Odessa massacre (1941)

The Odessa massacre (Romanian: Masacrul de la Odesa; Ukrainian: Голокост в Одесі) was a massacre of Jews in Odessa, Ukraine between October 22 and 24, 1941.[1] 30,000–100,000 Jews are estimated to have been killed within two weeks by the occupation forces of Romania, then-allied with Nazi Germany under the rule of Ion Antonescu.[2] The massacre was part of the Holocaust.[3]

Background

During WWII, after occupying much of Western Europe and the Balkans, Nazi Germany and some of her Axis allies[4][5] launched the Operation Barbarossa on 22 June 1941 to invade the Soviet Union as part of Hitler's plan to colonize Eastern Europe. They made initial success by capturing most of Ukraine, Belarus and knocking on the gates of Moscow within four months.[5]

On 16 October 1941, Romanian forces took over Odessa, when 70,000–120,000 Jews were trapped in the city, some of whom were Jewish refugees from Bessarabia.[6] The massacre was preceded by escalating violence towards Jews by the antisemitic Romanian troops.[1][3] On 22 October 1941, the Romanian military headquarters in Odessa was blown up mysteriously. Jews were blamed together with communists by Antonescu, who ordered the massacre.[1][3]

Massacre

Within two days, at least 5,000 Jews had been hanged, while another few thousand were deported to the nearby village of Dalnyk. The victims were confined to barns, sheds and warehouses, which were later sprayed with machine gunfire and set ablaze. Jews who tried to escape met their fate immediately, while some buildings with Jews were blown up by Romanian troops, causing thousands to perish instantly. Thousands more were slain in mass shootings, some of whom were also burned alive in artillery warehouses.[1][3]

Around 25,000 Jews who had not been killed were deported to a ghetto in Odessa's neighborhood Slobidka, where they endured cold and hunger for the remainder of the war. Holocaust experts estimated the death toll at Dalnyk alone was at least 20,000.[1][3]

Death march

By the end of October 1941, 25,000–30,000 Jewish deportees were forced on a death march to the Bogdanovka concentration camp, where the deportees were crowded in pigsties. Almost all of them were also slain in subsequent mass shootings or burned alive[7][8] by the end of January 1942, when the Soviets pushed back the Axis invaders from the outskirts of Moscow. Meanwhile, Romanian forces burned the Jewish corpses to destroy evidence of the genocidal massacre. By autumn 1942, over 90% of pre-war Odessa's Jews had already perished.[1][3]

Nazi German involvement

Despite Romanian forces having carried out most of the atrocities in Odessa, they were backed up by the Nazi German SS Einsatzgruppe D, who shot some Jews from the Fontans'ka Street prison and were hunting down Jews until November 1941, whose inflicted death toll numbered in thousands.[6] It is recorded that ethnic Germans in Odessa formed the militias Selbstschutze to facilitate the Holocaust in the area.[1][3]

Aftermath

Survivors

Around 1,000 Karaite Jews survived the war as Hitler designated them as "Turks" and spared them from death. A handful of other Jews, who were either forced laborers or hiding under false identities, also survived. Vera Bakhmutskaia, an Odessan Jew who survived the war by hiding in the house of a gentile friend, said,

There were very few of us left [. ...] If they [locals] knew [of me being Jewish], they would have denounced me immediately.

The Soviets retook Odessa on 10 April 1944 and conducted a census within two months, finding that Jews in Odessa had fallen from the pre-war level of 200,000 to 2,640, a 98.7% drop.[1][10]

Trial

Together with Ion Antonescu, other instigators including Gheorghe Alexianu,[12] were sentenced to death in 1946.[1][13]

Gentiles who saved Jews

Dozens of gentiles in Odessa who saved Jews have been recognized by the Yad Vashem as the Righteous Among the Nations.[14]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 "The Holocaust in Odesa". Holocaust Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
  2. 2.0 2.1 /ˌæntəˈnɛsk/
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6
    • International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania. Final Report. President of the commission: Elie Wiesel. Edited by Tuvia Friling, Radu Ioanid, and Mihail E. Ionescu. Iași: Polirom, 2004.
    • Ioanid, Radu. The Holocaust in Romania: The Destruction of Jews and Roma under the Antonescu Regime, 1940–1944. Second edition. Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2022.
    • Kruglov, Aleksander, and Kiril Feferman. “Bloody Snow: The Mass Slaughter of Odessa Jews in Berezovka Uezd in the First Half of 1941.” Yad Vashem Studies 47, no. 2 (2019): 15.
    • Solonari, Vladimir. A Satellite Empire: Romanian Rule in Southwestern Ukraine, 1941–1944. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2019.
    • Zipperstein, Steven J. The Jews of Odessa: A Cultural History, 1794–1881. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1985.
  4. Italy, Hungary, Finland and Slovakia.
  5. 5.0 5.1 John Graham Royde-Smith (September 16, 2024). "Operation Barbarossa". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Murder of the Jews of Romania". Yad Vashem. Retrieved October 22, 2024. Romania [...] had a Jewish population of about 757,000 before World War II. [...] In total, 380,000 – 400,000 Jews [...] were murdered in Romanian-controlled areas under the dictatorship of Antonescu.
    • Ancel, J. 2003. Transnistria. 1941–1942. The Romanian Mass Murder Campaigns. Tel-Aviv: Goldstein-Goren Diaspora Research Center.
    • Achim, V. 2009. “Die Deportation der Juden nach Transnistrien im Kontext der Bevölkerungspolitik der Antonescu-Regierung.” In Holocaust an der Peripherie. Judenpolitik und Judenmord in Rumänien und Transnistrien 1940 – 1944, edited by W. Benz, and B. Mihok, 151–61. Berlin: Metropol.
    • Desbois, P. 2018. Broad Daylight. The Secret Procedures behind the Holocaust by Bullets. La Vergne: Arcade Publishing.
  7. Ukrainian description: Голокост у Подільському районі, Одеська область, Україна.
  8. "Justice for Uncompensated Survivors Today (JUST) Act Report: Romania". U.S. Department of State. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
  9. Inscription:
    לזכור למען העתיד! ממקום זה התחילה דרך המוות של עשרות אלפי יהודי אודסה אשר גורשו וחוסלו ע"י הנאצים בחדש דצמבר 1941 במחנה השמדה "בוגדנובקה"
    במחוז ניקולאיב. אוקראינה
    [Remember for the future! From here began the path of death of tens of thousands of Odessa Jews who were deported and exterminated by the Nazis in December 1941 in the Bogdanovka extermination camp in Nikolaev Oblast. Ukraine]
    Помнить во имя будущего! С этого места началась дорога смерти для десятков тысяч евреев г.Одессы угнанных и уничтоженных нацистами в декабре 1941 г. на территории лагеря "Богдановка" в Николаевской области.
  10. Former Romanian fascist governor of Transnistria.
  11. "March of Time – outtakes – Russian, Polish, Yugoslav governments; War Crimes Trial: Romanian war criminals". Grinberg Archives. Retrieved October 22, 2024.