Jump to content

User:Vecrumba/Jānis Pīnups

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jānis Pīnups (10 May 1925 — 15 June 2007) was the last of the World War II Forest brothers, who only came out of hiding in 1995, at the age of 70.[1]

He had been conscripted into the Red Army in August, 1944 and sent sent to the front, where he participated in two battles. A concussion rendered him unconscious in the second battle. When he awoke, he saw that no one was left on the battlefield and seized the opportunity to "desert" [2], finally managing to return home on 7 October 1944.[3]


From that moment he spent more than 50 years hiding from the authorities and strangers. Only his brothers and sister knew he was even alive. At first he lived in the forest, but with cold weather setting in, he fitted out a hidden underground bunker for himself on the farm of some relatives. In the 1950's, these relatives built a new house, leaving their old one derelict, that becoming another sanctuary for hiding from strangers.[3]He came out into the yard during the day only when his neighbors couldn't see him. He also helped his brothers with farm work, as well as picking mushrooms and berries in the forest—all of which he did only by the cover of night, having constructed a number of bunkers in the forest to help him stay hidden.[1]


Once he accidentally wandered into the parish center and met a man at the bus stop who said that he knew Pīnups, but couldn't remember his name. Pīnups fled immediately—the incident made him even more cautious because, after a quarter of a century, had had been convinced no one would remember him. As late as the 1980's, when Pīnups dislocated his ankle, he sought medical assistance under an assumed name.[3]

He spent his last two decades in hiding being particularly cautious. Remaining in hiding became increasingly difficult after his brothers died and only his sister Veronika was left alive. Nor was he able to continue to assist her after her curious neighbors inquired as to who it was, that was visiting her.

Aware that Latvia had regained its independence in 1991, Pīnups nevertheless remained in hiding because of the former Soviet, now Russian, forces which still remained in Latvia. Only a half year after Russian forces evacuated Latvian territory did Pīnups finally raze his forest bunkers and, at the age of 70, appear at the Pelēču parish police station to announce that he had been hiding from the authorities in the surrounding woods for the last 50 years.[3][1]

He was granted Latvian citizenship and moved in to live with his sister, who had no other family. Initially he received only social welfare (approximately 25 lats per month) as the Ministry of Welfare considered him ineligible for a pension, however, this was later changed. Pīnups died in 2007 at the age of 80.[5][6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e Pēdējo mežabrāļu atgriešanās, Māra Grīnberga. 27 November 1997 Cite error: The named reference "ie2" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ Mobilization of forces from occupied territories was illegal. The USSR considered the forcibly occupied Baltics to be Soviet territory and its inhabitants Soviet citizens. Deserting or defecting were treated as acts of treason.
  3. ^ a b c d "Участник Второй мировой скрывался от властей 50 лет" Komersant (20.05.95.) in Russian Cite error: The named reference "ie4" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  4. ^ Red Army officers had standing orders to shoot anyone who retreated.
  5. ^ Pēdējo mežabrāļu atgriešanās (27.11.97.)
  6. ^ Grīnberga Māra, Pēdējā pasaules kara pēdējais mežabrālis // Diena (18.05.95.)