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Holocaust news-----UKRAINE   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #1003 of 1040 |



June 5



UKRAINE:

A holy mission to reveal the truth about Nazi death squads

Father Patrick Desbois has spent the past decade piecing together the
horrific story of the Nazis' secret death squads. Jonathan Brown meets a
man who's rewriting history

Father Patrick Desbois is a man desperately racing with death. By his own
calculations he has six, perhaps seven years at the outside in which to
complete his work: a task, which until the reaper renders it impossible
some time in the not-too-distant future, is at once unimaginably chilling
in nature and nightmarishly ambitious in scale. For the 53-year-old French
priest, with an easy laugh and shining eyes, has made it his holy mission
to recall for the world the slaughter enacted by the Nazi mobile death
squads, the feared Einsatzgruppen, which roamed and murdered Jews and
Gypsies with impunity in the remote villages of the former Soviet Union
between 1941 and 1944.

It was, until the intervention of Father Dubois, a largely overlooked
episode in one of the grimmest chapters of the Second World War. But for
the last 10 years the priest and his helpers have painstakingly gathered
the testimony of the survivors of this period, travelling to some of
Europe's most abject places where, without judging, they have listened as
a procession of elderly men and women recalled often for the first time
how, a lifetime ago, they became teenage helpmates to the Nazi killing
machine.

Today these witnesses have grown old and infirm and many are already dead.
Living in countries where the average life expectancy for a man is little
more than 60 years, those who experienced first-hand the Nazi genocide in
Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and Ossetia are steadily dying out. When they are
gone, Father Desbois fears, so too will the memory of what they saw and
with it a truth which exists only in the conscience of Europe's poorest
people.

During the course of the last decade, Father Desbois and his team from
Yahad in Unum, a French organisation dedicated to Christian-Jewish
understanding, have recorded conversations with more than 1,000 witnesses
to the mass murders on Hitler's Eastern Front. So far they have discovered
some 850 unmarked graves the majority of them previously unknown
including a site at Bodgdanivka which contained the remains of some 42,000
Jews.

The oral histories they have gathered, along with detailed ballistic
evidence, could soon change the face of the study of the Holocaust,
pushing the final death toll upwards by as much as 500,000 victims. They
are also, he hopes, providing irrefutable proof in the face of
increasingly vocal Holocaust deniers, emboldened by the disappearance of
the generation still able to recall the horrors of the Third Reich as they
actually happened.

Father Dubois was invited to Britain by the University of Manchester's
Centre for Jewish Studies where last week he addressed academics and spoke
at the city's Anglican Cathedral. Though largely unknown outside Jewish
circles in the UK, he is a hero in Israel and the United States. Last
year, in his native France, he was awarded the Legion d'Honneur by
President Nicolas Sarkozy, and sports the discreet red streamer proudly in
the buttonhole of his black priest's jacket. As he sits in the Victorian
splendour of Manchester's Palace Hotel, describing the detail of his
harrowing work, he displays a blistering sense of urgency at the looming
loss of the folk memory of the Nazi atrocities in the former Soviet Union.

"I am running against time," he says. "We have a maximum of six or seven
years if we take into account the age of the witnesses because they are so
old. Sometimes you arrive in the village and are told 'I'm sorry, Father,
but Madame Anna died just one month ago and she was the last witness. And
now nobody knows any more.' So I see time is short and we need to achieve
our goal as quickly as possible, which is why we must multiply our
energy," he says.

The reason for taking up this work is simple: to restore the dignity of
the uncounted and largely unmourned dead who were slaughtered and piled
into pits like animals, and to allow the Kaddish the Jewish prayer of
mourning to be recited over their final resting places. But there is
another reason too; to prevent a repeat of the Holocaust.

"You cannot leave Europe with thousands of unknown unmarked graves, or we
deny all our values," he says, his hands trembling slightly as he speaks.
"And what do we say to Cambodia or to Darfur if we do not bury correctly
the victims in our own continent? We are now 60 years after, and it is our
last chance to do it."

It is estimated that a minimum of 1.5 million Jews and Gypsies were killed
in Ukraine during the Second World War. The country was second only to
Poland for the number of Nazi murders on its soil. A further 500,000
perished in Belarus, while the exact numbers that perished in the vast
expanse of Russia, where the German army was encamped some 17 miles from
the Kremlin in the Moscow suburbs, or even in occupied Ossetia, can still
only be guessed at until that is these territories, too, welcome in the
priest and his helpers to unlock the memories of survivors there too.

What made the slaughter in Eastern Europe so unimaginable is that it was
carried out not in the impersonal industrialised surrounding of the
concentration camps but by mobile units of individuals armed with
low-powered rifles. The policy laid down by Berlin was simple and based on
an evil economy to appease the army's concerns over dwindling resources:
"one bullet one Jew; one Jew one bullet".

