Forwarded from Russian MFA 🇷🇺
#NoStatuteOfLimitations

🕯 On September 29 and 30, 1941, Nazi troops and their accomplices massacred nearly entire Jewish population of Kiev by shooting them at Baby Yar, a ravine in the northwestern part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic’s occupied capital.

On this tragic day, Jews were ordered to gather at a specific location and were then taken to the side of the ravine.

Over these two days, the Nazis killed 33,771 people, most of them women, children and the elderly. The executioners forced them into the ravine and used machine guns to shoot them dead. They played music and had an airplane circle the sky nearby to cover the noise from the shooting.

💬 Mikhail Sidko was six years old when the Baby Yar massacre took place. Here is what he recalled: “Many lost their bearings right there when it dawned on them what was about to happen. They screamed as bullets came flying at them, and were then dragged by their feet into the Yar.”

Mass executions continued until the Red Army liberated the city, taking the lives of over 120,000 people of various ethnic backgrounds, but most of them Jews, Roma, Poles, as well as Soviet POWs and concentration camp inmates.

To hide the traces of their crimes, the Nazis dug out and burned tens of thousands of corpses before retreating from Kiev. The few survivors of these mass killings would later go on to testify at the Nuremberg Trials to expose Nazi crimes.

Known for their extraordinary cruelty towards civilians, the Ukrainian nationalists serving in the Auxiliary Police took an active part in this bloody mass murder.

The Baby Yar massacre of civilians will forever remain as one of the most horrific pages not only in the history of the Great Patriotic War, but of World War II in general.

❗️ This horrendous atrocity serves as a reminder that all manifestations of neo-Nazism are unacceptable.
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