Discover different monuments to General Karbyshev. Unbroken

The monument was erected in 1980 at the intersection of the boulevard named after him and Marshal Zhukov Avenue.

From the history

D. M. Karbyshev was a Soviet general and engineer. At the beginning of the Great Patriotic War, he was captured.

He was offered to cooperate, but he refused. Karbyshev was kept in German concentration camps: Zamosc, Hammelburg, Flossenbürg, Majdanek, Auschwitz, Sachsenhausen and Mauthausen. I have repeatedly received offers to cooperate from the camp administration.

Despite his age, he was one of the active leaders of the camp resistance movement.

On the night of February 18, 1945, in the Mauthausen concentration camp (Austria), along with other prisoners (about 500 people), he was doused with water in the cold and died. It has become a symbol of unbending will and perseverance.

Description

The monument to General Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev was opened on May 7, 1980 on General Karbyshev Boulevard.

Doomych, CC BY-SA 3.0

The monument is cast entirely from bronze, in the form of 8-meter forms directed upward, symbolizing ice blocks on which a cube with a portrait of the hero is mounted.

The following is inscribed on the memorial sign:

“To Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev, Hero of the Soviet Union, Lieutenant General of the Engineering Troops, Doctor of Military Sciences.”

In February 1946, the representative of the Soviet mission for repatriation in England was informed that a wounded Canadian officer in a hospital near London urgently wanted to see him. The officer, a former prisoner of the Mauthausen concentration camp, considered it necessary to inform the Soviet representative of “extremely important information.”
The Canadian major's name was Seddon De-Saint-Clair. “I want to tell you about how Lieutenant General Dmitry Karbyshev died,” the officer said when the Soviet representative appeared at the hospital.
The story of a Canadian military man was the first news about Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev since 1941...

Cadet from an unreliable family

Dmitry Karbyshev was born on October 26, 1880 into a military family. Since childhood, he dreamed of continuing the dynasty started by his father and grandfather. Dmitry entered the Siberian Cadet Corps, however, despite the diligence shown in his studies, he was listed among the “unreliable” there.

The fact is that Dmitry’s older brother, Vladimir, participated in a revolutionary circle created at Kazan University, together with another young radical, Vladimir Ulyanov. But if the future leader of the revolution got away with only expulsion from the university, then Vladimir Karbyshev ended up in prison, where he later died.

Despite the stigma of being “unreliable,” Dmitry Karbyshev studied brilliantly, and in 1898, after graduating from the cadet corps, he entered the Nikolaev Engineering School.

Of all the military specialties, Karbyshev was most attracted to the construction of fortifications and defensive structures.

The talent of the young officer first clearly manifested itself during the Russian-Japanese campaign - Karbyshev strengthened positions, built bridges across rivers, installed communications and conducted reconnaissance in force.

Despite the unsuccessful outcome of the war for Russia, Karbyshev showed himself to be an excellent specialist, which was noted with medals and the rank of lieutenant.

From Przemysl to Perekop

But in 1906, Lieutenant Karbyshev was dismissed from service for freethinking. True, not for long - the command was smart enough to understand that specialists of this level should not be thrown away.

On the eve of the First World War, Staff Captain Dmitry Karbyshev designed the forts of the Brest Fortress - the same ones in which thirty years later Soviet soldiers would fight the Nazis.

Karbyshev spent the First World War as a division engineer of the 78th and 69th infantry divisions, and then as the head of the engineering service of the 22nd Finnish Rifle Corps. For bravery and bravery during the storming of Przemysl and during the Brusilov breakthrough, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and awarded the Order of St. Anne.

During the revolution, Lieutenant Colonel Karbyshev did not rush about, but immediately joined the Red Guard. All his life he was faithful to his views and beliefs, which he did not renounce.

In November 1920, Dmitry Karbyshev was engaged in engineering support for the assault on Perekop, the success of which finally decided the outcome of the Civil War.

Missing

By the end of the 1930s, Dmitry Karbyshev was considered one of the most prominent experts in the field of military engineering not only in the Soviet Union, but also in the world. In 1940 he was awarded the rank of lieutenant general, and in 1941 - the degree of Doctor of Military Sciences.

On the eve of the Great Patriotic War, General Karbyshev worked on the creation of defensive structures on the western border. During one of his trips to the border, he was caught by the outbreak of hostilities.

The rapid advance of the Nazis put the Soviet troops in a difficult situation. The 60-year-old general of the engineering troops is not the most necessary person in units that are threatened with encirclement. However, they failed to evacuate Karbyshev. However, he himself, like a real combat officer, decided to break out of Hitler’s “bag” together with our units.

But on August 8, 1941, Lieutenant General Karbyshev was seriously shell-shocked in a battle near the Dnieper River, and was captured in an unconscious state.

From that moment until 1945, a short phrase would appear in his personal file: “Missing in action.”

The German command was convinced: Karbyshev among the Bolsheviks was a random person. A nobleman, an officer in the tsarist army, he would easily agree to go over to their side. In the end, he and the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) joined only in 1940, apparently under duress.

However, very soon the Nazis discovered that Karbyshev was a tough nut to crack. The 60-year-old general refused to serve the Third Reich, expressed confidence in the final victory of the Soviet Union and did not in any way resemble a man broken by captivity.

In March 1942, Karbyshev was transferred to the Hammelburg officer concentration camp. It carried out active psychological treatment of high-ranking Soviet officers in order to force them to go over to the German side. For this purpose, the most humane and benevolent conditions were created. Many who suffered hardships in ordinary soldier camps broke down on this. Karbyshev, however, turned out to be from a completely different text - no benefits or concessions could “reforge” him.

Soon Colonel Pelit was assigned to Karbyshev. This Wehrmacht officer had an excellent command of the Russian language, since he had served in the tsarist army at one time. Moreover, Pelit was a colleague of Karbyshev while working on the forts of the Brest Fortress.

