German War Graves Commission

German War Graves Commission
Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge

German War Graves Commission Logo
Abbreviation VDK
Motto Work for Peace (in German: Arbeit für den Frieden)
Formation 16 December 1919
Legal status Association
Purpose To locate, maintain, care for German war graves outside of Germany
Headquarters Kassel, Hesse, Germany
Region served
Europe and North Africa (45 countries)
Membership
114,098 (2013)[1]
Official language
German
President
Markus Meckel[1]
Main organ
until 2012: Stimme & Weg, from 2013 on: frieden
Budget
EUR 41,203,000 (2013)
Staff
571 (2013)
Volunteers
8,000 (2013)
Website http://www.volksbund.de

The German War Graves Commission (Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge in German) is responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of German war graves in Europe and North Africa.[2] Its objectives are acquisition, maintenance and care of German war graves; tending to next of kin; youth and educational work; and preservation of the memory to the sacrifices of war and despotism.

Foundation in 1919

It was founded as a private charity on December 16, 1919 as the recognised [German] Commission under the war graves provisions of Article 225 of the Treaty of Versailles.[2]

Members, Offices

By the 1930s, the Commission had established numerous cemeteries for German World War I dead.[2] During World War II, the Volksbund's work was mostly carried out by the Wehrmacht's own graves service.[2]

After World War II, the Volksbund resumed its work in 1946 and soon established more than 400 war cemeteries in Germany.[2] In 1954, the German chancellor Konrad Adenauer, tasked the Volksbund with the establishment, care and upkeep of German war cemeteries abroad.[2]

Philosophy

To guard the memory of the victims of war and violence, to work for peace among all nations and to guarantee dignity of men, are the main goals in the statutes of the German War Graves Commission. All activities of German War Graves Commission have to harmonize with these general principles.[3]

Members and private donators

The Commission spent about 41 million Euro (in 2013). Two-thirds of this sum was financed by members and private donations. One third was paid by government (war graves outside of Germany) and states (maintenance of some war graves within Germany).[1]

Activities

Casualties, war graves, prisoner of war graves

The commission looks after "832 military cemeteries in 45 countries with about 2.6 million dead" and its work is carried out today by 8,000 honorary and 571 full-time employees.[1] Since the end of the Cold War, the Volksbund has access to Eastern Europe, where most World War II German casualties occurred.[2] Since 1991, 188 World War I cemeteries and 330 World War II cemeteries in eastern, central and south-eastern Europe have been reconstructed or rebuilt and about 759,110 bodies have been buried in new graves.[2] Maintenance of German war cemeteries in France is looked after by the Service d'Entretien des Sépultures Militaires Allemandes (the "German Military Burials Maintenance Service") known as S.E.S.M.A..[4]

War grave database online

The German War Graves Commission offers an accessible online database of 4.6 million individual names for World Wars I and II.[10][1]

War cemeteries and war dead of World War I and II inside of Germany are also documented in these files (895,561 in 2010). Among these are war dead transferred to Germany or persons who died within Germany. But only those are registered whose remains were transferred to war cemetery areas within civil cemeteries but not to individual family graves.

Further in this database persons can be found who died by aerial bombing of cities, as prisoner of war or in imprisonment, partly foreign members of German auxiliary troops who died in World War II or even some members of Wehrmacht who died before World War II began.

A grave research demand (Grabnachforschungsauftrag in German) can be sent online or as hardcopy to Volksbund (German War Grave Commission) to clarify the unknown fate of a German soldier. As some family names are very common it is important to mention all given names and the date of birth of the missing soldier. As additional data should be given if available: date of death, last unit (Truppenteil in German) and last letters. Often withdrawing troops could not bury their casualties. Detailed data on the war dead of World War I were destroyed in Berlin during World War II,[8] by aerial bombing in February 1945, when the files of the bureau Zentralnachweiseamt für Kriegerverluste und Kriegsgräber (ZNA) were lost.[11]

War cemetery database online

Volksbund has also an online database on war cemeteries. Data collected for each cemetery are location (geography), how to reach, number of dead, course of military events in the region and architecture of the cemetery.[12] The search for war cemeteries can also be done in geographical order (country, cemetery).[13]

List of German cemeteries by country/conflict

German War Graves Commission has an online inventory of its cemeteries.[14][15] Some of these cemeteries are described below:

Solers, France (Total burials: 2,228)
German war cemetery in Zagreb, Croatia
First World War grave at Laventie German Military Cemetery, France
Australia – World War I & II
Austria – World War I & II
Belgium – World War I
Belgium – World War I & II
Belgium – World War II
Canada – World War I & II
Croatia – World War II
Egypt – World War II
France (Western Front) – World War I
France (Normandy) – World War II
Southern France – World War II
Greece
Ireland – World War I & World War II
Israel – World War I
Italy – World War II
Luxembourg – World War II
Netherlands – World War I & World War II
Russia – World War II
Spain – World War I & World War II
Tunisia – World War II
United Kingdom – World War I & II

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Arbeitsbilanz 2013. In: frieden, April 2014, S. AB 1-AB 12. (PDF; 660 kB)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 German War Graves Commission homepage (in English)
  3. Satzung des Volksbundes Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge, § 3 – Aufgaben und Rechtsgrundlagen (Activities and legal basis)
  4. (fr) Paysages et Sites de mémoire de la Grande Guerre: Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge – S.E.S.M.A.
  5. Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge e. V. (Hrsg.): Arbeitsbilanz 2010. Sonderdruck 2011, S. 13
  6. 1 2 Arbeitsbilanz 2010. In: Stimme & Weg, 2/2011, pp. AB 1–AB 12.
  7. Kriegsgräberstätte Rossoschka on the website of Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge e. V. (German)
  8. 1 2 Beate Kalbhenn: Der Name ist entscheidend. Grabnachforschung durch den Volksbund. In: Stimme & Weg x/1997, pp. 24–25
  9. Kriegsgefangenenfriedhöfe
  10. Online-Search for War Graves (in German)
  11. clio online, Themenportal 1. Weltkrieg
  12. Website of Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge: German war cemeteries in alphabetical order
  13. Website of Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge: German war cemeteries in geographical order (Land=country, Friedhofsname=name of cemetery)
  14. Inventory of German War Grave cemeteries in geographical order (Land=country, Friedhof=name of cemetery)
  15. Inventory of German War Grave cemeteries in alphabetical order
  16. Woodland Cemetery
  17. Kitchener
  18. Website German War Graves Commission: Vermandovillers cemetery in France
  19. Österreich betreut Kriegsgräberstätten. In: Stimme & Weg, 2/2011, p. 24.
  20. Ministère de la Défense, SGA Sépultures de guerre (File of french soldiers killed in action)
  21. Website of the Oorlogsgravenstichting in Netherlands

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