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is a kike. We know her…", so the German officer told her to stand to one side and was then ordered to strip and walk onto a precipice. According to a different version of her testimony given under the name Dina
Wasserman, she was registered in her passport as being Russian. Another account states that she was registered as being of Jewish ethnicity. In her testimony to Soviet historians, Pronicheva said that she had thrown away her identity card before reaching the area and was told not to strip as it was late in the day and the Germans were tired. At the 1946 war crimes trial, Pronicheva testifies that she threw away her passport, then showed a policeman her trade union card and employment record which did not list her Jewish nationality and told him she was Ukrainian, and she was then taken to one side and told not to strip as it was getting late.
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produced records that differ in substance and, especially, style. Most of the texts fail to meet the standards of contemporary oral history interviews." Pronicheva later stated in West
Germany that she never wrote her testimony down herself. Berkhoff also states that "it looks as if she may have given in to pretrial pressure from the Kiev tribunal prosecution to say certain things". Berkhoff recommends using the Soviet Union historian testimony version. The Soviet Union historian testimony version includes an account of Pronicheva's vivid
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263:, truncheons and heavy sticks beating people as they passed, including Pronicheva. According to Pronicheva's written testimony to Soviet historians, Pronicheva then looked at naked people walking towards being executed on a path below her and saw her mother, who shouted at her to leave as she did not look like a Jew. According to a different version of her testimony, Pronicheva was with her mother and they embraced while her mother told her she was Russian and should go.
250:, "hunting for Jews began. Germans were going from flat to flat at night, searching for Jews. I was living with my mother-in-law. She was a pious woman, and icons were hanging on the walls, and when Germans came she pointed to the icons to indicate that we were Russians, and they did not bother me." After the fires, she says that there were "rumours in the city that all the fires were occurring because of Jews who had remained here and had not been evacuated."
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to work as a German translator in
Rokytne, but was thought to be a Jew and persecuted, so she left. She worked in the theater. In the summer of 1943, Pronicheva and the Shevchenko Theatre arrived in Ruzhyn, where 38 Jews lived in a ghetto and worked as tailors. She fed them secretly, but she witnessed all apart from three being executed. She continued to work in the theater until the arrival of the
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Soviet forces and left for the front and she left her children with her husband. At the Jewish cemetery location, Pronicheva saw
Germans and Ukrainians guarding anti-tank obstructions, letting people in but not out. Germans took her relatives' belongings and separated them from her. She saw Germans with
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Pronicheva testified at the trial that at
Lukianivka prison a policeman named Mitia freed her, revealed himself to be a partisan and left her near the Kalinin hospital. She then left for Bila Tserkva, where she stayed with an acquaintance of her husband who thought she was Russian. She then attempted
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Pronicheva testifies that again on 23 February 1942 the
Gestapo came to take her away, but she hid in the attic and they did not find her, then she ran into the forest. At the Darnytsia bridge she did not have to show a pass, as she used a letter about her needing to attend hospital. She then stayed
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Pronicheva testifies that a German officer told the group waiting that they would all be shot so there were no witnesses, but they were not undressed. After walking onto a ledge where people were machine gunned, she jumped off the cliff but felt no pain landing despite blood pouring from her face. A
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on her trade union card and told her “Sit down and wait until evening. We’ll let you go after we’ve shot all the Jews.” According to a second written testimony, she showed her passport to a fat officer at a desk and told him she was
Russian, but a policeman ran over and said "Don't believe her, she
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Dina
Pronicheva returned to Babi Yar every year after the war, and appears to have addressed a crowd there on the 25th anniversary of the massacre. In 1967, during their preparations for a trial of former members of Sonderkommando 4a, officials in the West German city of Darmstadt apparently asked
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While waiting, Pronicheva testifies that she saw people being undressed and beaten, turning grey in a matter of minutes, and that she saw infants being separated from their mothers and thrown over a sand wall. Karel C. Berkhoff states that many of the various versions of
Pronicheva's story "state
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According to
Pronicheva's nephew Mikhail, after escaping from Babi Yar, when Dina Pronicheva tried to visit her children at her mother-in-law’s, "a cleaner in the block called the police, who took her son Vlodya hostage, threatening to kill him unless Dina handed herself in. When the police then
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Pronicheva then began to be buried alive with sand and started coughing, but moved the sand away with her good right hand which the German had not stepped on and moved away to a wall to hide behind the execution wall with a fourteen year old child she met named Motia, where at dawn she witnessed
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On 28 September 1941, an order signed by the commandant's office was then given for Jews to take warm clothes and assemble at Degtiarev Street the following day at 8:00 a.m. or face execution. Karel C. Berkhoff states that the order was unsigned. Dina Pronicheva's brothers remained with the
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Forming a coherent version of Dina Pronicheva's life is hindered by the multiple contradictory verbal and written testimonies. Karel C. Berkhoff attributes the contradictions in Dina's testimonies to several factors, "Official censorship, self-censorship, and undue artistic or editorial license
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the Prosecutor’s Office in Kiev to question Pronicheva. The result of this deposition was a brief report in Russian, including the questions posed to her, dated February 9, 1967. This version incorrectly states that it is based on testimony given at a war crimes trial in 1945 rather than 1946.
