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{{short description|Nazi German militia of World War II}} {{Italic title}} {{Infobox military unit | unit_name = ''Volkssturm'' | image = Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1971-033-15, Vorbeimarsch des Volkssturms an Goebbels, Berlin.jpg | image_size = 260px | caption = ''Volkssturm'' marching. Most of the men marching are carrying [[Panzerfaust]] launchers; the man at the bottom carries a [[MG34]], November 1944. | type = [[Militia]] | country = {{flagcountry|Nazi Germany}} | command_structure = {{flagicon image|Flag of the NSDAP (1920–1945).svg}} [[Nazi Party]] | commander5 = [[Heinrich Himmler]] (Military training and equipment)<br />[[Martin Bormann]] (Administration and indoctrination) | start_date = 18 October 1944 | disbanded = 8 May 1945 }} The {{lang|de|'''Volkssturm'''}} ({{IPA|de|ˈfɔlksʃtʊʁm|-|De-Volkssturm.ogg}}, {{lit|people's storm}}){{sfn|Fritz|2004|p=ix}}{{sfn|Kershaw|2011|pp=86–88}} was a ''[[levée en masse]]'' national [[militia]] established by [[Nazi Germany]] during the last months of [[World War II]]. It was set up by the [[Nazi Party]] on the orders of [[Adolf Hitler]] and established on 25 September 1944.{{sfn|Stargardt|2015|p=456}} It was staffed by conscripting males between the ages of 16 and 60 years, who were not already serving in some military unit. The ''Volkssturm'' comprised one of the final components of the [[Total war#Nazi Germany|total war]] promulgated by [[Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda|Propaganda Minister]] [[Joseph Goebbels]], part of a Nazi endeavor to overcome their enemies' military strength through force of will.{{sfn|Kershaw|2001|pp=713–714}} ''Volkssturm'' units fought unsuccessful battles against [[Allies of World War II|Allied forces]] at the end of the war. On several occasions, its members participated in atrocities, accompanied by German civilians and the [[Hitler Youth]], which were overseen by members of the [[Schutzstaffel|SS]] or ''[[Administrative divisions of Nazi Germany|Gau]]'' leaders. ==Origins and organisation== [[File:Deutsches Reichsgesetzblatt 44T1 053 0253.jpg|thumb|Publication of the decree on the formation of the ''Volkssturm'', 20 October 1944, first page]] [[File:Deutsches Reichsgesetzblatt 44T1 053 0254.jpg|thumb|second page]] [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1979-107-10, Angetretene Volkssturmmänner.jpg|right|thumb|An SS Propaganda Company photograph of ''Volkssturm'', 21 October 1944; only the men on the far left and far right end of the line appear to be uniformed members, with the far right being an ''[[Ordnungspolizei]]'' officer.]] [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-H29033, Ratibor, Volkssturmmänner mit Panzerfäusten.jpg|thumb| This photo depicts the disparity in age between the members, on the left a man of 50 or more with a boy of about 15 or 16.]] The ''Volkssturm'' drew inspiration from the [[Kingdom of Prussia|Prussia]]n ''[[Landsturm]]'' of 1813–1815, that fought in the liberation wars against [[Napoleon]], mainly as guerrilla forces.{{sfn|Herzstein|1986|p=246}} Plans to form a ''Landsturm'' national militia in eastern Germany as a last resort to boost fighting strength were first proposed in 1944 by General [[Heinz Guderian]], chief of the [[German General Staff]].{{sfn|Guderian|2001|p=362}} The army did not have enough men to resist the Soviet onslaught. So, additional categories of men were called into service, including those in non-essential jobs, those previously deemed unfit, over-age, or under-age, and those recovering from wounds.{{sfn|Moorhouse|2012|p=351}} The ''Volkssturm'' had existed, on paper, since around 1925, but it was only after Hitler ordered [[Martin Bormann]] to recruit six million men for this militia that the group became a physical reality. While the regime formally established the ''Volkssturm'' on 25 September, it was not announced to the public until 16 October 1944.{{sfn|Burleigh|2000|p=786}} The official launch date was two days later, 18 October 1944 and was chosen by [[Heinrich Himmler]] to evoke parallels with the popular uprising which, according to popular legend, ended French rule over Germany and culminated in the [[Battle of Leipzig]] on the same date in 1813.{{sfn|Evans|2010|p=675}} Despite the appeal for this last-ditch effort, the intended strength of "six million" members was never attained.{{sfn|Read|2005|p=855}} Joseph Goebbels and other propagandists depicted the ''Volkssturm'' as an outburst of enthusiasm and the will to resist.{{sfn|Herzstein|1986|pp=251–252}} Historian [[Daniel Blatman]] writes that the ''Volkssturm'' was portrayed as the "incarnation" of the greater ''Volksgemeinschaft'', whereby "all differences in social status, origin, or age vanish and unite all people on the basis of race. It was the service framework for members of the local community, who had been raised together and lived side by side, and now bore arms together in order to defend the community."{{sfn|Blatman|2011|pp=222–223}} The militia was meant to embody Nazi racial community ideals, uniting men across classes for National Socialist ends.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=35}} However, many Germans greeted the ''Volkssturm'' with resignation or resentment.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=4–5}} Few were enthusiastic, and many feared its members would be treated as an illegal guerrilla force with the consequences that represented.