The NKVD prisoner massacre in Zolochiv was a
Soviet war crime conducted by the
NKVD in the city of
Zolochiv, then in
occupied Poland and now in Ukraine. In the last days of June 1941, following the
German invasion of the USSR, the Soviets executed an estimated 650 to 720 prisoners held in the Zolochiv prison. This atrocity was one of several
prisoner massacres carried out by the Soviet
secret police and
army during the summer of 1941.
Those apprehended by the
NKVD were confined in the cells of a pre-war Polish prison in the
Zolochiv Castle in Tarnopolska Street, on a hill in the eastern part of the city.[1] The prison in Zolochiv was one of four Soviet prisons operating in
Lviv Oblast. It was referred to as 'Prison No. 3' in Soviet official documents.[2]
On June 22, 1941,
Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union. Due to the swift progress of the German offensive, the NKVD began exterminating political prisoners in the war zone. In the summer of 1941, in the part of Poland occupied by the USSR, an estimated 20,000 to 30,000 individuals were murdered in prisons and detention centers.[3]
Massacre
According to documents from Soviet archives, as of June 10, 1941, the prison in Zolochiv held 625 inmates.[2] However, the number of prisoners was probably higher when the massacre commenced, as after the German invasion began, the NKVD began mass arrests of alleged '
enemies of the people.' These individuals were not registered in the prison records.[4] After the outbreak of the German-Soviet war, militants of the
Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists unsuccessfully attempted to capture the prison.[5][6]
Shortly thereafter, the prison guard was strengthened[7] and NKVD personnel began liquidating the prisoners. No prisoners survived to provide details on the exact course of the massacre.[8] Nevertheless, the local population heard shots and screams coming from the castle day and night, which the Soviets tried to drown out with the roar of truck or tractor engines.[7][9]
On July 1, 1941,
German troops entered Zolochiv.[10] Some inhabitants went to the Castle hoping to find relatives and friends there who had been arrested. However, no one was found alive in the deserted prison.[a] Only shallow[b] mass graves were discovered, covered with turf.[9] Two graves were discovered in the inner courtyard, another two or three in the orchard, and others under the prison wall.[8][11] Bodies were also found in cells and in the chapel.[c][8] Most bodies had gunshot wounds, but some showed signs of
bayonets, blows with a blunt instrument, and even
torture.[d][8][12] Bodies of pregnant women were also found in the graves.[13] The bodies buried in graves under the prison wall were in such an advanced state of decomposition that the Germans forbade their exhumation. They issued an order to sprinkle them with
lime and bury them again.[e][14]
Thousands of flies buzzed over the eight or ten long rows of bodies laid here. Among them walked bent women, still sobbing, trying to find their husbands and sons among the dead.
The exact number of victims remains difficult to determine. The July 12, 1941 report by Captain of State Security Andrei Filippov, head of the prison board of the NKVD of the
Ukrainian SSR, provides only summary information about the fate of inmates from four prisons in
Lviv Oblast (three in Lviv, one in Zolochiv). According to this document, a total of 2,464 inmates from both cities were reported as "decreased according to the first category", indicating they were executed.[6] Ukrainian sources estimated the number of murdered at 649–752, while the German sources at approximately 700.[16] Other witnesses, however, estimated that the number of victims was 650, 700 or 720 people.[f][9][17] One-quarter of the victims were women.[8] During the exhumation, approximately 80 corpses were identified, including 10 Jewish merchants from Zolochiv and the surrounding area.[8][18]
The 1995 publication Roads of Death by
KARTA Center included information about a column of approximately one hundred prisoners led out of Zolochiv prison. The prison warden allegedly told them that they would be taken to the nearest railway station and from there deeper into the Soviet Union. In fact, almost all the prisoners were shot near the village of Folwarki (today
Pidhorodne). Only three people survived by escaping in the confusion caused by the German air raid.[16] However, information about this crime is not confirmed in later studies on the NKVD prison massacres.
