From the DW:
“The tragedy of Babi Yar: An
assembly line of death in Kyiv”
(The portraits of survivors of
the Babi Yar massacres)
Eighty years ago, more than
30,000 Jews were murdered by Nazis in Kyiv in just two days. Babi Yar is the
most infamous site of the Holocaust in Ukraine — but the remembrance of the
massacres was suppressed for decades. More than 30,000 Jewish people were
killed in the Babi Yar, also known as Babyn Yar, massacres
Anna Furman has been able to
identify around 28,300 names so far. "In the past year, more than 1,000
new names were added," the project manager at the Ukrainian Babi Yar
Memorial Center told DW. But Furman and her colleagues still have a lot
of work to do. Exactly 80 years ago, on September 29 and 30, 1941, the Nazis
shot dead more than 33,000 people in occupied Kyiv, most of them Jews. It was
an assembly line of death. "Entire families were killed. The youngest
victim we were able to identify was an infant, just two-days old," Furman
said. All in all, there are estimates that between 70,000 and 100,000 people
were killed prior to liberation in 1943. The dead included Sinti and Roma,
Communists and prisoners of war. The
location Babi Yar, also known as Babyn Yar, is often mentioned in the same
breath as Auschwitz-Birkenau and is the Ukraine’s most famous Holocaust site.
There were many such places during World War II, but Babi Yar has a special
place in history, partly because the act of remembering the victims was
suppressed and concealed for decades.
What happened at Babi Yar? On
September 19, 1941, about three months after the invasion of the Soviet Union,
Nazi troops marched into Kyiv, the capital of Soviet Ukraine. A few days later,
resistance fighters blew up several buildings in the city center where the
occupiers had taken up residence. The Nazis used this as a pretext to launch a
massacre. Leaflets were distributed throughout the city of over a million
inhabitants, calling on Jews to appear at an intersection on the outskirts of
Kiev at 8:00 a.m. on September 29, 1941. They were to bring money and warm
clothing. Anyone who refused to come would be shot. The people were ordered to take off their
clothes. Then they were driven to the edge of the ravine and, in assembly line
fashion, shot. Loud music and a plane circling overhead were supposed to drown
out the screams and shots. Responsible for the massacre was the so-called
Sonderkommando 4a of Einsatzgruppe C, which participated in the Holocaust in
Eastern Europe. It was led by SS officer Paul Blobel, who was also involved in
other similar operations in Ukraine. He was convicted and executed in one of
the Nuremberg trials. The local "auxiliary police" also participated
in the killing of Jews. It is a chapter of Ukrainian history that has long been
suppressed, like the massacre itself.
Suppressed and forgotten For a long time after World War II,
nothing in the Soviet Union commemorated the tragedy. The award-winning
Ukrainian film director Sergei Loznitsa, who recently made a documentary about
Babi Yar, blames it on antisemitism. "The Soviet Union was an antisemitic
state," the filmmaker told DW. All rulers since Stalin have been
antisemitic, he said. Loznitsa
remembers that during his childhood the site of the massacre was filled in and
turned into a park. And bordering the park were prefabricated buildings. A
Jewish cemetery there was also destroyed around that time. "I
remember as a child walking through the park after going swimming and stumbling
over strange stones with words in an unknown language," he said. "I
had no idea at the time that these were remains of Jewish graves." It
wasn't until 1976 that the first memorial to the victims of the massacre was
even erected. But there was no mention of Jews. More was done following independence
beginning in 1991 but it wasn't until a few years ago that a memorial worthy of
its name was created. There is now also a symbolic synagogue. But parts of the
population still struggle with coming to terms with the past. "Unfortunately,
I don't see an ardent desire among my countrymen to preserve the memory of this
tragedy," Loznitsa said. In a June poll, 44% of respondents said they
didn't know where the Babi Yar memorial was located.
Controversial memorial center A
new private memorial, which is still under construction, triggered controversy
early on. Critics complained that the site's artistic director and some of its
financial backers were from Russia and that efforts to portray Ukrainian
citizens as Nazi collaborators and murderers of Jews were nothing more than
Russian propaganda. Loznitsa has no time for that sort of
thinking. "It amazes me, because instead of building something up,
something is being torn down." Collaboration is a "difficult
subject" and was prevalent everywhere, but people should know the truth,
he said. For project director
Anna Furman it is important to see the human fate beyond just the numbers of
the victims in Babi Yar: "We are beginning to understand our own history
better." At that time, almost the entire Jewish population of Kyiv was
wiped out, she said. That changed the city and should never be forgotten.
^ 28,300 out of the 33,771
murdered from September 29-30, 1941 and 150,000 that were murdered there from
1941-1943 may not seem like a large number, but it is giving every victim (man,
woman and child) back their name, their stories and closure to any family still
alive.
The vast majority of this
research has only been allowed in the past 30 years (since the Soviet Union
collapsed in 1991 and Ukraine became independent) since the Communist
Government censored Babi Yar and other Holocaust sites for 45 years.
The correct term should be
"German" since all the murderers were German with the vast majority were
not Nazi Party members. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/the-tragedy-of-babi-yar-an-assembly-line-of-death-in-kyiv/a-59346773
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