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=5–6}} To this end, there was a widespread justifiable concern among Germans that the Allies—especially the Soviets—would treat ''Volkssturm'' fighters as illegal combatants, leading to the summary execution of participating members.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=91–93}} Correspondingly, Germany sought legal assurance from the Allies that ''Volkssturm'' members would be treated as lawful combatants. Britain and the U.S. granted recognition contingent on compliance with Hague rules.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=91–93}}{{efn|The use of armbands, paybooks, and the Nazi attempt to equip the ''Volkssturm'' with uniforms reflected their efforts to meet the mandates outlined by the Hague Convention.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=93–94}} }} In some regards, the ''Volkssturm'' was the culmination of Goebbels' "total war" speech of February 1943 and its formation was "given a big build-up" in the November 1944 newsreel episode of ''[[Die Deutsche Wochenschau]]''.{{sfn|Welch|2002|p=120}} Consistent messages of final victory from various Nazi media outlets accompanying the ''Volkssturm's'' creation provided a psychological rallying point for the civilian population.{{sfn|Kallis|2005|pp=181, 192}} While it had some marginal effect on morale, it was undermined by the recruits' visible lack of uniforms and weaponry.{{sfn|Herzstein|1986|p=248}} Nazi themes of death, transcendence, and commemoration were given full play to encourage the fight.{{sfn|Herzstein|1986|p=252}} Many German civilians realised that this was a desperate attempt to turn the course of the war. Sardonic old men would remark, "We old monkeys are the ''Führer''{{'}}s newest weapon" (in German this rhymes: ''"Wir alten Affen sind des Führers neue Waffen"''). A popular joke about the ''Volkssturm'' went "Why is the ''Volkssturm'' Germany's most precious resource? Because its members have silver in their hair, gold in their mouths, and lead in their bones."{{sfn|Fritz|2004|p=36}} Whether it was indicative of desperation or not (as the sardonic German jokes suggest), the creation of the ''Volkssturm'' was part of a Nazi strategy—characterized in modern terminology as “defense-in-depth”—to fortify all German towns into defensive nodes, so as to forestall and delay the Allied entry into the greater Reich.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=34–35}} For these militia units to be effective, they needed not only strength in numbers, but also [[fanaticism]].{{sfn|Benz|2007|p=254}} During the early stages of ''Volkssturm'' planning, it became apparent that units lacking morale would lack combat effectiveness. To generate fanaticism, ''Volkssturm'' units were placed under the direct command of local Nazi Party officials, the ''[[Gauleiter]]'' and ''[[Kreisleiter]]''.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|p=222}} Mass rallies, oath ceremonies, and group singing were designed to instill communal fanaticism.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=30}} The new ''Volkssturm'' was also to become a nationwide organisation, with Heinrich Himmler as [[Replacement Army]] commander, responsible for armaments and training. Though nominally under party control, ''Volkssturm'' units were placed under ''[[German Army (1935–1945)|Heer]]'' command when engaged in action. At the Reich level, the SS and the [[Nazi Party Chancellery|Party Chancellery]] agreed to share responsibility between them. Himmler retained responsibility for military equipment and training while Bormann, head of the Party Chancellery, was charged with oversight of administration and political indoctrination.{{sfn|Orlow|1973|p=474}}{{sfn|Zentner|Bedürftig|1991|p=1004}} Aware that a "people's army" would not be able to withstand the onslaught of the modern army wielded by the Allies, Hitler issued the following order towards the end of 1944: <blockquote> Experience in the East has shown that ''Volkssturm'', emergency and reserve units have little fighting value when left to themselves, and can be quickly destroyed. The fighting value of these units, which are for the most part strong in numbers, but weak in the armaments required for modern battle, is immeasurably higher when they go into action with troops of the regular army in the field. I, therefore, order: where ''Volkssturm'', emergency, and reserve units are available, together with regular units, in any battle sector, mixed battle-groups (brigades) will be formed under unified command, so as to give the ''Volkssturm'', emergency, and reserve units stiffening and support.{{sfn|Trevor-Roper|1964|p=204}}</blockquote> With the Nazi Party in charge of organising the ''Volkssturm'', each ''Gauleiter'', or Nazi Party District Leader, was charged with the leadership, enrollment, and organisation of the ''Volkssturm'' in their district. The largest ''Volkssturm'' unit seems to have corresponded to the next smaller territorial subdivision of the Nazi Party organisation—the ''Kreis''. The basic unit was a [[battalion]] of 642 men. Units were mostly composed of members of the [[Hitler Youth]], invalids, the elderly, or men who had previously been considered unfit for military service.{{sfn|Zentner|Bedürftig|1991|pp=1004–1005}} On 12 February 1945, the Nazis conscripted German women and girls into the auxiliaries of the ''Volkssturm''.{{sfn|Hildebrand|1984|p=82}} Correspondingly, girls as young as 14 years were trained in the use of small arms, [[panzerfaust|''Panzerfausts'']], [[MG 42|machine guns]], and hand grenades from December 1944 through May 1945.