On 11 August 1946, a memorial service was held in Vienna to mark the opening of a cemetery to honour the Red Army soldiers who died fighting for the liberation of the Austrian capital. An obelisk was erected in the central cemetery with the inscription: “In memory of the Soviet heroes who gave their life for the liberation of Europe from the brown plague”. Soviet and Allied honour guards took part in the unveiling.
The Vienna Offensive commenced on 16 March 1945, and on 14 April, the city was liberated after intense street battles. The liberation of Austria from Nazism claimed the lives of 17,000 Soviet soldiers.
The memorial is adjacent to the graves of the great composers Beethoven, Johann Strauss II, Haydn, and Brahms. It is believed that the ashes of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart are also near here, having been buried in 1791 in a mass grave during an epidemic. In the cemetery, the graves of Soviet soldiers are meticulously groomed, and there are always fresh flowers at the memorial.
Soviet, Polish, and French soldiers in Vienna eventually became the subject of a screenplay by Vladimir Vysotsky and Eduard Volodarsky entitled "Vacation in Vienna", with Vysotsky himself, Daniel Olbrychski, Vakhtang Kikabidze, and Gerard Depardieu playing the lead roles. The film, unfortunately, was never made.
Source:
The newspaper “Pravda”, No. 191 (10273) from 12 August 1946