Otakar Jaroš

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Otakar Jaroš
1 August 19128 March 1943
Image:OtakarJaros.jpg
Place of birth Louny, Bohemia
Place of death Sokolovo, Soviet Union (today Ukraine)
Years of service 1937-9 1942-3
Rank Lieutenant (1937-9; Czechoslovak Army); First Lieutenant (1942-3; First Czechoslovak independent field battalion); Captain (in memoriam)
Commands Commander of signal platoon in Prešov (1937-9), Commander of the First Company, First Czechoslovak independent field battalion (1942-3)
Battles/wars Battle of Sokolovo
Awards Hero of the Soviet Union

Otakar Jaroš ['otakar 'jaroʃ] (1 August 1912 - 8 March 1943) was a Czech officer in the Czechoslovak army of the Soviet Union. He was killed in the Battle of Sokolovo and became the first foreign soldier decorated with the highest Soviet decoration Hero of the Soviet Union.[1]

Contents

[edit] Early life

Otakar Jaroš was born in Louny, Bohemia (Austria-Hungary today Czech Republic) to the family of a Czech railway engineer. When he was nine months old, his father was transferred to Mělník and his family followed him. Jaroš spent his childhood in Mělník and joined the Sokol and Scout organisations. These two organisations formed his physical skills and later fighting spirit.[2]

[edit] Military career

Following Czech independence in 1918, he studied in grammar school, but left and attended high school in electrotechnics. After graduation he was drafted and served his basic military service in the Third Signals Brigade in Trnava. He attended the non-commissioned officers school for a year, and finished as a corporal. Then he attended school for reserve officers in Turnov.[2] Following the advice of his uncle, colonel František Konopásek, Otakar entered the Military academy in Hranice. On 29 August 1937 he was appointed to the rank of Sub-lieutenant. He served as the commander of a signals platoon in Prešov for a year.

[edit] Life in Protectorate

After the 1938 Munich Agreement, Czechoslovakia was disunited. Otakar Jaroš returned to Mělník where the municipal office asked him to be the chief of police, which he refused. Instead, he worked for the post office in Náchod.

Germans are here, I would have to work against them and that would not end good.

—Otakar Jaroš when refusing job of police chief.[2]

[edit] World War Two

He did not accept the German occupation of Czechoslovakia, and in the summer of 1939 he escaped to Poland where he joined a Czechoslovak legion in Krakow under the command of lieutenant-colonel Ludvík Svoboda. When Poland was defeated by the Nazis and its eastern parts were occupied by the Soviet Union, the legion fell on 17 September to the Soviet captivity.

In the Soviet internment Jaroš led the signals platoon and also the Officer's School. Since January 1940 he served as the radio operator of the Czechoslovak military mission Moscow. After the German assault of the Soviet Union, the situation was radically changed. In the rank of Lieutenant (since October 1941) Otakar Jaroš, together with other Czech officers, became a constituent member of the First Czechoslovak independent field battalion in Buzuluk beginning in 1942. He became the First Lieutenant and was in command of the 1st company (February 7, 1942).[3]

[edit] Death

During the German counteroffensive in February 1943, the Czechoslovak battalion was ordered to defend the frozen river in the direction to Kharkov. Jaroš's strengthened 1st company took position in front of the river in the village of Sokolovo; the rest of the battalion and supporting soviet units stayed behind the river. On the afternoon of 8 March, German armored troops with at least 14 tanks launched two attacks on Sokolovo. In the ensuing battle, the 1st company was almost annihilated and Jaroš was killed. They were ordered to remain until reinforcements could arrive, but the supporting tanks could not cross the thawing river (the battalion's commander neglected recognition of the terrain). Not until late that night were the remnants of the 1st company ordered to retreat, the further defence of Sokolovo having lost any value as the unfrozen river no longer provided an avenue for the Germans to advance.

[edit] Decorations

For his heroism Otakar Jaroš was posthumously promoted to captain, and on 17 April 1943 was decorated with the Gold Star of the Hero of the Soviet Union as the first member of foreign army.[4]

Other decorations:

  • Československý válečný kříž 1939 (Czechoslovak Military Cross), 13.3.1943
  • Order of Lenin, 17.4.1943
  • Sokolovská pamětní medaile (Commemorative medal of Sokolovo), 8.3.1948

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Vojenské osobnosti československého odboje 1939-1945, Vojenský historický ústav, Praha 2005 ISBN 80-7278-233-9, p. 120
  2. ^ a b c Kapitán Otakar Jaroš
  3. ^ Vojenské osobnosti československého odboje 1939-1945, Vojenský historický ústav, Praha 2005 ISBN 80-7278-233-9, p. 120
  4. ^ Titul Hrdina Sovětského svazu

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