00:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Rawa Ruska, Ukraine
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    This was the camp 
    
  
    
    
    of prisoner   number 325, minus 30 degree centigrade 
    
  
    
    
    in winter,   stifling heat in summer, the place was also called the camp of   
    
  
    
    
    slow death. During World War II, the Germens interned   25,000 
    
  
    
    
    French deputies here. Claudius 
    
  
    
    
    Desbois   was one of them. He recounted this slow agony to his   
    
  
    
    
    grandson Patrick and this story changed Patrick’s   life for good.
    
  
00:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    My
 grandfather who was such a cheerful     man told me, it was hard for us
 in Rawa Ruska, we ate     dandelions, grass. But for the others it was 
worse. And so I     started to come here, to try to understand. Our 
daily round was     work. One group worked at the station, and another 
on the     roads. They were ordered to destroy the Jewish cemetery, but I
     know they refused. Some of the commandos were very hard, and     
others weren’t as bad. But they worked all the time with     Jews from 
the ghetto, the men and women from the ghetto. But     the difference 
was that the same number never returned. So,     there were summary 
executions, because a guard got annoyed or     simply because he just 
didn’t want to bring any Jews     back. They saw a huge amount of things
 like that; they were     condemned to see. That was their main sentence
 to     see…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    A condemnation that would 
    
  
    
    
    haunt   him. Patrick Desbois, the catholic a man of the church   
    
  
    
    
    would become the relentless investigator of the   massacre of the Jews in Eastern Europe.
    
  
01:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
02:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    The
 Ukraine, my vocation as a priest,     my identity and the Holocaust are
 one. This is part of the     circle of my life and I wanted to 
understand.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Understand the terrible audio of the   Ukrainian Jews.
    
  
02:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
02:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The crime of these men, Einsatzgruppen,   
    
  
    
    
    SS Special Task Forces. All was sent to the Eastern   
    
  
    
    
    Front officially to secure the re-alliance against all   and any resistance. 
    
  
    
    
    In realty, they were the foremen of   a 
    
  
    
    
    directive delivered by Adolf Hitler, exterminate all   the Jews of Europe.
    
  
02:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
02:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Of these killings, there are few images   that remain like 
    
  
    
    
    this film shot by a German soldier in   Libau, Lithuania in 
    
  
    
    
    1941.
    
  
03:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
04:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    France 3
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    presents
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    A mano a mano
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    production
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Shoah by Bullet
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    The Forgotten History
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    A film by
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Romain Icard
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    For the last five years, 
    
  
    
    
    Father   Desbois has been driving along the roads of Ukraine, the same   
    
  
    
    
    two vehicles follow one another, interpreters,   
    
  
    
    
    experts and ballistics, a whole crew, how can one   exhume 
    
  
    
    
    these forgotten dead? How can one prove the   existence of the Soah 
    
  
    
    
    by Bullets? Sometimes other men   of the Church lend their support for this 
    
  
    
    
    search for   lost memory.
    
  
04:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
06:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    I’ll
 tell you a story. I know that here     in front of the church, at the 
corner of the house next door,     an unspeakably cruel German soldier 
grabbed a Jewish     woman’s child from her. He was barely two years 
old, and     he took him and banged his head repeatedly against the 
wall.     The child died in pools of blood in front of the parent’s     
eyes. Brothers and sisters in faith, maybe some of you here     today 
know something about the tragedies that took place during     the war, 
under the Nazi occupation. About how Jewish families     lived and died.
 I beg you, if you know something, tell. But     now, let us pray, 
together. Glory to the Lord…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    An appeal for witnesses during   
    
  
    
    
    mass. Memory is not easily recalled, it’s too   painful. Outside 
    
  
    
    
    the Ukrainian churches the faithful   must be solicited.
    
  
06:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
06:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    What do you remember the Jews who lived     here?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
06:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    Yes, I remember when we lived     here, we saw arrests, killings, executions…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
06:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    They brought them to the edge of a pit and shot     them.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
07:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    But
 you see the pit move,     because some of them were still alive. We 
were young and it was     hard to watch. It was a tragedy, a great 
tragedy.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    What’s my name? Koutcha     Olha Haverylivna.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
07:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    And what age were you during the     war?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
07:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    And what age were you during the war?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    I was 15.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
07:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    We’ll come to see you later; it’s     not very feasible here.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Koutcha Olha Haveryliva
    
  
    
    
    Alright, I’ll tell you     what I know.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The crew 
    
  
    
    
    led by Father Desbois   listens and records those who lived through World War II,   
    
  
    
    
    those who witness these killings, but who never talked   about them. 
    
  
    
    
    The work has been accomplished step by step   
    
  
    
    
    methodically. 65 years later villages have revealed   
    
  
    
    
    little by little their dark secrets. Throughout   
    
  
    
    
    Ukraine over a million and a half Jews were executed by   the Nazis. 
    
  
    
    
    Until today nobody knew precisely what had   become with these 
    
  
    
    
    victims, a whole chapter of the Shoah   forgotten.
    
  
08:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
08:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    There
 are no gas chambers, no camps or     no tattoos here. Everyone was 
killed quickly. They were shot.     The holocaust by bullets, all over 
the continent…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Two years after the beginning of the   
    
  
    
    
    war, Nazi Germany opened a new front towards the   USSR.
    
  
08:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
08:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    This was the beginning of Operation   Barbarossa. 
    
  
    
    
    Adolf Hitler’s objective was to crush   the Soviet 
    
  
    
    
    Union and take procession of Ukrainian land,   which was indispensable of heinous plans to 
    
  
    
    
    expand   Third Reich. In only two weeks after combats 
    
  
    
    
    of extreme   violence Germen troops controlled the country.
    
  
09:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
09:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    In their footsteps, the Einsatzgruppen   started to work.
    
  
09:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
09:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
09:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    In
 the West we thought we would never     find these Jewish victims of the
 Holocaust, that they had     disappeared. But, they were often buried 
under a ditch. We are     now examining all the murder sites to find the
 bodies, to find     the proof. The bodies can then be buried with 
dignity. Humanity     begins with burying our dead.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    And 
    
  
    
    
    often the search begins with   witnesses encountered outside churches. 
    
  
    
    
    Olga was 12   years-old in 1942.
    
  
10:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 12 in 1942
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    12 years-old when she witnessed   it all.
    
  
10:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
10:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    How do you know that Jews were killed     here?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
10:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    But,
 because everybody talked about it,     oru parents talked about it. 
Everyone knew that Jews were     killed here at Oukopysko. The day we 
came to see they brought a     lot of Jews here. There must have been 60
 or 70. We look on. We     didn’t go too near, we stayed over there, but
 we children     could still see everything.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
10:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Where did that start?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
10:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Where did the pit start?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
11:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    Somewhere over there, as far as     here.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
11:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Up to the tree?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
11:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    Yes, that’s right.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
11:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    How many soldiers fired?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
11:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    How many soldiers fired?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    A lot. A lot.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
11:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    5? 10?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
11:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    More.
 There were a lot of guards when     they brought them here. All around 
the pit and in front of them     as well. There must have been about 15 
Germans.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
11:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Were the Jews standing or on their     knees when they were killed?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Were the Jews standing or on their knees when     they were killed?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
11:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    Standing.
 Standing, standing. They were     in groups. They formed a line and 
they shot them. Then a new     line came up and they were shot.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
12:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Was that how it happened?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
12:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    Yes, yes, they had their backs to the     pit, and they shot them.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    And the commander, he stood to the     side?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    And the commander, he stood to the side?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
12:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    Yes, on the side like this.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    They didn’t get into the     pit?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
12:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    No, nobody pushed them into the pit.     They killed them and the Jews fell in.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
12:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    That’s what I saw.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
12:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Did they shoot them in the back or face     to face?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Did they shoot them in the back or face to     face?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
12:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Olga Havrylivna
    
  
    
    
    In the back. They shot them in the     back.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    From Olga’s memory of the vents,   Father Desbois may have 
    
  
    
    
    discovered a mass grave, but   one testimony alone is not enough. He 
    
  
    
    
    would have to   return to fill-out the story of this killing.
    
