🗓 On January 18, 1943, the Red Army broke the siege of Leningrad during
Operation "Iskra" (Spark).
▪️The siege of the city lasted
872 days. For most of that time, communication with #Leningrad was maintained only by air and through the only transportation road, the
Road of Life, running on the ice across Lake Ladoga.
Soviet forces repeatedly tried to break the siege. They managed to succeed on January 18, 1943 during
Operation "Iskra" carried out by the Leningrad and the Volkhov Fronts with air support from the Baltic Fleet of the #USSR's Navy.
To liberate the besieged city, it was decided to deliver a major blow near
Shlisselburg, in the most vulnerable area of the German defences adjacent to Lake Ladoga. That area was best suited for two rapid offensives — from the west (inside the siege ring) and from the east.
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On January 18, during fierce fighting, the Red Army broke through the encirclement. A narrow 11 km-wide corridor was created on the southern shore of Lake Ladoga to deliver supplies to Leningrad and evacuate its residents.
After 16 months of
heroic struggle against Hitler’s invaders, the USSR’s second most important city regained connection by land with the rest of the country. Three weeks after the breakthrough, a railroad was laid and the first trains with food and ammunition were sent to Leningrad.
☝️ The breakthrough of the siege of Leningrad became a turning point in the battle for the Northern Capital.
Hitler's plans to overwhelm Leningrad by an assault were finally ruined. After the conclusion of the Operation "Iskra", the Red Army seized the initiative in battle for the city. The threat of Wehrmacht and Finland joining their forces under Leningrad was removed.
On the occasion of breaking the siege the city, US President
Franklin D. Roosevelt sent a special letter on behalf of all Americans to Leningrad residents. It read, in part:
✍️
“In the name of the people of the United States of America, I present this scroll to the City of Leningrad as a memorial to its gallant soldiers and its loyal men, women and children who, isolated from the rest of their nation by the invader and despite constant bombardment and untold sufferings from cold, hunger and sickness, successfully defended their beloved city throughout the critical period from September 8, 1941 to January 18, 1943, and thus symbolized the undaunted spirit of the peoples of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and of all the nations of the world resisting forces of aggression.” During Operation "Iskra", the enemy was pushed back from the southern shore of Lake Ladoga by 10-12 kilometers. That victory was achieved at a high cost. The 67th and 13th Air Armies of the Leningrad Front sustained casualties of 41'000 servicemen with 12'300 perished; the Volkhov Front’s casualties amounted to 73'800 with 21'600 who fell in that battle.
🎖 Around 19'000 soldiers and officers of the Leningrad and the Volkhov Fronts and the Red-Banner Baltic Fleet were awarded orders and medals; the title of the Hero of the Soviet Union was conferred on 25 individuals.
On January 18, 2018,
the 'Proryv [Breakthrough] Panorama Museum' was opened at the site where the forces of the Leningrad Front crossed the Neva river. It features a detailed picture of dramatic events of January 13, 1943 — the second day of Operation "Iskra".
#WeRemember #Victory80