The modus operandi of the Einsatzgruppen was as predictable as it was
murderous, explains Father Desbois. The mobile units were the precursors
of Heinrich Himmler's "Final Solution" policy. Composed primarily of
German SS and military personnel, they could draw on members of the
notorious German Gendarmerie, local police or even civilians "anyone with
a carbine" explains the priest. Using the Soviet system of requisition
enacted on their behalf by compliant local mayors appointed by the Nazis,
the death squads were often staffed by gunmen plucked from everyday war
duties and left deeply traumatised by their actions. Their orders were to
kill those they were told were enemies of the Reich. Among the Jews,
Gypsies and communists were thousands of mentally and physically disabled
people, women and children.

Their approach was always the same, explains Father Desbois. First a
single uniformed officer, an expert in digging mass graves, would arrive
in a village. His initial stop would be the home of the local mayor, where
he would ask simply: "How many Jews?" Gauging who was and was not Jewish
in the Soviet Union was easy. Jews were considered one of the USSR's
national minorities and the information was recorded in official
documents. Having arrived at a figure and estimated the volume of the pit
required to hold the victims, the solider would order the mayor to round
up local teenagers, many of whom are now among Father Desbois's witnesses.
They would then be ordered to dig. Sometimes the pits were complex
structures, excavated deep into the ground with stairs to allow the soon
to be murdered to lie down "like sardines" before they were shot.
Sometimes they were little more than shallow holes. When the work was
complete, the call would go out to the regional headquarters seeking
gunmen from the surrounding countryside.

The day of the murders would have a chilling routine to it, says Father
Desbois. "They (the mobile units) would all gather together in the morning
of the killing and surround the village and then announce that the Jews
will be deported to Palestine. They are Soviets, so while an order like
this is not nice, it is not surprising to be deported," he explains. The
credulous victims would then begin to line up in the streets, assembling
in lines of five, carrying whatever belongings they could. Those less
credulous among them who refused to leave their homes were shot and their
bodies stacked up on horse-drawn carts. The "deportees" were ordered to
march to the waiting pit, strip and then, still five-a-breast, walk
straight into the bullets of the waiting gunmen.

Those who were left behind remember all too vividly what they saw, says
Father Desbois. "I met a witness who told me: I saw my neighbour. She was
in the line to wait and I was crying. She told me: 'Don't cry, we are
going to Palestine.' But I knew they were not going to Palestine because
early in the morning I was out with my cow and I saw the mass grave I saw
it being dug by the children." As the victims were being mown down, the
Germans and their forced helpers set about the task of looting the
belongings of their victims. Clothes and jewellery were packed in boxes
while gold was prised from the mouths of the dead. The furniture was taken
from the now empty houses. The best was sent back to Germany while the
rest was sold off for cash. Meanwhile, the grim task of burial was being
completed by the same children who had dug the graves several days
earlier. Because of the "one bullet" policy, many of those inside the pits
were not dead. Children were dragged in by their falling parents or
propelled by the force of the advancing victims behind them. Others were
pushed in by gloved helpers. "In some cases there were Ukrainian girls,"
recalls Father Desbois. "I met one who was asked to walk on the corpses
between the shootings to make them flat. She said: 'The soldiers asked me
in the morning to come with my friends and between each of the shootings I
had to go down and walk on the corpses with my bare feet.'" Among the
victims were many friends and classmates, stripped naked and slaughtered
before her eyes. "They shot them and I had to walk on them like the
others," she recalled. Witnesses, little more than children, remembered
how the victims writhed "like flies and worms" as they died.

Sometimes some of those who were not dead would escape. More often they
would suffocate under the weight of the earth and bodies, but not before
they had endured further days of suffering, during which villagers watched
as the freshly dug earth heaved and fell under the agonized movements of
the victims below. It was as if the whole pit was breathing, according to
one onlooker.

"On the evening of the killing they would organise a party for the
shooters," says Father Desbois. There would be drinking, dancing and
prostitutes who travelled with the death squads as they moved from village
to village. The party was designed to ease the psychological guilt of the
killers, believes the priest, and bind the gunmen in the commonality of
their mass murder.

But while official records were kept detailing how many had been shot, it
is believed that up to 10 times that number were killed in Ukraine
unofficially. After the shootings each village would be declared
"Judenfrei" free of Jews putting them in good favour with the Nazi
authorities. Any Jews that escaped and returned were often killed to
prevent this status being lost. Many were forced into hiding in the
forests until the end of the war, only to emerge into the further terror
under Stalin. Others were not so lucky.

"In some villages they kept Jewish women to be sex slaves or forced
workers for the Gestapo," explains Father Desbois. "At the end of the war,
in many villages, they were pregnant, so they shot them just before
leaving the village. It is very difficult to find the mass graves of these
girls because no one wants to speak of that. All the village knew them
because they worked for the Gestapo so they saw them every time they went
to present their papers," he says.