Pelit, a subtle psychologist, described to Karbyshev all the advantages of serving great Germany, offering “compromise options for cooperation” - for example, the general is engaged in historical works on the military operations of the Red Army in the current war, and for this in the future he will be allowed to travel to a neutral country.

However, Karbyshev again rejected all the options for cooperation proposed by the Nazis.

Incorruptible

Then the Nazis made their last attempt. The general was transferred to solitary confinement in one of the Berlin prisons, where he was kept for about three weeks.

After that, his colleague, the famous German fortifier Professor Heinz Raubenheimer, was waiting for him in the investigator’s office.

The Nazis knew that Karbyshev and Raubenheimer knew each other; moreover, the Russian general respected the work of the German scientist.

Raubenheimer voiced to Karbyshev the following proposal from the authorities of the Third Reich. The general was offered release from the camp, the opportunity to move to a private apartment, as well as full financial security. He will have access to all libraries and book depositories in Germany, and will be given the opportunity to become acquainted with other materials in areas of military engineering that interest him. If necessary, any number of assistants were guaranteed to set up the laboratory, carry out development work and provide other research activities. The results of the work should become the property of German specialists. All ranks of the German army will treat Karbyshev as a lieutenant general of the engineering troops of the German Reich.

A middle-aged man who had gone through hardships in the camps was offered luxurious conditions while retaining his position and even his rank. He was not even required to denounce Stalin and the Bolshevik regime. The Nazis were interested in Karbyshev’s work in his main specialty.

Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev understood perfectly well that this was most likely the last proposal. He also understood what would follow the refusal.

However, the courageous general said: “My convictions do not fall out along with my teeth from a lack of vitamins in the camp diet. I am a soldier and remain true to my duty. And he forbids me to work for a country that is at war with my Motherland.”

The Nazis really counted on Karbyshev, on his influence and authority. It was he, and not General Vlasov, according to the original plan, who was supposed to lead the Russian Liberation Army.

But all the plans of the Nazis were dashed by Karbyshev’s inflexibility.

Gravestones for the Nazis

After this refusal, the Nazis put an end to the general, defining him as “a convinced, fanatical Bolshevik, whose use in the service of the Reich is impossible.”

Karbyshev was sent to the Flossenbürg concentration camp, where he was subjected to extreme hard labor. But here, too, the general surprised his comrades in misfortune with his unbending will, fortitude and confidence in the final victory of the Red Army.

One of the Soviet prisoners later recalled that Karbyshev knew how to cheer up even in the most difficult moments. When the prisoners were working on making gravestones, the general remarked: “This is the work that gives me real pleasure. The more tombstones the Germans demand from us, the better, which means things are going well for us at the front.”

He was transferred from camp to camp, the conditions became more and more harsh, but they failed to break Karbyshev. In each of the camps where the general found himself, he became a real leader of spiritual resistance to the enemy. His tenacity gave strength to those around him.

The front was moving to the West. Soviet troops entered German territory. The outcome of the war became obvious even to convinced Nazis. The Nazis had nothing left but hatred and the desire to deal with those who turned out to be stronger than them, even in chains and behind barbed wire...

Major Seddon De-Saint-Clair was one of several dozen prisoners of war who managed to survive the terrible night of February 18, 1945 in the Mauthausen concentration camp.

“As soon as we entered the camp, the Germans forced us into the shower room, ordered us to undress and launched jets of ice water on us from above. This went on for a long time. Everyone turned blue. Many fell to the floor and died immediately: their hearts could not stand it. Then we were ordered to put on only underwear and wooden stocks for our feet and were kicked out into the yard. General Karbyshev stood in a group of Russian comrades not far from me. We realized that we were living our last hours. A couple of minutes later, the Gestapo men, standing behind us with fire hoses in their hands, began pouring streams of cold water on us. Those who tried to evade the stream were hit on the head with batons. Hundreds of people fell frozen or with their skulls crushed. I saw how General Karbyshev also fell,” said the Canadian major.

The general’s last words were addressed to those who shared his terrible fate: “Cheer up, comrades! Think about the Motherland, and courage will not leave you!”

Hero of the Soviet Union

With the story of the Canadian major, the collection of information about the last years of General Karbyshev’s life, spent in German captivity, began. All collected documents and eyewitness accounts spoke of the exceptional courage and perseverance of this man.

On August 16, 1946, for the exceptional tenacity and courage shown in the fight against the German invaders in the Great Patriotic War, Lieutenant General Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

In 1948, a monument to the general was unveiled on the territory of the former Mauthausen concentration camp. The inscription on it reads: “To Dmitry Karbyshev. To a scientist. To the warrior. Communist. His life and death were a feat in the name of life.”

“I am a soldier and remain true to my duty. And he forbids me to work for a country that is at war with my Motherland,” - so during the Great Patriotic War, the plans of the Nazis were defeated by the inflexibility of the Soviet general Dmitry Karbyshev.

About the forgotten feat of General Karbyshev and why the German side needed him so much...

In February 1946, the representative of the Soviet mission for repatriation in England was informed that a wounded Canadian officer in a hospital near London urgently wanted to see him. The officer, a former prisoner of the Mauthausen concentration camp, considered it necessary to inform the Soviet representative of “extremely important information.”

The Canadian major's name was Seddon De-Saint-Clair. “I want to tell you about how Lieutenant General Dmitry Karbyshev died,” the officer said when the Soviet representative appeared at the hospital.

The story of a Canadian military man was the first news about Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev since 1941...

Cadet from an unreliable family

Dmitry Karbyshev was born on October 26, 1880 into a military family. Since childhood, he dreamed of continuing the dynasty started by his father and grandfather. Dmitry entered the Siberian Cadet Corps, however, despite the diligence shown in his studies, he was listed among the “unreliable” there.

