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Murder Story of Klintsy Jews at the Former Nogin Factory

Murder Site
Former Nogin Factory
Russia (USSR)
On December 6-7, 1941 about 3,000 Jewish inmates of the ghetto in Klintsy were shot by members of Einsatzgruppe 8. According to some sources the murder site was in the area of a former factory named after Nogin.

In mid-March 1942 from 150 to 300 surviving Jewish specialists, as well as people who had been held in the Klintsy prison, were brought by truck to the same site. After they were forced to undress and their valuables were taken, they were shot to death by Einsatzgruppe 7a. Together with these Jews at least 30 Gypsies were killed.

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From the testimony of Mendel (Mikhail) Sanovich, who was born in Klintsy in 1927:
On December 6, 1941, early in the morning, his elder brother Misha (17 years old) ran outside and immediately returned shouting: "Hurry up!" Indeed the police pushed everyone toward the end of the village. No sooner had they [the Jews] managed to get dressed than the police rushed into the house with clubs. They forced everyone outside. Mikhail remembers that one of them beat his mother on the head. He did not see any Germans. About 11 o'clock in the morning the Jews who had been previously taken to the edge [of town] were forced into nearby barns. Mendel did not see Germans, only [local] policemen.… Mikhail heard machine gun fire outside of town, [near the cloth factory named after Nogin]. It was getting dark. The police did not allow him to come closer (apparently the location was surrounded). Later that day Mikhail learned what had happened: he heard people talking. Ditches had been dug behind the cloth factory. The Jews from the Bannyi area had been taken there. Then they were forced to undress and shot from machineguns. The trenches were still being guarded the following day.
YVA O.33 / 5925
Former Nogin Factory
Murder Site
Russia (USSR)
52.758;32.256
Mikhail Leibov was born in Starodub in 1923 and stayed for some period in Klintsy during the occupation.
USC SHOAH FOUNDATION, 39303 copy YVA O.93 / 39303