  
12:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
12:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    We’re
 not leaving Rawa Ruska for     Rovno, where we’ve already begun. I 
think that it would     be better to begin in the North.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Yes, the North is much different from the     South.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Every 
    
  
    
    
    evening, the crew goes over   the day’s work. With Giom, his photographer and right hand   
    
  
    
    
    man, they prepared the next day’s research.
    
  
13:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
13:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    We’ve already done Lubijiv. In my     opinion, we have enough information to do this area.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
13:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Yeah, and there’s a large ghetto at     Sarny.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
14:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    In
 Sarny alone, 13,000 Jews were     killed, 33 hanged, 91 tortured and 
then killed. 13,895 all     told. There is a huge amount of testimony 
from people who     witnessed the killings. Historically, this project 
shows how     each person was killed by one person with the aid of other
     people. I just couldn’t listen to some of the first     witnesses I
 spoke to and I stopped several interviews. I said     we’d stop here, 
thank you. It’s too awful. And then     I though, ok, but if you let the
 horror take over, you’ll     never know the truth and that would give 
Hitler a posthumous     victory. I had to stay calm and not show my 
emotion and     reconstruct the crime.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    They use the same method in every village.   Look for 
    
  
    
    
    those who are children at the time.
    
  
14:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
14:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    What do you want to do with your     grandfather?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
14:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    He was at the front at the time. We’re     looking for your grandmother.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
14:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Ok, I’ll go with you.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Testimony 
    
  
    
    
    is not always easy to   find. More than 60 years after the killings, 
    
  
    
    
    time is   playing against Father Desbois, often the few witnesses left are   either dead or too 
    
  
    
    
    weak to speak. 
    
  
    
    
    Lviv,   Ukraine’s second largest 
    
  
    
    
    city, the crew wanted to   show us what was one of the largest 
    
  
    
    
    extermination sites   in the country, Lesienicki forest. 
    
  
    
    
    The forest where the   Jewish population of a whole city 
    
  
    
    
    disappeared, 90,000   dead. 
    
  
    
    
    Adofe was 12 years old in 
    
  
    
    
    1941, he too   was 12 years old when he saw 
    
  
    
    
    everything.
    
  
15:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
15:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    You were in the forest when it started?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
15:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Yes,
 I was up in a tree somewhere over there. I     couldn’t tell you 
exactly which one. We were playing with     our sleds when the Germans 
arrived. Then we heard shots and we     saw smoke. We were told not to 
go over there.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
15:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    What did you see from the tree?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
16:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    We
 saw how they took them up. There were guards     and they passed along 
there, but it was higher there at the     time. They beat them and 
pushed them down from the trucks. Then     we heard shots and people 
crying.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Did it last long?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
16:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Yes,
 it was a long time. It must have started     in 1941, when the Germans 
arrived. Nothing happened for two     months. We continued to play in 
the forest, trapping squirrels,     etc, and then it started. There were
 massacres here all during     the German occupation.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
16:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Were they adults or children?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
17:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Mostly
 adults. That’s what I saw. But,     there were some children they said,
 others saw children. I     wasn’t the only one who saw. People didn’t 
watch     all the time, it was terrifying. When you see cattle taken to 
    the slaughter, it’s frightening, but these people. We     couldn’t 
help hearing, pa-pa-pa pa-pa. They were     shooting. You know, I really
 want to know that we lived in     fear. We were afraid that we’d be the
 last ones into the     grave. We witnessed it; we saw everything. We 
were afraid that     the last bodies would be ours that they would take 
all the     witnesses.
    
  
17:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
17:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The victims were subjected to a final   
    
  
    
    
    humiliation, they were ordered to undress before being   assassinated. 
    
  
    
    
    Certain mass graves interred 
    
  
    
    
    up   to 2,500 corpses.
    
  
17:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
17:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
18:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    They
 made them run down the path to the     mass graves that were ready for 
them. There were 49 graves     altogether. Not all at the same time. 
They dug one pit, filled     it and then started another. This is an 
extermination     site.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The irrefutable 
    
  
    
    
    character of the   proof soon became evident to Father Desbois, but the question   
    
  
    
    
    remained how to demonstrate that the witnesses were   telling the truth that the Jewish population of 
    
  
    
    
    Ukraine   was indeed exterminated and buried where this rural memory had   designated. 
    
  
    
    
    In August 2006, to verify the truth, he   decided to 
    
  
    
    
    exhume the mass graves of the City of Busk.   Here the Jewish 
    
  
    
    
    community was five centuries old, it   was decimated during the war.
    
  
18:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
19:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Officially,
 there was no mass grave at     this site. And all neighbours who were 
interviewed at     Chevchenko Street that 10 people, said that they 
killed Jews in     the cemetery.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Father Desbois wanted to know for sure. He   started 
    
  
    
    
    digging, it was a matter of passing from words   to 
    
  
    
    
    undeniable proof.
    
  
19:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
20:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    First
 of all we had to ask Grand Rabbi     Blaich the Grand Rabbi of the 
Ukraine to request it. Rabbinic     law absolutely prohibits moving a 
bone, especially the remains     of the victims of the Holocaust, who 
are seen as saints by the     Jewish Orthodoxy. We received the 
permission and the area was     marked out with archeologists monitored 
by a Rabbi from the     Zaka orthodox movement. We had to balance the 
requirements of     Rabbinic law and the needs of the archaeologists on 
the other.     And then in the Ukraine, we weren’t used to opening up a 
    mass grave containing the bodies of Jewish victims. We     
discovered that there were 17 graves. It was very     hard…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    After three weeks of meticulous   excavations, the archaeologists 
    
  
    
    
    discovered the   unbearable. Under their instruments 
    
  
    
    
    1,700 skeletons   were revealed clearly disclaim the horror of their last   
    
  
    
    
    moments alive. Most were shot with the 
    
  
    
    
    bullet   to the head, others without apparent traces were most   
    
  
    
    
    likely buried alive. As ultimate 
    
  
    
    
    proof of   these killings, Misha, the ballistics expert who works with the   priest 
    
  
    
    
    found hundreds of German cartridges near the   mass graves. 
    
  
    
    
    For Father Desbois, the witnesses were   telling the truth, 
    
  
    
    
    no further doubts could be foreseen.   But constrained by religious regulations, the 
    
  
    
    
    digs were   stopped at the first layer of skeletons.
    
  
20:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
21:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Obliged 
    
  
    
    
    to leave the bodies in   their current state, Father Desbois wanted to offer the   
    
  
    
    
    memorial tombstone. He poured a slab of   
    
  
    
    
    concrete and invited Jewish authorities to pay homage   to the memory of the victims.
    
