Gaj massacre

Coordinates: 50°50′53″N 24°19′20″E / 50.84806°N 24.32222°E / 50.84806; 24.32222
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Gaj massacre
Ukrainisation

Gaj massacre was a wartime massacre of the Polish population of Gaj, committed on 30 August 1943 by the

Wołyń Voivodeship in the Second Polish Republic (now, part of the Kovel Raion, south-east of Kovel, Ukraine).[3]

Account of the massacre

Exhumation of the OUN-UPA victims in Gaj, 2013 [4]

One day before the massacre, on 29 August 1943, the same UPA unit led by Telemon Majdaniec murdered 40 Poles in the Polish town of Mielnica,[2] and in the night relocated to the Ukrainian village of Janówka where a large group of peasants was assembled for the raid on Gaj.[2] They entered the colony at dawn, when many Poles were still sleeping.[2]

The Ukrainian sotnia led by "Wowka" (Wolf) rounded up the Poles and escorted them to the school building. Many Poles were killed directly on their farms and along the road, or in the bushes while trying to escape.[2][5] Most victims were murdered in the school building, with automatic weapons and farm tools; their bodies thrown into the adjacent ditch. About 600 Poles (200 identified by name)[4] were killed in total, and 150 farms were robbed and scorched afterwards, along with the Catholic church.[2][4][6] A few days after the massacre, the Polish self-defence unit arrived at the Gaj colony from nearby Rożyszcze. The Poles were shocked by what they saw. The ditches and cellars were filled with dead bodies. In their vicinity lied the murder weapons: axes, pitchforks, hoes, saws and bars covered in blood. The self-defence identified and executed several Ukrainian collaborators and burned several Ukrainian houses. They then evacuated the few surviving Poles to Rożyszcze. In 2013 a group of archaeologists discovered one of the mass graves in the no longer existing village. They found the remains of 80 people, most of them were children. Other mass graves have already been destroyed in postwar years including during the construction of the local landfill.[4][6]

See also

Budy Ossowskie massacre also in powiat kowelski

References

  1. ^ Wołyń naszych przodków (2016). "Map of Powiat kowelski showing hundreds of locations of massacres of Poles (including the Gaj colony)". NaWolyniu.pl.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Bogusław Szarwiło (15 August 2011). "Piekło w Gaju" [A hell at the Gaj colony] (PDF). Kresowy Serwis Informacyjny. No. 3. pp. 13–14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 October 2011. Retrieved 2 December 2016. Na Gaj napadli o świcie, kiedy większość spała, lub krzątała się w gospodarstwach. Spędzono wszystkich do szkoły, gdzie wymordowano przy użyciu broni palnej lub ostrymi narzędziami. Ciała zrzucono do rowu strzeleckiego znajdującego się obok szkoły, wypełniając go do wysokości 1m. Część osób zamordowano w ich własnych obejściach, na drodze, w polu lub w krzakach – dogonionych na trasie ucieczki. Jeszcze inni zginęli w wykrytych schronach w wyniku wybuchów granatów wrzuconych do środka przez upowców. Po tym zrabowano gospodarstwa i spalono kolonię.
  3. ^ Strony o Wołyniu (October 2008). "Kolonia GAJ, gmina Wielick, powiat Kowel, woj. wołyńskie". Wolyn.ovh.org. Archived from the original on 2016-12-03. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
  4. ^ a b c d Soroka (7 October 2013). "80 kolejnych ofiar UPA odnalezionych. Większość to dzieci…" [80 more victims unearthed. Most of them were children…]. Kresy.pl. Archived from the original on 2013-10-09. W nieistniejącej już wsi Stary Gaj ekipa polskich archeologów odkryła zbiorową mogiłę 80 osób. Większość odnalezionych ciał to szczątki dzieci. Mieszkańcy okolicznych wiosek przy mogile urządzili sobie śmietnik.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  5. , p. 132.
  6. ^ a b "Pogrzeb 79 ofiar rzezi wołyńskiej" [Burial of the 79 victims of the Vohynian slaughter]. Fakty. Interla.pl. 19 October 2013.