soviet fighter planes carried out an effective surprise raid.
The Nazi occupiers tried everything to destroy Molodtsov's group. They mined and sealed the entrances of the catacombs, and even tried to use poison gas. All of these attempts failed.
Acting on information from a traitor, in February and March 1942 the Nazis captured most of Yakov's detachment. After months of torture and interrogation, in June Yakov was shot and killed. The remainder of the group eventually joined up with another partisan group and continued to fight.
Molodtsov and Yakov Gordienko are buried in the Alley of Glory.
A spiral staircase leads from the museum down to the catacombs. This is the same entrance that the partisans often used. The main base that Molodtsov used are actually several kilometers away.
Avenger's monument
Overlooking the museum and the catacombs is a large 12-meter (39 feet) sculpture called "The people's avengers". The six figures in the group represent the soviets that joined the partisans:
- A sailor,
- An industrial worker,
- An old man,
- A teenager,
- A Young Communist League member, and
- A woman
The inscription reads:
- "The dark of the catacombs and the Odessa black nights, You illuminate by your hearts, To the glory of Victory, you gave of yourselves"
Inside the catacombs
The first thing that strikes a person in the catacombs is the absolute complete darkness. The temperature in these caves remains almost the same in these caves throughout the year.
The pictures drawn by partisans have been relocated from other parts of the catacombs.
The partisan items you see in these caves are almost all recreations of the original. Inside the catacombs you will see sleeping quarters, shooting galleries, headquarters, kitchen, and a well. The sentry point, the barricade, the well, the classroom, and the guardroom are authentic and were used by Molodtsov's partisans.
The sentry point and barricade, with a large machine gun guarding the entrance, was used by the partisans to stop the Nazis. Near the sentry post is a picture of the partisans and a sculpture of a grieving mother. An eternal flame burns from a hand carved from stone.
Children used the classroom during the 73-day siege. The children worked by kerosene light, and the chairs and desks were made of the shell stone.
Background on story
Background on Mitrokhin: |
The real story
Excerpts from:
Christopher Andrew, Vasili Mitrokhin. "The Mitrokhin Archive: The KGB in Europe and the West" (Penguin Books. 2000), p. 96-99
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The KGB...sought to reinvent its record during the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945 as one of selfless heorism--best exemplified by its role in special operations and partisan (guerilla) warfare behind enemy lines. According to Pavel Anatolyevich Sudoplatov, head of the wartime NKVD Directorate for Special Tasks and Guerrilla Warfare, "This chapter in NKVD history is the only one that was not officially rewritten, since its accomplishments stood on their own merit and did not contain Stalinist crimes that had to be covered up." In reality, the NKVD's wartime record, like the rest of it's history, was extensively doctored. Among the best-publicized examples of the NKVD's bravery behind enemy lines were the heroic deeds of its detachment in the Ukrainian Black Sea port of Odessa during the 907-day occupation by German and Romanian forces. The detachment based itself in the catacombs there, a maze of underground tunnels used to excavate sandstone for the construction of the elegant nineteenth-century buildings which still line many of Odessa's streets and boulevards. With over a thousand kilometers of unmapped tunnels as well as numerous entrances and exits, the catacombs made an almost ideal base for partisan warfare. In 1969, on the twenty-fifth anniversary of VE Day, a section of the catacombs on the outskirts of Odessa was opened as the Museum of Partisan Glory, which throughout the remainder of the Soviet era received over a million visitors a year." After the Second World War, however, the sometimes heroic story of the struggle to liberate Odessa from enemy occupation was hijacked by the KGB to refurbish its dubious wartime record. Pride of place in the Museum of Partisan Glory, is given to the exploits of the NKVD detachment headed by Captain Vladimir Aleksandrovich Molodtsov, who was posthumously made a Hero of the Soviet Union and suffered the indignity of having his whole life transformed into that of a Stalinist plaster saint. The origins of Molodtsov's heroism were officially traced back to selfless devotion in overfulfilling his norms as a miner during the first Five Year Plan. "What a wonderful thing it is," he was said to have declared in 1930, "not to notice or watch the time during the working day, not to wait for the end of the shift but to seek to prolong it, to run behind the [coal] trolley, to be bathed in sweat and at the end of the shift to emerge victorious in fulfilling the plan!" The Museum of Partisan Glory contains a "reconstruction" of the NKVD detachment's underground headquarters, complete with dormitories, ammunition depot, workshops, fuel store, kitchen and meeting room with-inevitably-a-a portrait of Lenin (but not of Stalin) on the wall.2 Nearby is a vertical shaft 17 meters long linking the headquarters to the surface, through which it received messages and food from its agents in Odessa. During the Soviet era numerous films, books, magazine and newspaper articles, many by the KGB, celebrated the heroic feats of the NKVD detachment in holding at bay thousands of German and Romanian forces in Odessa before giving their lives in defense of the fatherland. Mitrokhin owed his discovery of the true story of the catacombs to a colleague in the FCD Illegals Directorate S, who borrowed the multi-volume Odessa file and, when he returned it, told Mitrokhin he might find it interesting. The file began by recording the despatch of Molodtsov's detachment of six NKVD officers to Odessa shortly before it fell to the