  
21:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English song]
    
  
21:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Three times a year, Patrick Desbois and his   crew go to the 
    
  
    
    
    United States. They are in close contact   with one of the most renowned research centers Yom Ha-Shoah,   
    
  
    
    
    the Holocaust Memorial. 
    
  
    
    
    Their collaboration   is essential for this institution. 
    
  
    
    
    Thanks to their   accumulated testimonies, the 
    
  
    
    
    victims of Shoah in   Eastern Europe have finally gained their place in   history.
    
  
22:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    We are dealing here with a is a very   
    
  
    
    
    interesting and huge puzzle and this 
    
  
    
    
    huge,   huge puzzle is coming together and it’s   
    
  
    
    
    confirming that Ukraine was and 
    
  
    
    
    remains a   huge cemetery.
    
  
22:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The work is meticulous and   demands patience, rigor and hours of 
    
  
    
    
    discussion. They   must confirm the millions of testimonial documents that   historians 
    
  
    
    
    have a must.
    
  
23:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    This is just another piece of   documentation. Martin has 
    
  
    
    
    found documentation relating   to places – I think a 
    
  
    
    
    couple of places that you   have been, but several that are on your agenda to go to.
    
  
23:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    My 
    
  
    
    
    project is parallel to   Patrick’s, I’m trying to identify the ghettos in   Ukraine and 
    
  
    
    
    whenever I find a sketch map or a drawing   where the ghetto was, for me, this is very, very useful.   
    
  
    
    
    Often of course they showed the mass graves as well. If   you look at this one here from Vyshnivets, did you go to   
    
  
    
    
    Vyshnivets already.
    
  
23:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Yeah.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    This is a town in Volhynia just on the border of   Polish.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Yeah, we – just – yeah, I   know.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    And for this time we actually have a   number of different sources which cooperate each other.
    
  
23:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Where does it come from?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Regional KGB Archive in 
    
  
    
    
    Tanapol(ph) and   the protocol 
    
  
    
    
    is taken by two witnesses, I think they   were bystander witnesses and they described that the person being   
    
  
    
    
    investigated, participated in the shooting and it shows   the root they get from the ghetto and 
    
  
    
    
    one of the   survivors describes on the day that this happened on the 12th of   
    
  
    
    
    August. And this man claimed, he made a speech to the   Ukraine police telling them 
    
  
    
    
    to drive all the Jews out   of the ghetto and that they have to shot outside the town, they   shouldn’t be shot in the 
    
  
    
    
    ghetto.
    
  
24:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    That’s why it’s also   difficult find them, because people look into the city and they   have been killed in the city.
    
  
24:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    But they are marched through the center of the   town…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Everybody so well.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    …providing the – but   
    
  
    
    
    it’s providing the eye witnesses…
    
  
24:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Yeah.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    ... that you’re interviewing today.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Exactly.
    
  
24:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    These exchanges with Father Desbois   
    
  
    
    
    have made evident the importance of Soviet Archives.   Several 
    
  
    
    
    tons of documents which have been up to now   largely neglected.
    
  
24:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Paul Shapiro
    
  
    
    
    The 
    
  
    
    
    reality is we tend to not   
    
  
    
    
    want to believe Soviet documentation, because of the   reputation of 
    
  
    
    
    the Soviet Union in some areas to not be   completely 
    
  
    
    
    true to fact. It’s just the way it is.   We tend to question and 
    
  
    
    
    scholars have tended to   question the authenticity of what’s in Soviet   
    
  
    
    
    documentation. Your testimonies are saying that this is   – this was 
    
  
    
    
    seriously done.
    
  
25:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    This was seriously done, yeah.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Paul Shapiro
    
  
    
    
    And people also tend 
    
  
    
    
    to question   testimonies taken today. Because 60 
    
  
    
    
    years have gone by,   because the people are elderly, but 
    
  
    
    
    what we’re   seeing here is such a strong way is the reality is when   you’re – 
    
  
    
    
    when you come face to face with   this kind of event and this kind of 
    
  
    
    
    tragedy, your   memory does not leave you with time, 
    
  
    
    
    it’s burned   in these people’s memories and having watched some of   testimonies you’ve taken, you 
    
  
    
    
    can tell that for   these – for those people, it’s as if this   happen…
    
  
25:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
25:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Paul Shapiro
    
  
    
    
    … you’re doing it at a time when   it’s essential to do it, because those 
    
  
    
    
    survivors,   those eye witnesses won’t be there five years from now.
    
  
26:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    That’s for sure.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Paul Shapiro
    
  
    
    
    Whatever we can do to facilitate   this, you have 
    
  
    
    
    total access here to this whole   institution and the institution 
    
  
    
    
    is with you 100%.
    
  
26:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    I know, it’s also because of that   
    
  
    
    
    that it works, because in some complicate places like   -- as we said, (inaudible 
    
  
    
    
    ) archived 
    
  
    
    
    we   cannot work to it.
    
  
26:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
26:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Paul Shapiro
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Director of the Holocaust Memorial
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Paul Shapiro
    
  
    
    
    The machinery of death of the death camps   and 
    
  
    
    
    deportations it is what we know best and it’s   important to know 
    
  
    
    
    it. But it’s also important to   understand that 
    
  
    
    
    over 1.5 million innocent Jewish   
    
  
    
    
    victims were murdered in the former USSR and Ukraine in   the 
    
  
    
    
    greatest numbers. This research won’t change   the basic 
    
  
    
    
    facts, basic facts are that more than 1.5   million innocent 
    
  
    
    
    people were murdered. What it will   change 
    
  
    
    
    is our understanding of what that really means,   
    
  
    
    
    who did what to whom and 
    
  
    
    
    how did they do it,   on the ground, in the villages, 
    
  
    
    
    in the towns, with what   motivation did they act, 
    
  
    
    
    what were the consequences,   the local consequences, what has been the 
    
  
    
    
    impact on the   people who survived.
    
  
27:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Volyn region, Ukraine
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Since historians have given their   support to the Frenchmen, 
    
  
    
    
    research has accelerated.   
    
  
    
    
    The Catholic Church lets Father Desbois works   
    
  
    
    
    early on in his mission. 
    
  
    
    
    Last summer with the   aid of archives from the United States, 
    
  
    
    
    he decided to   explore North Western Ukraine. This is one of the   
    
  
    
    
    poorest parts of the country, which in pre-war times   counted over 150,000 
    
  
    
    
    Jews. 
    
  
    
    
    We were in what   was then called Yiddishland, one of the cradles of   
    
  
    
    
    Jewish culture. 
    
  
    
    
    Craftsmen, merchants, rich   and poor, Jews were an integrated 
    
  
    
    
    part of local   society, nearly half the population. 
    
  
    
    
    Not a trace of   this culture remains today. 
    
  
    
    
    And to the question, do you   any witnesses of the holocaust, the response is explicit.
    
  
28:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
29:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    I know nothing. I have other things to do. I     don’t have the time. I know nothing.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Here 
    
  
    
    
    as everywhere in the   country, the mass graves are near cities and villages.   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois knows this well. 
    
  
    
    
    At the end   of this road over 30,000 Jews were killed by 
    
  
    
    
    German   bullets.
    
  
29:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
29:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    From summer 1941, the Germans organized the   segregation 
    
  
    
    
    of the Jews. 
    
