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The Jewish Chronicle

Why a priest hunts for lost Shoah victims

Father Patrick Desbois tells Simon Rocker how he has made it his mission to give thousands

December 4, 2008 12:03
Members of Father Desbois’s team digging for evidence of Nazi atrocities

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

2 min read

A large, stone menorah stands at Babi Yar, outside Ukrainian capital of Kiev, in memory of the 33,000 Jews who were among the 100,000 people murdered there by the Nazis during the Second World War. But for most of the 1.5 million Jews who were shot by the Einsatzgruppen, the Germans’ mobile killing squads, in Ukraine, no memorial marks the scene of their death. They lie beneath mounds in the forests, in farmers’ fields, even in gardens.

Their fate is probably generally less well-known than those who perished in camps such as Treblinka and Auschwitz. But one French Catholic priest is determined to ensure that their story does not lie buried with their unmarked graves. Over the past eight years, Father Patrick Desbois has travelled repeatedly to Ukraine to locate all the sites where the victims met their end and to interview former neighbours who witnessed the killings. The author of a book, The Holocaust by Bullets, recently published in English, he will be speaking about his mission of remembrance for the first time in the UK next week.

So far, he says, “we have covered 45 per cent of the territory of the Ukraine and one region of Belarus. We’ve discovered around 850 extermination sites and interviewed 825 witnesses.” That is 850 out of more than 2,000 sites.

Over time, he and his team have honed their research skills, using metal detectors to uncover incriminating gun cartridges or learning to distinguish between human and animal bones dug up from the ground.