Gargzdai (Gorzd), Lithuania
Gargzdai and the Holocaust
by
John S. Jaffer
I. Jewish Residents of Gargzdai killed in the Holocaust
The total number of Jewish
residents killed in or near Gargzdai is at least 500: 200 men killed on
June 24, 1941, and 300 women and children killed on September 14 and
16, 1941.
In November, 2004 Yad Vashem posted online its Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names. A search for the location Gargzdai or Gorzd
yields a list of
389 names. These names include persons killed in Gorzd, and those born
in Gorzd who perished elsewhere. Each name is linked to further
information from the report in the
Yad Vashem archives, as well as a copy of the report. This site is an
invaluable resource for anyone researching Gorzd.
A list containing names of 78 victims was compiled by the Gargzdai Town Secretary during the War:
Jewish residents of Gargzdai killed in June and September, 1941. The original list is now kept at Gargzdai Minijos Secondary School.
The events surrounding these killings are set forth below.
II. Einsatzgruppe A
Germany invaded the Soviet Union
beginning on June 22, 1941. Mobile killing squads known as
Einsatzgruppen followed the German Army into the occupied areas. There
were four Einsatzgruppen (A, B, C and D), which were in turn divided
into smaller units called Einsatzkommandos and Sonderkommandos.
Einsatzgruppe A, commanded by SS -
Brigadeführer Walther Stahlecker, carried on mass executions of
the Jewish population in Lithuania and other Baltic areas.
Einsatzkommando 3 (a subunit of Einsatzgruppe A) operated in Lithuania.
The deeds of Einsatzkommando 3 were set forth in an infamous document
known as the Jäger report, which was dated December 1,
1941. In that document Karl Jäger, commander of
Einsatzkommando 3, set forth totals of executions by location in
Lithuania. The executions outlined in the report began on July 4, 1941,
and totalled over 137,000.
- An Introduction to the Einsatzgruppen, by Yale F. Edeiken - Holocaust History Organization
- Einsatzgruppe A at olokaustos.org (in Italian)
- Einsatzgruppen (Mobile Killing Units) at Holocaust Encyclopedia, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
- Yosif Levinson, Skausmo Knygma - The Book of Sorrow (Vilnius: Vaga Publishers, 1997) contains photographs of the killing sites in Lithuania.
- Clickable Map of Lithuanian Killing Sites at Holocaust Education.
For photos of memorials, click on region, then on stars, then on numerals after "Pictures" at upper left.
- Richard Rhodes, Masters of Death - The SS-Einsatzgruppen and the Invention of the Holocaust (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2002)
- The Einsatzgruppen (Jewish Virtual Library)
- Einsatzgruppen der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD
at Wikipedia (in German)
- Nuremberg Trial of Einsatzgruppen Leaders
- Biography of Stahlecker - olokaustos.org (in Italian);
Wikipedia (in German);
Wikipedia (in English).
Photo of Stahlecker at Aktion Reinhard Camps
- Jäger
- Jäger Report, Holocaust History Project
- Biography and photograph - olokaustos.org (in Italian)
- Biography and photograph - United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (to view, Browser must have Shockwave plug-in)
- Wolfram Wette, "SS-Standartenführer Karl Jäger, Eine
biographische Skizze [A Biographical Sketch]," in V. Bartusevicius, J.
Tauber and W. Wette, eds., Holocaust in Litauen (Cologne: Böhlau Verlag, 2003), p. 77.
- Information about Jäger at Spiegel Online (in German)
- French L. MacLean, The Field Men: The SS Officers Who Led the Einsatzkommandos - the Nazi Mobile Killing Units (Atglen, PA: Schiffer Military History, 1999)
- Professor Christopher R. Browning, Evidence for the Implementation of the Final Solution" - Expert witness report submitted in the British libel case, Irving v. Lipstadt, posted at www.holocaustdenialontrial.org.
- Ronald Headland, "The Einsatzgruppen: The Question of Their Initial Operations," Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Vol. 4, No. 4, pp. 401-412 (1989).