  
    
    
    Herded into ghettos,   they were cut-off from the rest of the population. 
    
  
    
    
    From   then on, the Germans organized what certain historians would   later call 
    
  
    
    
    the devil’s trap. At the time, Eastern   Europe 
    
  
    
    
    was in washy Nazi Semitism, Tsarist Russia and   Stalin’s regime 
    
  
    
    
    inflamed this hatred. The Germans   had not trouble in 
    
  
    
    
    manipulating local populations, they   forced Jews to dissenter the bodies 
    
  
    
    
    of victims of   recent Soviet purges with the purpose of accusing them of being   the perpetrators of 
    
  
    
    
    these killings. The devil’s   trap then snap shot. 
    
  
    
    
    Convinced that the Jews were   responsible for the death of their loved 
    
  
    
    
    ones, blided,   mad with rage, local populations took their revenge.   
    
  
    
    
    Under the satisfied eye of German troops and   
    
  
    
    
    cameras of Nazi propaganda the program started as in   vid in 
    
  
    
    
    1942. But Nazi 
    
  
    
    
    dignitaries quickly put   an end to the lynching, they wanted the killing to be more   
    
  
    
    
    efficient.
    
  
31:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
31:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Yossip Revonuk
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
31:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Yossip Revonuk
    
  
    
    
    The
 first executions began when I was     going to the technical school, so
 that I wouldn’t be sent     to Germany. We saw the German arresting 
Jews. They told them to     take everything with them. We children ran 
as far as the     bridge. We never went any further than that. All our 
group     watched.
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Yossip Revonuk
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 15 in 1942
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Yossip was 
    
  
    
    
    15 years old in the   autumn of 1942.
    
  
31:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Yossip Revonuk
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
33:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Yossip Revonuk
    
  
    
    
    There
 were thousands of people in the     column and one Jew threw himself 
off the bridge into the river     to get away. The German guard fired 
and I saw the way the blood     flowed but that was just a child’s 
curiosity. We kept     watching what was happening. The Germans were 
taking away the     Jews, but they could also have taken us by mistake 
and made us     join the column. Then suddenly, over there behind the 
bridges,     there are a few houses we noticed movement in the crowd. 
The     women started to run away and shots rang out. Then here, in     
this street a German soldier killed a woman and her two     daughters. 
Right in front of my eyes they killed the girl. I     went home and 
started to tell my father, but he punished me     soundly and told me I 
shouldn’t have been there that I     couldn’t been killed as well, as I 
could’ve been     Jewish or Ukrainian. So yes, I remember. It started in
 the     ghetto sometime in the autumn. In the autumn in     1942…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    And where did they shoot people?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Yossip Revonuk
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
33:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Yossip Revonuk
    
  
    
    
    Bakhiv.
 Here’s how it worked. They     brought a train up there and told them 
they were going to     Germany for forced labour. They piled them all 
in, but in     reality the train skirted Kovel for about kilometers and 
then     turned into Bakhiv. The train was going to the sand quarry and 
    that’s where they shot them.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
34:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    And
 nobody has asked them. Thousands of     them saw the Holocaust close-up
 and nobody asked them about it.     They are often asked why they’re 
talking now. The answer     right across the Ukraine never varies; 
because you asked me.     Did anybody asked about it since 1942? No, 
never. They are     telling what they saw for the first and maybe the 
last-time.     The Holocaust in the East, here, remains in the minds of 
the     poor. It is also the Holocaust witnessed by poor people who     
hadn’t yet imbibed Soviet ideology. They are telling in     their own 
words what happened here.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Yossip offers precise details to his story   and points out the trail to follow to 
    
  
    
    
    the site of the   executions. Today, Yossip can’t stop talking after   
    
  
    
    
    60 years of silence.
    
  
34:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
34:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Our aim is to see the topography of the     events. Then, other witnesses will appear because we know where     we are.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The search begins as soon as they reached   the village.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
35:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Stop, stop, there’s a     babouchka.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
35:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Where were they during the war?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Where were they during the war?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
35:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    I didn’t live here, I was in     Karminska.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    After an hour, a villager ends up point at   a house on the village 
    
  
    
    
    outskirts. The person who lives   there already lived there 
    
  
    
    
    during the war. He has always   told the story of having seen the villagers 
    
  
    
    
    Jewish   women forced to dig their own graves.
    
  
35:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
35:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    His home is modest almost miserable,   
    
  
    
    
    the man is without force striking with pain.
    
  
36:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
36:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Ryzvanuk
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 14 in 1942
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Temofis was 14 years old in 1942.   
    
  
    
    
    He is an eye witness.
    
  
36:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
36:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    It’s July 30, 2007 and     we’re in the Loutsk region in the village of…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Bakhiv.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
36:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Bakhiv. We’re at the house     of…
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch   Rizvanuk.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    My name is Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
36:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    And what year was he born in?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    What year were you born in?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
36:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    In 1928.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
36:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    And where did he live during the     war?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
38:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    I
 lived near the quarry, I     was born there. I’ll tell you how it 
happened. We had     trains here and they immediately made a track. The 
train went     in and they loaded the ballast from the pits. We didn’t  
   know why the Germans were forcing the Jews to do that. Why they     
were digging those big holes, we didn’t know they were     for the Jews.
 The Germans beat them with some sort of whips.     The women cried and 
screamed, by they still took small shovel     and loaded up the train so
 they were working. Everybody was     afraid. We were so afraid of the 
Germans. They had things on     their caps they were terrifying. My 
father’s brother     said: don’t be afraid, no one is going to kill you.
     They’re only killing Jews. And they realized that they     were 
going to be killed. They stripped them naked men and     women. When 
they had killed them, they put them beside each     other, head to head,
 to pile in as many as possible, to save     space. The Germans had 
automatic rifles and when they got close     to the pit they shot them.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
38:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    How long did it take to kill a whole     wagonload?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
38:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    One
 whole wagon? A few     minutes. A few minutes, that’s all, nobody left.
 It was     all so well organized a production line. They had barely 
gotten     out when they fell and were pushed in and piled together, 
head     to head like hearings. Then the next wagonload arrived, and    
 then the next.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
38:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Were there people in charge in cars?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
39:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Temofis Semenovitch Rizvanuk
    
  
    
    
    Yes,
 there were six cars.     They stayed a little distance away. Six cars, 
all German     officers. They watched, hooted their horns and left. I 
know I     saw insignias. They were SS, but special. They were like some
     kind of communists… Me, I’m old and I don’t     care, but I don’t 
want my family sent to Siberia.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
39:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois decided to stay   
    
  
    
    
    in 48 hours, the descriptions of the killings came one   after the other. But who 
    
  
    
    
    would accept to guide them to   the old sand quarry, the site that everybody talked about.
    
  
39:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
40:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Hello.
 Does he remember where the mass     graves are? Tell him that we know 
where they are, but not the     exact location of the graves.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
40:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    We know the place, but not the exact spot where     the graves are, can you bring us there?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
40:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    Don’t know. I don’t have much   time.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
40:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Tomorrow if you prefer.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
40:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Maybe we should find someone else.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
40:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    You show us and we’ll bring you back in     the car. You just show us, it won’t be long.
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 15 in 1942
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Igor 
    
  
    
    
    was 15 years old in 1942, he   saw the 
    
  
    
    
    end of the killings.
    
