Capture On 22 June 1941,
Nazi Germany and its
allies launched
Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union. Stalin ensured that Dzughashvili and
Artyom Sergeyev, his adopted son and fellow artillery officer, went to the front lines. Serving as a lieutenant with a battery of the 14th Howitzer Regiment of the
14th Tank Division near
Vitebsk, Dzhugashvili was captured on 16 July during the
Battle of Smolensk. The circumstances of his capture are disputed: Sergeyev later said that "the Germans surrounded Yakov's battery. The order was given to retreat. But Yakov did not obey the order. I tried to persuade him... but Yakov answered: 'I am the son of Stalin and I do not permit the battery to retreat." Other sources, including Soviet prisoners interrogated, claimed that they willingly gave up Dzhugashvili as they hated the Soviet system. Material from the Russian archives also suggests that he surrendered willingly. The Germans announced the capture of Dzughashvili on 19 July. Stalin reacted negatively to the news: he had previously ordered that no soldiers were to surrender, so the idea that his own son had done so was seen as a disgrace. He was angry that Dzughashvili had not killed himself instead of being captured, and suspected that someone had betrayed him. Meltzer, his wife, was not immediately told the news and, suspicious of her motives and the idea that Dzhugashvili surrendered, Stalin had her arrested. With Meltzer imprisoned, Svetlana took care of Galina. During the interrogation, Dzughashvili openly criticised his division and other units of the
Red Army, saying they were unprepared for the war, and further commented that military commanders behaved poorly. The Germans intended to use Dzhugashvili in their
propaganda against the Soviets. He was pictured on leaflets dropped over Soviet soldiers, shown smiling with his captors. The back of the leaflet was part of a letter he wrote to Stalin shortly after his capture: "Dear Father! I have been taken prisoner. I am in good health. I will soon be sent to a camp for officers in Germany. I am being treated well. I wish you good health! Greetings to everyone. Yasha." He was subsequently moved to a guarded villa in Berlin, where
Joseph Goebbels, the
Nazi Propaganda Minister, hoped to use him on Russian-language radio broadcasts. When that failed to materialise, Dzhugashvili was moved to Oflag XC Lubeck then to
Sachsenhausen concentration camp. While interned there, Dzhugashvili was constantly frequented by visitors who wanted to meet and photograph the son of Stalin, meetings which began to distress him. He also quarrelled with the British prisoners, and would frequently get in physical altercations with them. Soviet Foreign Affairs Minister
Vyacheslav Molotov also recounted that Stalin refused to swap his son for Paulus because "All of them [Soviet prisoners of war] are my sons." According to
Nikolai Tolstoy, there was a proposal from Adolf Hitler to exchange Dzhugashvili for his half-nephew
Leo Raubal, but this was not accepted either.
Death On 14 April 1943, Dzhugashvili died at the Sachsenhausen camp. Initially, the details of his death were disputed: one account had him running into the
electric fence surrounding the camp. However, it had also been suggested that he was shot by the Germans; Kun speculated that it is "conceivable that he committed suicide: he had suicidal tendencies in his youth". Dzhugashvili was posthumously awarded the
Order of the Patriotic War, first class in 1977, although this was done secretly and the family was not allowed to collect the medal. ==See also==