Estonian partisans
Estonian Partisans or the Forest Brothers in Estonia (Estonian: Metsavennad) were partisans who waged the guerrilla warfare against the Soviet forces in Estonia from 1940-1941 and 1944-1978.
Armed Resistance in Estonia (Forest Brothers) | |||||||
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Part of Guerrilla war in the Baltic states | |||||||
![]() Estonian group of partisans between 1945–1950 | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
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Strength | |||||||
30,000 (total throughout 1944–1953) | Unknown | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
561 killed, 4,285 injured | 891 (Soviet estimate) |
As soon as the USSR occupied and annexed Estonia in 1940, former civilians, soldiers, or potential political opposition to the Kremlin were threatened with arrests and repression. More people began to seek refuge in the forest after the mass deportation on June 14, 1941.
The largest organization of the Forest Brothers was the Armed Combat Union (RVL), which operated from 1946 to 1949. The most important leaders of the RVL fell in the summer of 1949. Johannes Lillenurm, the last member of the RVL who was released, died in Läänemaa in 1980.
The biggest battles between the Forest Brothers and the KGB units ended in Estonia in 1953. Some battles were fought until 1957.
The last Forest Brothers arrested alive were arrested in the summer of 1967 in Võru County. These were Hugo and Aksel Mõttus. The last fallen Forest Brother was August Sabbe, who died in 1978.
History
The Soviet Union occupied and annexed Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania in 1940. From then on, former statesmen or soldiers who would otherwise have been imprisoned hid in the forests. Many began to hide in the woods after mass deportations. On June 14, 1941, when the war broke out between Germany and the Soviet Union, a large number of armed men went to the forest to help liberate Estonia from Soviet occupation.[1]
The Summer War
When the war between Germany and the Soviet Union broke out on June 22, 1941, many armed men went to the forest to help liberate Estonia from Soviet occupation. During the Summer War, the Forest Brothers liberated Southern Estonia. The biggest battles took place around Timmkanal and in Tartu, where the Forest Brothers started the Tartu uprising on July 10, 1941.
After 1944
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By November 25, 1944, the territory of Estonia was completely occupied by the Red Army. By the autumn of 1944, thousands of Estonian soldiers, former officers of the Wehrmacht, and self-defense detachments (Omakaitse) took refuge in the forest. Together with them, former employees of the occupation administration and persons evading conscription into the Red Army were hiding. They were armed mainly with German infantry weapons which were left there when the Germans were pushed back. Their uniforms combined elements of the uniforms of the former Estonian army, the Wehrmacht, and civilian clothing.
However, until the spring of 1945, the Forest Brothers did not take any noticeable action. The small groups of the Estonian forest brothers in their numbers represented groups of 5–10 people, with whom several dozens of "accomplices" from among the local population were associated.
Nevertheless, the Soviet command and the government of the Estonian SSR concentrated significant forces to fight the anti-Soviet underground. The 5th Infantry Division of the Internal Troops of the NKVD under the command of Major General Pyotr Leontiev, stationed in Latvia, extended its operations to Estonia. Estonian destroyer battalions (5,300 men) were also formed.

Arnold Veimer, having received a petition from the chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the Estonian SSR, to evict the families of "traitors to the Motherland, traitors, and other hostile elements", and in August 1945, 407 civilians, most of them of German descent, were transferred from Estonia to Perm Oblast.[citation needed] 18 families (51 persons) were transferred to Tyumen Oblast in October (51 persons), 37 families (87 persons) in November and other 37 families (91 persons) in December 1945 as "traitors".
In 1945, NKVD troops and destruction battalions, killed 432 Estonian freedom fighters, arrested 584 people and arrested 449 supporters of the partisans. At the same time, 56 policemen, soldiers and officers of the NKVD troops, 86 fighters of fighter squads and 141 members of the Soviet party activists were killed. The anti-Soviet partisan war in Estonia continued until 1953. Up to 30,000 people passed through the units of the "forest brothers".
Forest Brothers of Võrumaa
The forest brothers of Võrumaa were a large force and were sent to destroy large Soviet KGB units, which led to several battles between the KGB forces and the forest brothers. Although the losses in these battles were borne by both sides, most of them resulted in greater losses for the Soviet KGB forces.
According to various sources, there were more forest brothers in Võru County than in other Estonian counties.
Substantial Battles
The Battle of Osula
The Battle of Osula was in the village of Osula in Sõmerpalu Parish on 1 April 1946. The battle between the Forest Brothers and the Soviet KGB forces on Meretsi Farm was one of the largest in the county. 7 forest brothers took part in the battle. There were five men and 2 women in the group. However, the exact number of KGB soldiers was unknown. The battle lasted for 7 hours, but as the Forest Brothers ran out of ammunition at the end of the battle and the KGB soldiers used flames, the house caught fire. Two forest brothers died during the battle, the rest burned into the house.
A letter was found in the furnace flue of the burnt house with the text:
"Estonian People! Today, on 1 April 1946, we, the Estonian partisans, fought against the traitors of the Estonian people. We resisted about ~ 8 hours. Estonian people, fight just as firmly for the freedom and independence of the Estonian people. Long live free Estonia and the Estonian people!"
Battle Of Saika
The biggest and bloodiest battle between the forest brothers was the battle of Saika in the forest of Saika village on 7 March 1951.
Eight forest brothers and several truckloads of KGB guards took part in the battle.
