Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943., photo Rada OPWiM, 2007
License: all rights reserved
Photo showing Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943.
Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943., photo Rada OPWiM, 2007
License: all rights reserved
Photo showing Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943.
Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943., photo Rada OPWiM, 2007
License: all rights reserved
Photo showing Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943.
Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943., photo Rada OPWiM, 2007
License: all rights reserved
Photo showing Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943.
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ID: WOJ-000720-W/163471 (UA-5955)

Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943.

ID: WOJ-000720-W/163471 (UA-5955)

Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943.

Rudnia Łęczyńska was a Polish village with about 300 inhabitants during the Second World War. In April 1943, a detachment of German gendarmerie and Ukrainian police pacified the village, murdering about 200 people. The pretext for the pacification action was a report that the Poles were collaborating with Medvedev's Soviet partisans. The victims were buried in a common grave, which was a large pit dug on the order of the executioners before the execution began.

On the common grave of the murdered, the surviving inhabitants erected a cross. After several years, the cross fell over. The Soviet authorities then placed an obelisk with a star on the grave. The grave is located by the roadside, fenced off with a wooden fence more than a metre high, measuring 5 x 2 m, with evenly planted decades-old pine trees around it. The inscription (in Ukrainian) is painted on the obelisk. The inscription (translated into Polish) reads: "Here were buried the inhabitants of Rudni Łęczyńska / who became victims of the German fascists in 1943... [further part of the inscription is illegible]".

A memorial site in Rudnia Łęczyńska with a blue wooden fence surrounding a grave marked by an obelisk. Tall pine trees grow around the site. Photo showing Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943. Gallery of the object +3
Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943., photo Rada OPWiM, 2007
Grave of Poles murdered in 1943 in Rudnia Łęczyńska. The site is marked by an obelisk with a star, surrounded by a blue wooden fence and pine trees. Photo showing Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943. Gallery of the object +3
Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943., photo Rada OPWiM, 2007
A memorial obelisk with a star stands on a mass grave of Poles murdered in 1943 in Rudnia Łęczyńska. The grave is surrounded by a wooden fence and pine trees, with flowers placed at the base. Photo showing Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943. Gallery of the object +3
Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943., photo Rada OPWiM, 2007
Close-up of a memorial plaque on a monument in Rudnia Łęczyńska, Ukraine, with Ukrainian text commemorating Polish victims of a 1943 massacre by German and Ukrainian forces. Photo showing Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943. Gallery of the object +3
Grave of Poles murdered by the Germans and Ukrainian police in 1943., photo Rada OPWiM, 2007

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