Unlike the Holocaust in Central and Western Europe, where victims were
rounded up and deported, the genocide in Ukraine and Eastern Europe came
to the village squares, the gardens and farms of the survivors, and it was
among them that the bodies remained. Again, unlike Germany and Poland,
where the extermination camps stand testament to the atrocities that were
perpetrated within their walls, no symbols or memorials exist to the dead
Jews and Gypsies of the former USSR. Under Stalin, the victims, where they
were remembered, were considered to be fallen fellow-Soviets. All that
remains of this Holocaust by bullets are the cartridge cases discarded in
the dirt, each bearing a distinctive date and brand and each having
claimed the life of a human being.

It may seem strange that the task of remembering the millions of Jews and
Gypsies who died in Eastern Europe should fall to a Roman Catholic priest.
Father Desbois is neither a historian, nor an archaeologist. He is
certainly not a politician. It was through his family's wartime
experiences that he became involved in his present mission. The Desbois
family resisted the German occupation, hiding partisans on their farm in
eastern France. His grandfather (and other relatives) were imprisoned,
eventually being sent to the Ukraine, witnessing the horrors at Rawa-Ruska
where thousands of Jews died. He eventually told his grandson what he had
seen, as a way of downplaying his own suffering. It was during a visit to
the site of his grandfather's wartime incarceration that Father Desbois
posed the local mayor a simple question: "Where are the bodies of the
Jews?" The politician said he did not know an answer the priest found
impossible to believe. Returning the next year, there was a new mayor, who
this time took the inquisitive Frenchmen out in to the forest where 100
villagers were waiting to tell him of the horrors they had seen played out
there among the birch trees.

The symbol of his authority is, he says, his clerical collar. Arriving
unannounced, he knocks on doors and listens offering no comment or
judgment on actions which may have haunted a life for 60 years. Often, at
the end of a gruelling testimony he may pray with the witnesses, though he
does not offer absolution through confession. It is simply an opportunity
for someone to talk while another listens.

"These people, they may have seen on one day the killings of over 1,000
persons, and sometimes they say to me: "all my life I dreamt of finding
someone to tell them.'"

He recalls a recent interview in Brest, Belarus, when an elderly man was
describing how he would rest at night from packing away the belongings of
the slaughtered Jews as the German soldiers raped the surviving women. "At
the end of the interview I said: 'Of course you have spoken a lot of times
about that before?' He said: "No, it is the first time that I have spoken.
Who would be interested in all that?' These were poor people and no one
has ever paid any attention to them," he says.

Even today, conditions in the villages of the former Soviet Union are
harsh. There are often no roads; no running water and the weather is
bitterly cold. It is also an occasionally violent part of the world and
the priest, who has been shot at in the past, makes his five journeys a
year to the former killing fields in the company of armed bodyguards.
After enduring the horrors of the Nazis and Stalin during their lives, the
villagers have never posed themselves the kind of questions of guilt and
complicity that so often bedevil the conscience of the wealthier and more
privileged, believes Father Desbois.

As a former mathematics teacher in West Africa who became a priest after
working with Mother Teresa in the slums of Calcutta, he is not inured to
suffering. But he dismisses inquiries about how he or others "feel" in
relation to the atrocities as "typical Western questions". Under the
totalitarian regimes of the 20th century people simply had no choice they
co-operated or they died. This leaves him free to concentrate on the task
in hand logging the dead.

"My questions are who killed the Jews? Where are the corpses and how do we
establish evidence? I am completely concentrating on my goal and I try to
avoid the other questions or I might miss my goal," he says."

With the backing of the French government and Pope Benedict, Father
Desbois has become of the leading figures in the world of Jewish-Christian
relations. But he sees his role simply. "I am a very practical person and
I want to stay at this level. I am not an important person. I am only
doing some duty that has to be done. To bury the people is not an
important role it is a simple role," he says. As for those who question
the existence of the Holocaust, whether they are politicians or within his
own church, he sees them as the direct inheritors of Himmler and Heydrich.
They are, he says, the "deniers of the inferno".

And at the heart of the unimaginable continent-wide tragedy can be found
individual human suffering and a timeless story and its still unanswered
questions dating back to the murder of Abel.

He says: "I don't work for millions. I am the disciple of Mother Teresa.
Everybody asked her: 'How can you stand in Calcutta with 13 million poor
people?' And she answered: 'I never saw 13 million, I only saw one.' It is
the same for me... it is people. I try to think really concretely of these
people not as a millions or just mathematics I am looking for the tombs
of Isaac, Rebecca and Dora," he says. "We cannot build a safe Europe and a
modern world and ask people to keep silent. Otherwise we justify the next
genocide. It is the ultimate victory to Hitler if we don't bury the
victims."

(source: The Independent)





Fri Jun 5, 2009 7:53 pm

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June 5 UKRAINE: A holy mission to reveal the truth about Nazi death squads Father Patrick Desbois has spent the past decade piecing together the horrific story...
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