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Transnistria
is a region in the western Ukraine, across the Dniestr River from
Romania, that Hitler handed to Romania as a reward for its
participation in the war against the Soviet Union. After it was
occupied, Transnistria became a concentration ground for the Jews of
Bessarabia, Bukovina, and northern Moldavia, whom the Romanian
authorities deported on the direct order of Ion Antonescu. The
deportations began on September 15, 1941, and continued on-and-off
until the autumn of 1942; September 15 is the official date of the
deportation of the Jews of Bessarabia. Most of the deportations to
Transnistria took place on foot, via four transit points: Atachi
(the principal transit point), Cosauti, Rezina, and Tiraspol. In
all, an estimated 150,000 persons were deported; German sources
speak of 185,000. In addition to massacres carried out by Romanians,
Jews were murdered in the camps of Bogdanovka, Akhmechetka and
Domankevk. |