1 Sitio(s) de ejecución
Raisa L., born in 1935: “The shootings started from around 1942. Although, they [the Germans] would not bring them [the Jews] massively, but rather little by little. That is why some people already knew that the Jews were being shot while others didn’t. But, when they began to bring them by train to the railway station, to get them off the wagons and to round them up, everyone already knew. There were many of them, thousands of people. So, when they started bringing them in big columns, at that time everybody knew that the Jews were being shot. Our village was quite small, so everybody knew. […]
Y.U.: Do you know if the Jews had been previously rounded up somewhere or if they were taken straight from their houses and brought to the execution site ?
Witness : The local [Jews] were taken straight from their houses to be shot. But I don’t know that for sure. I didn't see it myself; it was my grandfather who told this. And when the convoys started to arrive, they [the Jews] were detained at the railway station. There were storage facilities where they were confined. And afterwards, all of them were marched towards the execution site.” (Witness n°2728U, interviewed in Voznesensk, on November 26, 2019)
«The accused Finger, along with Teilkommando of Einzatskommando 10b, arrived from Ananiev [today Ananiv] to Voznesensk. In September 1941, there is no exact date, -the Teilkommando shot at least 200 Jews, including men, women and children in the pit at the outskirts of the village. Before being killed Jews were forced to strip naked. The execution was prepared and orchestrated by Finger under the order of the Eienzatskommando chief, Persterer. Finger also personally managed a part of the execution, while the rest of the execution was supervised by SS-Untersturmführer Wiesenberg.» [Report of the Voznesensk Prosecutor : BArch B162-993, p.13]
Voznesensk is located 89km (55 miles) northwest of Mykolaiv. The first Jews who moved from the northwestern parts of Russian Empire settled in this town in the first half of the 19th century. In 1864 1,249 Jews lived in Voznesensk. By 1897 the Jewish community increased and numbered 5,116 Jews making up 24% of the total population. The majority of Jews lived off small scale trade. Some of them were specialists, such as artisans, doctors or musicians. A small percentage of Jews worked in the kolkhozes. The Jewish community suffered from several waves of pogroms conducted in 1918-1920. As a result of the pogroms and relocation to bigger towns, the Jewish population slightly decreased.
Voznesensk was occupied by Germans in August 1941. According to the German archives at least 200 Jews were shot in Voznesensk in September 1941. However, according to the local dwellers the shootings started not earlier than in spring 1942. According to the testimony n°YIU/2728 the local Jews, as well as those brought from the nearby villages were taken to the sand quarry, located near the hamlet of Natiahailivka, where they were shot dead.
After the execution of the local Jews, hundreds of Jews, most probably from Odesa, were brought by train and confined in the railway station premises. From there, they were taken to the same sand quarry and shot. The ditches were dug and filled in by the Soviet prisoners of war. Part of the Voznesensk Jews were first displaced to the nearby village of Kryvoruchka, from where they were taken to Bohdanivka. According to the testimony n°YIU/2729 it happened in June 1942. Allegedly, the executions lasted until the fall 1943. The last victims were Jews who for all this time were used for different Germans needs, among them there were Grisha, a musician and ensemble leader, and Ms Baklazhanova, a dentist.
For more information about the execution of Jews in Kryvoruchka please refer to the corresponding profile.
¿Tiene información adicional con respecto a un pueblo que le gustaría compartir con Yahad?
Por favor contáctenos a contact@yahadinunum.org
o llamando a Yahad – In Unum at +33 (0) 1 53 20 13 17