{{sfn|Kater|2004|p=238}} Municipal organisation: * A ''Bataillon <!--German-->'' (battalion) in every ''[[Districts of Germany|Kreis]]'' (there were 920 ''Kreise'' in Greater Germany) * A ''Kompanie'' ([[Company (military unit)|company]]) in every ''Ortsgruppe'' (the "local chapter" of the Nazi Party). * A ''Zug'' ([[platoon]]) in every ''Zelle'' (literally a "cell" of Party members) * A ''Gruppe'' ([[squad]]) in every ''Block'' (city block) Each ''Gauleiter'' and ''Kreisleiter'' had a ''Volkssturm'' Chief of Staff. From the militia's inception until the spring of 1945, Himmler and Bormann engaged in a power-struggle over the jurisdictional control over the ''Volkssturm'' regarding security and police powers in Germany and the occupied territories; a contest which Himmler and the SS more or less won on one level (police and security), but lost to Bormann on another (mobilising reserve forces).{{sfn|Yelton|2003|pp=167–177}} These disputes over jurisdiction only served to hinder centralized coordination of the ''Volkssturm'', reducing its effectiveness in turn.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=37–38}} Historian David Yelton described the situation as two ranking officers at the helm of a sinking ship fighting over command.{{sfn|Yelton|2003|p=176}} [[Benito Mussolini]] suggested, through his son [[Vittorio Mussolini|Vittorio]], then general secretary of the [[Republican Fascist Party]]'s German branch, that 30,000 Italians should be added to the ''Volkssturm'' in the defence of Germany. However, no evidence exists that this offer was implemented.{{sfn|Goeschel|2018|p=287}} Meanwhile, there were cases when criminals and foreigners were inducted into the ''Volkssturm'' if the authorities determined them to be ideologically acceptable.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=75–76}} ==Uniforms and insignia==<!-- This section is linked from [[Comparative military ranks]] --> [[Image:Volkssturm armband.svg|thumb|200px|''Volkssturm'' armband]] The ''Volkssturm'' "uniform" was only a black armband with the German words ''Deutscher Volkssturm [[Wehrmacht]]'' ("German People's Storm, (of the) Armed Forces").{{sfn|Lepage|2009|p=153}} The German government tried to issue as many of its members as possible with military uniforms of all sorts, ranging from ''[[Feldgrau]]'' to [[Military camouflage|camouflage]] types. To this end, the Nazi government meant for members of the ''Volkssturm'' to wear uniforms and avoid "partisan" weapons in order to maintain legality under international aggreements, but this did not always prove practicable.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=93}} Often, the members wore a motley assortment of whatever they could find for their uniforms; a telling example of the ''Volkssturm''{{'}}s piecemeal outfitting occurred in the [[Rhineland]], where one unit was provided with "pre-war black SS uniforms, brown Organization Todt coats, blue [[Luftwaffe]] auxiliary caps, and French [[Adrian helmet]]s."{{sfn|Stargardt|2015|p=458}} Most members of the ''Volkssturm'', especially elderly members, had no uniforms at all and were not supplied, so they generally wore either work uniforms (including railway workers, policemen, and firemen), Hitler Youth uniforms, old uniforms or parts of uniforms from the [[World War I|First World War]], or their civilian clothing and usually carried with them their own personal rucksacks, blankets, cooking-equipment, etc.{{sfn|Evans|2010|pp=675–676}} ==Ranks== The simple paramilitary insignia of the ''Volkssturm'' were as follows: {| style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;" |-align="center" ! Volkssturm Rank ! Translation ! Comparative military rank ! Insignia |-align="center" | ''[[Bataillonsführer]]'' | Battalion leader | [[Major (rank)|Major]] | [[File:NSKK-Sturmbannführer.svg|50px]] |-align="center" | ''Bataillonsarzt'' | Battalion physician | [[Captain (armed forces)|Captain]] | [[File:NSKK-Sturmführer.svg|50px]]<br>{{small|with [[Rod of Asclepius]]}} |-align="center" | ''[[Kompanieführer]]'' | Company leader | Captain | [[File:NSKK-Sturmführer.svg|50px]] |-align="center" | ''[[Zugführer (military)|Zugführer]]'' | [[Platoon leader]] | [[Lieutenant]] | [[File:NSKK-Truppführer.svg|50px]] |-align="center" | ''Sanitätsdienstgrad'' | [Platoon]<br>Medical orderly | [[Corporal]] | [[File:NSKK-Scharführer.svg|50px]] |- align="center" | ''Gruppenführer'' | Squad leader | Corporal | [[File:NSKK-Scharführer.svg|50px]] |-align="center" | ''Volkssturmmann'' | People's storm man | [[Mann (paramilitary rank)|Private]] | [[File:NSKK-Mann.svg|50px]] |} ==Training and impact== [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-J31391, Berlin, Volkssturm, Ausbildung.jpg|thumb|''Volkssturm'' members being trained to use the ''[[Panzerfaust]]'' anti-tank weapon, February or March 1945]] [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1973-001-30, Volkssturm, Frau mit Panzerfaust.jpg|thumb|''Volkssturm'' trooper explaining the handling of a ''Panzerfaust'' to a female civilian, March 1945]] Typically, members of the ''Volkssturm'' received only very basic military training. Training across the Reich was inconsistent and typically brief; for many, learning military operations was often nothing more than a few evening or weekend sessions with outdated weaponry.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=107}} Many units were instructed in basic rifle handling, anti-tank tactics, and urban defense, but few received sustained or professional instruction.