From the DW:
“Germany remembers 'Holocaust by
bullets' in Ukraine”
Between 1941 and 1944, German
soldiers and police shot and killed more than 1 million Jews in Ukraine. The
German government now wants to raise awareness of this chapter in history. They are sites of horror that many in Germany
have even never heard of: Samhorodok, Ljubar, Plyskiv. In each of these places,
more than 500 Jews were executed by the Wehrmacht, SS soldiers and the German
police. Hundreds of mass executions were carried out by Nazi death squads in
Ukraine. "The Holocaust by bullets deserves a place in our memory.
However, that it is yet to happen," said Uwe Neumärker, director of the
Foundation Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. The German government now
wants to raise awareness of the so-called Holocaust by bullets. This week,
Foreign Minister Heiko Maas opened an exhibition in Berlin called
"Protecting Memory" to commemorate the murdered Jews, Romas,
prisoners of war and the mentally ill in what is nowadays Ukraine. "Until
this day, despite the incomprehensible dimensions of these crimes, we see that
this chapter of the Holocaust has received too little attention," said
Maas. The exhibition features places in Ukraine where for decades there has
been nothing demarcating sites where mass executions took place. Memorials are
now gradually being set up: This can be a stone plaques bearing an inscription
or just a group of benches, where people can meet to sit and remember the past.
These are places of remembrance and "symbols of our responsibility, our
crimes," as Uwe Neumärker puts it. His foundation has been working with
Ukrainian organizations to design the monuments collaboratively.
Living on mass graves
Ukrainian photographer Anna
Voitenko has been documenting progress at the new memorials with her camera.
She has experienced the transformation of bucolic landscapes into monuments
first hand: "Sometimes, the places were so beautiful with blooming meadows
and fields, and then you remember what happened there." She said that
conversations with victims' relatives were often traumatic: "Sometimes by
the end, everyone would be crying," Voitenko told DW. She recalled a time
where she stood alongside a Ukrainian Jew on a wildly overgrown picturesque
hilltop. Then she realized they were standing on a mound of bones and skulls .
And her companion said to her, "I could have ended up here." It is
important that these monuments are set up, says Voitenko. "Otherwise
people might end up living on gravesites unaware of what happened there." The
Ukrainian ambassador to Germany, Andriy Melnyk, sees the exhibition and the new
monuments as part of a project "explicitly supporting the Ukrainian
people." Melnyk is well aware of the fact that almost every Ukrainian
family was affected by the Holocaust: "Every third Jewish citizen who was
exterminated by the Nazis lived on the territory of today's Ukraine." As
few people in Germany seem to know that, Melnyk sees an "urgent need for
action."
Students must learn of the
Holocaust in Ukraine
The Ukrainian ambassador also
spoke of his son, who went to a German highschool where he learned nothing
about the Ukrainian victims of the Nazi regime — something that left him
"perplexed and disappointed." Melnyk asked the German foreign
minister that appropriate changes be made to German schools' curricula. He is
also calling for a monument to be set up in Berlin to commemorate the Ukranian
victims of the Nazi regime. As a first step, the German Foreign Ministry has
pledged close to €2 million ($2.2 million) to support the "Protecting
Memory" project and its plans for new monuments, educational programs, and
further historical research. In times of increasing anti-Semitism and the rise
of right-wing populists, Maas believes remembering German history is more
important than ever. The exhibition, which will initially be on show at the
Foreign Ministry, will then go on tour to educate as many people as possible
about the Holocaust in Ukraine.
^ I’ve known about the mass
graves in Ukraine and other locations in Eastern Europe for as long as I have known
about the Holocaust. It seems that 70+ years later the Germans are finally
doing what should have been done in May 1945 – remembering the innocent men,
women and children they murdered to make sure their crimes are not repeated. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-remembers-holocaust-by-bullets-in-ukraine/a-50211165
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