The fact is that Dmitry’s older brother, Vladimir, participated in a revolutionary circle created at Kazan University, together with another young radical, Vladimir Ulyanov. But if the future leader of the revolution got away with only expulsion from the university, then Vladimir Karbyshev ended up in prison, where he later died.

Despite the stigma of being “unreliable,” Dmitry Karbyshev studied brilliantly, and in 1898, after graduating from the cadet corps, he entered the Nikolaev Engineering School.

Of all the military specialties, Karbyshev was most attracted to the construction of fortifications and defensive structures.

The talent of the young officer first clearly manifested itself during the Russian-Japanese campaign - Karbyshev strengthened positions, built bridges across rivers, installed communications and conducted reconnaissance in force.

Despite the unsuccessful outcome of the war for Russia, Karbyshev showed himself to be an excellent specialist, which was noted with medals and the rank of lieutenant.

From Przemysl to Perekop

But in 1906, Lieutenant Karbyshev was dismissed from service for freethinking. True, not for long - the command was smart enough to understand that specialists of this level should not be thrown away.

On the eve of the First World War, Staff Captain Dmitry Karbyshev designed the forts of the Brest Fortress - the same ones in which thirty years later Soviet soldiers would fight the Nazis.

Karbyshev spent the First World War as a division engineer of the 78th and 69th infantry divisions, and then as the head of the engineering service of the 22nd Finnish Rifle Corps. For bravery and bravery during the storming of Przemysl and during the Brusilov breakthrough, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and awarded the Order of St. Anne.

During the revolution, Lieutenant Colonel Karbyshev did not rush about, but immediately joined the Red Guard. All his life he was faithful to his views and beliefs, which he did not renounce.

In November 1920, Dmitry Karbyshev was engaged in engineering support for the assault on Perekop, the success of which finally decided the outcome of the Civil War.

Missing

By the end of the 1930s, Dmitry Karbyshev was considered one of the most prominent experts in the field of military engineering not only in the Soviet Union, but also in the world. In 1940 he was awarded the rank of lieutenant general, and in 1941 - the degree of Doctor of Military Sciences.

On the eve of the Great Patriotic War, General Karbyshev worked on the creation of defensive structures on the western border. During one of his trips to the border, he was caught by the outbreak of hostilities.

The rapid advance of the Nazis put the Soviet troops in a difficult situation. The 60-year-old general of the engineering troops is not the most necessary person in units that are threatened with encirclement. However, they failed to evacuate Karbyshev. However, he himself, like a real combat officer, decided to break out of Hitler’s “bag” together with our units.

But on August 8, 1941, Lieutenant General Karbyshev was seriously shell-shocked in a battle near the Dnieper River, and was captured in an unconscious state.

From that moment until 1945, a short phrase would appear in his personal file: “Missing in action.”

The German command was convinced: Karbyshev among the Bolsheviks was a random person. A nobleman, an officer in the tsarist army, he would easily agree to go over to their side. In the end, he and the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) joined only in 1940, apparently under duress.

However, very soon the Nazis discovered that Karbyshev was a tough nut to crack. The 60-year-old general refused to serve the Third Reich, expressed confidence in the final victory of the Soviet Union and did not in any way resemble a man broken by captivity.

In March 1942, Karbyshev was transferred to the Hammelburg officer concentration camp. It carried out active psychological treatment of high-ranking Soviet officers in order to force them to go over to the German side. For this purpose, the most humane and benevolent conditions were created. Many who suffered hardships in ordinary soldier camps broke down on this. Karbyshev, however, turned out to be from a completely different text - no benefits or concessions could “reforge” him.

Soon Colonel Pelit was assigned to Karbyshev.

Pelit, a subtle psychologist, described to Karbyshev all the advantages of serving great Germany, offering “compromise options for cooperation” - for example, the general is engaged in historical works on the military operations of the Red Army in the current war, and for this in the future he will be allowed to travel to a neutral country.

However, Karbyshev again rejected all the options for cooperation proposed by the Nazis.

Incorruptible

Then the Nazis made their last attempt. The general was transferred to solitary confinement in one of the Berlin prisons, where he was kept for about three weeks.

After that, his colleague, the famous German fortifier Professor Heinz Raubenheimer, was waiting for him in the investigator’s office.

The Nazis knew that Karbyshev and Raubenheimer knew each other; moreover, the Russian general respected the work of the German scientist.

Raubenheimer voiced to Karbyshev the following proposal from the authorities of the Third Reich. The general was offered release from the camp, the opportunity to move to a private apartment, as well as full financial security. He will have access to all libraries and book depositories in Germany, and will be given the opportunity to become acquainted with other materials in areas of military engineering that interest him. If necessary, any number of assistants were guaranteed to set up the laboratory, carry out development work and provide other research activities. The results of the work should become the property of German specialists.

All ranks of the German army will treat Karbyshev as a lieutenant general of the engineering troops of the German Reich.

A middle-aged man who had gone through hardships in the camps was offered luxurious conditions while retaining his position and even his rank. He was not even required to denounce Stalin and the Bolshevik regime. The Nazis were interested in Karbyshev’s work in his main specialty.

Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev understood perfectly well that this was most likely the last proposal. He also understood what would follow the refusal.

However, the courageous general said: “My convictions do not fall out along with my teeth from a lack of vitamins in the camp diet. I am a soldier and remain true to my duty. And he forbids me to work for a country that is at war with my Motherland.”

The Nazis really counted on Karbyshev, on his influence and authority. It was he, and not General Vlasov, according to the original plan, who was supposed to lead the Russian Liberation Army.

But all the plans of the Nazis were dashed by Karbyshev’s inflexibility.

Gravestones for the Nazis

After this refusal, the Nazis put an end to the general, defining him as “a convinced, fanatical Bolshevik, whose use in the service of the Reich is impossible.”

