Re: Ex-POW & Russian Soldier Meet Again
Date: February 01, 2004
"EX-POW,
Russian soldier who freed him meet again
By GEORGE MORRIS gmorris@theadvocate.com
Advocate staff writer
Don Menard displays a photo of Russian sergeant Vasily Bezugly, part of the
unit that liberated Menard from a POW camp in Barth, Germany, in World War II.
Other items include the medal Bezugly had made to commemorate Menard's 75th
birthday, a letter of Bezugly's intended reunion remarks for Menard, medals
and a reciprocal chocolate bar given to the Russians by American POWs from their
Red Cross care packages. After leaving a prisoner of war camp near the end of
World War II, Don Menard never expected he'd get to know any of the Soviet soldiers
who liberated him.
Yet, for almost three years, that is exactly what he has been doing.
Since 2001, Menard has been corresponding with Vasily Bezugly, part of the Soviet
force that liberated Stalag Luft 1 in Barth, Germany, on May 2, 1945, just days
before Germany's surrender ended the war.
"We talk about the weather," Menard said. "We talk about what
things we've been to. We talk about our health a lot."
They've also talked about the separate paths that took them to Barth, and the
events that followed.
Menard, 79, enlisted in the Army from Lafayette exactly a year after the attack
on Pearl Harbor that sent the United States into the war. When inadequate depth
perception kept him from becoming a pilot, and there were no training openings
to become a navigator, his choices were bombardier or radio operator.
"I got to thinking, 'What in the hell am I going to do with bombardier
training if I live through this thing?'" said Menard, owner of Menard Electronics.
"So, I chose radio, and I never was sorry I did, because it ended up feeding
my family for all these years."
That, however, was an abstraction on Oct. 28, 1944. The B-17 carrying Menard
was hit by antiaircraft fire on a mission. Trying to reach Allied territory
in Holland, the bomber was further damaged by ground fire, and the 10-man crew
was forced to bail out.
Menard landed in a pear tree and, as he was cutting himself loose from the parachute,
he fell and injured an ankle and hip. Despite this, Menard and other crewmen
made a 17-mile march to a railway that ultimately would take them to prison
camp.
The camp gave the airmen a sense of how their bombings were affecting the German
populace. As they neared the Frankfurt train station, an air raid siren sounded.
They faced the civilians' wrath.
"It didn't take them long to recognize we were flyboys, so they rushed
us, crowded us," Menard said. "The guards -- we had seven guards for
10 people -- it was all they could do to hold those people back.
"About that time a couple of young German pilots came in. One of them whistled
and the other yelled a command. I don't know what the hell it was, but you could
hear a pin drop, and they left us alone. They let us get out."
Menard eventually reached Stalag Luft 4 in Pomerania (now western Poland). There,
the biggest problem was malnutrition.
"That was the worst winter they'd had in 100 years, terrible winter,"
he said. "The transport had been systematically destroyed, and some of
our supplementary food came from Red Cross parcels. ... The ideal thing was
everybody got a parcel a week. That never happened. The Germans hoarded them.
"That spring -- February, March, April -- we damn near starved to death.
It was that bad."
As the Soviet army approached from the east, the captors crammed about 1,500
prisoners, including Menard, into boxcars and sent them west. The conditions,
which would have been rough even had the POWs been in good health, were nightmarish.
"You couldn't sit, couldn't stand, and about half of us had diarreah from
dysentery," Menard said. "They had a two-gallon bucket to take care
of that. We had very little to eat. We had been handed some Red Cross parcels
in the beginning, but we had to split them three or four ways. Out of a carton
you'd have one good meal. We were down to 500 or 600 calories at the most."
Thirst was a bigger problem. Prisoners in Menard's boxcar ripped off part of
the roof and took turns scooping snow for water. They spent five days in the
boxcars before being let out for a toilet break in the middle of a town square.
The trains carried them to Stalag Luft 1 near the Baltic Sea.
The Soviets, however, kept coming. Knowing the Germans would rather surrender
to the British army, which was closing in from the west, the Allied prison commander
talked his captors into leaving the camp in his hands.
"They would leave at night and he would not announce anything to the prisoners
until they had left," Menard said. "Sure enough, at midnight that
night they left on horseback, in wheelbarrows, on foot -- whatever transport
they could find."
The prisoners were technically free, but unarmed and needing help. Some prisoners
who knew how to speak Russian and German sought and found the Soviet army, which
didn't know the camp was there. The liberators rounded up cattle, pigs and flour
so the Americans could eat.
They were not, however, so accommodating when it came to letting the prisoners
go home. Although the British lines were about 50 miles away, Menard said the
Soviets, mistrustful of their allies, wanted to put the liberated POWs on trains
and take them roughly 1,000 miles to the Black Sea port city Odessa, where they'd
leave on ships.
The Allied prison commander negotiated a compromise: 300 airplanes made multiple
trips to evacuate the prisoners. That decision speeded their trip and ultimately
led to Menard and Bezugly finding each other.
By contacting a museum in Barth dedicated to the POW camp there, Menard learned
that the airplane evacuation had been filmed. He called the National Archives
and learned how he could obtain a videotape copy, and the archivist told him
of a Russian man who also had been interested. That was Andrew, Bezugly's grandson,
whose e-mail address the archivist provided. Menard made a copy of the tape
and sent it to him. That began the correspondence, which Andrew translates for
his grandfather.
Advocate staff photo by Travis Spradling
This beret was sent to Don Menard by Vasily Bezugly. "The tape moved me
to tears," Bezugly wrote.
Bezugly, who was born in Ukraine, was a mortar unit sergeant when the 44th Infantry
Division reached Barth. His unit fought its way across Ukraine and Poland. By
May, German resistance was collapsing when the division encountered scouts from
Stalag Luft 1, Bezugly wrote.
Bezugly stayed in the army after the war and retired as a major. He and Menard
write each other about twice a month. They had hoped to meet at a POW reunion
in Barth in 2001. However, Menard's wife fell ill and he had to cancel the trip.
Bezugly brought a box of gifts for Menard to the reunion. One of those who attended
shipped it to him. It included a paratrooper's beret, medals, a cigarette lighter,
Russian chocolate bar and a medal Bezugly had made for Menard's birthday. Menard
had previously sent Bezugly some of his military group and squadron badges and
ball caps with his squadron and bulldog logo.
© 1992-2003, WBRZ, Louisiana Broadcasting LLC and The Advocate, Capital
City Press LLC"
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