From the BBC:
“Ukraine war: Holocaust
survivor killed by Russian shelling in Kharkiv”
(Boris Romantschenko outside the
Buchenwald concentration camp)
A Ukrainian man who survived the
Nazi Holocaust during World War Two has been killed during a Russian attack on
the eastern city of Kharkiv. Boris Romantschenko, 96, died during Russian
shelling of his apartment block on Friday, relatives said. Russian forces have
been relentlessly shelling Kharkiv, which lies just 30 miles (50km) from the
border, for over three weeks. At least 500 civilians have now been killed
there, Ukrainian officials say. Police said one of the victims has been
identified as a nine-year old boy.
The Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora
Memorials Foundation said it was "deeply disturbed" by Mr
Romantschenko's death. The organisation, of which Mr Romantschenko was
vice-president, announced the news after being informed by his family and said
he had "worked intensely on the memory of of Nazi crimes". "We
mourn the loss of a close friend. We wish his son and granddaughter, who
brought us the sad news, a lot of strength in these difficult times," the
foundation's statement added. Mr Romantschenko's death comes more than three
weeks after President Vladimir Putin sought to justify his invasion to the
Russian people by telling them his goal is to"de-Nazify Ukraine". Western
leaders have condemned these claims and pointed out that Ukraine's president,
Volodymyr Zelensky, is Jewish.
Mr Romantschenko was born in the
north-eastern city of Bondari on 20 January 1926. He was rounded up by Nazi
troops after the invasion of the Soviet Union and deported to Germany in 1942,
where he was forced to do hard labour, the foundation said. After a failed
escape attempt in 1943, he was sent to the Buchenwald concentration camp, where
some 56,545 people were murdered before its liberation in 1945 by the allies. He
also spent time in the subcamp of Mittelbau-Dora, as well as the infamous
Bergen Belsen and Peenemünde camps. He returned to Buchenwald in 2012 to
celebrate the 67th anniversary of the liberation of the camp by US troops,
where he recited the pledge made by survivors to create "a new world where
peace and freedom reign". The Nazi regime murdered over six million Jewish
people across occupied Europe between 1941 and 1945.
^ He survived the Fascist Germans
only to be killed by the Fascist Russians. Note the Russians use the word “Fascist”
and not “Nazi.” ^
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