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Site of mass execution of Jews in
Kovno,
Lithuania. Over
50,000 people were killed there during the German
occupation, from June 1941 to the summer of 1944. Many were
Jews from Kovno or
Jews who had been deported from
Germany. In the 19th century the Ninth Fort was one of a series of
forts built around Kovno. The Ninth Fort was located four
miles from the center of Kovno, and served as a prison
between the two world wars.
In the fall of 1943, the Germans began to destroy all
evidence of mass murder by burning bodies. This operation
was kept completely secret. It was carried out by the
Sonderkommando
serving in
aktion
1005. Thirty-four prisoners from the Kovno
Ghetto, who had tried
to escape, were forced to participate in the operation, as
well as 26 Soviet prisoners of war and four non-Jews.
The Ninth Fort prisoners were strictly guarded and kept
chained after work. Nevertheless, 64 escaped on December 24,
1943. Some reached the Kovno Ghetto, where they were taken
to join the
partisans.
Thus, the horrors committed by the Germans in the Ninth Fort
became known a year before the war ended. Today, the fort
houses a museum.
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