Aftermath
The bodies of identified victims were taken away by their families. The remaining bodies, over a hundred in number, were buried in a mass grave at the local Catholic cemetery.[8] The funeral ceremony of the victims of the prison massacre took place on July 6.[10] Several thousand residents of Zolochiv took part.[19]
As in other instances of prison massacres, the local Jewish community got blamed for the actions of the NKVD. As per the antisemitic canard of
Jewish Bolshevism, non-Jewish inhabitants perceived Jews as synonymous with the Soviet regime and its policies of terror. Furthermore, acts of violence against the Jews of Zolochiv were probably inspired by members of one of the subunits of
Einsatzgruppe C, who were in the city in the first days of July.[20]
After occupying the city, the Germans, supported by young Ukrainians, drove a group of Jews[g] to the Zolochiv castle, where they forced them to exhume the bodies of murdered prisoners.[10][21] Captured
Red Army soldiers were also forced to take part.[22] During this work, both Jews and POWs were abused and killed.[23] On July 4, the Germans carried out a mass execution of Jews in the castle.[24] Only after two days,[25] and not without difficulties,[26] the riots were suppressed by the
Wehrmacht. By then, hundreds of Zolochiv Jews had fallen victim to the
pogrom. The Germans estimated the number of
murdered Jews at approximately 300–500 people.[27]
The massacre in Zolochiv prison also served as a pretext for the Nazis to carry out mass and more systematic executions of Jews. On July 10, the
Feldgendarmerie shot approximately 300 members of the Jewish
intelligentsia in the city.[27]
Notes
^One witness testified that after the Soviets left, a prisoner was found alive in the
castle, supposedly hidden in the chimney flue. However, this lacks confirmation from other sources. See: Dynowski (1997), p. 136.
^The bodies of the murdered prisoners were buried at a depth of 0.5 to 1 meter. See: Dynowski (1997), p. 135 and Musiał (2001), p. 146.
^Some prison documentation, including personal files of prisoners, was also found in the castle. See: Popiński, Kokurin i Gurjanow (1995), pp. 17, 29.
^The testimony and accounts of witnesses involved in the exhumation of the victims of the
NKVD prisoner massacres repeatedly mention bodies bearing signs of severe torture. However, according to
Bogdan Musiał, injuries initially thought to be signs of torture were likely a result of rapid decomposition of the corpses, accelerated by the summer heat, as well as scavengers and unskilled handling during exhumation (see: Musiał (2001), pp. 236–237). At times, executions were hastily carried out using grenades and machine guns, resulting in severe injuries to the victims (see: Musiał (2001), p. 236). Also, he believes that in
Eastern Galicia and
Volhynia, there were cases where, after the departure of the Soviets, the bodies of NKVD victims were purposely mutilated by
Ukrainian nationalists seeking to depict dramatic examples of their nation's martyrdom for propaganda purposes (see: Musiał (2001), pp. 237–240).
^These badly decomposing bodies likely belonged to prisoners who died or were murdered by the NKVD before the outbreak of the
German-Soviet war. See: Musiał (2001), pp. 150–151.
^While some witnesses estimated the number of victims as high as 1,800–2,000, these figures are likely overestimates. See: Dynowski (1997), p. 136.
^The victims were predominantly men, but there were also reports of Jewish women forced to work on the exhumation. See: Musiał (2001), p. 162.
Dynowski, Arkadiusz (1997). "Zbrodnicza ewakuacja więzień i aresztów NKWD w Busku, Czortkowie, Złoczowie, Stryju I Stanisławowie w czerwcu–lipcu 1941 r." [Criminal evacuation of NKVD prisons and detention centers in Busk, Chortkiv, Zolochiv, Stryi and Stanisławów in June–July, 1941]. In Mikoda, Janina (ed.). Zbrodnicza ewakuacja więzień i aresztów NKWD na Kresach Wschodnich II Rzeczypospolitej w czerwcu – lipcu 1941 roku. Materiały z sesji naukowej w 55. rocznicę ewakuacji więźniów NKWD w głąb ZSRR, Łódź 10 czerwca 1996 r. [Criminal evacuation of NKVD prisons and detention centers in the Eastern Borderlands of the Second Polish Republic in June-July 1941. Materials from the scientific session on the 55th anniversary of the evacuation of NKVD prisoners deep into the USSR, Łódź, June 10, 1996] (in Polish). Warszawa: Główna Komisja Badania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu – Instytut Pamięci Narodowej.
ISBN83-903356-6-2.
Galiński, Antoni (1997). "Więzienia NKWD na Kresach Wschodnich II Rzeczypospolitej w latach 1939–1941 na podstawie dokumentacji Okręgowej Komisji Badania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu w Łodzi – Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej" [NKVD prisons in the Eastern Borderlands of the Second Polish Republic in 1939–1941 in the light of documents gathered by the District Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation in Łódź – Institute of National Remembrance]. In Mikoda, Janina (ed.). Zbrodnicza ewakuacja więzień i aresztów NKWD na Kresach Wschodnich II Rzeczypospolitej w czerwcu – lipcu 1941 roku. Materiały z sesji naukowej w 55. rocznicę ewakuacji więźniów NKWD w głąb ZSRR, Łódź 10 czerwca 1996 r. [Criminal evacuation of NKVD prisons and detention centers in the Eastern Borderlands of the Second Polish Republic in June-July 1941. Materials from the scientific session on the 55th anniversary of the evacuation of NKVD prisoners deep into the USSR, Łódź, June 10, 1996] (in Polish). Warszawa: Główna Komisja Badania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu – Instytut Pamięci Narodowej.
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