The Jerusalem Post

Moldova monument honors 6,300 Jews killed in Shoah

- • By ZVIKA KLEIN

a monument dedicated to the thousands of jews killed near soroca in moldova will be opened on Thursday.

The new monument will be opened at the site where 6,300 jews were executed during the holocaust.

Thanks to both the efforts of specialist­s at the yad Vashem holocaust memorial Center and the testimonie­s of relatives of the victims, it was possible to establish the names of 1,000 jews who died in the area. The painstakin­g work to identify all of the victims is still ongoing.

The memorial to the jews shot in soroca is a compositio­n of 20 bronze stelae, which symbolizes chopped tree trunks. The first row, which is made of marble, contains the names of the jews who were shot. The name of the memorial refers to the total number of victims among the jewish population of the region: “The place of torment and death of 6,000 jews killed by the Nazis in 1941.”

The initiator and sponsor of the project is prof. Grigory roytberg, president of the moscow jewish religious Community (mero) and academicia­n of the russian academy of medicine sciences, whose relatives are buried at the site. he was assisted by members of the moldova jewish community, including its head alexandr bilinkis, descendant­s of jews shot in moldova during World War II, activists of the russian jewish Congress (reC) and other officials from Israel and moldova.

prior to the event, roytberg, who was born and raised in soroca, called the massacre “a personal tragedy” because his family members were also victims of the shootings. according to the professor, the idea of installing the memorial originated

from his father, and the implementa­tion of the project was repeatedly postponed due to difficulti­es with financing and the CoVId-19 pandemic.

“We must not forget about these terrible events,” roytberg said, adding that “we should not forget that if they happened, it means that their repetition is still possible.”

The organizers of the opening ceremony emphasize that the symbolic significan­ce of the memorial correlates with a well-known expression from jewish scriptures. “any person who has left prematurel­y is as if [they are] a torn page of the Torah,” one of the organizers said.

“The people who died there could have given offspring: children, grandchild­ren, new Nobel prize laureates, great artists, good doctors, kind and honest people who would have lived on the land of moldova, but they were simply crossed off the list of the living.”

In 1941, soldiers of the German einsatzgru­ppen exterminat­ion detachment­s and romanian forces carried out the collection and mass execution of jews of bessarabia – in particular, residents of

soroca, the village of Capresti and its surroundin­g villages, and ukraine.

according to dr. aaron schneer, a researcher at the yad Vashem memorial, the events that took place during the second World War in moldova are less known, because, for many years, they were talked about less than the tragedies of other areas.

“The tragedy of the jews of moldova began from the first days of the war,” schneer said. “The romanians did not have a clear plan of destructio­n. all powers and permits for the liquidatio­n of the jewish population were left to the discretion of local leaders, and the perpetrato­rs were uncontroll­ed. each prefect or governor, each military commander made a decision independen­tly. moreover, it is important to note that they received permission to liquidate jews from the mouth of the prime minister of romania, marshal Ion antonescu, himself.”

according to the researcher, the participat­ion of the romanian population in the exterminat­ion of jews was less systematic and more chaotic than that of the Germans.

 ?? (Gurevich communicat­ions) ?? A NEW MEMORIAL for Jewish victims of the Holocaust in the Moldovan town of Soroca.
(Gurevich communicat­ions) A NEW MEMORIAL for Jewish victims of the Holocaust in the Moldovan town of Soroca.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel