“How many times can you kill the same people?” —Rabbi Yaakov Bleich, Chief Rabbi of Ukraine

“How many times can you kill the same people?” —Rabbi Yaakov Bleich, Chief Rabbi of Ukraine

“A missile hit the place where Babyn Yar memorial complex is located: Once again, these barbarians are murdering the victims of Holocaust.” –Andriy Yermak, Chairman of the Ukrainian Presidential Office

Ukrainain President Zelensky, who is Jewish, alluded to Babi Yar’s history, tweeting “What is the point of saying ‘never again’ for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar?”

Soviet POWs covering a mass grave after the Babyn Yar massacre. (Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons)

Babi Yar or Babyn Yar(Ukrainian: Бабин Яр) is a ravine in the Ukrainian capitan Kyiv and a site of massacres carried out by Nazi forces during its campaign against the Soviet Union in WWII. The massacres took place in September 1941, killing approximately 33,771 Jewish people. The massacre was the largest mass killing under the Nazi regime and its collaborators during its campaign against the Soviet Union, and it has been called “the largest single massacre in the history of the Holocaust”  to that date but surpassed by the later 1941 Odessa massacre of more than 50,000 Jews in October 1941 and by the Aktion Erntefest of 1943 in occupied Poland with 42,000–43,000 victims.

It is estimated that between 100,000 and 150,000 people were killed at Babi Yar during the German occupation.

Babi Yar, Ukraine, SS soldiers next to Jews before their execution, 1941. (Courtesy: Yad Vashem Archives)

For all I know, my missing family. is there.

2 Comments

  1. Dee Bradshaw

    I can not believe that there is another war killing innocent people. When will we ever learn to live in peace? Not in my lifetime, I am sure.

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