Dimitravas | Klaipėda

/ A homestead in the village of Tarvydai. ©Kate Kornberg/Yahad - In Unum The ruins of the camp buildings and fence have survived. ©Kate Kornberg/Yahad - In Unum The remains of the main prison building. ©Kate Kornberg/Yahad - In Unum The remains of the isolation ward. ©Kate Kornberg/Yahad - In Unum Antanas P., born in 1935, and his father narrowly escaped the same fate as the Jews confined in the Dimitravas camp. ©Kate Kornberg/Yahad - In Unum When Antanas came to the execution site after it was over, he found three covered mass graves. ©Kate Kornberg/Yahad - In Unum

Execution of Jews in Dimitravas

1 Sitio(s) de ejecución

Tipo de lugar antes:
Hill in the forest
Memoriales:
Yes
Período de ocupación:
1941-1944
Número de víctimas:
510

Entrevista del testigo

Antanas P., born in 1935: “About 600 women and children were brought to the camp from Skuodas. They had to walk 60 kilometers to reach the camp. Anyone who couldn’t continue walking was killed on the way.” (Witness N°87, interviewed in Tarvydai, on October 13, 2014)

Nota histórica

The village known as Tarvydai has existed since the 16th century. In the 19th century, a manor was built in the village and named Dimitravas after its owner, Dmitrij Zubov. There is no archival information confirming that Jews had ever lived there. In 1937-1940, at the time of Lithuania’s independence, a forced labor camp was built in Dimitravas. Political prisoners, mainly communists, were sent there along with criminal offenders. They were employed collecting and breaking up the stones that were later transported by railway to different Lithuanian towns and were used for paving roads and streets. The camp had an administration building, three barracks and a number of workshops. It was surrounded by a barbed wire fence with watchtowers. When the Soviets occupied Lithuania in 1940, they released most of the prisoners and closed the camp, but its operation was resumed by the Germans when the war started in June 1941.

Holocausto por balas en cifras

Soviet officials and activists became the first inmates of the Dimitravas Camp during the German occupation. Later, at the end of July 1941, about 500 Jewish women and children were transferred there from Skuodas, located 40 km away. The inmates arrived, exhausted, after traveling this distance on foot in two days. They were placed in two barracks and stayed there for a couple of weeks. By mid-August, several pits were dug in the nearby forest of Joskaudai, on Alka Hill. The mass execution of Jews started on August 15 and lasted until the next morning. Victims were brought to the pits in groups, undressed, pushed inside the pits and shot. About 40 young Jewish women were left in the camp to do farm work, but they were also shot a month later near Darbėnai, alongside local Jews. In late 1944, Soviet government inspected the execution place at Alka Hill and found four pits containing the bodies of 385 women, 94 adolescents and 31 children (510 victims in total). The children’s bodies had no bullet wounds.

Holocaust Atlas of Lithuania

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