Tomi 🇺🇦🇫🇮 Profile picture
Jun 9 14 tweets 6 min read Read on X
Five bloody minutes started the winter war in November 1939 -

Soviet bombers hit Helsinki without a declaration of war and killed 91 civilians.

The first bombings of Helsinki were a clear war crime against civilians 🧵 Image
As the border region became a battleground early in the morning, the citizens of Helsinki started their day oblivious to that war had started.

The first indication they had that anything was amiss was the wail of the siren at 09:20, followed shortly by rumbling of engines. Image
Many civilians gazed in amazement as the low flying Soviet planes shot overhead. Instead of bombs, they dropped leaflets.

These leaflets addressed the people of Finland, informing them "it was time to shake of the shackles of oppression & overthrow the Imperialist Government" Image
The stunned inhabitants of the capital chuckled at these propaganda pieces but they soon saw their smiles turned as the darkest day for Helsinki was just beginning. Image
First wave of bombers missed their target: Busy Helsinki Central Railway Station & luckily only caused superficial damage to downtown Helsinki.

3 civilians were killed & 9 wounded. Image
After the excitement of the morning, the people of Helsinki were in a state of shock, many civilians were caught in a daze, some grabbed brushes and began to help clear up the damage, others started to pack in order to get out of the capital. Image
It was in this daze that Helsinki suffered its most devastating raid of not only the day, but of the entire war.

Just after noon, a group of 8 DB-3 bombers took of from Klopitsa airfield. They arrived in Helsinki in altitude of only 400 meters & dropped their bombs.
The resulting swath of destruction carved through the inner city.

The Helsinki University of Technology was essentially erased, the bus station at Kamppi, full of evacuating civilians, was badly hit. Lutheran Church also took hits.
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Death toll of the attacks were counted as 91 with another 240 injured.

Witnesses of the attack also reported that rear gunners of the bombers also sprayed the city with their machine guns.

The machine gunning of the streets was recorded by numerous people on that day. Image
The largest number of victims was caused by the bombs that hit the tall corner house on Abrahaminkatu and Lönnrotinkatu streets. Dozens of dead and wounded were carried out. Image
The first bombings of Helsinki lasted only five minutes.

From Hietalahti, the planes flew straight towards the bus station and from there turned to the sea to Kruununhaka sideways.

They had dropped their incendiary and explosive bombs mainly on residential blocks in Kamppi. Image
The bombing of Helsinki continued right away on December 1st, when a few SB planes again fired machine guns at people gathered in open places.

Six people from Helsinki were killed.

Anti-aircraft hit one plane, which crashed into Munkkiniemi.
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Foreign journalists reported about the bombing, forcing Soviet Foreign Minister, Vyacheslav Molotov, to make a radio speech declaring that the Soviet Union was not bombing Finland, certainly not killing the poor civilians, but were in fact dropping bread for the starving citizens


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More from @TallbarFIN

Jun 8
On June 14, 1940, the Finnish airliner Aero's Kaleva plane was on its normal scheduled flight from Tallinn to Helsinki, when two Soviet DB-3T bombers appeared next to it shortly after takeoff.

Planes opened fire, causing an tragedy which was kept silent for decades 🧵 Image
In the summer of 1940, days of fear were lived in Estonia.

The presence of the Soviet forces, who had already taken over the bases, was turning into a full occupation, which would be carried out without mercy.

There was an interim peace between Finland and the Soviet Union. Image
Just as the occupation was about to begin, the Finnish passenger plane Kaleva took off from Tallinn Airport on the afternoon of June 14.

Soon after the takeoff, Junkers Ju 52-type Kaleva was followed by two Soviet bombers.
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Read 15 tweets
Jun 3
June 20, 1944 was a particularly dark day in Finnish history. Soviet bombers bombed Kurkijoki's Elisenvaara station.

A tragedy happened, about which both Finnish and Soviet authorities kept silent for decades.🧵 Image
The most destructive aerial bombardment in Finland took place at the Elisenvaara crossing station on June 20, 1944.

USSR bombed a massively crowded station with 80 planes. Image
Bombing took place in the retreat phase of the Continuation War, on the same day that the USSR recaptured Vyborg.

USSR Air Force had been ordered to destroy the Elisenvaara station, because the transports of Finnish troops to the Karelian Isthmus passed through Elisenvaara.
Read 11 tweets
Jun 2
Betrayed Battalion - The sad story of Tribal Battalion 3 (Heimopataljoona 3)

In fall 1942, Marshal Mannerheim approved the creation of the ”Tribal Battalion". POW's who understood the Finnish language, but did not serve in the Red Army in officer positions, were selected to it. Image
Tribal Battalion 3 consisted mainly of prisoners of war who served in the Red Army, soldiers from Aunus, Tver and Vienna Karelia, as well as soldiers from Inger and Veps.

Battalion was assigned to the Finnish core crew, 119 officers, non-commissioned officers & regular soldiers. Image
In total, about 1,500 tribal POW's applied for the tribal battalion & about 1,100 of them were accepted.

Those accepted into the battalion had to sign a service commitment, which freed the prisoner from being a prisoner of war so that he could serve in the Defence Forces. Image
Read 16 tweets
Jun 2
Attack by Russian partisans on the Finnish village of Seitajärvi in Savukoski in the summer of 1944 was one of the worst attacks against civilians of the entire war & an example of Russian brutality they are capable of.

❗WARNING contains very sensitive pictures of the victims❗ Image
Destruction in the remote village of Seitajärvi was total on the morning of July 7, 1944. A Soviet partisan unit had carried out an attack hundreds of kilometers from the front line.

A village inhabited by civilians had been surprised in a perfectly bright summer night.
Several dozen partisans had navigated through the forests for days. Attack was carefully prepared & it was by no means the first partisan attack on civilian villages.

Throughout northern Finland, there was the same fear: russians could appear "out of nowhere". Image
Read 14 tweets
May 19
Imagine how differently things would be today if Finland actually got the Western help it wished & asked for in Winter War against the Soviet Union.

Let's play with this alternative line of history in this short thread 🧵 Image
Was there a real threat during the Winter War that the Soviet Union would be attacked from Finland?

Everyone knows that there wasn't.

The goal was to annex Finland back to the Soviet Union. There was a literal deal about it between Nazi-Germany & USSR.
Finns would never have gone to a one-on-one war against the Soviet Union. There's absolutely no sense in that claim.

Finland had turned its eyes to the West & had dreams of a partnerships with Western powers like Great Britain, France etc.

Stalin was not going to accept it. Image
Read 13 tweets
May 19
One good example of Soviet/Russian treachery & cunningness was the Soviet made puppet state called "Finnish Democratic Republic" in 1939.

It was established by Stalin upon outbreak of the Winter War & headed by Otto Wille Kuusinen to govern Finland after Soviet conquest. 🧵 Image
The "Finnish Democratic Republic" was only recognised by the Soviet Union and nominally operated in Soviet-occupied areas of Finnish Karelia from the de facto capital of Terijoki.

The puppet state was also far from democratic, because its "leader" Kuusinen was communist.
"Finnish Democratic Republic" was portrayed by the Soviet Union as the official socialist government of Finland capable of "restoring peace"

Terijoki was the first major settlement in Finland captured by the Red Army and because of poor success, it was chosen as capital of FDR Image
Read 10 tweets

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