  
40:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
41:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
41:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
41:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    There are two mass graves there; one is     behind, over there. And there was a mass grave here.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
41:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    The big one, which is it?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    3,000.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
41:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Wait, ask him, wait. How was it dug?     What was it like? A long one?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    How should I know?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
41:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    It was this long, like this.
    
  
41:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
41:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
42:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    That’s the large grave, there.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
42:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    How many people?.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
42:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    9,000
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
42:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    That’s a bone.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Yes, a bit of a skull.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
42:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Igor Chemko
    
  
    
    
    The grave took up all that, there.
    
  
42:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
42:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
42:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Patrick, I think that this hole was made by     looters and grave robbers…. There that’s bone.     Here, a bone.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
43:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    All
 those bones have been taken out     recently. And that says volumes 
about what is going on. Look,     each grave robber has a hole. It’s 
simple. There’s     one over there. It’s like a site for them. One there
 and     a large one over here. They dig systematically hoping to find  
   jewellery or gold teeth. We’ve heard witnesses describe     it. They 
take away heads in a bag and go through them at home.     We’ll look for
 cartridge cases.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The cartridges 
    
  
    
    
    amasses expertise,   he can spend entire days, accumulating 
    
  
    
    
    evidence is the   obsession of the whole crew.
    
  
43:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
43:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Patrick, a German cartridge case.
    
  
43:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
44:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
44:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    It’s a seal, for signing letters, in     Hebrew.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
44:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Oh! There Patrick, a seal with the name in     Hebrew.
    
  
44:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
44:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
44:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Bulger Soderma… I’m not     sure. If that is the name, it’s incredible, he threw in     his name so that someone could find him.
    
  
44:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
44:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
45:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    So,
 we’re coming into Loubijov.     Maybe here we’ll interview people in 
the square, old     people. Over there’s a good spot, you have the bus  
   station, the market, the restaurant and the church, so     we’re at 
the heart of the village life.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The crew laid out a sophisticated good work   searching 
    
  
    
    
    for a key witness, someone who saw what   happened with his own eyes. For the Third 
    
  
    
    
    Reich, it was   crucial to keep the extermination of the Jews secrete, but   
    
  
    
    
    here in Eastern Europe in spite of their orders, SS   commanders assassinated 
    
  
    
    
    openly.
    
  
45:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
45:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    The
 Nazis didn’t say that first they     weren’t obeying the secrecy order,
 but that they also had     moonlighters. There were an awful lot of 
moonlight death     workers. They put them into groups and had them dig 
the graves.     Or ordered them to walk on the bodies in between each   
  execution.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Forced laborers forgotten by history,   
    
  
    
    
    thousands of young Ukranians accomplished the base   tasks of the Nazi 
    
  
    
    
    killers. He was one of them. The   Germans induced threats to make insipid 
    
  
    
    
    to them. Stepan   was 18 years old 
    
  
    
    
    in 1942, a constrained grave digger of   the Shoah.
    
  
46:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Stepan Unchik
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 18 in 1942
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Stepan Unchik
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
48:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Stepan Unchik
    
  
    
    
    I
 had Jewish friends in my hamlet, two     boys. We hid them and fed them
 in my parent's house. The father     and mother asked us to hide them -
 they're killing us, they     said. The hamlet was 5 kilometres from 
here. Me, they     conscripted me when I lived there. The Germans 
arrived, two of     them and took the able bodied young people. I was 
there at the     time - be quiet, got to bed. They took us and showed us
 a spot.     To be more precise, there were stakes planted to mark out 
the     ground we had to dig. There were 3,700 souls in that grave.     
Even Children were buried over there. When it was over there     was a 
hillock. To tell the truth, we used a digger to put sand     on top and 
the blood spread out over more than a metre. Any of     us who had 
horses were ordered to go to the ghetto and get lime     to pour over 
it. The grave formed a mound, they killed 3,600     souls. The blood 
rose.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Each commando of 
    
  
    
    
    killers had its   method of execution. Paying close attention to 
    
  
    
    
    details,   some even drafted maps. Everything was specified from the   distance of 
    
  
    
    
    the killers to the depths of the mass   graves. An 
    
  
    
    
    assassin for a victim, a firing squad fire a   row of condemned, grenades, 
    
  
    
    
    dynamite, machine guns, the   sufferance of the Jews is 
    
  
    
    
    unalterable. But the horror   did 
    
  
    
    
    not stop there. Any attempt to revolt was met with   an unrestrained 
    
  
    
    
    response. Again, Patrick Desbois would   verify the implacable strategy applied by the German   
    
  
    
    
    occupier. An active resistance 
    
  
    
    
    isolated or   collective led to punishment by 
    
  
    
    
    fire. And the whole   village had to pay the 
    
  
    
    
    price. Thousands of Ukrainians   met their death burned alive.
    
  
49:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
49:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
49:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Did your father die in the village?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Nadia Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
50:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Nadia Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    Yes,
 he was burned to death in the     church. When we buried him we only 
identified him by a piece of     his jacket. He was unrecognisable 
otherwise. He was burned to     ashes.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Nadia Stepanova
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 13 in 1942
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 15 in 1942
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Nadia and Misha 
    
  
    
    
    saw all the   horrors of the war in Ukraine.
    
  
50:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
50:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Tell us how it happened.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Nadia Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
51:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Nadia Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    How
 it happened? The German soldiers     advanced from Loutsk to occupy the
 whole region. This is the     part where there were no houses, you 
probably noticed, there     are no buildings. There was an act of 
resistance against the     Germans. After that shooting they stopped in 
the village and     spent the night. In the morning they gathered all 
the people.     They separated the Jews and shoved them into the ghetto,
 like     you said, into a barn, men on one side and women and children 
    on the other. Shots rang out. And then they dug the mass graves     
and we thought, we're all going to die, like in the nearby     villages.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Were many Jews executed?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    What?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
51:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Were many Jews executed?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
52:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    I
 think they must have killed about     1,000. There are two mass graves 
over there. They dug large     graves up to the three over there. They 
used diggers for two of     them. They brought them here in trucks and 
shot them, the Jews.     Even tiny children, so high. They lay them 
down, killed them     and threw others on top. I don't know how many 
were killed     three. Many. many.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Did you see the trucks with the Jews?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
52:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    But
 of course I saw them. We saw how     they brought them here in trucks, 
how they stipped them naked.     Everything off and into the hole. Lie 
down.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Each time the priest asked his   witness to accompany him to the site of the killings,   
    
  
    
    
    he knew then that it would be easier to find all the   witnesses.
    
  
52:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
52:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
52:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Please. Give me your hand.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
52:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    Over there, the graves are over     there.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    We'd better take the road. This way.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
53:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    There, there's a large grave. And there     was another one beside it.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
53:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    It was this size.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
53:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    How far did it go, to these     plants?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
53:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
53:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    I don't remember exactly how far it     went.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
53:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    What is it?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
53:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    Tell me where the second mass grave is,     where?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
53:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    So,
 why did you come here if you don't     know? What do you want? Drink? 
Money? When they were killed,     you lived over there, far over, you 
weren't there!
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Misha Stepanova
    
  
    
    
    I lived there at the time.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
54:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    Show
 me where the graves are?Where is the     second grave? Where? You don't
 know! Me, I saw how they killed     them, because I lived here. You, 
you lived over there! What do     you know about it, you bastard?
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 7 in 1942
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Memory is still a very touchy   subject among witnesses at the time. 
    
