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Here you see what genocide means

New project sets out to trace sites of Holocaust mass-killings

January 27, 2011 11:24
Debois, a French priest, has been collecting testimonies since 2001

ByToby Axelrod, Toby Axelrod

1 min read

Often desolate, in isolated fields and overgrown forests, many sites of Second World War mass-shootings of Jews are in danger of being forgotten.

And yet locals remember what happened in these places, and can point the way. Their memories have formed the basis for a new mission to secure and preserve such sites. Of the six million Jews killed, more than a million were murdered by mass-killing units, mostly on the outskirts of towns and cities.

"A lot of the mass-graves have been ignored and fallen into the wrong hands. At some sites, people are digging them up," said Joe Shik, 30, a rabbinical supervisor for the London-based Committee for the Preservation of Jewish Cemeteries in Europe.

Mr Shik recently took part in a pilot project to assess the state of several sites in Ukraine, co-ordinated by the American Jewish Committee, the Central Council of Jews in Germany, and the German War Graves Commission. German's Foreign Ministry has given 300,000 euros to the project.