Karbyshev was sent to the Flossenbürg concentration camp, where he was subjected to extreme hard labor. But here, too, the general surprised his comrades in misfortune with his unbending will, fortitude and confidence in the final victory of the Red Army.

One of the Soviet prisoners later recalled that Karbyshev knew how to cheer up even in the most difficult moments. When the prisoners were working on making gravestones, the general remarked: “This is the work that gives me real pleasure. The more tombstones the Germans demand from us, the better, which means things are going well for us at the front.”

He was transferred from camp to camp, the conditions became more and more harsh, but they failed to break Karbyshev. In each of the camps where the general found himself, he became a real leader of spiritual resistance to the enemy. His tenacity gave strength to those around him.

The front was moving to the West. Soviet troops entered German territory. The outcome of the war became obvious even to convinced Nazis. The Nazis had nothing left but hatred and the desire to deal with those who turned out to be stronger than them, even in chains and behind barbed wire...

Major Seddon De-Saint-Clair was one of several dozen prisoners of war who managed to survive the terrible night of February 18, 1945 in the Mauthausen concentration camp.

“As soon as we entered the camp, the Germans forced us into the shower room, ordered us to undress and launched jets of ice water on us from above. This went on for a long time. Everyone turned blue. Many fell to the floor and died immediately: their hearts could not stand it. Then we were ordered to put on only underwear and wooden stocks for our feet and were kicked out into the yard. General Karbyshev stood in a group of Russian comrades not far from me. We realized that we were living our last hours.

A couple of minutes later, the Gestapo men, standing behind us with fire hoses in their hands, began pouring streams of cold water on us. Those who tried to evade the stream were hit on the head with batons. Hundreds of people fell frozen or with their skulls crushed. I saw how General Karbyshev also fell,” said the Canadian major.

The general’s last words were addressed to those who shared his terrible fate: “Cheer up, comrades! Think about the Motherland, and courage will not leave you!”

Hero of the Soviet Union

With the story of the Canadian major, the collection of information about the last years of General Karbyshev’s life, spent in German captivity, began. All collected documents and eyewitness accounts spoke of the exceptional courage and perseverance of this man.

On August 16, 1946, for the exceptional tenacity and courage shown in the fight against the German invaders in the Great Patriotic War, Lieutenant General Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

Monument to General Dmitry Karbyshev in Mauthausen. Photo: RIA Novosti

In 1948, a monument to the general was unveiled on the territory of the former Mauthausen concentration camp. The inscription on it reads: “To Dmitry Karbyshev. To a scientist. To the warrior. Communist. His life and death were a feat in the name of life.”

On October 21, 1961, it was inaugurated in Omsk monument to the general Karbyshev D.M. The monument was erected in the center of Omsk in the park named after General Karbyshev.

The sculptural composition is a high granite base, on it there is a bust of General Karbyshev and behind (the bust of the general) eight concrete slabs are installed, on which it is written: “General Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev, a native of the city of Omsk, during the Great Patriotic War showed exceptional courage and fortitude in fight against enemies. While in fascist prisons and camps, he retained the honor and dignity of a Soviet citizen, scientist, and communist. True to his oath, the patriot preferred death to betrayal. Eternal glory to the heroes who fell in battles for the freedom and independence of our homeland.”

Such an unusual monument was made by sculptor V. Fedorov and architect Yu. Krivushchenko. I must admit that the sculptural composition is truly unusual. There are enough busts on pedestals, but there were also concrete slabs so that the message could be clearly read - this has never happened before. On most monuments they try to write something in small print, but few people read it. And here in large letters - a great idea, even despite the rough execution (after all, concrete slabs are not exactly the architecture of a park).

Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev evokes only respect after reading the story of his life. I think even such titles as general and patriot, as well as professor, cannot fully convey all the power of spirit and will to knowledge of this person. He was a great man, so many thanks to the people of Omsk for preserving his memory.

Some information about D.M. Karbyshev.

Dmitry Mikhailovich was born in Omsk on October 26, 1880. After 18 years he graduated from the Omsk Cadet Corps. Then the Nikolaev Military Engineering School and the Nikolaev Military Engineering Academy.

He was a participant in the Russian-Japanese War, as well as the First World War. He was not a simple performer, but a man with a lively mind, so even then he realized himself as an excellent fortifier.

But his merits include not only participation and leadership of construction in wars, the thirst for knowledge also did not cool down in him. Therefore, despite the ongoing wars, he is also the author of more than a hundred scientific works on military engineering and military history. He also passed on knowledge to subsequent generations and conducted teaching activities.

He ended his journey as a hero, a military man. Or as they used to say, “a man should die on the move on the road or, even better, in battle.”

In August 1941, Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev was captured by the Nazis. For more than three and a half years, the Germans tried to find a way to win him over to their side. But Karbyshev was adamant. During his captivity, he was in the camps of Breslau, Zamosc, Hammelsburg, Flossenbürg and Mauthausen, maybe the Germans were trying to show that their side was the side of the winners, because there were millions of Russians in these camps. The Nazis knew who they had captive and what experience he had, so they used every opportunity. But when all the psychological pressures and tests were unsuccessful, then they moved on to cruel torture.

But his death is worth talking about separately.

The chronicles preserved the conclusion of the supervisors specially assigned to Karbyshev: “This largest Soviet fortifier, a career officer of the old Russian army, a man who was over sixty years old, turned out to be thoroughly infected with the Bolshevik spirit, fanatically devoted to the idea of ​​fidelity to military duty and patriotism. Karbyshev can be considered hopeless in terms of the possibility of using him as a specialist in military engineering.”

Canadian Army Major Seddon de Saint-Clair spoke about the death of Dmitry Mikhailovich. While on his deathbed, the major asked to witness the story, because. he possessed knowledge that, in his opinion, had no right to be buried with him.

