IPA 2010 Winner / German Veteran from the Battle of Stalingrad / Emma Dodge Hanson Photography / Emma Hanson (2024)

IPA 2010 Winner / German Veteran from the Battle of Stalingrad / Emma Dodge Hanson Photography / Emma Hanson (1)

In November 2009 we met with eight-teen of the last surviving Veterans from the Battle of Stalingrad in their homes in either Moscow or Germany. This is Gerhard Hindenlang, from a small town in Germany. He opened his home to us, unraveled endless seemingly impossible and incredible stories from the Battle, and showed us what he kept in his pocket (charms). He passed away in February.

IPA 2010 Winner / German Veteran from the Battle of Stalingrad / Emma Dodge Hanson Photography / Emma Hanson (2)

IPA 2010 Winner / German Veteran from the Battle of Stalingrad / Emma Dodge Hanson Photography / Emma Hanson (3)

IPA 2010 Winner / German Veteran from the Battle of Stalingrad / Emma Dodge Hanson Photography / Emma Hanson (4)

IPA 2010 Winner / German Veteran from the Battle of Stalingrad / Emma Dodge Hanson Photography / Emma Hanson (5)

Story

When the Russian pincers snapped in November 1942, 300,000 soldiers of Hitler's army were trapped in Stalingrad, the legendary city on the Volga that they sought to conquer for the Nazi empire. After weeks of desperate fighting 100,000 surviving Germans went into Russian captivity. Six thousand survived, returning to Germany after the war. Of them, 35 are still alive today. We visited ten of these veterans, to trace the memories of the battle in their faces and voices. In Russia we located a dozen surviving Red Army soldiers who had fought the Germans at Stalingrad. The result of our work, conducted over three weeks of travel through Russia and Germany, is an engrossing set of personal portraits and testimony. We were invited into homes modest or ornate, experiencing different forms of welcome; we spoke with decorated war veterans as well as simple soldiers; we watched our hosts celebrate or silently grieve; we recorded as some men changed into parade uniforms that looked huge on their shrunken bodies, while others showed us the small objects that had sustained them through war and the prison camps. Throughout, we observed the workings of two different memory cultures: the haunting shadows of loss and defeat on the German side, and the culture of national pride and sacrifice in Russia. 'Faces of Stalingrad' seeks to bring these distinct memories together, by presenting the portraits and voices of soldiers who came face to face in one of the fiercest battles of World War II.

IPA 2010 Winner / German Veteran from the Battle of Stalingrad / Emma Dodge Hanson Photography / Emma  Hanson (2024)

FAQs

Are there any German survivors of Stalingrad alive today? ›

Six thousand survived, returning to Germany after the war. Of them, 35 are still alive today.

What happened to the German bodies in Stalingrad? ›

The Rossoschka German War Cemetery is located 37 kilometers northwest of the city center of Volgograd on the Rossoschka River. It is a resting place and a place of remembrance for those who died in the Battle of Stalingrad and for those missing whose bodies could not be recovered.

How many German soldiers froze to death in Stalingrad? ›

In the winter of 1942/43, Hitler sacrificed twenty-two divisions through his command to hold out at Stalingrad. More than 100,000 German soldiers fell, froze, or starved to death even before the surrender of the Sixth Army. Over 90,000 men ended up in Soviet prisoner-of-war camps—only around 6,000 of them survived.

What happened to the German prisoners after Stalingrad? ›

The German 6th Army surrendered in the Battle of Stalingrad, 91,000 of the survivors became prisoners of war raising the number to 170,000 in early 1943, but 85,000 died in the months following their capture at Stalingrad, with only approximately 6,000 of them surviving to be repatriated after the war.

How many Germans left Stalingrad? ›

They quickly encircled an entire German army, more than 220,000 soldiers. In February 1943, after months of fierce fighting and heavy casualties, the surviving German forces—only about 91,000 soldiers—surrendered.

What was the life expectancy of a German soldier in Stalingrad? ›

The fighting was bitter and bloody, with every yard being fought over. The Soviets found the rubble perfect for fighting a defensive action, and the Germans dubbed the brutal fighting Rattenkrieg (rat war). It is claimed at this point that the average life expectancy for any soldier in Stalingrad was roughly 24 hours.

How many German generals surrendered at Stalingrad? ›

Of the 24 German generals who surrendered at Stalingrad in 1942, how many of them survived to return to Germany? - Quora. Of the 24 German generals who surrendered at Stalingrad in 1942, how many of them survived to return to Germany?

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