Sochy massacre


The Sochy massacre occurred on 1 June 1943 in the village of Sochy, Lublin Voivodeship in Zamość County, Lublin Voivodeship during German occupation of Poland when approximately 181–200 of its inhabitants, including women and children, were massacred by a German Ordnungspolizei, SS''.

Background

During World War II and the occupation of Poland by Nazi Germany, Poles were subjected to terror and mass German repression. Both in cities and in the villages. Hundreds of Polish villages were subjected to pacifications, massacres of people, executions of civilians, burning, often entire villages.
An incomplete list drawn up after World War II estimates the number of 299 such Polish villages destroyed by German occupiers, e.g. Rajsk, April 16, 1942 ; Krasowo-Częstki, 17 July 1943 ; Skłoby, 11 April 1940 ; Michniów, 13 July 1943 ; Józefów, April 14, 1940 ; Kitów, December 11, 1942 ; Sumin, 29 January 1943 ; Sochy, 1 June 1943 ; Borów, 2 February 1944 ; Łążek, February 2, 1944 ; Szczecyn, 2 February 1944 ; Jamy, Lublin Voivodeship, March 3, 1944 ; Milejów, 6 September 1939 ; Kaszyce, 7 March 1943 ; Krusze, 31 August 1944 ; Lipniak-Majorat, September 2, 1944 and many others.
The largest pacification operation took place between November 1942 and August 1943 in the region of Zamość in Poland, which was selected by the Germans for the area intended for German colonization as part of the Generalplan Ost plan. About 300 villages were expelled from their homes more than 110,000 Polish peasants. It was 31 percent of the population living in the Zamość region. Some were taken to slave labor in the German Third Reich. Polish children were deported with the intention of being Germanized. Many Poles were sent to Auschwitz concentration camp and Majdanek concentration camp to death. The rest were driven from their homes to the German General Government. The occupants' plans were to further exterminate another 400 Polish villages.
Pacification and expulsion of Poles in the Lublin region were under the leadership of the SS commander and police in the Lublin District, SS-Brigadeführer Odilo Globocnik. The first deportations took place on the night of November 27-28, 1942. By the end of December, 60 villages inhabited by about 34,000 Poles were involved in the action. The second phase of the operation lasted from mid-January to the end of March 1943 and covered mainly the areas of the Hrubieszów poviat. 63 villages were displaced then.
The terror of the German occupiers met with passive resistance of the displaced population and the armed reaction of the Polish resistance movement. Guerrilla units of the Peasant Battalions, the Home Army and the People's Guard attempted to stop the crimes and pacification and displacement activities, attacked German economic and communication facilities, as well as retaliated against the Germans and their colonists occupying Polish villages. The resistance posed by the Polish guerilla in connection with the difficult situation of German troops on the Eastern Front forced the occupiers to temporarily stop displacement. They resumed in the last days of June 1943. Before that, the Germans carried out a series of violent pacification operations in the Zamość region. One of them was the victim of the village of Sochy in the commune of Zwierzyniec.
Probably the reason for the pacification was the cooperation of the inhabitants of Sochy with the Polish guerilla. According to witnesses, shortly before the massacre, Gestapo agents appeared in the village, claiming to be partisans, examining the attitude of the population to the Polish resistance. Extermination in Sochy was one of the many pacifications that the Germans carried out in the Zamość region and in Poland.

Massacre

Early in the morning of June 1, 1943, German troops arrived in Sochy. The pacification expedition included mainly German Ordnungspolizei officers stationed in Zamość. They were also to be accompanied by SS members and Ukrainian or Russian-speaking collaborators. The village of Sochy is located in a valley. The Germans were on the slopes of this valley and then surrounded the village with a tight cordon. When the inhabitants saw the Germans, they began to take their belongings out of their homes because they expected that displacement action would start soon.
But the Germans entered the village and began a systematic massacre. Women, children, men and old people were murdered. The buildings were set on fire together with the wounded left inside. There were also cases of throwing victims into burning buildings. Whole families were killed during the pacification.
Around 8:00 am, the German police withdrew from Sochy. Then came from 7 to 10 Luftwaffe aircraft, which bombed and fired at machine guns both the village and nearby fields, where the inhabitants who hid the first phase of the massacre were hiding. A dozen or so other people were killed then. It was the first case in occupied Poland of the use of military aviation by the German occupiers during the pacification of the entire village.
During the pacification, the German Luftwaffe also bombarded Polish villages: Sochy, Lublin Voivodeship, Momoty Dolne, Momoty Górne, Pawłów, Chełm County, Tokary, Lublin Voivodeship, and Klew.
The number of victims of the massacre is estimated at 181, 182, 183 or about 200 people. Nearly half of the village inhabitants were killed. Some people were outside the village. According to Czesław Madajczyk, 106 men, 53 women and 24 children were among the victims, other sources say that 108 men and 54 women or 103 women and children were murdered. The Register of places and facts of crimes committed by the Nazi occupier in Poland in the years 1939–1945 contains the names of 159 identified victims of pacification. The rest were buried unidentified. The village was almost completely burned; only three residential houses and two barns survived.

Epilogue

The Germans ordered the municipal authorities to organize a burial of victims. Among the ruins and piles of corpses, the inhabitants of the surrounding towns found about 25 seriously wounded. They were taken to the hospital in Biłgoraj. The murdered inhabitants of Sochy were buried in seven mass graves.
The massacre echoed widely. Reports about the Polish underground and underground press informed about it. In retaliation for the massacre and pacification of Sochy, partisan units of the Polish Underground State of the Home Army commanded by Adam Piotrowski, pseud. "Dolina", Jan Turowski pseud. "Norbert" and Tadeusz Kuncewicz pseud. "Podkowa" attacked the village of Siedliska occupied by German colonists. According to underground sources, 60 people were killed and 140 farms burned.

Memorial

In the village of Sochy there is a cemetery with mass graves of victims of the massacre carried out by the German Nazi occupiers. A gate with an inscription - one of the commandments from the Decalogue "5. Thou shalt not kill" leads to the cemetery. A monument was also built to commemorate the victims, among whom there were about 45 children murdered, women about 52, men about 88.
There is also a board near the cemetery informing about the pacification and extermination of the inhabitants of the village of Sochy by German invaders, in three languages: Polish, German and English.

In culture

The work of the poet Teresa Ferenc, who, as a nine-year-old child, survived the pacification of Sochy and lost both her parents in it, refers to the massacre in Sochy and World War II.
The family trauma associated with the pacification of Sochy is the main theme of the book "A Small Annihilation" , whose author is the daughter of Teresa Ferenc, Anna Janko.
Based on the book by Anna Janko, a documentary film entitled "A Small Annihilation" was created

Gallery