III. Einsatzkommando Tilsit
The execution of the Jewish men in
Gargzdai took place on June 24, 1941, prior to the first execution
listed in the Jäger report. These killings in Gargzdai were the
first mass execution following Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union
on June 22, 1941, and may be regarded as the start of the Holocaust.
The group which perpetrated the killings is sometimes called
Einsatzkommando Tilsit. Tilsit was in East Prussia, close to the
border with the Soviet Union.
Einsatzkommando Tilsit was not formally part of
Einsatzgruppe A, but acted as an adjunct to it. The Tilsit unit
was commanded by SS-Major Hans - Joachim Böhme, and composed of
personnel from the Gestapo and Security Service in Tilsit, as well as
police from Memel (the latter led by Oberführer Bernhard Fischer-Schweder). It committed mass executions in the area of
the Soviet Union close to the border with Germany.
The killings by the Tilsit unit were reported to
Berlin in the same "Operational Situation Reports" which reported the
killings by Einsatzgruppe A. Report No. 14, dated July 6, 1941,
lists the killings in Garsden (the German name for Gargzdai), as well
as in Krottingen (Kretinga) and Polangen (Palanga). The Report lists
these killings under the heading of Einsatzgruppe A, but states that
"Tilsit was used as a base" for these "major cleansing operations." The
Report sets forth that 201 persons were executed in Garsden, and gives
a cover story to explain the Garsden shootings - that the "Jewish
population had supported the Russian border guards." Similar cover
stories were given with regard to the other two towns.
In Report No. 19, dated July 11, executions in
additional towns are attributed to "Stapo Tilsit," including Tauroggen
(Taurage), Georgenburg (Jurbarkas), and Mariampol (Marijampole). The
author no longer found it necessary to give any supposed excuse for the
executions.
In Report 26, dated July 18, a total of 3302
executions are attributed to "Police Unit - Tilsit," and these are set
forth separately from Einsatzgruppe A.
Stahlecker later wrote a document dated October 15,
1941, known as the Stahlecker Report, which referred to a total of 5502
killed by State Police Security Service Tilsit.
The summary figures in Report 26 and the Stahlecker
Report presumably include the 201 persons previously reported as killed
in Garsden.
Scholars have more recently discovered in the archives of the former Soviet Union Report from Staatspolizei Tilsit to RSHA, July 1, 1941.
This document was evidently used as a source for Operational Situation
Report No. 14 (which was dated five days later), and also contains
additional information.
- Biography of Böhme (in Italian) and photograph - olokaustos.org. A biography Böhme appears in KZ-Verbrechen vor deutschen Gerichten, Band II: Einsatzkommando Tilsit - Der Prozess zu Ulm
(Frankfurt am Mein: Europaïsche Verlagsanstalt, 1966), pp. 28-30.
Born in Magdeburg in 1909, he studied jurisprudence at the Universities
of Halle and Rostock. He joined the Nazi party and SS in 1933,
eventually achieving the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer (Major). He
was appointed head of Staatspolizei ("Stapo") Tilsit in October, 1940.
In 1944 Böhme assumed Jäger's previous position as head of
Einsatzkommando 3. Arrested in 1956, Böhme was tried by the West
German Government in Ulm, and in 1958 received a 15 - year sentence. He
died in 1960. See also Hans-Joachim Böhme (SS-Mitglied)
and Bernhard Fischer-Schweder at Wikipedia (in German).
- German Documents
- Operational Situation Report 12 - nizkor
- Operational Situation Report 14 - nizkor
- Operational Situation Report 19 - nizkor. A photograph of the first page of this report (including the reference to "Stapo Tilsit") is shown in W. Reich, Hidden History of the Kovno Ghetto, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, p. 48 (1997).
- Operational Situation Report 26 - nizkor
- Stahlecker report (excerpts) - nizkor; www.mazal.org. Graphics from the report are pictured at the website of United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (to view picture, browser must have Shockwave plug-in); and in W. Reich, Hidden History of the Kovno Ghetto, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, pp. 20-21 (1997).