  
    
    
    Leonid was seven   years old in 1942, seven years old when he saw the massacre of   the Jews. 
    
  
    
    
    Seven years old when the SS entered his   village. But for him, it's like 
    
  
    
    
    yesterday. The day when   he was almost thrown into the grave with his neighboring   
    
  
    
    
    Jews.
    
  
54:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    He didn't even live here.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
54:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Did you go near the grave?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
55:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    I'll
 tell you. If my mothere didn't know     people in the police who 
collaborated, I wouldn't be here. A     German soldier was pulling me by
 the hand to put me in the     grave. And then someone said, he's not a 
Jew. If not, I would     have been stretched out like them.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    So!
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
55:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    My mother took me by the hand, I was with     my younger brother, and we both went back there. To see. It was     terrible.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Where was he on the day of the executions?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
57:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    Where
 do you think? At home is where. It     began, I remember, just before 
the harvest. We had just started     to cut the hay. There were very few
 houses here. Nobody lived     here. This man, us and Paraska. When they
 dug the pit, nobody     knew why, even the Jews didn't know they'd be 
killed. And the     next day, a truck, a lorry actually, arrived here 
and they went     all over. And there were no houses here yet, only Klym
 and     Vlasko, that's all. And they began bringing them in the truck. 
    Bringing them in the lorry, there were two trucks, or three. I     
don't remember exactly. I was small.... They took them and     drove 
them towards the pit. They took off all their clothes,     naked, and 
over there, three German submachine guns, big ones,     you know, huge, 
waited for them. They stripped them and into     the pit. There were 
only sparks. And we were young, we looked     on, we were interested. 
They killed them, and the trucks picked     up the clothes and took 
everything back to the ghetto, in the     centre of town. Then they put 
more Jews on top of the ones they     had killed. Some weren't even 
dead. And it all began again.     They had put them all together in the 
ghetto and for two days     this went on! They covered up the grave. It 
moved for 6 months     and the blood flowed. They took the clothes, 
brought them to     the ghetto and went on killing. The Germans took the
 jewellery.     All the earrings, everything, they took everything.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
57:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    How far did the blood flow in the grave?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
58:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Leonid Kvil
    
  
    
    
    Maybe three hundred-four hundred metres. It     flowed as far as the river. It was horrible.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    In silence, he sees the scene   
    
  
    
    
    again. What's more? The village has remained as if   frozen in 
    
  
    
    
    time. Today, the children listen. They   discover 
    
  
    
    
    history.
    
  
58:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Nikola Kristitch
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Aged 8 in 1942
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    A friend from that time has much to say as   well. 
    
  
    
    
    Nikola was eight years old in 1942. He tells the   
    
  
    
    
    story of massacred innocence.
    
  
58:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
58:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Do you remember the beginning of the     executions?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Nikola Kristitch
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:01:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Nikola Kristitch
    
  
    
    
    Yes.
 It was a Friday. We were near the     river taking out the sower. There
 were nine of us boys. Then we     heard "Bah, bah", something was going
 "bah". We glanced around     and saw vehicles, here near Mohky's and 
Kopysk's houses. We     looked and we saw three policmen and a German 
coming. We ran     and they started shooting at us. We stopped. Who are 
you? We     said we were taking out the sower. What are you doing around
     here? Scram or we'll kill you! We ran for our lives. And here,     
there was a house, on the edge, near Kopysk. We hid behind that     
house to see what was going on. One after the other, the cars     came, 
black crows as we called them. They pushed them, roughly,     the small 
children... I can't tell. The children, thrown into     the pit by the 
hand. And the others were completely naked and     walked witht he Rabbi
 at their head. He gave a sermon, to all     those who were already 
there. And the cars kept coming, there     were more and more people and
 they went into the pit in rows.     They all lay down like herrings. 
They lay down, and there was     one submachine gun and two Germans, 
they had the skull and     crossbones on their caps. They fired a burst 
at the people     lying there, and then more went in and another burst. 
They kept     shooting them until nightfall. And we watched. Then the 
Germans     went back again to get the villagers to cover the grave. 
People     hid to escape doing it. And us kids, we hid in the bushes, 
out     of curiosity, to see. That night, the people covered it in, but 
    the ground was still moving, for another two days. The ground     
heaved.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The horror of a child's memory.   
    
  
    
    
    Nikola remembers down to the smallest detail, down to   the torture experienced by one of 
    
  
    
    
    the village's young   Jews.
    
  
01:01:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Nikola Kristitch
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:02:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Nikola Kristitch
    
  
    
    
    I
 remember one of the girls, a young     girl. Her panties were around 
her ankles. A German fired at her     and her hair caught fire. She 
screamed and he took an automatic     rifle, got into the grave and 
fired. The bullet ricocheted off     his knee and he bled everywhere. He
 bandaged his knee, he was     half undressed and then he emptied his 
round. He even killed     Jews who still had their clothes on, he 
couldn't wait he was so     crazed with rage. He fired at everybody, he 
was crazy. The next     day, the Germans began searching everywhere, in 
the forests.     They found some and dug another grave there. This was 
covered     in and there were no more killings here. But over there, 
there     was a second grave and all the others were killed over there, 
    in summer, whenever they found them.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:03:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Those
 who took part in the killings     here were sentenced. And we know that
 they admit killing at     least 700, at least. And at the same time 
there were a lot of     Ukrainian police who took part, everybody said 
it. So the     killers are clearly identified. What is often estimated 
is the     number of victims, as the people told us that it went on all 
    through the war, and that they reopened the graves to put in     
more bodies. Clearly, that's not declared, because Ostregeits     was 
certainly declared "Judenfrei". And afterwards, the SS     probably 
didn't dare to admit, that they were still killing     Jews, because 
their reports were false.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    "Judenfrei", 
    
  
    
    
    get rid of the Jews,   that was the ultimate purpose of the 
    
  
    
    
    Nazi extermination   mission.
    
  
01:03:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
01:03:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Heinrich Himmler, Head of the SS, was   
    
  
    
    
    the mastermind behind this systematic killing.   
    
  
    
    
    On August the 15th 1941, he went to Minsk, a   
    
  
    
    
    city largely destroyed to inspect his troops. On that   day, he 
    
  
    
    
    visited Soviet Prisoner Camp. A few hours   later, he himself 
    
  
    
    
    watched a mass execution.   Paradoxically, the Chief Executioner 
    
  
    
    
    couldn't stomach   the macabre event. No more than the 
    
  
    
    
    killers themselves   who were qualified by the SS hierarchy as alcoholics and   
    
  
    
    
    psychopaths. According to historians, 
    
  
    
    
    Himmler   concluded in his own words, death by shooting is certainly not   the most 
    
  
    
    
    humane death. He then asked his 
    
  
    
    
    men   to imagine a more impersonal way of killing. Talks of gas came on   
    
  
    
    
    to the scene. The prefigured the industrial stage that   of 
    
  
    
    
    extermination camps and Zyklon B.
    
