On the 84th anniversary of the notorious Babi Yar massacre, the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center (BYHMC) revealed the names of more than 1,000 newly identified victims, announced publicly for the first time at a ceremony at the site on Monday.
In Jerusalem, BYHMC and March of the Living hosted a parallel memorial at the National Library of Israel, where the newly discovered names were also read out. Speakers included BYHMC Chairman Natan Sharansky, Ukraine’s Ambassador to Israel Yevgen Korniychuk and Yad Vashem Chairman Dani Dayan.

“Memory is a moral weapon against denial, oblivion and distortion,” said Sharansky. “Every name we succeed in restoring contributes to Holocaust commemoration and advances justice and dignity for its victims. Precisely in times of war, the obligation to defend the truth is doubled.”
Korniychuk thanked Sharansky, in his capacity as chairman of the supervisory board of the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center, for working together with the Ukrainian government to maintain the site, the memory of the massacre and its victims.
“Let’s do everything we can in order to preserve the history and prevent such atrocities from happening again,” he said, comparing the Nazi atrocities at Babi Yar to the Hamas massacre on Oct. 7, 2023, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 22, 2024. “We have been passing through the era of the new Nazis.”
Despite the ongoing war in Ukraine, researchers restored the identities of 1,031 people previously lost to history. The BYHMC database now contains nearly 30,000 names, enriched with details such as ages, relatives, professions and circumstances of death. Victims ranged from a nine-month-old baby to a 102-year-old woman, underscoring the indiscriminate nature of the massacre.
On September 29–30, 1941, Nazi forces and their collaborators shot 33,771 Jews at Babi Yar in just two days. Over the following two years, the ravine outside Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital, became the largest mass grave in Europe, where some 100,000 people—including Jews, Roma and Ukrainian prisoners—were executed.
The discoveries were made possible by unprecedented archival access during wartime, when BYHMC scanned more than 7 million documents, creating the largest digital archive in Eastern Europe.

Among the newly discovered materials are applications to adopt children orphaned after their parents were murdered at Babi Yar, petitions by citizens seeking legal recognition of relatives’ deaths for inheritance, remarriage or financial support, and birth certificates from the 1920s and 1930s that helped identify children murdered alongside their parents.
One striking case is a 1946 legal file detailing the plea of Zindel Kravetsky, who sought recognition of the deaths of his wife and three children: Aron, 8, Zoya, 6, and Vova, 4, all murdered at Babi Yar. Another record documents Rakhil Meirovna Kravets, born in 1863, who fled Korosten to Kyiv at the outbreak of the war, only to be murdered in the ravine.
Since the Russia-Ukraine war began, more than 2,000 existing records have been updated and corrected, BYHMC said in a press release. More than 300,000 visitors have visited the Babyn Yar memorial since the Russian invasion began, while more 600 educational tours have been conducted, it added.
“Babyn Yar, the symbol of the ‘Holocaust by Bullets,’ tells the story of more than 2 million Jews shot and thrown into mass graves across Eastern Europe,” said March of the Living Israel CEO Revital Yakin Krakowsky. “We honor their memory and pray for an end to the war in Ukraine. We hope to march in Kyiv next year on the 85th anniversary of the massacre.”
The post Despite war in Ukraine, a historic discovery at Babi Yar appeared first on JNS.org.
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