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=107–108}} Historian David Yelton notes that ideological indoctrination was prioritized alongside military instruction, though ''Volkssturm'' members generally responded more positively to practical training than to propaganda.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=160}} The lack of weapons, ammunition, and experienced instructors further hampered combat readiness, leading many units to enter battle ill-prepared and with dangerously low morale.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=109}} There was no standardisation of any kind and units were issued only what equipment was available. This was true of every form of equipment—''Volkssturm'' members were required to bring their own uniforms and culinary equipment etc. This resulted in the units looking very ragged and, instead of boosting civilian morale, it often reminded people of Germany's desperate state.{{sfn|Herzstein|1986|p=248}} Armament was equally haphazard: though some Karabiner 98ks were on hand, members were also issued older [[Gewehr 98]]s, [[Mannlicher M1895|Steyr-Mannlicher M1895s]], 19th-century [[Mauser Model 1871|Gewehr 71s]], and [[Mannlicher M1888|Steyr-Mannlicher M1888s]], as well as [[Dreyse M1907]] pistols. In addition there was a plethora of Soviet, British, Belgian, French, Italian, and other weapons that had been captured by German forces during the war. The Germans had also developed cheap ''Volkssturm'' weapons, such as [[MP 3008]] machine pistols and ''[[Volkssturmgewehr]]'' rifles. These were completely stamped and machine-pressed constructions (in the 1940s, industrial processes were much cruder than today, so a firearm needed great amounts of semi-artisanal work to be actually reliable). The ''Volkssturm'' troops were nominally supplied when and where possible by both the ''[[Wehrmacht]]'' and the SS.{{sfn|Duffy|2002|p=383}} By the end of January 1945, the ''Volkssturm'' had only accumulated 40,500 rifles and 2,900 machine guns amid this mish-mash of foreign and outdated assemblage of weapons.{{sfn|Stargardt|2015|pp=456–457}} When units had completed their training and received armament, members took a customary [[Hitler Oath|oath to Hitler]] and were then dispatched into combat. Teenagers and middle-aged men were sent to separate training camps, some of whom received as little as ten to fourteen days of training before being sent to fight.{{sfn|Stargardt|2015|p=457}} Unlike most English-speaking countries, Germany had universal military service for all young men for several generations, so many of the older members would have had at least basic military training from when they served in the German Army and many would have been veterans of the First World War. ''Volkssturm'' units were supposed to be used only in their own districts, but many were sent directly to the front lines. Ultimately, it was their charge to confront the overwhelming power of the British, Canadian, Soviet, American, and French armies alongside ''Wehrmacht'' forces to either turn the tide of the war or set a shining example for future generations of Germans and expunge the defeat of 1918 by fighting to the last, dying before surrendering.{{sfn|Bessel|2010|p=17}}{{efn|Also see: Berd Wegner, "Zweite Weltkrieg und die Choreographie des Untergangs", ''Geschichte und Gesellschaft'', vol. xxvi (2000), no. 3, pp. 492–518.}} It was an apocalyptic goal which some of those assigned to the ''Volkssturm'' took to heart. Unremittingly fanatical members of the ''Volkssturm'' refused to abandon the Nazi ethos unto the dying days of Nazi Germany, and in a number of instances took brutal "police actions" against German civilians deemed defeatists or cowards.{{sfn|Kershaw|2011|p=87}} Losses were high among the ''Volkssturm'' – Battalion 25/235 for instance, started out with 400 men but fought on until there were only 10 men remaining. Fighting at [[Kostrzyn nad Odrą|Küstrin]] between 30 January to 29 March 1945, militia units made up mostly of the ''Volkssturm'' resisted for nearly two months. Losses were upwards of 60 percent for the ''Volkssturm'' at [[Kołobrzeg|Kolberg]], roughly 1,900 of them died at [[Wrocław|Breslau]], and during the [[Battle of Königsberg]], another 2,400 members of the ''Volkssturm'' were killed.{{sfn|Sorge|1986|pp=49–50}} At other times along the western front particularly, ''Volkssturm'' troops would cast their arms aside and disappear into the chaos.{{sfn|Burleigh|2000|p=786}} Many units lost their enthusiasm for the fight when it became clear that the Allies had won, prompting them to lay down their weapons and surrender – they also feared being captured by Allied forces and tortured or executed as partisans.{{sfn|Moorhouse|2012|p=352}} Duty to their communities also played a part in their capitulation, as did self-preservation.{{sfn|Bessel|2010|p=22}} In the end, only approximately 150,000 ''Volkssturm'' members experience serious military action; most served in auxiliary roles.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=150–152}} ==Battle of Berlin== [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-J28787, Volkssturmbataillon an der Oder.jpg|thumb|''Volkssturm'' members receiving orders in an [[Defensive fighting position|entrenched position]] along the [[Oder]] River, February 1945. Note the mixed assortment of firearms, a [[Volkssturmgewehr|VG 1-5]], a [[MG 42]] and a scope-equipped [[Karabiner 98k]].]] Their most extensive use was during the [[Battle of Berlin]], where ''Volkssturm'' units fought in many parts of the city. This battle was particularly devastating to its formations; however, many members fought to the death out of fear of being [[Gulag|captured by the Soviets.]]