- Report from Staatspolizei Tilsit to RSHA, July 1, 1941 (translation, photocopy and notes)
- ShtetLinks and Yizkor Book sites
- Ruta Puisyte, Holocaust in Jurbarkas (B.A. Thesis), at ShtetLinks site for Jurbarkas (Yurburg), Lithuania
- Zvi Levit, The Destruction of Jurbarkas, from the book Lite, at JewishGen Yizkor site
- ShtetLinks site for Kretinga (Krottingen), Lithuania
- ShtetLinks site for Kybartai (Kibart), Lithuania
- ShtetLinks site for Mariampol, Lithuania
- ShtetLinks site for Naishtot (Kudirkos-Naumiestis), Lithuania
- ShtetLinks site for Tavrig (Taurage), Lithuania
- Professor Peter Longerich, "The Systematic Character of the National Socialist Policy for the Extermination of the Jews" - Expert Witness Report submitted in the case of Irving v. Lipstadt. See especially sections 2.1.3 to 2.1.6. Posted at www.holocaustdenialontrial.org.
- Books
- KZ-Verbrechen vor deutschen Gerichten, Band II: Einsatzkommando Tilsit - Der Prozess zu Ulm
(Frankfurt am Mein: Europaïsche Verlagsanstalt, 1966)
- Ronald Headland, Messages of Murder: A Study of the Reports of the Einsatzgruppen of the Security Police and the Security Service, 1941-1943 (N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1992).
- Konrad Kwiet, "Rehearsing for Murder: The Beginning of the Final Solution in Lithuania in June, 1941," Holocaust and Genocide Studies 12 (1998).
- Jürgen Matthäus, "Operation Barbarossa and the Onset of the Holocaust," in Christopher Browning, The
Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939 - March, 1942 (Lincoln, Neb. and Jerusalem: University of Nebraska Press and Yad Vashem, 2004).
- Christoph Dieckmann, "The War and the Killing of the Lithuanian Jews," in Ulrich Herbert, ed., National Socialist Extermination Policies: Contemporary German Perspectives and Controversies (N.Y. and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2000).
- Tilsit is now Sovetsk, Russia.
- City Directory for Memel, 1942 at
Once Memel - Klaipeda Now contains listing of
Nazi officials, including Police. See Section III, pages 5-7. Lists "Polizeidirektor: SA.-Oberführer Fischer" on page 5.
This is evidently Bernhard Fischer-Schweder. See KZ-Verbrechen vor deutschen Gerichten, Band II: Einsatzkommando Tilsit - Der Prozess zu Ulm, p. 83; Bernhard Fischer-Schweder at Wikipedia (in German).
Several members of Einsatzkommando Tilsit were
prosecuted by the West German Government for War Crimes. These trials
took place in Ulm and Dortmund, West Germany, for crimes including the
killings at Gargzdai/Garsden. Summaries of War Crimes
prosecutions related to Gargzdai (including the sentences) are located
at the site for the University of Amsterdam.
- Nazi Crimes on Trial - University of Amsterdam.
(To see the summaries, click on the numbers below. Use your Browser's "Back" button to return here.)
- Case No. 465 (including Böhme and Fischer-Schweder)
- Case No. 499
- Case No. 521
- Case No. 547
- Heiner Lichtenstein, Himmlers grüne Helfer: Die Schutz- und Ordnungspolizei im "Dritten Reich," (Düsseldorf: Gewerkschaft der Polizei, 2d Ed. 2003), "'...damit es unsere Kinder besser haben' - Die Einsatzkommandos und die Massenmorde von Garsden," pp. 29-40 (contains excerpts from court judgment).
- Ulm Trial Testimony, 3 July, 1941 at Shtetlinks site for Yurburg
- Shooting of Women and Children (Ulm Trial, Tilsit), in Yizkor Book for Yurburg at the JewishGen Yizkor site
- Erich Haberer, "History and Justice: Paradigms of the Prosecution of Nazi Crimes," Holocaust and Genocide Studies, V19N3, Winter 2005, pp. 487-519. [Abstract]
- Ulmer Einsatgruppen-Prozess at Wikipedia (in German)
- Excerpts from Ulm Judgment at article about Werner Hersmann at Wikipeida
- Photo of defendants at Ulm at website for City of Ulm. Click here for larger view of photo.
