January 2020 photo expedition along the World War I Eastern Front: Pinsk, Parechcha, Al’shanka, Tsjeljakhany, S’vjataja Volja.
Фотавандроўка ў студзені 2020 г. па лініі фронту Першай сусьветнай вайны: Пінск, Парэчча, Альшанка, Целяханы, Сьвятая Воля.
World War I cemeteries (part XXXII): German World War I cemetery, Parechcha.
From September 1915 to November 1917 the World War I Eastern Front cut a static southwest to northeast line across Belarusian lands. According to Belarusian photographer-historian Uladzimir Bahdanau, during that time the German, Austrian and Russian imperial armies established more than 300 military cemeteries along this section of the front. Estimates vary from 106 to more than 150 German cemeteries which remain or are locatable.
After World War I the newly-formed German War Graves Commission (Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge — VDK or “Volksbund”) paid the government of the Second Polish Republic to look after German war cemeteries on Polish territory. Between 1921 and the Nazi-Soviet invasion of September 1939 Polish territory included the western Belarusian lands. The Poles undertook careful exhumations and where necessary reburied soldiers’ remains under new concrete crosses or tombstones. In many cases, as in the smaller section of the cemetery in Parechcha (photos of the day for March 22), German cemeteries contained remains of soldiers from the Russian imperial army; the Poles treated those remains with equal respect.
In stark contrast, at no time did the Soviet regime showed interest in honoring Russian imperial army graves in territories under Soviet occupation. After occupying the western Belarusian lands when it invaded Poland in September 1939 together with Nazi Germany and again after driving the Germans out in 1944, the Soviet regime neglected, or allowed the destruction of, World War I cemeteries there. Some local Belarusian authorities continue to allow depredation of German World War I cemeteries, for instance in Bartashy (Shchuchyn District) in 2018.
Since the collapse of the Soviet empire, the Volksbund has joined Belarusian volunteers and local historians’ efforts to put some of the German World War I cemeteries in Belarus in order, as here.
Regarding sites of Russian cemeteries, since the mid-1960s (i.e., in Kreva), but especially since 1991, Belarusian volunteers have more and more actively placed memorials to honor common graves or, in a more and more cases, named soldiers of the Russian imperial army.
Могілкі Першай сусьветнай вайны (частка XXXII): нямецкія могілкі, Парэчча.
Larger section of the cemetery with cross erected by the German War Graves Commission (Volksbund).
Большы раздзел могілак з крыжам узведзеным нямецкім Фольксбундам (Volksbund — Народны зьвяз Германіі па дагляду за воінскімі пахаваньнямі ў Беларусі).