During the period from November 1941 to March 1942, the ghetto inmates were shot in small groups. Their exact murder site is unknown. On November 7, 1941, the Germans publicly hanged a young Jewish woman, Basya Malik, who had originally come from Lithuania, and whose husband was serving in the Red Army. On March 8, 1942, the remaining Jews of Opochka, numbering 90-100, were led through the town along the road to the village of Varygino. Other sources indicate that the Jews were taken to the murder site along the road to the village of Maslovo. On the outskirts of the forest (some sources identify it as the forest of the village of Varygino), they were shot and buried in a common grave. Later, in the autumn of 1943, in an attempt to erase all traces of the massacre, a special German Kommando exhumed the grave and burned the bodies of the Jewish victims. The cremation took two days, and the site of the pyre was surrounded by a reinforced guard.
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ChGK Soviet Reports
From the testimony of Anna Makovskaya, who was born in 1913 and lived in Opochka during the war years:
...From the tales of local residents, I know that, sometime around the fall of 1943, the graves of the Jews who had been shot were exhumed, and the bodies were cremated on pyres. Those pyres burned for two days, and throughout that time no one was allowed to approach them, because they were surrounded by a reinforced guard. Prior to March 8, 1942, the Jews had been shot in small groups. The Jews who were shot on March 8 were the last ones, and thus the entire Jewish population of Opochka – including those Jews who had somehow managed to stay alive there – was annihilated.
From the testimony of Yevdokiya Mikhalevskaya, who was born in 1911 and lived in Opochka during the war years:
…Secondly, in March 1942 I saw Jews being led out of Opochka. There were about 90–100 of them, including men, women, and children, as well as infants being carried in their mothers' arms. Along with other residents of Opochka, I followed this crowd. It quickly became apparent that the Jews were being taken away to be shot, and that [they themselves] were aware of this. Some women with children [in their arms] fell down; they were picked up, loaded onto a cart, and driven after the [rest of the] crowd. They were led out of the town along Proletarskaya Street, and then along the road to Varygino. Some 300-400 meters from the town, on the outskirts of the forest, [the killers] began to shoot them with submachine guns. We were not allowed to come close, but we could hear everything: the shooting, the volleys of submachine gun fire, and the cries and screams of the women and children.