{{sfn|Kissel|1962|p=32}} The ''Volkssturm'' had a strength of about 60,000 in the Berlin area, formed into 92 battalions, of which about 30 battalions of ''Volkssturm I'' (those with some weapons) were sent to forward positions, while those of ''Volkssturm II'' (those without weapons) remained in the inner city.{{sfn|Beevor|2002|p=178}} One of the few substantive fighting units left to defend Berlin was the [[LVI Panzer Corps]], which occupied the southeastern sector of the town, whereas the remaining parts of the city were being defended by what remained of the SS, the ''Volkssturm'', and the Hitler Youth formations.{{sfn|Ziemke|1968|p=481}} Nonetheless, a force of over 2.5 million Soviet troops, equipped with 6,250 tanks and over 40,000 artillery pieces, were assigned to capture the city, and the diminished remnants of the ''Wehrmacht'' were no match for them. Meanwhile, Hitler denounced every perceived "betrayal" to the inhabitants of the ''[[Führerbunker]]''.{{sfn|Bessel|2010|pp=104–109}} Not eager to die what was thought to be a pointless death, many older members of the ''Volkssturm'' looked for places to hide from the approaching Soviet Army.{{sfn|Kershaw|2001|p=811}} One notable and unusual ''Volkssturm'' unit in the Battle for Berlin was the 3/115 [[Siemensstadt]] Battalion. It comprised 770 men, mostly World War I veterans in their 50s who were reasonably fit factory workers, with experienced officers. Unlike most ''Volkssturm'' units it was quite well equipped and trained. It was formed into three rifle companies, a support company (with two [[infantry support gun]]s, four infantry mortars, and heavy machine guns), and a heavy weapons company (with four Soviet [[152 mm howitzer-gun M1937 (ML-20)|M-20 howitzers]] and a French De Bange 220mm mortar). The battalion first engaged Soviet troops at [[Friedrichsfelde]] on 21 April and saw the heaviest fighting over the following two days. It held out until 2 May, by which time it was down to just 50 rifles and two light machine guns. The survivors fell back to join other ''Volkssturm'' units. Twenty-six men from the battalion were awarded the [[Iron Cross]].{{sfn|Le Tissier|2008|p=212}} Allied bombing and Soviet artillery had reduced Berlin to rubble; meanwhile the final stand in Berlin dwindled to fighting against highly trained, battle-hardened Soviet troops on the brink of final victory, who viewed resistance fighters like the ''Volkssturm'' as terrorists in much the same way the ''Wehrmacht'' once had viewed potential partisans during [[Operation Barbarossa]].{{sfn|Beevor|2002|p=299–301}} [[Red Army]] soldiers called the Hitler Youth formations and members of the ''Volkssturm'' still fighting to the end in Berlin "totals" for being part of Germany's total mobilisation effort.{{sfn|Beevor|2002|p=316}} ==Role in atrocities== On several occasions, members of the ''Volkssturm'' participated in atrocities. During January 1945, thousands of prisoners were evacuated and force-marched from several smaller [[Nazi concentration camps|concentration camps]]—which included Jesau, Seerappen, Schippenbeil, Gerdauen, and Helgenbeil—near [[Königsberg]], many dying along the way.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|pp=117–119}} Upon reaching [[Yantarny, Kaliningrad Oblast|Palmnicken]], some 2,500 to 3,000 prisoners of the 5,000 that originally began the journey were lodged in a factory.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|p=120}} Mayor and local Nazi party chief, Kurt Friedrichs wanted the SS to send these prisoners on their way since the Red Army was not far away. When local ''Volkssturm'' leader Hans Feyerabend was ordered to transport the suffering prisoners out of the town, he refused to carry out the order and was heard exclaiming that he would not permit a massacre like the one at [[Katyn massacre|Katyń forest]].{{sfn|Blatman|2011|pp=120–121}} Feyerabend even assigned ''Volkssturm'' guards to keep watch on the local Nazi party members, but this proved fruitless when Friedrich armed a group of Hitler Youth and likewise summoned the local [[Sicherheitsdienst|SD]] elements, whose leaders then commanded the ''Volkssturm'' to help evacuate the prisoners.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|pp=121–122}} On 30 January 1945, after the ''Volkssturm'' left with Friedrich in charge, Feyerabend committed suicide; then between 30 January and 1 February the prisoners were murdered by the remaining assemblage of SS guards, Hitler Youth, and the local ''Volkssturm'' unit.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|p=122}} When prisoners fell sick with [[typhus]] in [[Reichsgau Steiermark]] during February–March 1945, SS men, Hitler Youth, and ''Volkssturm'' units systematically murdered them.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|p=219}} Under the orders of Loeben-district Kreisleiter, Otto Christandl, ''Volkssturm'' units in nearby Graz and Eisenerz assisted the Gestapo and Ukrainian ''Waffen-SS'' troops in evacuating between 6,000 and 8,000 prisoners—being marched towards [[Mauthausen concentration camp|Mauthausen]]—from their region, many of whom were murdered during the journey when they collapsed from exhaustion.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|p=228}} Beyond battlefield conduct, some ''Volkssturm'' formations were used to enforce curfews, assist in deportations, and guard prisoner-of-war or concentration camp transports.