The Manila Times

Ukraine remembers Babi Yar slaughter

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KIEV: A sombre Ukraine on Thursday marked 75 years since the World War II slaughter of some 34,000 Jews on the outskirts of Kiev, one of the largest massacres of the Holocaust.

The carnage by Nazi forces at the Babi Yar ravine has caused years of soulsearch­ing and debate in Ukraine over the participat­ion of local collaborat­ors in the killings and atrocities that followed.

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin was meant to attend a memorial ceremony led by Ukrainian leader Petro Poroshenko and the European Union’s Donald Tusk on Thursday evening. But he cut short his visit to Kiev due to the death of Israeli statesman Shimon Peres -- although not before drawing criticism for “undiplomat­ic” comments about Ukrainians’ role in the Babi Yar slaughter.

Rivlin did not shy away from telling Ukrainian lawmakers in Kiev on Tuesday that “many of the crimes were committed by Ukrainians” during the Holocaust.

“The fighters of UPA were especially prominent,” said Rivlin.

“They victimised the Jews, killed them, and in many cases reported them to the Nazis.”

Rivlin’s comments led the Ukrainian parliament’s deputy speaker to condemn his remarks as “undiplomat­ic”.

“Certain statements of our esteemed guest were out of place in these days of mourning, with them spoken in the parliament of a country that today is also fighting for its independen­ce,” Iryna Gerashchen­ko said. Gerashchen­ko was referring to a 29-month pro-Russian revolt that has claimed 9,600 lives in the east of Ukraine.

The anniversar­y comes at a sensitive time for Ukraine, as a confrontat­ion with Russia has sparked a rising tide of nationalis­m that has increasing­ly lionized some groups accused of WWII crimes against the Jews.

Members of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) collaborat­ed with Hitler’s generals in the early years of the war, because they felt the Nazis could help them win independen­ce from the Soviet Union’s even-more-hated Stalin.

Moscow denies sparking the war in reprisal for the 2014 ouster of Ukraine’s Russian-backed leader and its western neighbor’s decision to seek future membership in the European Union and NATO.

The Nazis helped by local auxiliarie­s exterminat­ed the Jews between September 29 and 30 of 1941 as they blitzed their way toward Moscow and captured major cities on the western flank of the former Soviet Union.

The last survivor of that carnage still alive in Kiev told AFP that Jews comprised about a quarter of the city’s 800,000-strong population at the time.

About 100,000 live in the city today out of a population of around 2.8 million and Yiddish, once widely spoken among Ashkenazi Jews, is almost never heard on the streets.

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