- Recent discovery of audio tapes from Ulm trial at website for Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg (in German)
- Information about the trials at Spiegel Online. Includes audio of court's announcement of judgment and sentence (in German)
IV. Killing of the Jewish Men of Gargzdai
The Court in Ulm entered a lengthy
Judgment which is a major source of information about the Gargzdai
killings. This Judgment was published in Justiz und NS-Verbrechen, Vol. XV, University Press Amsterdam (1976), and in KZ-Verbrechen vor deutschen Gerichten, Band II: Einsatzkommando Tilsit - Der Prozess zu Ulm, (Frankfurt am Mein: Europaïsche Verlagsanstalt, 1966). The judgment is summarized in the Gorzd Yizkor Book, pages 75-79 [Image 426]. Further information about the killings is contained on page 38 of the Gorzd Yizkor Book [Image 463].
Two letters about the killings are posted at the JewishGen Yizkor Book Project. One is a letter in the Gorzd Yizkor Book from Leyb Shoys
(or Leibke Shauss), dated February 5, 1945, page 342-344 [Yiddish
section]. Shoys had returned to Gargzdai, collected information from
town residents, and wrote this report to his brother in South Africa
about the killings. A similar letter from Shoys to his uncle Khaim
Shoys in America is set forth in the book Lite, as the Chapter titled "The Destruction of Gorzd". Lite
gives the name only of the uncle who received the letter and not the
nephew who wrote it, but the Gorzd Yizkor Book, page 38, identifies the
author as Liebke Shauss.
Further details are contained in the Gorzd Chapter in Pinkas Hakehillot Lita, also posted at the JewishGen Yizkor Book Project.
In the Court Judgment, the following facts are reported:
At the time of the attack, Gargzdai had a population
of around 3000, of which 600-700 were Jews. This included Jewish
refugees who had come from Klaipeda/Memel after Germany annexed the
Memel Territory in 1939.
Germany attacked at 3:05 AM on June 22, 1941.
There was heavy resistance by the Soviet army, and the town was not
secured until the afternoon of June 22. During the fighting, most
of the civilians hid in a cellar, and much of the town was burned.
The Gestapo and SD (Security Service) from Tilsit
began to round up the Jewish men, as well as suspected Communists, for
execution. They were held overnight in the park. The males
were forced to work on defense trenches, an old rabbi was abused, and a
Jewish boy was shot for allegedly not working hard enough.
On June 24, the men were led to a trench. They were
shot by a firing squad consisting of 20 persons, including the Tilsit
personnel as well as police from Memel. Some of the victims who
were refugees from Memel knew their executioners among the Memel
police. The total number executed on that day was 201 persons.
The Shoys letters add some additional details. The
men were going to be shot on an earlier day, but a messenger arrived
and ordered the shooting to be delayed. The men were kept without food
or water until the 24th. The shootings took place near a house
belonging to David Wolfowitz, at around 1:00 PM.
The Gorzd Yizkor Book
[Image 463] states that the killings took place in a field at the end
of Tamozhne St. A town diagram in the book [Image 13] shows this
name for the main street leading west to the old border and Laugallen.
("Tamozhnya" is the Russian word for "Customs.") The Report of
Staatspolizei Tilsit states that the 201 persons killed on June 24,
1941 included one woman. The persons committing the shooting were
selected by the police director in Memel, and consisted of 30 men with
one police officer.
- Y. Alperovitz, Ed., Sefer Gorzd (Tel Aviv: Gorzd Society of Israel, 1980), NYPL: *PXV (Gargzdai) 88-463. This book is posted online by the New York Public Library. On-line translation underway at JewishGen Yizkor Book Project. Includes letter from Leyb Shoys, dated February 5, 1945, page 342-344 [Yiddish section]. The JewishGen Yizkor site lists libraries where this book may be viewed; in addition, it may be available at public libraries by interlibrary loan.