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=92}} Yelton notes that in many regions, particularly where the SS had strong influence, the ''Volkssturm'' was co-opted into auxiliary policing and punitive roles that blurred the line between civilian defense and participation in state terror.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=92, 148}} These activities, though not always centrally coordinated, contributed to the postwar narrative that the ''Volkssturm'' was not merely a desperate militia but at times complicit in Nazi crimes.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|pp=148–149}} Sometime in early April 1945 as Allied forces approached the [[Mittelwerk]] facilities—where [[V-2 rocket|V2 rockets]] were being produced—the slave labourers from the [[Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp]] were force-marched from the western Harz by a collection of guards drawn from the military, the Hitler Youth, and the ''Volkssturm''.{{sfn|Stargardt|2015|p=516}} Approximately {{cvt|40|km}} north of [[Magdeburg]], in the village of [[Mieste]], this motley assemblage of guards locked a thousand of these prisoners in a barn and burned them alive at the instruction of a local Nazi Party leader; this event came to be known as the [[Gardelegen massacre]].{{sfn|Stargardt|2015|p=516}} Over 1,000 persons were murdered during this event.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=148}} At the town of [[Celle]] in Lower Saxony around the same time, members of the SS, SA, local police, Hitler Youth, and ''Volkssturm'' were aided by locals to "hunt down and shoot" prisoners who had fled into the local woodland after their transport train was bombed.{{sfn|Stargardt|2015|p=517}} ==Final phase== While Iron Crosses were being handed out in places like Berlin, other cities and towns like [[Parchim]] and [[Mecklenburg]] witnessed old elites, acting as military commandants over the Hitler Youth and ''Volkssturm'', asserting themselves and demanding that the defensive fighting stop so as to spare lives and property.{{sfn|Bessel|2010|pp=139–140}} Despite their efforts, the last four months of the war were an exercise in futility for the ''Volkssturm'', and the Nazi leadership's insistence to continue the fight to the bitter end contributed to an additional 1.23 million (approximated) deaths, half of them German military personnel and the other half from the ''Volkssturm''.{{sfn|Fritz|2004|p=191}}{{efn|The figure put forward by the historian Stephen Fritz does not match the observations of [[Richard J. Evans]], who reported 175,000 ''Volkssturm'' members killed when fighting the professional armies of the western Allies and the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Evans|2010|p=676}} Evans' figures are based on the members listed in the index cards and reported as killed, while Martin Sorge pointed out that this figure did not include the 30,000 listed as presumed missing or dead in a 1963 report.{{sfn|Sorge|1986|p=50}} }} In many small towns, when leading members of the ''Volkssturm'' refused to fight on against the superior forces of the Allies—part of an attempt to circumvent the "total destruction" of their home regions—they were tried and "summarily hanged" by party activists.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|p=260}} During the spring of 1945, thousands of ''Volkssturm'' members were killed like this by Nazi Party fanatics in Franken.{{sfn|Blatman|2011|p=261}} [[File:The British Army in North-west Europe 1944-45 BU2810.jpg|right|thumb|Two members of the ''Volkssturm'' after surrendering to British troops near [[Bocholt, Germany|Bocholt]], 28 March 1945]] ==Postwar Treatment and Legacy== Interrogated members of the ''Volkssturm''—when questioned as to where the regular forces had gone—revealed that German soldiers surrendered to the Americans and British instead of the Red Army for fear of reprisals related to the atrocities they had committed in the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Beevor|2002|p=308}} Correspondingly, Yelton writes that "Defeat and occupation by the Western Allies simply did not hold the same personal or collective horror for Germans as did losing to the Soviets."{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=133}} He adds that many ''Volkssturm'' men began to believe it would be "better to let the Americans and British get as far east as possible."{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=134}} After Germany’s surrender in May 1945, the fate of ''Volkssturm'' members varied dramatically based on the occupying power. In the Western Allied zones, most ''Volkssturm'' fighters were treated leniently, particularly if they had surrendered peacefully or had not participated in combat.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=150}} American and British forces generally classified them as lightly-armed conscripts and released many after brief internment, unless specific war crimes were alleged.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=150}} By contrast, Soviet treatment was far harsher; ''Volkssturm'' members captured by Red Army forces were often viewed as partisans or ideological enemies and were frequently executed or deported to labor camps in the USSR.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=151}} Yelton argues that the legacy of the ''Volkssturm'' in postwar Germany was one of ambiguity. On one hand, it symbolized the desperation and collapse of the Nazi regime, as civilians were pressed into hopeless combat against overwhelming Allied forces.