WWII Decisions Online · Hilfswillige: Survival or Refusal in the Transit Camp
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Hilfswillige: Survival or Refusal in the Transit Camp

A Red Army sergeant, captured during the Kiev pocket and held in a German transit camp in occupied Ukraine

Captured in September 1941 during the Kiev pocket, Sergeant Oleksiy D. has been held for 6 weeks in an open-air transit camp (Dulag). Around him, thousands of fellow Soviet prisoners share the same barbed-wire enclosure. Food rations are minimal, medical care almost nonexistent. The Ukrainian autumn chill is setting in.

A German NCO approaches with an interpreter: he is drawing up a list of Hilfswillige volunteers — unarmed auxiliaries assigned to logistics, kitchens, and transport. Those who sign up will be transferred to a work billet with regular rations, indoor shelter, and access to medical care. Those who remain in the enclosure keep the current ration through a winter heading for -20 °C.

Oleksiy can refuse out of loyalty to his military oath and to the USSR, staying in the enclosure; accept ostensibly while preparing a collective escape at the first opportunity; or accept the auxiliary role and give himself the best chance of surviving the winter.

Occupied Ukraine, November 1941, you are a captured Red Army sergeant in a transit camp: what to do with the offered Hilfswillige role?

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