In 1941, in a gorge called Niangzi Valley in Kiev, Soviet Ukraine, there were dead bodies everywhere, and a big ** had just happened here.
On September 26, 1941, after the fascist German occupation of Kyiv, Ukraine, the German army quickly issued the following order to the city: All Jews in and around Kyiv must assemble at 8 a.m. on Melnik Street on Monday, September 29, with papers, money, valuables, and warm clothing, saying that they would be relocated outside the city. Any Jews who do not obey this order and are found elsewhere will be shot.
But in fact those who gathered were led along Melnik Street to a small ravine called Babi Yar. The Jews were forced to hand over their valuables, strip off their clothes, and enter the canyon in small groups. German detachments and Soviet servicemen who had defected to the Germans opened fire on them. **Lasted two days, about 340,000 Jews were killed in this incident, including not only men, but also women and children. In the months that followed, thousands more Jews were shot dead in the Valley of Niangzi. Many non-Jews, including Roma (Gypsies) and Soviet prisoners of war, were also killed in the gorge.
This group of veterans was photographed by German war photographer Johannes Hale from the 637th Propaganda Company of the 6th Army of the Wehrmacht, on October 1, 1941.
Soviet prisoners of war covered the dead with sand under the supervision of German SS soldiers.
These ** filmed by the German fascists were originally used for propaganda purposes, but now they have become evidence of their **Jews.