The tip-off came from the pastor of the local church in the small town of Sopiv, western Ukraine: A German medical plane was said to have crashed near the village in the region of Ivanko-Frankivsk oblast during World War II, he told the German War Graves Commission.
“The inhabitants would have recovered the bodies scattered all over the field and buried them behind the church,” the pastor said, according to a commission statement. After Ukraine’s independence in 1991, villagers are said to have then erected wooden crosses at the burial ground.
Last month, in the midst of the ongoing war in Ukraine,experts from the commission disinterred the bones of 41 Wehrmacht soldiers there.
Ukrainian soldiers discover Wehrmacht remains
The horrors of the Nazi invasion have struck a chord with today’s war in Ukraine, especially following a similar find on the northern outskirts of the capital, Kyiv. There, on a site near the town of Vyshhorod, located directly on the dam that regulates the inflow of the Dnieper River to Kyiv, Ukrainian servicemen found the remains of two Wehrmacht soldiers in April last year.
“A trench was excavated, and bones were found first, and then an identification marker, by which the soldiers recognized that they were German war dead,” Vladimir Ioseliani, the War Graves Commission’s reburial leader responsible for Ukraine, told DW.
At the time, a 40-kilometer-long (25 miles) Russian military column was jammed not far from Vyshhorod on its way to the capital. The Ukrainian servicemen and women then “investigated on their own initiative and found out there was a commission representation in Ukraine, and they got in touch with us, and we arranged to meet,” Ioseliani said.
But this find was an isolated case last year, when the German association stopped its work in the embattled areas of Ukraine and retreated to relatively safe areas in the west and center of the country.
After the fall of the Iron Curtain, the commission was able to extend its work to the countries of eastern Central Europe and the former Soviet Union. In other words, primarily to Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine, but also to Russia — all countries that had been overrun in a brutal campaign of extermination by the Wehrmacht under Adolf Hitler.
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7 steps to identification
The procedure for identifying remains follows a set procedure, commission spokesperson Diane Tempel-Bornett told DW. Whether the remains are of German origin can usually be determined fairly quickly: The lace-up boots of Wehrmacht soldiers, for instance, are often still preserved 78 years after the end of the war.
But identifying the soldiers themselves is also important. “German soldiers almost always wore dog tags,” she said. “But that doesn’t automatically mean if someone has an identification tag it’s that person.”
More than seven steps are needed to identify a person: Age can often be reconstructed based on the state of the teeth or the condition of the skull. “By the length of the femur, you can determine approximate height,” said Tempel-Bornett. The sites are then cross-referenced with information from Germany’s federal archives. These old Wehrmacht files are also often the start of excavation work. However, even the smallest doubts can mean rejecting an identification, the Volksbund spokeswoman said.
Remaining family members in Germany are always informed when the identity of fallen German soldiers can be established beyond doubt.
The remains are then re-buried in various special commission cemeteries throughout Europe, often in the presence of relatives from Germany — including in Ukraine. “Before the war, we interred people twice a year in each cemetery,” says Ioseliani. Not in 2022, though, for safety reasons: The commission is now hoping for an end to Russia’s war against Ukraine so it can bury the 816 war dead unearthed last year.
Source: BBC