Český Malín, Volhynia
a village burned down by German soldiers · Malyn, Rivnens'ka oblast, Ukraine
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Escape on a linden tree

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Mrs. Emílie Jarmarová, a native of Volhynia, met a fourteen year-old boy during the war who was one of the few to survive the destruction of Český Malín. “He just cried all the time and it drove others crazy.” Emílie took care of him and the boy told her about what he escaped in Český Malín. “They had a big linden tree in the yard, and when the tanks were approaching, his mother sent him to have a look where they were going. Suddenly, the gate opened and his father was shot right on the doorstep. They also shot the boy’s five year-old sister, and they drove all women from the village into their barn, poured petrol on them and set them on fire. He had a grandmother at home who could no longer walk or speak, she just lay; they brought the grandma to the barn, spilled petrol on her and threw her in the barn too.” Nobody noticed the boy in the tree.

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The destruction of Český Malín

The destruction of Český Malín

The community of Český Malín in Ukraine’s Volhynia region was founded in 1871 by Czech émigrés from the Rakovník, Louny and Žatec area. Malín became part of Poland following the Peace of Riga of 1921 and when the German-Polish war burst out, Malín and all of Volhynia was annexed to the USSR based on the secret addendum to the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of 23 August 1939. A Nazi military unit took Český Malín and the neighboring Ukrainian Malín on 13 July 1943. On the pretext of document inspection, they drove most citizens from their homes and burned them by groups in the church, school and barns. Whoever tried to escape was shot. The Nazis then looted the village and burned it all down. 374 Czechs and 26 Poles were murdered in Český Malín. The pretext for the burning was the alleged attack on the Nazi unit brought by a Bandera group (Ukrainian nationalists).

Český Malín, Volhynia

Available in: English | Česky

In the mid-19th century, a hectare of agricultural land in the territory of today's Ukraine cost less than a goat. The land was sold by the tsar, who wanted to attract foreign farmers to this abandoned region. On Easter 1870, approximately twenty families from Bohemia – specifically from the region of Lounsko, Žatecko and Rakovnicko – set out on a journey. They journeyed for about a month through the Carpathian Mountains to Rovno in Volhynia, where the local middlemen offered them for sale land belonging to a Polish landowner, Kazimir Slivinski, in Malín in the Ostroh district. The price that the Czech settlers paid was twenty rubles for one Morg (less than one hectare). Václav Cibulka from Pnětluky, Ferdinand Re from Domoušice, Jan Janďourek and other farmers started to toil the land and so Český Malín was born, a village with everything that goes with it – a school, shops, craftsmen or a fire-fighting corps. For over sixty years, the dwellers of Malín were building (and renewing) their farmsteads while they had – as we use to say today – good relationships with their Ukrainian and Polish neighbors. They survived the First World War, when they were exiled for several years from their village and the village itself nearly destroyed and they survived the misery of the Soviet and German occupation. Then came the morning of July 13, 1943. The farmers were just about to leave for work on their fields after two days of holidays, when a unit of soldiers in German uniforms marched into the village. Within a few hours, the troops burned, shot and beat to death over four hundred villagers, including women and children. As if by a miracle, a few people managed to escape and live to tell the story. They were the fortunate few who had left the village early on in the morning to do some shopping or those who managed to flee from the group created for the purpose of taking away the booty of the murderers. In 2006, the last nine witnesses of the Malín massacre – an enormous wartime mass-murder of Czechs – were alive. The pretext for this operation of the German military was an alleged assault of the Ukrainian nationalist militia on German troops.

Český Malín, Volhynia

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Escape on a linden tree

Escape on a linden tree

The destruction of Český Malín
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