This powerful war memorial, located in Berlin's Tiergarten park, was built to honor the Soviet soldiers who fell in the final battles against the German army in World War II. It was constructed on the orders of the Red Army shortly after the war's end and was the first Soviet memorial in Berlin. Its location is highly significant, placed in the heart of the city not far from the Brandenburg Gate and the Reichstag building, and it was officially dedicated on November 11, 1945.
The main approach from the grand avenue, Strasse des 17. Juni, is flanked by two Soviet T-34 tanks, which were the first to reach the city in 1945 with the advancing army. Behind them stand two large artillery guns; volleys fired from these very cannons proclaimed the end of the "Battle of Berlin."
The heart of the memorial is a curved colonnade, fronted by two stone sarcophagi engraved with the names of officers who fell in battle and were honored as "Heroes of the Soviet Union." The central pillar, taller than the others, supports an 8-meter bronze sculpture of a Red Army soldier. His rifle hangs from his shoulder, symbolizing the end of the war, while his left hand is held out protectively over the fallen comrades buried at the foot of the memorial.
Behind the columns, two fountains represent the tears and grief of the people of the former Soviet Union for the soldiers who had died. More than 2,000 of these fallen soldiers are buried in the landscaped grounds behind the memorial, though their individual graves cannot be identified. Today, information boards tell visitors about the history of this and other Soviet memorials in Berlin, recalling the war and its legacy of destruction.