Jerusalem – Research on Smaller Nazi Sites Now Coming To Public Light

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    [Rina Castelnuovo for The New York Times]  Visitors at the International Institute for Holocaust Research at Yad Vashem, where research is being done on lesser-known killing fields. Jerusalem – In the Ukrainian town of Berdichev, Jewish women were forced to swim across a wide river until they drowned. In Telsiai, Lithuania, children were thrown alive into pits filled with their murdered parents. In Liozno, Belarus, Jews were herded into a locked barn where many froze to death.

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    Holocaust deniers aside, the world is not ignorant of the systematic Nazi slaughter of some six million Jews in World War II. People know of the gas chambers in Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen; many have heard of the tens of thousands shot dead in the Ukrainian ravine of Babi Yar. But little has been known about the hundreds — perhaps thousands — of smaller killing fields across the former Soviet Union where some 1.5 million Jews met their deaths.

    That is now changing. Over the past few years, the Yad Vashem Holocaust museum and research center in Israel has been investigating those sites, comparing Soviet, German, local and Jewish accounts, cross-checking numbers and methods. The work, gathered under the title “The Untold Stories,” is far from over. But to honor Holocaust Remembrance Day, which starts Monday evening, the research is being made public on the institution’s Web site.

    “These are places that have been mostly neglected because they involved smaller towns and villages,” said David Bankier, head of the International Institute for Holocaust Research at Yad Vashem. “In many cases, locals played a key role in the murders, probably by a ratio of 10 locals to every one German. We are trying to understand the man who played soccer with his Jewish neighbor one day and turned to kill him the next. This provides material for research on genocide elsewhere, like in Africa.”

    For the purposes of this project, a killing field entailed at least 50 people, Lea Prais, the project director, said. The murdering began in June 1941 with the German invasion of the Soviet Union. From the Baltic Republics in the north to the Caucuses in the south, Nazi death squads combed the areas.

    The first evidence for what took place was gathered right after the war by Soviet investigating committees largely focused on finding anti-Soviet collaborators.

    The new research checks those versions against German records, diaries and letters of soldiers, and accounts by witnesses and the few surviving Jews, some of whom climbed out of pits of corpses. Sometimes, the researchers said, the Soviets seemed to have exaggerated, and that is noted on the Web site. One goal of the project is to gain greater specificity of the numbers killed.

    One little-known case comes from a German sailor who filmed actual killings in Liepaja, Latvia. The film has been on view for some years at the Yad Vashem museum. But the new Web site has a forgotten video of a 1981 interview with the sailor, Reinhard Wiener, who claimed to have been a bystander with a movie camera.

    According to part of his account, “After the civilian guards with the yellow armbands shouted once again, I was able to identify them as Latvian home guardsmen. The Jews, whom I was able to recognize by now, were forced to jump over the sides of the truck onto the ground. Among them were crippled and weak people, who were caught by the others.

    At first, they had to line up in a row, before they were chased toward the trench. This was done by SS and Latvian home guardsmen. Then the Jews were forced to jump into the trench and to run along inside it until the end. They had to stand with their back to the firing squad. At that time, the moment they saw the trench, they probably knew what would happen to them. They must have felt it, because underneath there was already a layer of corpses, over which was spread a thin layer of sand.”

    Ms. Prais, the project director, said one of the discoveries that most surprised her is the way in which Soviet Jews who survived the war made an effort to commemorate those who perished. In distant fields and village squares they often placed a Star of David or some other memorial despite fears of overt Jewish expression in the Soviet era.

    “The silent Jews of the Soviet Union were not so silent,” she said.

    The slaughter that some of them had escaped defies the imagination. One case Ms. Prais and her colleagues have cross-referenced involves what happened in the town of Krupki in Belarus, where the entire Jewish community of at least 1,000 was eliminated on Sept. 18, 1941.

    A German soldier who took part in the mass murder kept a diary that was found on his body by the Allies, she said. In it, he wrote of having volunteered as one of “15 men with strong nerves” asked to eliminate the Jews of Krupki. “All these had to be shot today,” he wrote. The weather was gray and rainy, he observed.

