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This advance on the part of Russia washailed in the west as a definite invasion96with the object of sweeping across Prussiato Berlin. It was nothing of the sort.Russia was only advancing because theGermans had not yet collected their fullforces. Indeed, Russia was by no meansready, and she carefully refrained frompressing too far forward, pending thecompletion of her own preparations. Afterthe affair of Stalluponen there was obviouslythe temptation to push forward. But thiswould have brought the attacking forcedangerously near the main German armyand dangerously distant from Russian support.The advance, therefore, ceased untilstronger forces could be brought forward.The German preparations, too, were progressing,and they were able to delivervigorous attacks on the small invading force.Numerous attempts were made to recaptureboth Stalluponen and Eydtkuhnen, but allwere beaten back. Then, after an interval97of about a week, the main Russian army,under General Rennenkampf pushed forward,and the advance into Eastern Prussiamay be said to have definitely begun.
The Russians must be somewhat of a disappointmentto many experts, professionaland amateur, whose supreme ignoranceof the conditions obtaining in the easterntheatre of the war was only equalled bytheir sublime confidence in the ability of asteamroller to push forward, full steamahead, over all obstacles and against allopposition. When towards the middle ofAugust the news came that Russia wasready for serious business, it was confidentlypredicted that the end was insight. It was only a matter of 180 milesfrom the Russian frontier to Berlin, the104Germans had only Landwehr and Landsturmforces, contemptible third-rate fightingmaterial, to defend her territories,and Austria was too busy shooting herown mutinous soldiers to be a menace toanybody. Obviously then, said the strategists,it could only be a matter of daysbefore the tramp of the Russian legionswould be heard perilously close to Berlin,the Kaiser would have to withdraw hisforces from the west to meet the dangerin the east, the allies would overthrowhis weakened armies and hurl them backagainst the oncoming Russian hordes.Armageddon looked to be in danger ofdegenerating into a race to Berlin.
Utilising his advantages to the full,von Hindenburg lured the Russians towardsTannenberg to the south-east ofOsterode. The Russians, realising that asuccessful offensive was their only chance,blundered forward. They pressed on until133they found themselves in a position wheretheir flanks rested on more or less solidground, but their centre was backed by avast swamp. Then von Hindenburg struckhis blow. An immense force was hurledagainst the Russian right. A desperateencounter followed, but sheer weight ofnumbers gave victory to the Germans.The Russians were forced back on to theswamps. A similar attack on the Russianleft was equally successful.
The retreat of General Bankal from Lublinand the driving back of the Germansfrom Lodz left General Russki free to moveforward in earnest. The conditions were atonce reversed. Hitherto the successful advanceof General Bankal had caused his162army to be the most important factor inthe campaign. Now it was only of secondaryimportance. The centre of interesthad shifted from Poland to Eastern Galicia.
Galina Koroliova, born in 1935 in Ardavskoye, Belarus (now in Verkhniadzvinski raion, Belarus), describes being five years old when the war broke out; her memories of the Germans arriving in her town and how they were very friendly and joyous; growing up in a large house and their various kinds of neighbors, including Jews and Romani; the peacefulness of the Germans at first; being injured and treated by a German doctor; the partisans causing trouble for the Nazis resulting in the occupying Germans turning on the people; being kicked out of their homes by German soldiers; the roundup of everyone into a grain shed; how the Germans were very indiscriminate; escaping the shed with her brother and mother along with numerous others; hiding in a large bush in a field; how those who were unable to escape were burned alive inside the shed, including her best friend; the enormous black plume coming from the shed; the Slavic-speaking police officers who helped the Germans round up the townspeople; the survival of only 23 people from Ardavskoye; how after the young men left either to live in the woods or to join the army, the Jewish and Romani population was comprised of only children and the elderly; the destruction during the second summer of the German occupation of Belarus, including the burning of cities and villages; joining a community in the woods with her family and other survivors; a commotion one morning when the Germans were approaching and began shooting at them as they tried to flee; successfully escaping with her family; the gradual return of people to the village in the woods; how bakers made bread for the partisans with the grain they hid away in the ground; the arrival of the Romanians and being forced with her family and the small remaining population into a cellar; the good relations between the village and the freedom fighters; surviving an explosion in the cellar; the nature of her life during the war; how when the Fascists came, the partisans left and when the Fascists left, the partisans came; hiding in a swamp with others and being rounded up and sent to a concentration camp in Borkovichi (Vitebsk voblasts', Belarus); the forcing of the adults to dig trenches each morning while the children were free to do whatever they wanted, including going out into the surrounding town, where they begged for food or stole whatever they could; getting sick with typhus and not remembering how the camp was liberated; surviving villagers returning and being greeted by allied soldiers who had begun liberating Europe; seeing an enormous car by the side of the road just outside of the woods and being terrified as she nudged the bodies of dead German soldiers surrounding the car; not knowing if there were Jewish villagers from other towns in the camp; how there were no Jews left from Ardavskoye; the mass grave in her current town of Sebezh, Russia, where the Jews were massacred during the war; how after the war the massacred Jews were buried properly; the stories she was told about what happened during the war in Sebezh along with what she remembers seeing towards the end of the war; getting to Sebezh in 1944; the fate of the Jewish citizens of Sebezh; smaller stories from life during the war; and communal living during the war.
Galina Koroliova, born in 1935 in Ardavskoye, Belarus (now in Verkhniadzvinski raion, Belarus), describes being five years old when the war broke out; her memories of the Germans arriving in her town and how they were very friendly and joyous; the roundup of everyone into a grain shed; escaping the shed with her brother and mother along with numerous others; hiding in a large bush in a field; how those who were unable to escape were burned alive inside the shed, including her best friend; the enormous black plume coming from the shed; the Slavic-speaking police officers who helped the Germans round up the townspeople; the survival of only 23 people from Ardavskoye; how after the young men left either to live in the woods or to join the army, the Jewish and Romani population was comprised of only children and the elderly; the destruction during the second summer of the German occupation of Belarus, including the burning of cities and villages; joining a community in the woods with her family and other survivors; a commotion one morning when the Germans were approaching and began shooting at them as they tried to flee; successfully escaping with her family; the gradual return of people to the village in the woods; how bakers made bread for the partisans with the grain they hid away in the ground; the arrival of the Romanians and being forced with her family and the small remaining population into a cellar; the good relations between the village and the freedom fighters; surviving an explosion in the cellar; the nature of her life during the war; how when the Fascists came, the partisans left and when the Fascists left, the partisans came; the forcing of the adults to dig trenches each morning while the children were free to do whatever they wanted, including going out into the surrounding town, where they begged for food or stole whatever they could; getting sick with typhus and not remembering how the camp was liberated; surviving villagers returning and being greeted by allied soldiers who had begun liberating Europe; seeing an enormous car by the side of the road just outside of the woods and being terrified as she nudged the bodies of dead German soldiers surrounding the car; not knowing if there were Jewish villagers from other towns in the camp; how there were no Jews left from Ardavskoye; and the mass grave in her current town of Sebezh, Russia, where the Jews were massacred during the war. 2b1af7f3a8