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=151}} On the other hand, some veterans and Nazi loyalists attempted to cast the ''Volkssturm'' as a heroic last stand for German sovereignty and unity.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=152}} In broader historiography, however, the militia is more often remembered as an expression of the regime’s refusal to surrender and its willingness to sacrifice its own people in pursuit of ideological goals.{{sfn|Yelton|2002|p=152}} ==Notable members== * [[Otto Dix]], German painter * [[Gerhart Drabsch]], German writer, killed on the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]] in 1945 * [[Martin Heidegger]], German philosopher{{sfn|Safranski|1999|pp=332–333}} * [[Otto Herzog]], received the [[Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross]] * [[Hans Modrow]], penultimate [[Lists of political office-holders in East Germany|Prime Minister of East Germany]]{{sfn|Gohsmann|Weichold|2001|p=viii}} * [[Ernst Tiburzy]], received the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross.{{sfn|Fellgiebel|2000|pp=423, 506}} * [[Gustav Anton von Wietersheim]], WWI veteran and WWII general dismissed for apparent failures early in the [[Battle of Stalingrad]], who served in the ''Volkssturm'' as a private ==In fiction== * [[Gregor Dorfmeister]], under the pseudonym of ''Manfred Gregor'', in 1958 published the novel ''[[Die Brücke (novel)|Die Brücke]]'', based on his experiences in a ''Volkssturm'' unit. The novel was adapted to film [[Die Brücke (film)|the following year]] and to a made-for-television movie in [[Die Brücke (film)#Remake|2008]]. * ''Volkssturm'' units composed of teenagers are depicted in battle scenes in the 2004 film ''[[Downfall (2004 film)|Downfall]]''.{{efn|See ''Downfall'' (2004) on IMDB.com: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0363163/?___441}} * ''Volkssturm'' units composed of teenagers are depicted in scenes in the sixth episode of the 2019 ''[[Das Erste]]'' series ''[[Charité (TV series)|Charité at War]]'', which streams on [[Netflix]]. * ''Volkssturm'' units are seen in battle scenes in the 2019 film ''[[Jojo Rabbit]]'' by [[Taika Waititi]]. * ''Volkssturm'' units composed of teenagers are depicted in battle scenes in the 2014 film ''[[Fury (2014 film)|Fury]]''. ==See also== * [[Einstossflammenwerfer 46|''Einstossflammenwerfer'' 46]] * ''[[Landwehr]]'' * ''[[Volksgrenadier]]'' * ''[[Volkspistole]]'' * ''[[Wachdienst]]'' * ''[[Werwolf]]'' * [[Niederkaina massacre]] '''Other nations:''' * [[Black Brigades|Black Brigades (Italy)]] * [[Home Guard (United Kingdom)]] * [[Volunteer Fighting Corps|Volunteer Fighting Corps (Japan)]] ==Notes== {{Notelist}} ==References== ===Citations=== {{Reflist|20em}} ===Bibliography=== {{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}} * {{cite book | last = Beevor | first = Antony | author-link = Antony Beevor | title = The Fall of Berlin, 1945 | year = 2002 | publisher = Viking | location = New York; London | isbn = 0-670-03041-4 }} * {{cite book | last=Benz | first= Wolfgang | year=2007 | title= A Concise History of the Third Reich | location= Berkeley and Los Angeles | publisher= University of California Press | isbn= 978-0-52025-383-4 }} * {{cite book | last=Bessel | first=Richard | author-link = Richard Bessel | year=2010 | title=Germany 1945: From War to Peace | location=New York | publisher=Harper Perennial | isbn=978-0-06054-037-1}} * {{cite book | last=Blatman | first=Daniel | title=The Death Marches: The Final Phase of Nazi Genocide | year=2011 | location=Cambridge, MA and London | publisher=The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press | isbn=978-0-67405-049-5}} * {{cite book | last=Burleigh | first=Michael | year=2000 | title=The Third Reich: A New History | location=New York | publisher=Hill and Wang | isbn=978-0-80909-325-0 | url=https://archive.org/details/thirdreichnewhis00burl }} * {{cite book | last=Duffy | first=Christopher | year=2002 | title= Red Storm on the Reich: The Soviet March on Germany, 1945| location= Edison, NJ | publisher= Castle Books | isbn=0-7858-1624-0 }} * {{cite book | last=Evans | first=Richard | year=2010 | title=The Third Reich at War | location=New York | publisher=Penguin | isbn=978-0-14311-671-4 }} * {{cite book | last=Fellgiebel | first=Walther-Peer | year=2000 | title=Die Träger des Ritterkreuzes des Eisernen Kreuzes 1939–1945 | language=de | location=Friedberg | publisher=Podzun-Pallas | isbn=978-3-7909-0284-6 }} * {{cite book | last=Fritz | first=Stephen G. | year=2004 | title=Endkampf: Soldiers, Civilians, and the Death of the Third Reich | location= Lexington | publisher= The University Press of Kentucky | isbn=978-0-81312-325-7 }} * {{cite book|last=Goeschel|first=Christian|year=2018|title=Mussolini and Hitler: The Forging of the Fascist Alliance|place=New Haven and London|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=978-0300178838}} * {{cite book | last1=Gohsmann | first1=Christine | last2=Weichold | first2=Jochen | title=Findbücher/04 - Bestand: Dr. Hans Modrow, MdB (1990 bis 1994) | year=2001| place=Berlin | publisher=Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung | url=https://www.rosalux.de/fileadmin/rls_uploads/pdfs/ADS/Findbuch_04.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140915162547/http://www.rosalux.de/fileadmin/rls_uploads/pdfs/ADS/Findbuch_04.pdf |archive-date=2014-09-15 |url-status=live}} * {{cite book | last=Guderian | first=Heinz | year=2001 | title=Panzer Leader | location=New York and Boston | publisher=Da Capo Press | asin=B008CMU05I }} * {{cite book | last=Herzstein | first=Robert E.