- Letter to Khaim Shoys from his nephew, "The Destruction of Gorzd," Sudarsky et. al, eds., Lite
(New York: Jewish-Lithuanian Cultural Society - "Lite", Inc., 1951), p.
1867, translated as part of JewishGen Yizkor Book Project
- D. Levin and Y. Rosin, Eds., Pinkas Hakehillot Lita (Jerusalem: 1996), p. 187, translated as part of the JewishGen Yizkor Book Project.
- The Klevan list of Lithuanian towns and their Jewish Population, at the LitvakSIG site on JewishGen, states that the pre-war Jewish population of Gargzdai was 1049.
- The Yahrzheit Dates
page compiled by Litvak SIG [Special Interest Group] on JewishGen lists
the date of the first killings for Gorzhd as June 24, 1941; 29 Sivan,
5701.
- Report from Staatspolizei Tilsit to RSHA, July 1, 1941 (translation and photocopy)
- Joachim Tauber, "Garsden, 24. Juni 1941," 5 Annaberger Annalen 117 (1997) (in German)
- Jürgen Matthäus, "Operation Barbarossa and the Onset of the Holocaust," in Christopher Browning, The
Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939 - March, 1942 (Lincoln, Neb. and Jerusalem: University of Nebraska Press and Yad Vashem, 2004), pp. 253-255.
- Jürgen Matthäus, "Controlled Escalation: Himmler's Men in the Summer of 1941 and the Holocaust in the Occupied Soviet Territories," Holocaust and Genocide Studies 21, no. 2 (Fall 2007), 218-242.
- Excerpts from Ulm Judgment at article about Werner Hersmann at Wikipeida (in German)
- Rabbi Ephraim Oshry, The Annihilation of Lithuanian Jewry (Brooklyn: The Judaica Press, Inc., 1995), pp. 194-196.
- Clickable Map of Killing Sites at
Holocaust Education. Click on "Gargzdai" and then "Pictures: 1" for view of monument at Men's Killing Site.
- For photo of Leibke Shauss (Leibe Shaus), see Esperanto Class.
V. Killing of the Jewish Women and Children
The women and
children of Gargzdai were initially rounded up at the same time as the
men. After the men were killed, the women and children were kept
prisoner for several months. The Gorzd Memorial book and the
Shoys letters say they were kept in the village of Anelishke and forced
to perform hard labor. Then, during September of 1941, they were
taken to the woods northeast of Vezaiciai, on the road to Kule
(Kuliai). The Gorzd Book says the children were killed by the Germans
with bayonets, and their mothers and grandmothers killed two days
later.
The Court Judgment points to statements that women
and children from Garsden were killed by "betrunkene litauische
Hilfspolizisten" (drunken Lithuanian auxiliary police) in
August/September 1941, but further states the Court could not determine
if Gestapo personnel were involved. The Court concluded that a
minimum of 100 were killed.
The monument at one of the women's killing sites
states that the killing occurred in October, 1941, and 300 were killed.
Yosif Levinson, Skausmo Knyga - The Book of Sorrow
(Vilnius: Vaga Publishers, 1997), page 110. However, the monuments are
not necessarily accurate sources of information as to dates. The
monument at the men's site in Gargzdai has a clearly erroneous date of
July, 1941 despite the known date of June 24. Pinkas Hakehillot Lita gives the dates of the women's killings as September 14 and 16, and states that about 300 were killed.
There was one survivor of the women's shooting,
Rachel (or Eyne) Yami, who provided chilling detail to Leib Shoys which
is set forth in his letters.
- Letter to Khaim Shoys from his nephew, "The Destruction of Gorzd," Lite, p. 1867, JewishGen Yizkor Book Project
- Y. Alperovitz, Ed., Sefer Gorzd (Tel Aviv: Gorzd Society of Israel, 1980), NYPL: *PXV (Gargzdai) 88-463; letter from Leib Shoys, dated February 5, 1945, page 342-344 [Yiddish section]
- Pinkas Hakehillot Lita, p. 187, translated as part of the JewishGen Yizkor Book Project
- Rabbi Ephraim Oshry, The Annihilation of Lithuanian Jewry (Brooklyn: The Judaica Press, Inc., 1995), pp. 194-196.
