Executions of Kiev Jews by German army mobile killing units, 1942
German soldier shooting a woman with a child in her arms, Ivanograd, 1942.
Executions of Kyiv Jews by German army mobile killing units
(Einsatzgruppen) near Ivanograd, Ukraine. The executioner appears to be
standing over the body of an already executed person. The gun barrels
of other executioners are visible at the left-hand edge of the
photograph.
The photo was mailed from the Eastern Front to Germany and intercepted
at a Warsaw post office by a member of the Polish resistance collecting
documentation on Nazi war crimes.
The original print was owned by Tadeusz Mazur and Jerzy Tomaszewski and
now resides in Historical Archives in Warsaw. The original German
inscription on the back of the photograph reads: “Ukraine 1942, Jewish Action [operation], Ivanograd”.
This photo is considered, in the words of British journalist Robert
Fisk, “one of the most impressive and persuasive images of the Nazi
Holocaust”. It was featured in numerous books, and at photo exhibits
both in Poland and Germany, as “precious and terrible evidence” of “the
Nazi cruelties
in Eastern Europe”.
In 1964, at the height of the Cold War, the popular German weekly Der
Spiegel (Nr. 49/1964) published the photograph along with a diatribe
naming several angry readers claiming it to be a fake generated by the
Russians, although the most incriminating evidence came from the
official German records.
Confronting a society with photographic evidence of one’s own personal
experience of war is almost as old as photography itself, wrote
reporter-turned-historian Janina Struk, who discussed this image in her
Private Pictures: A Soldiers’ Inside View of War
In extreme situations the “possession of such private pictures could
lead to a court-martial”, and yet soldiers keep taking them.
Between 1941 and 1945, approximately 3,000,000 Ukrainian and other
non-Jewish victims were killed as part of Nazi extermination policies,
along with between 850,000 – 900,000 Jews who lived in the territory of
modern Ukraine.
Original plans of genocide called for the extermination of 65% of the
nation’s 23.2 million Ukrainians, and the remained of inhabitants to be
treated as slaves. In ten years’ time, the plan effectively called for
the extermination, expulsion, Germanization, or enslavement of most or
all Ukrainians.

No comments:
Post a Comment