  
01:04:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Myzoczs
    
  
01:04:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Nevertheless in Ukraine, killing by   
    
  
    
    
    bullets continued. Hundreds of villagers saw Jews   
    
  
    
    
    massacred in the middle of the countryside. These   fields are the silent witnesses of forgotten 
    
  
    
    
    history.   On October the 13th 1942, five 
    
  
    
    
    photos by a German   policeman recount the sequence of the death 
    
  
    
    
    sentence.   Assembling 1,700 Jews from the ghetto, undressing,   
    
  
    
    
    lining up in rows, 
    
  
    
    
    execution, the final   
    
  
    
    
    blow.
    
  
01:05:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:05:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:05:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    So he lived there and saw nothing?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:05:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Yes, he was born in 1926.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:06:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Yeah,
 he was only 14. Ok, let's go,     we'll come back, but they saw, they 
lived beside there, it's     not possible. Often, people are afraid to 
speak because of the     vegetable gardens. A very small thing stops 
them from speaking.     People think that it's the killings, guilt, but 
it's just the     vegetable gardens. We've come across that hundreds of 
    times.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    One day, they opened it with a digger. It was     probably in the '60s.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:06:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    There was a ravine, a huge pit.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:06:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    I
 don't remember exactly, but the one who did     the work told us that 
they found a huge amount of bones and     skulls. That it gave him the 
shivers.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:06:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    There,
 where the car is, there's a ravine, they     buried a lot of people 
there. Over there too. There, where you     see a tree. There, they 
covered it in. Then higher up as well.     That's all I know. Bye.
    
  
01:07:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:07:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    In
 the West, there can be no memory of     the people they didn't bury 
here. Whose bodies have been found     with tractors, diggers, dogs. The
 gulf is too wide. Europe will     be totally blocked with this. We're 
in the heart of Europe     here.
    
  
01:07:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
01:07:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    It's here without a doubt that for a lack   of witness the research ends in 
    
  
    
    
    vain. They will   return.
    
  
01:07:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:07:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    It's not possible that there's no rural     memory of where they are. They know. They must have seen.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The crews voyage is near its 
    
  
    
    
    end.   After five years of 
    
  
    
    
    research, Father Desbois' crew   located 700 sites of extermination in Ukraine. 
    
  
    
    
    Death is   sometimes right around the street corner, in the middle of a   
    
  
    
    
    city.
    
  
01:08:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:08:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Public Works have brought to 
    
  
    
    
    like   Jewish cemetries. The cemetry was ancient and was used to hide   the massacres. 
    
  
    
    
    The Nazi's buried 6,500 victims here, a   typical 
    
  
    
    
    technique.
    
  
01:08:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Misha found human bones.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:08:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    A child's bone, a pelvic bone.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    During the 1960s, the Soviet   raised a Jewish cemetry to build this cultural 
    
  
    
    
    center.   Here a simple public works director shows that his long   
    
  
    
    
    history of memory erased is far from over.
    
  
01:08:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:09:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    This
 is where we are. These are human     bones, these are people, they're 
not animals. And we're in the     middle of the town. We're not in a 
village in the middle of     nowhere. A desecrated Jewish cemetery. This
 would make     international headlines normally. Not here. All the 
bones are     in the open, everybody saw them, and the workers didn't 
bother     to rebury them.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The remains of the Jewish   
    
  
    
    
    cemetery. Misha found them a few hundred meters from   here in an old Soviet 
    
  
    
    
    barracks.
    
  
01:09:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:09:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    These are all gravestones, but the inscriptions     are on the other side.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:09:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:09:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Can he turn them around?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:09:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Look, letters.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:09:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    I think that's "Yehuda's     daughter".
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:09:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    We'll try to turn that one.
    
  
01:10:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:10:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    There are colours on it.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    It's beautiful, it must be very old.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    What's her name?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Massia.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:10:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    Massia,
 she was Tema's wife. That's her     life story... told in a few words. 
It goes on and on. This path     running perpendicular here, well it's 
made from gravestones     too.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:10:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    They've
 been tarred over, but the stones are     there. You can see some of 
them. This is where the soldiers     marched. The memory has been 
totally eradicated. And     everything's been reused.
    
  
01:10:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
[sil.]
    
  
01:10:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Today, the 
    
  
    
    
    descendents of the   Ukrainian Jewish community live principally in New York.   
    
  
    
    
    Father Patrick Desbois regularly informs them of the   
    
  
    
    
    fruit of his research. The validation of 
    
  
    
    
    his   findings by religious authorities is indispensable for the French   
    
  
    
    
    priest. 
    
  
    
    
    A few kilometers from Manhattan   
    
  
    
    
    resides one of the most respected Rabbis in the United   States. At the very 
    
  
    
    
    start of the French priest   research, Israel Singer supported his cause, because according to   
    
  
    
    
    him, his research corresponded to a major historic   global 
    
  
    
    
    site.
    
  
01:11:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Israel Singer
    
  
    
    
    Now what is happening in this   special project is that these people who were 
    
  
    
    
    left to   die in the worst way possible are suddenly possibly in   
    
  
    
    
    some way being resurrected by Father Patrick and his   team. I think 
    
  
    
    
    that this is a unique opportunity to take   the 
    
  
    
    
    most evil that was done in the world   
    
  
    
    
    possibly in world history. And to take these events   
    
  
    
    
    of over a half a century ago and turning them on their   head.
    
  
01:12:20
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Many 
    
  
    
    
    Jews themselves attempted to   locate these mass graves, but they had never attained such   
    
  
    
    
    results.
    
  
01:12:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Israel Singer
    
  
    
    
    The local population is much more   
    
  
    
    
    trusting of a catholic priest who is coming than a Jew   from Brooklyn, this is the first thing, this is a   
    
  
    
    
    logical thing, this is very simple to understand.   You're come in the place you know in the Western Ukraine   
    
  
    
    
    where
 most of the people are Catholic and seeing   Catholic, brisk on to say,
 this is good idea. If they would see   me coming with a kippah 
    
  
    
    
    from Brooklyn, you know they   would think, this is not such a good idea, you know and so that's   the first 
    
  
    
    
    point, the feeling of trust. And second one,   is it just wasn't 
    
  
    
    
    done, because the people who could do   it were mostly 
    
  
    
    
    dead. They killed million and half   people, among them, 113 
    
  
    
    
    people from my family.
    
  
01:13:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Over the 
    
  
    
    
    years and through his   encounters, Father Desbois became imbued with Eastern European   Jewish 
    
  
    
    
    culture. This allowed him to understand the   still vivid pain that families suffer 
    
  
    
    
    from.
    
  
01:13:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:14:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    We
 work with Jewish organisations,     first because they know many 
survivors and they put us in     contact with them, but also because our
 work will be exhibited     in New York, the city with the largest 
number of survivors.     These people say that the camps were often 
talked about, but     never what happened to us. Brooklyn is still home 
to a large     number of Jews from the Soviet Union. In the beginning,  
   unfortunately, we were the ones who brought bad news. A Jewish     
friend once said to me: "The crime itself had been uppermost.     Now 
you're telling us that they're dead and that's very     different." The 
fact that we know where the bodies are, it's     not just as reminding 
of the crime.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Over the last several 
    
  
    
    
    months, the   testimonies of survivors arrive in numbers of Patrick Desbois'   desk. 
    
  
    
    
    In particular that of one man, essential to the   understanding of the perversion 
    
  
    
    
    of Nazi crime.   
    
  
    
    
    Today, settled in New Jersey Leon Wells accepted to   recieve the 
    
  
    
    
    priest. He told him the story of his   childhood as Ukrainian 
    
  
    
    
    Jew, a youth destined to die   before being forced to work for the SS.
    