- The Yahrzheit Dates
page compiled by Litvak SIG [Special Interest Group] on JewishGen lists
the date of the second killings for Gorzhd as September 14, 1941; 22
Elul, 5701.
- Sudare Saliamonas Vaintraubas, Garažas, Vilnius (2002), ISBN 9955-9317-1-X, p. 20 (in Lithuanian).
- Clickable Map of Killing Sites at
Holocaust Education. Click on "Vezaiciai" and then "Pictures: 1, 2, 3" for view of monuments at Killing Sites.
- The killing of the women and children of Gargzdai is not set
forth in the Jäger Report. Jewish women and children in other
Lithuanian towns were killed in the same mid-September time frame. See
the ShtetLinks sites for Kybartai (Kibart) (September 11, 1941);
Virbalis (Verzhbelov) (September 11, 1941); Salant (Salantai) (September 12, 1941);
Sakiai (Shaki) (September 13, 1941);
Skaudvile (Shkudvil) (September 15, 1941);
Naishtot (Kudirkos-Naumiestis) (September 16, 1941);
and Tavrig (Taurage) (September 16, 1941).
These killings are also not included in the Jäger Report.
- A Lithuanian map from 1938 (Klaipeda - Gargzdai 1:100,000)
shows Anieliske between Gargzdai and Vezaiciai, and lists its alternate
name as "Kalniskiai." It's shown on the map below as "Anielin."
Modern detailed Lithuanian maps show this location as "Kalniske."
- For information concering the role of the Lithuanian auxiliary police in the mass killings during this time period,
see:
-
Michael MacQueen, "The Context of Mass Destruction: Agents and Prerequisites of the Holocuast in Lithuania," Holocaust and Genocide Studies, V12 N1, Spring 1998, pp. 27-48
- MacQueen, "Lithuanian Collaboration in the Final Solution: Motivations and Case Studies,"
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies (2005)
- "Lithuanian Security Police" (at Wikipedia)
- Arunas Bubnys, "Die litauischen Hilfspolizeibataillone und der Holocaust," in V. Bartusevicius, J. Tauber and W. Wette, eds., Holocaust in Litauen (Cologne: Böhlau Verlag, 2003), p. 117.
Article in Lithuanian, with English summary available at the site of the Museum of Genocide Victims.
- B. Baranauskas and K. Ruksenas, compilers; E. Rozaskas, Ed.; and V. Grodzenskis, English Ed.; Documents Accuse,
Gintaras Vilnius (1970). See especially Doc. 99, p. 223,
reporting that Jews in Sakiai and Kudirkos Naumiestis were "finally
dealt with" on September 13, 1941 and Sept. 16, 1941 respectively, "by
the local partisans with the help of the auxiliary police." Another
translation of the letter is set forth in
in Joseph Levinson, The Shoah (Holocaust) in Lithuania,Vilnius: The Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum (2006), ISBN 5-415-01902-2, p. 213.
Karte des Deutschen Reiches (1921-1929)


Scale in Meters (1000m = .62 miles)
- Red squares indicate (from left): 1) Men's Killing Site; 2)
Anieliske/Anielin/Kalniskiai, where the women and children were held
prisoner between June and September, 1941; and 3) the Vezaitines Forest
(northeast of Vezaiciai, shown here as "Wiezajcie"), where the women
and children were killed in September, 1941.


VI. Orders to Einsatzkommando Tilsit
The men's killing in Gargzdai is
particularly important to historians of the Holocaust because it was
the first in the Soviet Union. The source, timing and content of
orders to Böhme concerning the first killings are the subjects of
controversy.
