Background
Harald Riipalu was born in Saint St. Petersburg where his family was lessee in a manor.
Harald Riipalu was born in Saint St. Petersburg where his family was lessee in a manor.
In 1920, after the Estonian War of Independence, he attended a small local parish school. He graduated in 1932, being among the best students in the school. From 1932 to 1933, Riipalu studied at the Faculty of Law of University of Tartu.
When World War I began, their family moved to Estonia, Saare parish near Kääpa river. He had four sisters, one of whom died at the age of four. In 1926 he went to study in Hugo Treffner Gymnasium in Tartu.
In 1933 Riipalu started his military career, attending the Military Academy of Estonia, from which he graduated in 1935.
He served in Narva, and was then assigned in January 1940 to the Defence League Tartu Territorial Regiment, as a junior instructor. After the Soviet occupation of Estonia in 1940, Riipalu was forcibly mobilized into the Soviet Army 22nd Territorial Corps, serving until 1941, at which time he defected to the German side to fight against the Soviet Union.
He was initially held as a prisoner of war by the Germans until March 1942. From 1942 to 1943 Riipalu was a Zugführer (platoon leader) and company commander of the 36th Defence Battalion, and became commander of the battalion in November 1942.
From 1943 to 1945, he served in the 3rd Steamship-Brigade and the 20th Waffen Grenadier Division of the Steamship He was the Commander of the 45th Steamship-Grenadier Regiment from April 1944.
The award was presented to him by Felix Steiner, the commander of III Steamship Panzer Corps. After Germany had lost the war, many former Estonian soldiers who had served in the 20th Waffen Grenadier Division of the Steamship, including Riipalu, were hunted by the Soviet Union, but Riipalu managed to evade captivity. From 1945 to 1948 he lived in Denmark, and later lived in Great Britain.
He suffered a heart failure and died in 1961, at the age of 49.
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