| year=1986 | title=The War That Hitler Won: Goebbels and the Nazi Media Campaign | location=St Paul, MN | publisher=Paragon House | isbn=978-0913729472 }} * {{cite book | last=Hildebrand | first=Klaus | year=1984 | title=The Third Reich | location=London and New York | publisher=Routledge | isbn=0-0494-3033-5 | url=https://archive.org/details/thirdreich0000hild }} * {{cite book | last=Kallis | first=Aristotle | year=2005 | title= Nazi Propaganda and the Second World War | location=New York | publisher=Palgrave MacMillan | isbn=978-0-23054-681-3}} * {{cite book | last=Kater | first=Michael H. | year=2004 | title=Hitler Youth | location=Cambridge, MA | publisher=Harvard University Press | isbn=0-674-01496-0 | url=https://archive.org/details/hitleryouth00kate }} * {{cite book | last=Kershaw | first=Ian | year=2001 | title= Hitler: 1936–1945, Nemesis | location= New York | publisher= W. W. Norton & Company | isbn=978-0-39332-252-1}} * {{cite book | last=Kershaw | first=Ian | year=2011 | title= The End: The Defiance and Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1944–1945 | url=https://archive.org/details/enddefiancedestr00kers_0 | url-access=registration | location= New York | publisher= Penguin Books | isbn=978-0-14312-213-5}} * {{cite book | last=Kissel | first=Hans | year=1962 | title=Der Deutsche Volkssturm 1944/45: Eine territoriale Miliz im Rahmen der Landesverteidung | language=de | location=Frankfurt am Main | publisher=Verlag E. S. Mittler und Sohn | asin=B00DSDZEGQ }} * {{cite book | last=Lepage | first=Jean-Denis G.G. | title=Hitler Youth, 1922–1945: An Illustrated History | place=Jefferson, NC; London |publisher=McFarland & Co.|year=2009| isbn=978-0-78643-935-5}} * {{cite book | last=Le Tissier | first=Tony | year=2008 | title=Berlin Battlefield Guide: Third Reich & Cold War | location=South Yorkshire | publisher=Pen & Sword Military | isbn=978-1-84415-766-2 }} * Massaquoi, Hans J. (1990). ''Destined to Witness: Growing Up Black in Nazi Germany''. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. * {{cite book | last=Moorhouse | first=Roger | year=2012 | title=Berlin at War | location=New York | publisher=Basic Books | isbn=978-0-46502-855-9}} *{{cite book |last= Orlow |first= Dietrich |title= The History of the Nazi Party: 1933–1945 |publisher= University of Pittsburgh Press |year= 1973 |isbn= 0-822-9-3253-9}} * {{cite book | last = Read | first = Anthony | title = The Devil's Disciples: Hitler's Inner Circle | place = New York | publisher = Norton | year = 2005 | isbn = 978-039332-697-0 }} * {{cite book | last=Safranski | first=Rüdiger |author-link=Rüdiger Safranski | title=[[Martin Heidegger: Between Good and Evil]] | place=Cambridge, MA | publisher=Harvard University Press | year=1999 | isbn=978-0-67438-710-2 }} * {{cite book | last=Sorge | first=Martin K. | title=The Other Price of Hitler's War: German Military and Civilian Losses Resulting from World War II | year=1986 | place=New York | publisher=Greenwood Press | isbn=978-0-31325-293-8}} * {{cite book| last=Stargardt | first=Nicholas | year=2015 | title=The German War: A Nation Under Arms, 1939–1945| place=New York | publisher=Basic Books | isbn=978-0-46501-899-4}} * {{cite book | last=Trevor-Roper | first=Hugh | title=Blitzkrieg to Defeat: Hitler's War Directives, 1939–1945 | year=1964 | place=New York | publisher=Holt, Rinehart and Winston | isbn=978-0-03085-494-1 }} * {{cite book| last =Welch | first=David | title=The Third Reich: Politics and Propaganda | year =2002 | location=New York | publisher=Routledge | isbn=978-0-41511-910-8}} * {{cite book | last=Yelton | first=David K. | year=2002 | title=Hitler’s Volkssturm: The Nazi Militia and the Fall of Germany, 1944–1945| location=Lawrence, KS | publisher=University of Kansas Press | isbn= 978-0-70061-192-8}} * {{cite book | last=Yelton | first=David K. | chapter=The SS, NSDAP, and the Question of Volkssturm Expansion | title=The Impact of Nazism: New Perspectives on the Third Reich and Its Legacy | editor1=Alan E. Steinweis | editor2=Daniel Rogers| year=2003 | location=Lincoln, NE | publisher=University of Nebraska Press | isbn=978-0-80324-299-9 }} * {{cite book | last1=Zentner | first1=Christian | last2=Bedürftig | first2=Friedemann | year=1991 | title=The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich (2 vols.) | location= New York | publisher=MacMillan Publishing | isbn=0-02-897500-6 }} * {{cite book | last=Ziemke | first=Earl F | year=1968 | title= Stalingrad to Berlin: The German Defeat in the East | url=https://archive.org/details/stalingradtoberl00ziem | url-access=registration | location= Washington D.C. | publisher= Office of the Chief of Military History – U.S. Army | asin= B002E5VBSE }} {{refend}} ===Further reading=== * {{cite book| last=Weaver | first= W. Darrin|title=Desperate Measures — The Last-Ditch Weapons of the Nazi Volkssturm | year=2005|publisher=Collector Grade Publications|isbn=0889353727}} ==External links== {{commons category}} * [http://www.lonesentry.com/articles/volkssturm/index.html U.S. Wartime Intelligence Report on German Volkssturm] {{Uniforms, insignia and ranks of Nazi Germany}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Germany home front during World War II]] [[Category:Paramilitary organisations based in Germany]] [[Category:Civil defense]] [[Category:Military units and formations established in 1944]] [[Category:Military units and formations of Germany in World War II]]
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