The priest and representatives of the Soviet committee recorded the following testimony: “I ask you to record my testimony and send it to Russia. I consider it my sacred duty to impartially testify to what I know about General Karbyshev. I am fulfilling my duty as an ordinary person. I have very little time left to live, and I am worried that the facts known to me about the heroic life and tragic death of the Soviet general, whose grateful memory should live among people, do not go to the grave with me. On the evening of February 17, 1945, a large group of us were forced into a shower room, ordered to strip naked, and then jets of ice water were released on us from above. This went on for a long time. We all turned blue. Many could not stand it, fell, died from a broken heart. Then we were allowed to put on only our underwear and wooden stocks for our feet and were kicked out into the cold. We realized that we were living our last hours.

The old general, as always, was calm, he was only struck by a strong chill, like each of us. He said something passionately and convincingly to the Russians around him. They listened to him carefully. In his phrases I caught the words “Soviet Union” repeated several times and understandable to me. Then, looking in our direction, he said in French: “Cheer up, comrades. Think about your homeland, and courage will not leave you.” At this time, the Gestapo men, standing behind us with fire cannons in their hands, began to pour streams of ice water on us. Those who tried to evade the stream were hit on the head with batons. Hundreds of people fell with their skulls crushed. I saw how General Karbyshev also fell. After this execution, by some miracle, several people survived, including me...

The memory of General Karbyshev is sacred to me. I remember him as the greatest patriot, the most honest soldier and the most noble and courageous man I have ever met in my life.”

I think that after such words everyone will agree that Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev is a symbol of perseverance and loyalty for one and all. He is an example both in peaceful life, in wartime, and even in the face of death.

If it were not for the difference in political views of the present time and that era, then I think every schoolchild would know about the personality of Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev. I would think about him, make films and use him as an example.

I was still a teenager, about 12-13 years old, when one day my mother showed me a textbook on the history of the USSR for the 4th grade. He says: “These are the textbooks we used to study in our time.” It was simply called “Stories on the History of the USSR.”
I don’t know whether I still have it or not, but I looked at the shabby antique quite greedily. Well, of course: the textbook is almost 30 years old, although others will object to me: why even keep such old stuff at home. But nevertheless, it was a certain memory. One day, while looking through the paragraphs of a textbook, I came across a curious episode of the Second World War and the Great Patriotic War. About 12-13 years have passed since then, but I remember the story that I want to tell you now. Even though it shows a fragment of this man’s life, I cannot ignore it. Moreover, this year is associated with the Victory Anniversary, and October 14 marks the 135th anniversary of his birth. February 18 marked the 70th anniversary of his martyrdom. I am practically not familiar with his biography, so I will have to use the material that is on the Internet. The only thing I know about him is how he died. Before his death, he said: “I am a communist! I know that we will win, and death and damnation await all of you!” This quote caught my eye in that textbook and I still remember it. And this man’s name was Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev.

This man is hardly remembered now. The younger generation probably doesn’t even know his name anymore. But it is precisely such examples that these young people need to be educated on. If you want to raise die-hard heroes, not amorphous soda drinkers. Let's remember our Russian heroes. They deserve it. This is the only way to preserve the connection between generations. The name of the man who became a symbol of the unbending will of the Russian officer, perseverance and courage is Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev. Hero of the Soviet Union. Already in Soviet school they talked a little about him. The Nazis tortured General Karbyshev by pouring cold water on him in winter. That's all that the average student of the USSR knew about him. Today's schoolchildren practically do not know Karbyshev. There are, of course, exceptions...11.04. 2011 “A public meeting dedicated to the International Day of the Liberation of Prisoners of Fascism was held in Vladivostok. About a hundred members of the city and regional organizations of former prisoners, veterans, representatives of the city administration, military personnel, schoolchildren and students gathered at the monument to the hero of the Soviet Union Dmitry Karbyshev.” Do your children know this surname? Fix this gap. Tell your children about Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev...


DMITRY Mikhailovich Karbyshev - Hero of the Soviet Union, Lieutenant General of the Engineering Troops, Doctor of Military Sciences, Professor, Tatar by origin, ancestral Siberian Cossack. A couple of weeks before the start of the Great Patriotic War, he was sent to Grodno to assist in defensive construction on the western border. On August 8, while trying to escape from encirclement in the area north of Mogilev, he was shell-shocked and captured by the Nazis.


Childhood, youth, beginning of service

Born in the city of Omsk in the family of a military official. Baptized Tatar. At the age of twelve he was left without a father. The children were raised by their mother. Despite great financial difficulties, Karbyshev brilliantly graduated from the Siberian Cadet Corps and in 1898 was admitted to the St. Petersburg Nikolaev Military Engineering School. In 1900, after graduating from college, he was sent to serve in the 1st East Siberian Engineer Battalion, as head of the cable department of a telegraph company. The battalion was stationed in Manchuria.

Russian-Japanese, World War I

During the Russian-Japanese War, as part of the battalion, he strengthened positions, installed communications equipment, built bridges, and conducted reconnaissance in force. Participated in the battle of Mukden. Awarded orders and medals. He finished the war with the rank of lieutenant.

After the war he served in Vladivostok. In 1911 he graduated with honors from the Nikolaev Military Engineering Academy. According to the assignment, Staff Captain Karbyshev was sent to Brest-Litovsk to serve as commander of a mine company. There he took part in the construction of forts at the Brest Fortress.

A participant in the First World War from day one. He fought in the Carpathians as part of the 8th Army of General A. A. Brusilov (Southwestern Front). He was a division engineer of the 78th and 69th Infantry Divisions, then the head of the engineering service of the 22nd Finnish Rifle Corps. At the beginning of 1915, he took part in the assault on the Przemysl fortress. Was injured. For bravery and bravery he was awarded the Order of St. Anna and promoted to lieutenant colonel. In 1916 he was a participant in the famous Brusilov breakthrough.