    The Jews had been told they were to be deported to work in Germany but as they were forced into a ditch, the reality of their fate became evident. Panic ensued. The soldier wrote that the guards had a hard time controlling the crowd.

    “Ten shots rang out, ten Jews popped off,” he wrote. “This continued until all were dispatched. Only a few of them kept their countenances. The children clung to their mothers, wives to their husbands. I won’t forget this spectacle in a hurry….”


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    13 Comments
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    Liepa
    Liepa
    15 years ago

    To whoever raised a finger against our jewish brethern, Y’mach sh’mom v’zicrom lo’netzach.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    ribono shell oilem, “nekom l’eineiny nikmas dam avudechu hashufich, bimheiru”

    yitzchok
    yitzchok
    15 years ago

    Hashem yinkom du’mom imach shemom vezichrom

    FVNMS
    FVNMS
    15 years ago

    Their time is fast approaching.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    And mushicah still didnt come! I cant blieve this. I read these stories and i wonder how my grand parents stayed frum; nevermind frum, normal! I would rather die then go through this pain of remembering these cruil nazis; i would definitly kill some of them on my way to heaven.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    I will never be able to understand how we let this happen to us. Why were we weak sheep led to the slaughter? Why did we go so quietly to the grave? What the $% ! I just can’t understand and it makes me so upset. You try to touch me now and I’ll rip your head off before I let you destroy my people. Why were we so easy to kill? I just don’t understand it.

    Rot Nazis Rot
    Rot Nazis Rot
    15 years ago

    All I can say is may these Nazi murderers rot in hell for ever and ever. Filled with everlasting shame and derision. Hated by Hashem. Spit upon by their victims.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    All the big talkers on this website want to know how we let this ahppen and that they would use violence to stop it. Meanwhile, very few Jews actually demonstrate against Iran or Islamofascism and rail constantly against Israel where, whether you are zionist or not, many jews live and they are in DANGER!!!.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Nothing in WOrld History compares to the Shoah and what the Germans did. Not Roman cruelty, not Persian, not Assyrian. THey killed millions of Jews but for some misguided reason. The greeks to assimilate us, the Persians to conquer EY, likewise the Romans and the Assyrians. No one killed us becase we were of a strange race. THis smacks purley of the SIanh of Amalek who attacked us for no reason. TOday’s Germans may acknowledge thier guilt or that of their nation but that is not sufficient. They pay reparations but only to the living and grudgingly. Nothing for the Dead and, indeed, it is not possible to pay for a lost life. We are in the End of Days and when we see Germany and its cohorts destroyed, we will at last see Yad Hashem. This includes the Latvians, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Belorussians, and others who so eagerly helped the Nazis. Totally unbleivable and incomprehensible. Inhuman. THat inhumanity must be eradicated for mankind to progress. Bimharah biyumeni.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    The Churban was a gezeiro and we will never understand.

    Those who speak of sheep to the slaughter are desecrating the memory of the kedoishim.

    To understand better, imagine if the US became a dictatorship overnight and enforced anti-Semitic laws, so that the NYPD did the work of the Gestapo then. Would you dare take up arms against the NYPD at any time? You’d be finished with pretty fast and even faster if they became the arms of a fascist dictatorship (chas vesholom). So, resistance was futile, plain and simple. These were not gangsters or rogues with no public support; these Nazis YMS were the law plain and simple and had the support of the local population.

    Yisroel Aryeh Leib
    Yisroel Aryeh Leib
    15 years ago

    My Grandfather’s sister, Tanta Rivka, answered my grandfather’s question when she arrived in the US as to what happened to everyone in their village: the villagers rounded them all up in the slaughter house, said the Nazis will be here soon; better we get all your property than them, and killed them. Tanta Rivka was a little girl and one of her dead landsmen fell on her. The Poles left when the slaughter was over, thinking all were dead. After a while, covered with her family’s and community’s blood, she escaped into the forest and was found by Resistance. After the war she came to the US and reunited with her brother, my Grandfather.