Niny | Stavropol

/ Igor O., born in 1930: “With my friends, we could see a woman dressed in black being brought in a truck. She was shot by two Germans.” © Cristian Monterosso - Yahad-In Unum Nadezhda B., born in 1930: “Like all the refugees, the Jews worked in the kolkhoz. It was difficult for them because they weren’t used to this kind of work, but they had no choice. ” © Cristian Monterosso - Yahad-In Unum Yahad's team during the interview © Cristian Monterosso - Yahad-In Unum Local historian leading Yahad’s team to the killing site of Jewish refugees, located in the fields © Cristian Monterosso - Yahad-In Unum A Yahad team member takes down the GPS coordinates of the killing site © Cristian Monterosso - Yahad-In Unum The ruins of the building where the Jewish children were poisoned. It used to be the auxiliary building of a pigsty. © Cristian Monterosso - Yahad-In Unum Local historian showing the killing site of Jewish refugees to Yahad’s team © Cristian Monterosso - Yahad-In Unum

Execution of Jewish refugees in Niny

1 Sitio(s) de ejecución

Tipo de lugar antes:
Field
Memoriales:
No
Período de ocupación:
1942-1943

Entrevista del testigo

Igor O., born in 1930, remembered of that day: « We were playing near that site and we could see a closed truck arrive. We could see a woman dressed in black lined up. She was tearing her hair out. When we heard a shot, we ran away. We stayed hidden in the ditch nearby while they were shooting. I can’t tell you exactly how long it lasted.
YIU: Was it a German truck?
W: Yes, it was a covered German truck. I can’t tell you the details because I was just a child at that time. Once they left, we wanted to go take a look but we didn’t. Five days later, when we came to this place, the pit had already been covered. ” (Witness n°539, interviewed in Niny, on August 18, 2015)

Archivos soviéticos

« In autumn 1942, I don’t remember the exact date, someone came to requisition me. They made me get in the vehicle and took me in the direction of the vegetables gardens that belonged to the Peredovaya kolkhoz. On the site, there was a big square pit, about 20m large and 20m long. There were bodies covered with a thin layer of soil inside. It was forbidden to try to identify the people and I don’t know either how many bodies there were. There were about 17 of us men requisitioned to fill the pit. I didn’t know the names of the others because I was not a native of that village. I know that among those people, many were evacuated from Leningrad. I don’t know when they were shot.” [Deposition of the requisitioned villager, Stepan K., made on July 18, 1943; RG-22.002M, 7021-17/9 (district A)]

Nota histórica

Niny is located about 220km southwest of Stavropol. Historically home to Russians, there were no Jewish families living in the village prior to the war. Once the war broke out, many Jewish refugees along with other refugees, passed by the village. Some of them settled there for a while and didn’t have time to evacuate. According to the witnesses, the Jews lived among the villagers and worked in the kolkhoz. The Germans occupied the territory in August 1942.

Holocausto por balas en cifras

From their field research, Yahad-In Unum found that the Jewish refugees were taken by truck to the execution site. As was rather common for this region, the children were poisoned, while the adults were shot. According to Witness n°543, the Jewish children were first taken for one night to the pigsty, anauxiliary building located not far from the killing site, where it is said they were poisoned. The following day, their bodies were taken by truck and thrown in the pit where the adults had been shot. It is said that the Jewish refugees from the vicinity were also executed in Niny.

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