Joining the Red Army

In December 1917, in Mogilev-Podolsky, D. M. Karbyshev joined the Red Guard. Since 1918 in the Red Army. During the Civil War, he participated in the construction of the Simbirsk, Samara, Saratov, Chelyabinsk, Zlatoust, Troitsky, and Kurgan fortified areas, and provided engineering support for the Kakhovka bridgehead. He held responsible positions at the headquarters of the North Caucasus Military District. In 1920, he was appointed chief of engineers of the 5th Army of the Eastern Front. In the fall of 1920, he became assistant chief of engineers of the Southern Front. He supervised the engineering support for the assault on Chongar and Perekop.


Academy named after Frunze, General Staff Academy
In 1923-1926, chairman of the Engineering Committee of the Main Military Engineering Directorate of the Red Army. Since 1926 - teacher at the Military Academy named after M. V. Frunze. In 1929, he was appointed author of the project “The Lines of Molotov and Stalin.” In February 1934, he was appointed head of the department of military engineering at the Military Academy of the General Staff.


Since 1936, he was assistant to the head of the department of tactics of higher formations of the Military Academy of the General Staff. In 1938 he graduated from the Military Academy of the General Staff. In the same year he was confirmed in the academic rank of professor. In 1940, he was awarded the rank of lieutenant general of the engineering troops. In 1941 he received the academic degree of Doctor of Military Sciences.


Karbyshev is responsible for the most complete research and development of the issues of using destruction and barriers. His contribution to the scientific development of issues of crossing rivers and other water barriers is significant. He published more than 100 scientific papers on military engineering and military history. His articles and manuals on the theory of engineering support for combat and operations, and the tactics of engineering troops were the main materials for the training of Red Army commanders in the pre-war years.


In addition, Karbyshev was a consultant to the Academic Council on restoration work in the Trinity-Sergius Lavra, of which I.V. Trofimov was appointed scientific director and chief architect.

Soviet-Finnish War

Participant in the Soviet-Finnish war of 1939-1940. As part of the group of the deputy head of the Main Military Engineering Directorate for defensive construction, he developed recommendations for the troops on engineering support for breaking through the Mannerheim Line.
At the beginning of June 1941, D. M. Karbyshev was sent to the Western Special Military District. The Great Patriotic War found him at the headquarters of the 3rd Army in Grodno. After 2 days he moved to the headquarters of the 10th Army. On June 27, the army headquarters was surrounded. In August 1941, while trying to get out of encirclement, General Karbyshev was seriously shell-shocked in a battle in the Dnieper region, near the village of Dobreika, Mogilev region of Belarus. In an unconscious state he was captured.

The path through the concentration camps and death

Karbyshev was held in German concentration camps: Zamosc, Hammelburg, Flossenbürg, Majdanek, Auschwitz, Sachsenhausen and Mauthausen. I have repeatedly received offers to cooperate from the camp administration. Despite his age, he was one of the active leaders of the camp resistance movement. On the night of February 18, 1945, in the Mauthausen concentration camp (Austria), along with other prisoners (about 500 people), he was doused with water in the cold and died. It has become a symbol of unbending will and perseverance.


Awards

On August 16, 1946, Dmitry Mikhailovich Karbyshev was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.

Awarded the Orders of Lenin, the Red Banner and the Red Star.


A monument was erected to the Hero of the Soviet Union D. M. Karbyshev at the entrance to the memorial on the site of the Mauthausen camp. Monuments to D. M. Karbyshev were also erected in Moscow, Kazan, Vladivostok, Samara, Tolyatti, Omsk and Pervouralsk, Nakhabino, and a bust in Volzhsky. A boulevard in Moscow, Karbysheva Street (St. Petersburg), streets in Kazan, Dnepropetrovsk (Ukraine), Sumy, Belaya Tserkov, Lutsk, Krivoy Rog (Ukraine), Chuguev (Ukraine), Balashikha, Krasnogorsk, Minsk, Brest bear his name. Belarus), Kiev, Tolyatti, Samara, Perm, Kherson, Gomel, Ulyanovsk, Volzhsky, Vladivostok, Krasnoyarsk and Omsk.


A number of schools in the former Soviet Union are named after D. M. Karbyshev. In Omsk, a children's health camp is named after D.M. Karbyshev. The name of D. M. Karbyshev was given to one of the electric trains operating on the Riga direction of the Moscow Railway.


A minor planet in the solar system is also named after him.


The poem “Dignity” by S. A. Vasiliev is dedicated to the feat of D. M. Karbyshev.

Proceedings

Engineering preparation of the borders of the USSR. Book 1, 1924.
Destruction and obstruction. 1931, joint with I. Kiselev and I. Maslov.
Engineering support for combat operations of rifle formations. Part 1-2, 1939-1940.

Karbyshev spent 3.5 years in fascist dungeons. Unfortunately, there are still no scientific studies (or at least truthful publications) about that tragic and heroic period in the life of the great Soviet general. For several years in Moscow they knew nothing at all about Karbyshev’s fate. It is noteworthy that in his “Personal File” in 1941 an official note was made: “Missing in action.”

Therefore, it is no secret that some domestic publicists began to “give out” absolutely incredible “facts” such as the fact that the Soviet government in August 1941, having learned about the capture of Karbyshev, proposed to the Germans to arrange an exchange of the Soviet general for two Germans, however in Berlin such an exchange was considered “unequal.” In fact, our command at that time did not even know that General Karbyshev had been captured.

