A 15 ruble gold coin from the reign of Tsar Nicholas the Second |
* * *
By himself Domek Pazaryk frightened no one. Even in his native Moravia, a region of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire not known for powerful giants, he was a considered a small, frail man. By the spring of 1918, however, Vladimir Lenin, new head of the Soviet government, had good reason to fear Domek Pazaryk and the 45,000 like him. Domek Pazaryk was a rifleman in strongest, best-disciplined fighting force now threatening Soviet Russia―The Czech Legion.
* * *
Members of the Czech Legion |
The Czech Legion aboard a captured Russian train |
* * *
For a moment, Florence held her breath. “These men,” she said sweeping her arm across
the wounded, “are coming from Chelyabinsk.”
“Who …? What
happened?”
Doctor Farnsworth knelt down next to a stretcher and lifted a bloody
bandage to reveal a festering wound. “The
Czech Legion and Kolchak's Whites. These
men were to disarm the Legion and this is the result."
* * *
As the Legion's train traveled east past Chelyabinsk, Private Pazaryk made an history changing discovery. There in a forested siding, he and his rail clearing crew discovered several abandoned boxcars.
* * *
Private Pazaryk placed his bar into the first car's lock and pulled. It took three attempts before the straining bar snapped the door open. The car's inside was stacked a third of the way to its roof with small crates. Private Pazaryk hoisted himself into the car and studied one. It looked like an ordinary military hardware crate but was too small to contain rifles or ammunition. Running his fingers across the top he felt rather than saw the embossed emblem of Imperial Russia. Putting aside his bar, he attempted to lift the crate and nearly sprained his already tired back. It felt like a crate full of lead or maybe…?
* **
Abandoned railway engine |
My research into the Czech Legion brought me full circle to my hometown of Joliet, Illinois. A news report from the 1918 Joliet Herald told of a Canadian military officer recruiting local Austrian-Hungarian men who had been interned after the United States entered the First World War. The men, primarily young, unmarried Slovaks from Joliet's east side, were to be part of the Czech Legion being organized for action on the Western Front.
Newly formed Czech Legion in France |
No comments:
Post a Comment