Active 1940–1944 | ||
Strength Around 150 saboteurs and helpers (1944) Opponents Nazi Germany, Nasjonal Samling |
The Osvald Group was a Norwegian sabotage organisation—the most active one in Norway from 1941 to the summer of 1944. It performed around- or more than 110 sabotage actions. (There were 39 sabotage actions according to Asbjørn Sunde's book from 1947.)
Contents
- Origin of name
- History
- Continued resistance by Saborg after summer of 1944
- Violent actions
- Organization
- Post war
- 2014 lawsuit over research project
- Monument and plaquettes
- Members
- Members of Saborg
- Other participants in the illegal work of the Osvald Group
- References
The organisation was originally a branch of the Wollweber League, a subsidiary to the Soviet secret police organization NKVD which dissolved when Ernst Wollweber was arrested in 1940.
Martin Hjelmen was its first leader until Asbjørn Sunde took over in 1938.
Origin of name
Historian Lars Borgersrud says about the origins of the group's name, that "The Norwegian section of Wollweber's sabotage instrument was called 'the Osvald Group' («Osvald-gruppa») after the pseudonym of the leader, Martin Hjelmen"—Osvald. Osvald was also one of the pseudonyms used by Asbjørn Sunde.
History
After the arrest of Ernst Wollweber and the revelation of the Wollweber League, the Osvald Group was intact in Oslo, but had lost contact with Moscow, and had no funding. The group stored explosives around the country. They initiated their sabotage activities shortly after Operation Barbarossa, the German attack on the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, and continued until the Osvald Group was demobilised in 1944, by orders from Moscow. Their first railway sabotage mission was undertaken on 20 July 1941, the explosion of a Wehrmacht train at Nyland Station in Oslo. In July 1942 Sunde held his first sabotage course at Rukkedalen (where they had their headquarters)]. "A short time later he actioned against German friendly" companies in Hadeland.
The Osvald group's active resistance policy was in opposition to the Communist Party of Norway (NKP), Milorg and other organizations that preferred a more passive resistance. The group cooperated with the group 2A and 2A's police group, as well as with Milorg, SOE and XU.
From the winter of 1942 NKP formed military groups, and Sunde had meetings with their leader Peder Furubotn. Sunde established a sabotage training center in Rukkedalen and recruited a network of saboteurs in the Torpo-Gol and Nesbyen area—and through Hallingdal and towards Oslo and Bergen. In September 1942 Sunde agreed to supply guards at the communist party's central camp in Hemsedal, in exchange for practical and financial support. Sunde became NKP's military leader, and the organisation became more efficient.
In 1944 there was a break between the group and NKP's leader Peder Furubotn, when Furubotn demanded that the group should subordinate itself to his leadership.
The Osvald Group was closed down in 1944, following orders from Moscow. During its operative period from July 1941 to July 1944 the group was responsible for around 110 known actions, dominating sabotage activity in Norway during this period.
35 of the saboteurs were killed, excluding the one killed in Bergen.
Continued resistance by Saborg after summer of 1944
After the decommissioning of the Osvald Group, Saborg continued. ("Saborg was originally created and developed as the Bergen chapter of the international ship sabotage organization under Ernst Wollweber's leadership. This happened before World War Two".) In November and December 1944 the leaders of Saborg were arrested. Saborg was the only resistance organization, that at times was subordinate to Milorg in Bergen, SOE, or the Communist Party's section in Bergen. (The latter relationship lasted a few days until Saborg was destroyed, and it is regarded as insignificant, according to Borgersrud.)
Violent actions
The Saborg section of the Osvald Group was responsible for 30 actions.
Organization
The number of members was over 200.
"The communist sabotage organization in Bergen" was called Saborg, and the core of the organization counted around 60-65 members.
The Vågård Group (Vågårdsgruppa) was another section of the Osvald Group, and it was based North of Hønefoss, in the forest.
Post-war
Saboteur Josef Monsrud said that "I am proud of having been part of the Osvald organization. And the recognition that we have not received, I can [accept or] live with. Because I know what we have done", according to a 2009 LO-Aktuelt article.
Sunde received an award (the Defence Medal 1940–1945 in bronze)—by certified mail—from the Norwegian government.
In 2013, then minister of defence honored 8 members—of the 17 who are still alive. Sunde and his organization received award and recognition the Soviet Union for their contributions during the war.
2014 lawsuit over research project
In 2014 Lars Borgersrud filed a lawsuit against Museum Vest, and he demanded the return of documentation that he had gathered, Later that year the lawsuit was settled out of court.
Monument and plaquettes
On 30 May 1995 a plaquette was installed on a wall of an atrium that leads to Østbanehallen (from Jernbanetorget in Oslo), listing employees of the State Railways [whereof at least two were "Osvald members"] who died during World War II. In 2015 the plaquette was moved onto the base of the monument located at Jernbanetorget in Oslo. Other plaquettes are at other places in Norway.
On 29 April 2015 a monument was installed at Jernbanetorget, and unveiled on 1 May. The monument—["crush nazism"] Knus nasismen by Bjørn Melbye Gulliksen—shows a hammer (specifically a mukkert) that is crushing a swastika, with the swastika nearly becoming "invisible (...) What we now see is a sledgehammer slamming at Norway's bedrock". On the base of the monument are two plaquettes and one inscription: an Asbjørn Sunde quote, "It was worth fighting for the freedom—for all nations, for all races, for all classes, for all people". (One plaquette is dedicated to dead Osvald members; another larger plaquette is for State Railway employees killed in World War II. Two of the names appear on both plaquettes.) Present at the unveiling were 4 surviving members. The permit (from the municipality) for the monument's current location, lasts for six months, whereupon placement of the monument will be reviewed. Controversy has lasted since 2014.