Germany – Jewish Groups Push to Find Holocaust Mass Graves

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    In this photo taken Dec. 20, 2010 and released Friday, Jan 21, 2011 by the American Jewish Committee tomb stones are photographed at a mass grave in Rava Ruska, Ukraine. Several Jewish organizations say they have started a coordinated effort to identify, protect and memorialize thousands of forgotten Holocaust mass graves across eastern Europe. Rabbi Andrew Baker of the American Jewish Committee said Friday Jan. 21, 2011 in Berlin that Germany's Foreign Ministry has granted 300,000 euro (US dlrs 404,000) to support the project. (AP Photo/American Jewish Committee, Christoph Villinger) (Christoph Villinger - AP) Germany – Jewish organizations launched a joint effort Friday to identify, protect and memorialize thousands of forgotten Holocaust mass graves across eastern Europe.

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    More than 2 million Jews in eastern Europe were rounded up by the German military and shot, their bodies left in unmarked mass graves, even before the Nazis began to organize mass killings at the gas chambers in death camps like Auschwitz and Belzec.

    “Entire communities were wiped out and those few who by some miracle survived seldom returned,” Rabbi Andrew Baker of the American Jewish Committee told reporters in Berlin. Most locals who witnessed the crimes are either dead or very old, he added.

    “Only a short time is left to collect their testimonies, which are often crucial in identifying the exact killing site,” he said.

    The committee along with Germany’s Central Council of Jews and the German War Graves Commission will co-ordinate work by groups in Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and Poland that are talking to witnesses, identifying mass graves, marking and protecting them and establishing memorials.

    The German Foreign Ministry is donating €300,000 ($404,000) to the project, Baker said.

    Several organizations have been working on the ground for the last few years trying to identify the killing sites based on witness accounts as well as German and Soviet historical documents.

    Among them is Lo Tishkach, which has created a database of over 10,000 Holocaust mass graves and Jewish cemeteries across Ukraine. Another organization, Yahad-In Unum, will conduct 15 research trips in eastern Europe this year alone to identify further killing sites.

    The teams will be “driving up and down the back roads of small villages in Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and Poland, knocking on doors and asking the elderly … to recount what they have seen during the war,” said William Mengebier of Yahad-In Unum.

    Some 1.4 million of Soviet Ukraine’s 2.4 million Jews were executed, starved to death or died of disease during World War II. Another 550,000 to 650,000 Soviet Jews were killed in Belarus and up to 140,000 in Russia, according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. Most of the victims were women, children and the elderly.

    The slaughter, which followed Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, is sometimes called “Holocaust by Bullets.” It was the opening phase of what became the Nazis’ Final Solution.

    Last month, a group of researchers from the different organizations travelled to five different killing sites in western Ukraine that are in urgent need of protection, said Jan Fahlbusch of the American Jewish Committee, who is in charge of co-ordinating the joint project.

    Among those sites was a mass grave in Rava-Ruska in western Ukraine. Some 7,400 Jews lived there until they were forced into a ghetto in August 1942 by the German army. In Dec. 1942, about 5,000 of them were shot and thrown into a mass grave in front of the local Jewish cemetery.

    The site is today covered by a swamp but, as part of the new project, it will be sealed according to Jewish burial law and a memorial will be erected to remember those who died there.

    “It is important that the people who live there know what happened in their home villages some 70 years ago,” said Fahlbusch. “There’s a lot of ignorance among the local population and it is important to raise awareness to the crimes of the past.”


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    2 Comments
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    Samlowrey
    Samlowrey
    13 years ago

    They need to account for the 3 million victims that vanished when the numbers killed in Auschwitz had to be revised downward 75% I suppose. And let’s not forget the Katyn Forest massacre which was falsely blamed on the Germans by the very ones who committed the atrocity – the SAME ONES you are now “working with.” How are they going to know the victims, should they find any, are Jews? Who will confirm this that does not have an agenda? Why is it illegal to question what a cabal tells us to believe – that is contrary to every Western doctrine.

    GB_Jew
    GB_Jew
    13 years ago

    €300,000 will be just a spit in the ocean when it comes to the fiscal cost of locating these graves.