The Jewish Chronicle

Thieves dig up mass graves in search for gold

Death pits in Ukraine where tens of thousands of Jews are buried are targets for thieves seeking precious metals

- BY ROSIE WHITEHOUSE

THIEVES HAVE desecrated a mass grave in western Ukraine where almost 24,000 Jews are buried — in an apparent search for gold.

The perpetrato­rs dug a large rectangula­r hole at the site in the Sosenki Forest, near the city of Rivne.

Police detained a 54-year-old man in connection with the incident on July 24, while another suspect escaped arrest.

The unnamed man claimed that he didn’t know there was a mass grave on the site and that his friend had told him only that he needed help, because his metal detector had signalled there was something undergroun­d.

But local activists say attempted robberies at mass graves are increasing­ly common in Ukraine and the holes are profession­ally dug, reinforced with wooden beams and supports

The suspect in last month’s case was released on bail and a criminal investigat­ion opened.

Vyk Chymshyt, a Rivne archivist who helps survivors’ families trace their loved ones, said the authoritie­s were reluctant to press charges and keen to play down the incident.

A conviction can carry a fine of up to £485 and a sixmonth prison sentence.

It is most likely that the robbers were looking for gold, Ms Chymshyt said.

Shmuel Herzfeld, an American Modern Orthodox rabbi, is understood to have helped collect and re-inter the remains.

Tens of thousands of Jews from the then-Polish ghetto of Równe were led in the early hours of November 7, 1941, to the pine grove in Sosenski, where they were massacred by the Nazi mobile killing units known as the Einsatzgru­ppen.

Many locals collaborat­ed in the shootings. It took two days to kill 17,500 adults. Some 6,000 children were murdered in an adjacent pit.

Ms Chymshyt said that, although the Jews were stripped naked before they were shot, there remains a widespread belief that they were wearing gold jewellery and had other precious items in their possession when they died. The Sosenki death pits today lie on the outskirts of Rivne, just beyond car showrooms that are frequented by those who make money out of the region’s illegal amber mining.

The pits are marked by a memorial — an unusual sight in Ukraine, where many death pits go unacknowle­dged.

This month’s attempt was the second time this year that grave robbers, known locally as “black archaeolog­ists”, targeted the site of the mass grave in Sosenki.

Several such attempts have been made since the 1990s. When the complex was badly vandalised in 2012, the local Jewish community decided not to replace a sign on the main road pointing to the memorial.

Other death pits have been dug up near Nemyriv, where 2,680 Jews were murdered by the Nazis in 1941.

In the most recent incident, bones were removed from the graves, although what the robbers intended to do with the remains is not clear. Two men were arrested and criminal proceeding­s launched.

Concerns about antisemiti­sm have been rising in Ukraine in recent years.

A law passed in 2015 has served to rehabilita­te Stepan Bandera, a controvers­ial nationalis­t figure who fought both the Nazis and the Soviets during the war but whose supporters also killed Jews and Poles.

Earlier this month, the country’s chief military prosecutor was criticised for suggesting Jews sought bloodshed in Ukraine.

But the current Prime Minister Voldymyr Groysman is Ukraine’s first ethnically Jewish leader. His grandfathe­r survived the Holocaust after pretending to be dead in a mass grave.

Robberies are becoming more common

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 ??  ?? Human remains (above and right) were scattered from the hole in Sosenki
Human remains (above and right) were scattered from the hole in Sosenki
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