  
01:14:40
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Leon Wells
    
  
    
    
    We 
    
  
    
    
    dugged our own grave and worked   on and it was two people at that time 
    
  
    
    
    shot. So when it   came to my name to go 
    
  
    
    
    down, so I shouted, no, they   meantime 
    
  
    
    
    shot somebody in the camp, so they had to be   brought to this 
    
  
    
    
    grave. So I was in line, so they   
    
  
    
    
    said fine, you come with us to bring over men to   
    
  
    
    
    the grave, these men, say, created the death brigade,   
    
  
    
    
    it was called the 1005. It was a 
    
  
    
    
    purpose to   erase any sign of criminal 
    
  
    
    
    signs or killing. So they   took out the bodies from the 
    
  
    
    
    graves, put it on, you   know, 
    
  
    
    
    wood, bodies, wood, bodies and 
    
  
    
    
    burnt   it, separated out ashes to find 
    
  
    
    
    gold and that was   all.
    
  
01:15:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Operation 1005 was top sectret.   The 
    
  
    
    
    Einsatzgruppen did not hesitate to use Jews to   carryout their most soded tasks.
    
  
01:16:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Leon Wells
    
  
    
    
    My job as Einsatz was to take care   
    
  
    
    
    of the gold and teeth and son on from the ashes, so   they burned the 
    
  
    
    
    bodies. So they had to bring it   
    
  
    
    
    in from the day and in the evening somebody came from   the bank, 
    
  
    
    
    an assessment and I had to give 
    
  
    
    
    it   over to them and also some assessment were 
    
  
    
    
    on positive   sides because they took some gold 
    
  
    
    
    for themselves. So I   gave it to them. So I 
    
  
    
    
    became like an important   friend.
    
  
01:16:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    And 
    
  
    
    
    how did you escape?
    
  
01:16:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Leon Wells
    
  
    
    
    I have something to give gold to them, they   opened the door 
    
  
    
    
    and I --
    
  
01:16:55
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    And you ran.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Leon Wells
    
  
    
    
    And we started to run. And I did not   
    
  
    
    
    know 
    
  
    
    
    the
 neighborhood to travel, I was too   young and we never went out my one 
neighborhood. I did not even   know where to go, where to go.
    
  
01:17:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    He finally settled in the United States a   few years 
    
  
    
    
    later. In the 1960s, he testified at the   trial of other wise men 
    
  
    
    
    one of the leading figures in   the final solution. Since his flight from 
    
  
    
    
    Ukraine, he   has always refused to return.
    
  
01:17:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
01:17:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    The German army ran into trouble at   Stalingrad. 
    
  
    
    
    It was the winter of 1942. This was one of   the turning 
    
  
    
    
    points at war, confronted with harsh   Russian climate, the 
    
  
    
    
    German's retreated.   
    
  
    
    
    Doubt settled in, and with that doubt came the fear of   having to 
    
  
    
    
    account for their actions. After months of   indecision 
    
  
    
    
    in 1943, Himmler finally demanded the   Einsatzgruppen to erase all evidence of their   
    
  
    
    
    butchery.
    
  
01:18:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Lysinitchy Forest
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    This forest became one of the   principal sites of 
    
  
    
    
    Operation 1005. 
    
  
    
    
    Adofe had   again become a witness. 
    
  
    
    
    He who at the age of nine   witnessed the beginnings of the killings of the occupation,   
    
  
    
    
    now witnessned their negation.
    
  
01:18:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:19:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    They
 put barbed wire all round at the end of     the war. They brought the 
Jews and made them live here. They     dug up the bodies and burned 
them. Two, three heaps, you could     see the smoke rising from the 
pyres. I remember that the Jews     used to take this path to get water 
from the well. Because the     fires went on for so long, maybe five or 
six months, people     said there must have been 90-100000 killed.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    How did they burn them?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:19:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    They
 took the bodies out of the mass graves and     the stink was so strong 
that you could smell it in the houses.     You couldn't breathe, see. 
The bodies had been lying there for     two or three years decomposing. 
They opened up the graves, took     out the bodies and took them away on
 stretches to here.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
   
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    Did you see them burning the bodies from your     house?
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:20:05
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    It
 was awful. It was like smoke rising from     hell. And the worse was 
the stink, when they opened the graves.     We ran into the fields, to 
make something to eat, the smell in     the house was unbearable.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:20:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:20:15
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    While the Nazi's struggled to make the   bodies 
    
  
    
    
    disappear, they organized an elaborate stage   plan, a theater 
    
  
    
    
    of death with a role for each and   everyone. 
    
  
    
    
    It's unique purpose was to further humiliate   the young Jews.
    
  
01:20:30
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:21:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    They
 had a whole ceremony, the one who     lit the fire had cow horns for 
devil's horns. They had music,     they had a whole ceremony. They had 
someone to count, a young     lad of 14 who counted the bodies and wrote
 everything down in a     notebook. They killed him so that he couldn't 
tell the number.     This is an extermination site and the site of 
operation     1005.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    An operation that the German's   
    
  
    
    
    wouldn't have time to execute throughout country, which   is why mass graves can 
    
  
    
    
    still be found today.
    
  
01:21:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Rawa Ruska
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    During his last voyage, Father   Desbois came back to the site where for him, it all began five   
    
  
    
    
    years ago. Members of the local Jewish community   accompanied 
    
  
    
    
    him. A 
    
  
    
    
    prayer was heard to pay   homage to the memory of 1500 brothers killed in   
    
  
    
    
    November 1943 in this forest.
    
  
01:21:35
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:21:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    [non-English   narration]
    
  
01:22:45
  
  
  
    
    
       
     
    
  
    
    
    Patrick Desbois
    
  
    
    
    This
 is the first mass grave I     discovered. It was a huge surprise. was 
sitting here and the     witnesses arrived, they told me their story. I 
didn't have a     video or a camera. And just like that I discovered we 
could     find out where the bodies were buried. And that it was nowhere
     as you can see. That the spot was unmarked. I discovered     
everything in that moment. It was the previous Mayor of the     town who
 decided to protect the site, he arranged all that and     the Star of 
David to show that this is a Jewish grave. That     fact that Ukrainians
 are doing this means that there are people     here who want to keep 
the memory alive. They want people to     know where the Jews were 
killed and what became of the bodies.     The Star of David is being 
seen again on Ukrainian soil.     There's not a single Star of David on 
the ground in this whole     region I think this will be the first in 
this region.
    
  
   
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Three figures were present, three   
    
  
    
    
    survivors, the first witnesses met by Father Desbois.   
    
  
    
    
    Three women who pushed him to pursue a lifelong work of   research.
    
  
01:23:00
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:23:10
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    Hester Wilcox
    
  
    
    
    Another race against death has   
    
  
    
    
    begun. Each day that goes by the eyewitnesses disappear   one by 
    
  
    
    
    one, and with them a part of the work of Father   Desbois 
    
  
    
    
    the memory keep up.
    
  
01:23:25
  
  
  
    
    
       
   
    
  
    
    
    UNKNOWN
    
  
    
    
    [non-English narration]
    
  
01:23:50
  
  
  
    
    
       
[music]
    
  
Amazing man, I hope that one day, all the sites will be identified and permanent memorials laid.
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