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if(window.location.pathname.indexOf(“656089”) != -1){console.log(“hedva connatix”);document.getElementsByClassName(“divConnatix”)[0].style.display =”none”;}The website notes Ivanovich’s burial place in Minneapolis, and his service in the Ukrainian army during the short-lived independent Ukrainian People’s Republic from 1917 to 1921. But it does not mention the atrocities his unit was involved in during the war.Another figure commemorated by the virtual necropolis project is Ivan Omelianovycha-Pavlenko, commander of the 109th Schutzmannschaft Battalion, which is also thought to have been involved in the massacre of Jews in Ukraine.His webpage location is given as Chicago, although little else is mentioned.According to Per Rudling, a Swedish historian and expert on Ukrainian nationalism and the role of Ukrainian nationalists in the Holocaust, the Schutzmannschaft units were staffed by volunteers and were heavily involved in the Holocaust.Rudling says that Nazi forces were often unable to identify and locate Jewish populations, and that the Schutzmannschaft, as well as carrying out police functions, were “the foot soldiers of pacification in occupied areas and tracked down Jews and cordoning off their areas,” allowing Nazi Einsatzgruppen units to carry out their massacres. “The Schutzmannschaft were primarily a police force in the heartland of the Holocaust, but were at the heart of implementing the violence and terror that took place during the occupation,” says Rudling.Two other prominent yet highly controversial Ukrainian figures memorialized on the project are Stepan Bandera and Symon Petliura, who were also responsible for massacring thousands of Jews.Dr. Efraim Zuroff, director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Israel office, said the inclusion of such figures was part of an effort by eastern European countries to “glorify figures who are considered heroes because they fought for independence,” but who “should be disqualified for such honor because they murdered people, primarily Jews.”Pavlo Podobed, coordinator of the Virtual Necropolis project, noted in response that both Ivanovich and Omelianovycha-Pavlenko moved to the US and were naturalized there.“Neither Kost Smovsky nor Ivan Omelianovycha-Pavlenko were found guilty of war crimes by the US court in the manner prescribed by law,” said Podobed. “None of them was subject to the procedure of deprivation of American citizenship or extradition to the USSR or the State of Israel, although such a practice of war criminals existed and was used in the postwar period.”He added that according to the records of the Sectoral State Archive of the Security Service of Ukraine – which stores archival and criminal cases against those who served in the auxiliary police and other German formations during the Nazi occupation of Ukraine – the Soviet investigative and punitive-repressive bodies did not record the involvement of Ivanovich or Omelianovycha-Pavlenko in war crimes committed in Ukraine or Belarus.“Regarding the involvement of Stepan Bandera or the OUN (B) in the pogrom in Lvov, as well as the responsibility of Chief Ataman of the Troops and the Navy of the UPR Simon Petliura in the Jewish pogroms in Ukraine, there is a large body of academic texts and archival materials refuting these manipulative theses,” Podobed said.
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