Headline

Tells How Nazis Shot Jews in Kiev

Publication Date
Wednesday, November 17, 1943
Historical Event
Germans Kill Thousands of Jews in Mass Shooting Outside Kiev
This database includes 222 articles about this event
Tags
Gannett full page downloadable
Deportation and Mass Murder
Article Type
News Article
Newspaper
The Oshkosh Northwestern/The Daily Northwestern/The Oshkosh Daily Northwestern
Location
Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Page Section and Number
3
Author/Byline
AP
Article Text
Moscow— (AP) —An eyewitness account of Jewish massacres in Kiev during the early days of its occupation by German troops has been given the newspaper Izvestia by Dmitri Grlov, a resident of Kiev, who said he saw hundreds of men and women stripped naked and then shot at the edge of a gulley into which their bodies dropped on a great pile.

In the account, distributed by Tass news agency, Grlov related:

"Several days after the Germans entered Kiev I went to Lvovskaya street. An incessant procession of people was streaming through it and both sidewalks were lined with German patrols. This human stream kept flowing for three days and three nights without interruption.

"The Germans were driving the Jews in Babi Yar gulley beyond the city. I also stealthily made my way to that place. I was able to stand the sight of what I saw there only for 10 minutes and after that everything went black before my eyes.

Forced to Undress
"The Germans forced people to undress and then methodically gathered their clothes and loaded them on trucks. In separate trucks they put underwear. Then they tore off from naked people—there were men and women among them—rings and watches if they had any, dragged them up shivering from cold or mortal terror at the edge of the gulley and shot them.

"The Germans did not spend any bullets on little children, but simply hurled them alive into the gulley.

"Those who were awaiting their turn stood silently, or sang or even laughed. I could see that those who laughed were already insane.

"And this thing lasted three days.

"All these whom the Germans as yet did not drive to their death knew what was in store for them. Old men put on mourning clothes and gathered in their homes for prayer, then went out Lvovskaya street. Invalids were supported by others and some were even carried.

"All of them were killed."
History Unfolded Contributor
Silouan H.
Location of Research
Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com)

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