Dmitry Karbyshev began his “camp journey” in a distribution camp near the Polish city of Ostrov Mazowiecki. Here the prisoners were registered, sorted, and interrogated. In the camp, Karbyshev suffered from a severe form of dysentery. At dawn of one cold October day in 1941, a train crowded with people, among whom was Karbyshev, arrived in Zamosc, Poland. The general was settled in barracks No. 11, which later became firmly assigned the name “general’s barracks.” Here, as they say, there was a roof over your head and almost normal food, which was a rarity under captivity. The Germans, according to German historians, were almost sure that after everything they had experienced, the outstanding Soviet scientist would have “feelings of gratitude” and agree to cooperate. But this did not work - and in March 1942, Karbyshev was transferred to a purely officer concentration camp in Hammelburg (Bavaria). This camp was special - intended exclusively for Soviet prisoners of war. His command had a clear directive - to do everything possible (and impossible) to win over the “unstable, wavering and cowardly” Soviet officers and generals to Hitler’s side. Therefore, the appearance of legality and humane treatment of prisoners was observed in the camp, which, admittedly, gave its positive results (especially in the first year of the war). But not in relation to Karbyshev. It was during this period that his famous motto was born: “There is no greater victory than victory over yourself! The main thing is not to fall to your knees before the enemy.”

PELIT AND THE HISTORY OF THE RED ARMY

At the beginning of 1943, Soviet intelligence learned that the commander of one of the German infantry units, Colonel Pelit, was urgently recalled from the Eastern Front and appointed commandant of the camp in Hammelburg. At one time, the colonel graduated from the cadet school in St. Petersburg and had an excellent command of the Russian language. But it is especially noteworthy that the former officer of the tsarist army Pelit once served in Brest together with captain Karbyshev. But this fact did not evoke any special associations among Soviet intelligence officers. They say that both traitors and real Bolsheviks served in the tsarist army.

But the fact is that it was Pelit who was instructed to conduct personal work with the “prisoner of war, lieutenant general of the engineering troops.” The colonel was warned that the Russian scientist was of “particular interest” for the Wehrmacht and especially for the Main Directorate of the German Engineering Service. Every effort must be made to make it work for the Germans.

In principle, Pelit was not only a good expert in military affairs, but also a well-known master of “intrigue and intelligence” in German military circles. Already at the first meeting with Karbshev, he began to play the role of a man far from politics, a simple old warrior, who sympathized with the honored Soviet general with all his soul. At every step, the German tried to emphasize his attention and affection for Dmitry Mikhailovich, called him his guest of honor, and showered him with pleasantries. Without sparing color, he told the military general all sorts of tall tales that, according to information that had reached him, the German command had decided to grant Karbyshev complete freedom and even, if he so desired, the opportunity to travel abroad to one of the neutral countries. Needless to say, many prisoners could not resist such a temptation, but not General Karbyshev. Moreover, he immediately realized the true mission of his long-time colleague.

I will note in passing that during this period it was in Hammelburg that German propaganda began to develop its “historical invention” - here a “commission was created to compile the history of the Red Army’s operations in the current war.” Leading German experts in this field, including SS officers, arrived at the camp. They talked with the captured officers, defending the idea that the purpose of compiling “history” was purely scientific, that the officers would be free to write it in the way they wished. It was reported in passing that all officers who agreed to write the history of the operations of the Red Army would receive additional food, comfortable premises for work and housing, and, in addition, even a fee for “literary” work. The focus was primarily on Karbyshev, but the general categorically refused “cooperation”; moreover, he was able to dissuade most of the remaining prisoners of war from participating in Goebbels’ “adventure.” The attempt by the fascist command to organize a “Commission” ultimately failed.

BELIEF AND FAITH

According to some reports, by the end of October 1942, the Germans realized that with Karbyshev “everything is not so simple” - attracting him to the side of Nazi Germany was quite problematic. Here is the content of one of the secret letters that Colonel Pelit received from a “higher authority”: “The high command of the engineering service again contacted me about the prisoner Karbyshev, a professor, lieutenant general of the engineering troops, who is in your camp. I was forced to delay the resolution of the issue, since I was counting on the fact that you would carry out my instructions regarding the said prisoner, be able to find a common language with him and convince him that if he correctly assessed the situation that had developed for him and met our desires, a good future awaited him. However, "Major Peltzer, whom I sent to you for inspection, stated in his report the general unsatisfactory implementation of all plans concerning the Hammelburg camp and in particular the prisoner Karbyshev."

Soon the Gestapo command ordered Karbyshev to be taken to Berlin. He guessed why he was being taken to the German capital.

The general was placed in a solitary cell without windows, with a bright, constantly flashing electric lamp. While in the cell, Karbyshev lost track of time. The day here was not divided into day and night, there were no walks. But, as he later told his fellow prisoners, apparently at least two or three weeks passed before he was called in for the first interrogation. This was a common technique of jailers,” Karbyshev later recalled, analyzing this whole “event” with professorial precision: the prisoner is brought into a state of complete apathy, atrophy of will, before being taken “for promotion.”

But, to Dmitry Mikhailovich’s surprise, he was met not by a prison investigator, but by the famous German fortifier Professor Heinz Raubenheimer, about whom he had heard a lot over the past two decades, whose works he had closely followed in special magazines and literature. They met several times.

The professor politely greeted the prisoner, expressing regret for the inconvenience caused to the great Soviet scientist. Then he took out a sheet of paper from the folder and began to read the previously prepared text. The Soviet general was offered release from the camp, the opportunity to move to a private apartment, as well as full financial security. Karbyshev will have access to all libraries and book depositories in Germany, and will be given the opportunity to get acquainted with other materials in areas of military engineering that interest him. If necessary, any number of assistants were guaranteed to set up the laboratory, carry out development work and provide other research activities. Independent choice of topics for scientific development was not prohibited; permission was given to travel to the front lines to test theoretical calculations in the field. True, there was a reservation - except for the Eastern Front. The results of the work should become the property of German specialists. All ranks of the German army will treat Karbyshev as a lieutenant general of the engineering troops of the German Reich.

