On This Day: the Nazis massacre Jews at Babyn Yar

Published date30 September 2021
AuthorARIELLA MARSDEN
Babyn Yar is located near Kyiv, which the Nazis took control of on September 19, 1941. A few days later, there was a big explosion at the German command post that killed many German soldiers. The Nazis blamed the explosion on the Jews, intensifying their hate, so when the SS troops entered Kyiv, the city's Jews were immediately marked for destruction.

Between September 29 and 30, nearly 34,000 Jewish men, women and children were marched to the ravine of Babi Yar, stripped and machine-gunned into a mass grave, which was immediately covered, burying some of the victims alive.

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The grave was filled with thousands of more bodies over the next two years. The total is unclear, but at least 100,000 people were murdered at Babyn Yar over two years. The victims were primarily Jewish, but they also included communists, Soviet prisoners of war and Roma people.

When the German army retreated from the Soviet Union, the Nazis tried to hide the evidence of the massacres that took place at Babyn Yar. They used prisoners to help pile bodies in pyres and burn them, and when they were done, they killed the prisoners. 15 Prisoners were able to escape and tell the truth...

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