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Samsing Group

Samsing Group
Samsing-gruppen
Participant in Second World War
Active June 1943 - June 1944
Leaders Willy Samsing
Headquarters Aarhus, Denmark
Opponents Nazi Germany German Occupying Forces

The Samsing Group (Danish: Samsing-gruppen) was a Danish resistance group in Aarhus, Denmark active from June 1943 until 6 June 1944. The group consisted of Willy Samsing, his three brothers and 10-12 other men. The group conducted some 60 large and small sabotage actions in and around Aarhus and were the driving force behind resistance operations in the city in the early years. In addition to sabotage the group collected weapons and supplies airdropped by the allies and supplied them to other groups in Jutland. In 1944 the group was dismantled by the German authorities and its members arrested. The group worked with a loosely based group of university students that had been active since 1942.

Germany invaded and occupied Denmark on 9 April 1940. In June 1941 Germany invaded the Soviet Union and the Danish government subsequently arrested Danish communists and signed the Communist Law on 22 August 1941, forcing many communists to either flee or go underground. Willy Samsing (Codename: Frandsen) was the local leader of the Communist Party of Denmark in Trøjborg. With his three brothers he founded a small group of resistance fighters with communist leanings. The group conducted their first operation on 22 March 1943 and their last in May 1944. On 10–11 August 1943 the group conducted one their larger operations, spanning 9 locations across Aarhus, which may have contributed to the August Crisis.

In May 1944 the Danish resistance was, through a radio broadcast from England, given orders to destroy the electricity plant in Aarhus. Vagn Bennike, who headed the resistance in Jutland at the time, assigned the Samsing Group to the task and gave the order to start planning. The director of the electricity plant happened to also be associated with the resistance and supplied schematics and advice but also pointed out the action could leave the city without power for up to 3–4 years. Willy Samsing subsequently decided against the operation and it was never carried out. After the war documents have shown the order was given without consultation with the Freedom Council.


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