Around 10 a.m., gunshots began to sound in nearby villages. The battle was bloody, lasted a few hours, and killed the forest brothers Tullus, Tomba, Visk, Keir and Pild. When the battle ended, there were only three of the eight Forest Brothers left. They still resisted stubbornly, but they soon began to retreat. During the exchange of fire, they managed to break through. The three of them ran a hundred yards, the KGB men chasing them fired constantly until Roland Uibo was hit. Due to this, only August Kuus and Richard Vähi escaped the battlefield, and Vähi was wounded. They ran to a forest farm, took a horse from there, and fled to the forest.
The KGB officers allegedly went into the forest with several trucks and returned with only one truck full of men. KGB lost about 30 men dead or wounded. The fallen forest brothers were taken to a KGB shelter, where their relatives were ordered to identify them. The forest brothers were buried in a swamp near Vastseliina and the fallen KGB soldiers were buried in various places in Estonia to give the impression that very few people died.
Battle of Puutli
The largest bunker battle of Puutli in Vastseliina municipality took place on 29 March 1953, in Vastseliina Parish, Võru County. In 1953, they hid in a bunker in the forest near the villages of Loosi and Puutli, The Resistance had eight forces.
On 29 March, the KGB officers raided the forest brothers in the bunker at 9 a.m. The bunker siege lasted almost three hours. There was a powerful exchange of fire in the forest.
Forest brothers Richard Vähi, Karl Kaur, August Kuus, August Kurra, Leida Grünthal, Endel Leimann, Lehte-Kai Ojamäe and Ilse Vähi were killed in the battle. The wounded forest brothers exploded their grenades to prevent them from falling into the hands of the enemy.
However, the losses of the KGB forces were much greater. After the battle, the bunker was burned by security. The fallen forest brothers were taken for recognition and later buried at the edge of the Ristimäe forest.

Aftermath
A list of forest brothers who have died since 1944 compiled by Eerik-Niiles Kross contains 1,700 names, including forest brothers who have died in captivity. Historian Mart Laar claims, based on Kross, that there were more than 2,200 known fatalities.
The last partisan, August Sabbe, died in a clash on 27 September 1978, he reportedly drowned in a river after being found by an KGB while he was fishing, he either drowned accidentally or deliberately lodged himself under a log.[2]
Since 1998, the Defense League has been organizing military-sports expeditions in the forests of Vana-Vigala and Eidapere every summer, which is called the Põrgupõhja expedition. The trip is dedicated to the memory of the freedom fighters.
In 2019, a job was created in the Estonian War Museum to study the Forest Brotherhood.
Songs of the Forest Brothers
- "Metsavendade laul" Song of the Forest Brothers
- "Politruk" Political Commissar
- "Meie Maast Ida Pool" East of Our Land
- "Metsavenna elu lõbus" The Life of a Forest Brother is Fun
In popular culture
The Canadian film Legendi loojad (Creators of the Legend) about the Estonian Forest Brothers was released in 1963. The film was funded by donations from Estonians in exile.[3]
A 1997 documentary film We Lived for Estonia tells the story of the Estonian Forest Brothers from the viewpoint of one of the participants.
The 2007 Estonian film Sons of One Forest (Estonian: Ühe metsa pojad) follows the story of two Forest Brothers in southern Estonia, who fight with an Estonian from the Waffen-SS against the Soviet occupants.
The 2013 novel Forest Brothers by Geraint Roberts, follows the fortune of a disgraced British Navy officer who returns to Estonia in 1944 for British Intelligence. Many of the people from his past who aid him have taken to the forest, during the ongoing conflict between Germany and the Soviet Union.
Estimates
According to historians who studied the forest holdouts, there were about 14,000–15,000 forest brothers in Estonia after the Second World War,[4] along with people simply hiding in the woods, the total number of forest brothers has been suggested to be higher, up to 30,000. According to a report submitted by Soviet KGB Major Oskar Borelli in June 1953, 1,495 members of the Forest Brothers and secret organizations had been killed by the Soviet KGB forces between 1944 and 1 June 1953, 9,870 people had been arrested (5,471 members of the Forest Brothers and 1,114 members of the secret organization, 1212 citizens).[5]
According to Soviet sources, 891 people died between 1946 and 1956 as a result of the Forest Brotherhood, including 447 Soviet and party activists, newcomers and their families, 295 members of extermination battalions, 52 NKVD and NKGB, MGB and 47 military personnel.[6]
See also
References
- Uibu, Krista; Timm, Maile (April 2014). "Sõnasemantika ja teksti mõistmine põhikooli esimeses ja teises kooliastmes". Eesti Rakenduslingvistika Ühingu aastaraamat = Estonian Papers in Applied Linguistics (10): 319–334. doi:10.5128/erya10.20. ISSN 1736-2563.
- "История "лесного брата" завершилась". Эстония (in Russian). 2006-10-04. Retrieved 2022-04-22.
- http://www.nommevalitsus.org/?p=1117.
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(help) - Tark, Triin (2020-12-31). "Igor Kopõtin, Rahvuse kool: Eesti rahvusarmee ja vähemusrahvused aastatel 1918–1940 (Tartu: Rahvusarhiiv, 2020), 631 lk, ISBN: 978-9949- 630-07-3". Ajalooline Ajakiri. The Estonian Historical Journal. 172 (2): 179–185. doi:10.12697/aa.2020.2.05. ISSN 2228-3897.
- Tannberg, Tõnu (2019-05-27). "„Üks võimsamaid relvi võitluses kodanlise natsionalismi vastu on kindlasti eesti ajalugu…". Eesti vabariigi perioodi uurimisest Eesti NSV Teaduste Akadeemia ajaloo instituudis aastatel 1946–1950". Ajalooline Ajakiri. The Estonian Historical Journal (2/3). doi:10.12697/aa.2018.2-3.05. ISSN 2228-3897.
- "РСПП: Статьи". www.rspp.su. Retrieved 2022-04-22.