Having carefully listened to the terms of the “cooperation”, Dmitry Mikhailovich calmly replied: “My convictions do not fall out along with my teeth from the lack of vitamins in the camp diet. I am a soldier and remain faithful to my duty. And he forbids me to work for a country that is at war with my homeland."

ABOUT GRAVE PLATES

The German did not expect such stubbornness. Somehow, with your favorite teacher it would be possible to come to a certain compromise. The iron doors of the solitary slammed shut behind the German professor.

Karbyshev was given salty food, after which he was denied water. We replaced the lamp - it became so powerful that even closing my eyelids, there was no rest for my eyes. They began to fester, causing excruciating pain. They were almost not allowed to sleep. At the same time, the mood and mental state of the Soviet general were recorded with German accuracy. And when it seemed that he was starting to turn sour, they came again with an offer to cooperate. The answer was the same - “no”. This went on for almost six months.

After this, Karbyshev was transferred to the Flossenbürg concentration camp, located in the Bavarian mountains, 90 km from Nuremberg. He was distinguished by hard labor of particular severity, and the inhumane treatment of prisoners knew no bounds. Prisoners in striped clothes with their heads shaved in the shape of a cross worked from morning to night in granite quarries under the supervision of SS men armed with whips and pistols. A minute's respite, a glance thrown to the side, a word spoken to a neighbor at work, any awkward movement, the slightest offense - all this caused the furious rage of the overseers, beating with a whip. Shots were often heard. They shot me straight in the back of the head.

One of the Soviet captured officers recalled after the war: “Once Dmitry Mikhailovich and I were working in a barn, cutting granite posts for roads, facing and gravestone slabs. Regarding the latter, Karbyshev (who even in the most difficult situations had a sense of humor) suddenly remarked : “This is work that gives me true pleasure. The more gravestones the Germans demand from us, the better, which means things are going well for us at the front.”

Dmitry Mikhailovich's almost six-month stay at hard labor ended one August day in 1943. The prisoner was transferred to Nuremberg and imprisoned by the Gestapo. After a short “quarantine” he was sent to the so-called “block” - a wooden barracks in the middle of a huge cobblestone courtyard. Here many people recognized the general: some - as a colleague in the past, others - as a competent teacher, others - from printed works, some - from previous meetings in fascist dungeons.

Then came Auschwitz, Sachsenhausen, Mauthausen - camps that will forever go down in human history as monuments to the most terrible atrocities of German fascism. Constantly smoking furnaces where the living and the dead were burned; gas chambers, where tens of thousands of people died in terrible agony; mounds of ash from human bones; huge bales of women's hair; mountains of shoes taken from children before sending them on their last journey... The Soviet general went through all this.

Three months before our army entered Berlin, 65-year-old Karbyshev was transferred to the Mauthausen camp, where he died.

UNDERWATER ICY

The death of Karbyshev first became known a year after the end of the war. On February 13, 1946, Canadian Army Major Seddon De-Saint-Clair, who was recovering in a hospital near London, invited a representative of the Soviet mission for repatriation in England to report “important details.”

“I don’t have long to live,” the major said to the Soviet officer, “so I’m worried about the thought that the facts known to me about the heroic death of the Soviet general, the noble memory of which should live in the hearts of people, will not go to the grave with me. I’m talking about the general -Lieutenant Karbyshev, with whom I had to visit the German camps."

According to the officer, on the night of February 17-18, the Germans drove about a thousand prisoners to Mauthausen. The frost was about 12 degrees. Everyone was dressed very poorly, in rags. “As soon as we entered the camp, the Germans drove us into the shower room, ordered us to undress and launched jets of ice water on us from above. This went on for a long time. Everyone turned blue. Many fell to the floor and died immediately: their hearts could not stand it. Then we were ordered to put on only underwear and wooden stocks for our feet and kicked out into the yard. General Karbyshev stood in a group of Russian comrades not far from me. We realized that we were living our last hours. A couple of minutes later the Gestapo men, standing behind us with fire cannons in their hands, began to water us streams of cold water. Those who tried to evade the stream were beaten on the head with batons. Hundreds of people fell frozen or with crushed skulls. I saw how General Karbyshev also fell,” the Canadian major stated with pain in his heart.

“On that tragic night, about seventy people remained alive. I can’t imagine why they didn’t finish us off. They must have been tired and put it off until the morning. It turned out that the Allied troops were approaching the camp closely. The Germans fled in panic... I ask you to write down my testimony and send them to Russia. I consider it my sacred duty to impartially testify to everything I know about General Karbyshev. By doing this I will fulfill my small duty to the memory of a great man,” the Canadian officer ended his story with these words.

Which is what was done.

On August 16, 1946, Lieutenant General Dmitry Karbyshev was posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. As stated in the decree, this high rank was awarded to the hero general, who tragically died in fascist captivity, “for exceptional steadfastness and courage shown in the fight against the German invaders in the Great Patriotic War.”

On February 28, 1948, the Commander-in-Chief of the Central Group of Forces, Colonel General Kurasov and the Chief of the Engineering Troops of the Central Group of Military Forces, Major General Slyunin, in the presence of delegations from the troops of the honor guard group, as well as the government of the Republic of Austria, unveiled a monument and memorial plaque at the site where the Nazis brutally tortured General Karbyshev on the territory of the former Nazi concentration camp Mauthausen.

In Russia, his name is immortalized in the names of military groups, ships and railway stations, streets and boulevards of many cities, and assigned to numerous schools. Between Mars and Jupiter, a small planet # 1959 - Karbyshev - travels along a circumsolar orbit.

In the early 1960s, the movement of young Karbyshevites took organizational form, the soul of which was Hero’s daughter Elena Dmitrievna, colonel of the engineering troops.

Materials used from the sites: perunica.ru and tatveteran.ru