- Review by Alfred Streim, "The Tasks of the SS Einsatzgruppen," Simon Wiesenthal Center Annual, Issue 4 [If link is unavailable, check here for archived version at web.archive.org]
- Response by Professor Helmut Krausnick, Simon Wiesenthal Center Annual, Issue 6 [If link is unavailable, check here for archived version at web.archive.org]
- Reply by Streim, Simon Wiesenthal Center Annual, Issue 6 [If link is unavailable, check here for archived version at web.archive.org]
- Jürgen Matthäus, "Assault and Destruction," in W. Reich, Hidden History of the Kovno Ghetto, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, p. 18 (1997).
- Jürgen Matthäus, "Operation Barbarossa and the Onset of the Holocaust," in Christopher Browning, The
Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939 - March, 1942 (Lincoln, Neb. and Jerusalem: University of Nebraska Press and Yad Vashem, 2004).
- Jürgen Matthäus, "Controlled Escalation: Himmler's Men in the Summer of 1941 and the Holocaust in the Occupied Soviet Territories," Holocaust and Genocide Studies 21, no. 2 (Fall 2007), 218-242.
- Konrad Kwiet, "Rehearsing for Murder: The Beginning of the Final Solution in Lithuania in June, 1941," Holocaust and Genocide Studies 12 (1998).
- Christoph Dieckmann, "The War and the Killing of the Lithuanian Jews," in Ulrich Herbert, ed., National Socialist Extermination Policies: Contemporary German Perspectives and Controversies (N.Y. and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2000).
- Jürgen Matthäus, "Key Aspects of German Anti-Jewish Policy," United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies (2005).
- Report from Staatspolizei Tilsit to RSHA, July 1, 1941 (translation and photocopy)
- Gord McFee, "When did Hitler decide on the Final Solution?," at Holocaust History Project
VII. Visiting the Memorials
The Memorial to the Men's killing
is on the west end of Klaipedos gatve (Klaipeda Street), between the
bus station and an apartment complex. A photo of the Men's Monument
is on this website. The monument erroneously dates the killings
in July, 1941, rather than on June 24. Also on this website is a German aerial reconnaissance photo, taken in January, 1945, obtained from the U.S. National Archives, which shows the area of the killing site.
There are two Monuments to the killing of the women
and children. Both are in the Vezaitines Forest, northeast of
Vezaiciai, on Road 166 leading to Kuliai. The location of
Vezaiciai and Road 166 to Kuliai may be seen at the Mapquest link on
the Gargzdai
main page. As of August, 2001, there were separate marked entrances off
the east side of Road 166 leading to the two sites. The more
northeasterly site is easily located, because there is a direct road
from 166 to the site. The more southwesterly site cannot be
located without a knowledgeable guide, or assistance from personnel in
the Town Hall of Vezaiciai. Finding the site requires the correct
choice at two unmarked forks in the unpaved road, and then parking at a
further unmarked spot to walk on a path through the woods. Photos of the Women's Monuments are on this website.
VIII. The Kovno Ghetto
A number of
residents or former residents of Gargzdai who were elsewhere in
Lithuania at the time of the invasion were imprisoned in the Kovno
Ghetto. Many died there due to illness caused by intolerable
living conditions, or were killed in various "Actions" during which
residents were selected for execution.
Executions took place at the old forts ringed around Kovno: at Fourth
Fort, Seventh Fort and Ninth Fort. The ghetto was liquidated in 1944,
with the residents transported to Dachau and Stutthof Concentration
Camps. Some in the Ghetto tried to hide in underground bunkers,
but most of the hidden persons died when the Nazis set the Ghetto on
fire.
Gorzd Yizkor Book, page 351
(Hebrew Section), posted at the JewishGen Yizkor Book Project, contains
a list of Gorzd residents killed in the Kovno Ghetto and in
concentration camps, as well as those who fought in the Lithuanian
Division or fell in battle at the front.
Gargzdai main page
Aerial Photo of Gargzdai | Identification of Features on Aerial Photo | Aerial Photo of Killing Site
Photos, Page 2 (Women's Memorials) | Photos, Page 4 (Men's Memorial)
Copyright © 2002-2008 John S. Jaffer