Chapter 4.2 - deporting Eichhorn
On August 21, 1941 was officially decreed the deportation of Volga Germans to Siberia, Middle Asia and northwest of the Soviet Union, where most will find death in the midst of forced labor and deplorable living conditions.
Volga villages were emptied of "German colonists" losing all their belongings and these possessions, Eichhorn who still remained in them were also deported.
In September 1955, during the government of Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet Union signed a decree through which he publicly acknowledged that the treatment of the Volga Germans had been totally unfounded, guaranteeing amnesty way survivors remaining in Russia. Despite being recognized as victims, they were forced to sign certain proceedings where renounced all rights to property and inheritance, and return to the territory of the former republic.
As a result of the life imposed in the concentration camps, the generation of survivors of Volga Germans who remained in Russia grew without family or school. German families were decimated, children who could produce quickly were forced to develop forced labor, and banned education. As part of these needs, the survivors were forced to sign waivers that violated their human dignity even in other respects but put an end to the persecution.
The Eichhorn deportees who decided to stay in Russia did in Kamyshin and Podsosnovo in the Altai region in Konstantinovka in the Caucasus, in Kazakhstan and in Nikolaevsk in Samara, others decided to leave Russia and settle in Germany at present the Eichhorn are present in Argentina, United States, Russia, Kazakhstan and Germany, adding thousands of descendants of the marriage of German settlers who left Stockbronner Hof in Germany in 1762.
Volga villages were emptied of "German colonists" losing all their belongings and these possessions, Eichhorn who still remained in them were also deported.
In September 1955, during the government of Nikita Khrushchev, the Soviet Union signed a decree through which he publicly acknowledged that the treatment of the Volga Germans had been totally unfounded, guaranteeing amnesty way survivors remaining in Russia. Despite being recognized as victims, they were forced to sign certain proceedings where renounced all rights to property and inheritance, and return to the territory of the former republic.
As a result of the life imposed in the concentration camps, the generation of survivors of Volga Germans who remained in Russia grew without family or school. German families were decimated, children who could produce quickly were forced to develop forced labor, and banned education. As part of these needs, the survivors were forced to sign waivers that violated their human dignity even in other respects but put an end to the persecution.
The Eichhorn deportees who decided to stay in Russia did in Kamyshin and Podsosnovo in the Altai region in Konstantinovka in the Caucasus, in Kazakhstan and in Nikolaevsk in Samara, others decided to leave Russia and settle in Germany at present the Eichhorn are present in Argentina, United States, Russia, Kazakhstan and Germany, adding thousands of descendants of the marriage of German settlers who left Stockbronner Hof in Germany in 1762.
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