Germans in October 1941, with orders to establish underground residency which would organize reconnaissance, sabotage and special operations behind the German lines. In Odessa they were joined by thirteen members of the local NKVD Special Department, commanded by Lieutenant V. A. Kuznetsov. According to the official version of events, the two groups held a Party/Komsomol meeting on the evening of October 15 immediately before going down into the catacombs to set up their base. What actually, took place, according to the KGB file, was a raucous dinner party and heavy drinking which ended in a fight between the Moscow and Odessa NKVD detachments. The next day, the two groups entered the catacombs still at daggers drawn, with Molodtsov and Kuznetsov each claiming overall command. Over the next nine months Muscovites and Odessans combined operations against the Germans and Romanians with internecine warfare among themselves. Molodtsov's end may well have been genuinely heroic. According to the official Soviet version, he was captured by the enemy, in July 1942 but refused to beg for his life, courageously telling his captors, "We are in our own country and will not ask the enemy for mercy."3 The rest of the history of the Odessa catacombs, however, was an NKVD horror story. After Molodtsov's execution, Kuznetsov disarmed his detachment and put them under guard inside the catacombs. All but one, N. F. Abramov, were executed on Kuznetsov's orders on charges of plotting against him. As conditions in the catacombs deteriorated, the Odessans then proceeded to fall out among themselves. The dwindling food supply became moldy; and, with their kerosene almost exhausted, the detachment was forced to live in semidarkness. On August 28 Kuznetsov shot one of his men, Molochmy, for the theft of a piece of bread. On September 27 two others, Polschikov and Kovalchuk, were executed for stealing food and "lack of sexual discipline." Fearing that he might be shot next, Abramov killed Kuznetsov a month later. In his notebook, later discovered in the catacombs and preserved in the KGB Odessa file, Abramov wrote:
By this time, following several other deaths at the hands of the enemy, only three NDKV officers remained alive in the catacombs: Abramov, Glushchenko and Litvinov . Abramov and Glushchenko together killed Litvinov, then began to eve each other suspiciously in the semi-darkness. Glushchenko wrote in his diary that Abramov wanted to surrender: "We are beaten. There is no victory to wait for. He told me not to be frightened of committing treason or being shot as he has friends in German intelligence." On February 18, 19-33, apparently suffering from hallucinations, Glushchenko wrote, "[Abramov] was bending over, attending to his papers. I took my pistol from my belt and shot him in the back of the head." Over the next few months Glushchenko spent much of his time outside the catacombs in his wife's Odessa flat, finally abandoning the underground base on November 10, 1943. After the liberation of Odessa by the Red Army in April 1945 Glushchenko returned with members of the Ukrainian NKVD to collect equipment and compromising papers from the catacombs, but was fatally wounded when a grenade he picked up exploded in his hands. For almost twenty years, the Centre believed that no survivor of the Odessa catacombs remained to cast doubt on the heroic myth it had constructed. In 1963, however , the KGB was disconcerted to discover that Abramov had not been killed by Glushchenko after all, but had escaped and was living in France. His father, who may also have known the true story of the Odessa catacombs, was reported to have emigrated to the United States. Abramov's supposed widow, Nina Abramova, who had been working in the KGB First Chief Directorate, was quietly transferred to another job. The myth of the NKVD heroes of the Odessa catacombs was left undisturbed." According to statistics in KGB files, the NKVD ran a total of 2,222 "operational combat groups" behind enemy lines during the Great Patriotic War." Mitrokhin found no realistic appraisal, however, of the effectiveness of partisan warfare. Contrary to the claims of post-war Soviet hagiographers, the combat groups seem only rarely to have tied down German forces larger than themselves." Because about half of all partisans were NKVD personnel or Party officials, they were frequently regarded with acute suspicion by the peasant population on whom they depended for local support. The virtual collapse of partisan warfare in the western Ukraine, for example, was due largely to the hostility of the inhabitants to the Party and the NKVD. Though partisan warfare became more effective after Stalingrad, there were important areas-notably Crimea and the steppes-where it never became a significant factor in the fighting on the eastern fronts. |
See also
External links
- Excellent history of the Catacombs during WW2
- prikol.bigmir.net (In Russian--Use this Google translate, or alternatively, babelfish)
- See the Talk:Catacombs for an Russian account similar to Mitrokhin's (above), which has been translated with an online translating web page.
- One group's website with dozens of photos and videos: http://katakomb-od.ucoz.ru/(In Russian--Use this Google translate, or alternatively, babelfish)
Notes
- ^ www.odessaonline.com.ua (In Russian--Use this Google translate, or alternatively, babelfish)
- ^ The official Soviet guide to the Museum of Partisan Glory is Balatskv, V., Museum in the Catacombs Guide (Odessa: Mayak Publishing House, 1986). At the time of writing, the Museum is still open daily with guided tours in Russian and Ukrainian catacombs.
- ^ Samolis, T V. (ed.), Veterany Vneshnei Razvedki Rossii Kratkiy Biografichesky Spravochnik (Moscow: SVR Press, 1995), p. 102-103. This account of Molodtsov's capture and execution is neither confirmed nor contradicted by Mitrokhin's notes on the Odessa file.
- Portions of this page adapted from Odessa, a guide, by G Kononova Raduga Publishers, 1984
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