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In the written testimony, she states that after leaving the ravine she then found a cottage, where the son of the inhabitant brought a German officer to her, telling the German she was a Jew. She then carried out household work for several German officers until being placed in a vehicle with
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policeman or German then tripped over her, causing her to turn over. He then shone a torch on her face but did not see blood on her body. She was then picked up, beaten and thrown down, her chest and left hand were stood on, but played dead and the Germans walked away.
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When the boy she was with walked ahead of her, he was shot by the Germans. In a different written testimony given under the name Dina Wasserman, she testifies that the boy told her that he was eleven years old and named Fima Schneidermann.
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that the hair of some victims at Babi Yar turned white (or gray) before Pronicheva’s eyes. While such phenomena have been mentioned in many other times and places, rapid whitening of scalp hair in extreme situations is impossible."
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Pronicheva was the only survivor of the massacre to testify afterwards at the 24 January 1946 Kiev-based war-crimes trial. Based on one of the at least 12 versions of her testimony and other evidence at a trial supervised by the
303:, seeing her family in front of her in white robes. The account of her vivid hallucinations are not present in all versions of her testimony. After hallucinating and collapsing, she is then woken up by the boy.
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According to Pronicheva's testimony to Soviet historians, she then told a Ukrainian policeman that she was a Ukrainian, not a Jew, and was there by mistake. The policeman believed her due to the Russian
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of the Soviet Union to work in the communications branch. She was then transferred as a typist of the 37th Army. On 17 September 1941 she was told to stay behind enemy lines while the Army retreated.
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while at Babi Yar, seeing people who were not there. Most versions of her testimony are given under the name Dina Pronicheva, but another is given under the name Dina Wasserman or Vasserman.
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Pronicheva testifies that she was later betrayed, but policeman and Gestapo who came for her were told that she had a heart condition and was possibly not a Jew as her papers were in order.
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prisoners of war, which she jumped out of with another prisoner Liuba. The residence they moved to was then raided by police, but Pronicheva hid under pillows and was not found.
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on 7 January 1911 and was of Jewish ethnicity. She completed theatrical and military communications school. In 1941 she was working at a puppet theatre, then joined the
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1165:. Ray Brandon, Wendy Lower, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 2008. pp. 294–295, 299, 315.
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with several people and spent nights in attics, cellars, lavatories and ruins until she was picked up in the street and taken to hospital.
930:"B09 Babi Yar Survivor Dina Pronicheva describes her ordeal to Soviet Historians, 24 April 1946 | ehri online course in holocaust studies"
906:"B09 Babi Yar Survivor Dina Pronicheva describes her ordeal to Soviet Historians, 24 April 1946 | ehri online course in holocaust studies"
827:"B09 Babi Yar Survivor Dina Pronicheva describes her ordeal to Soviet Historians, 24 April 1946 | ehri online course in holocaust studies"
778:"B09 Babi Yar Survivor Dina Pronicheva describes her ordeal to Soviet Historians, 24 April 1946 | ehri online course in holocaust studies"
709:"B09 Babi Yar Survivor Dina Pronicheva describes her ordeal to Soviet Historians, 24 April 1946 | ehri online course in holocaust studies"
605:"B09 Babi Yar Survivor Dina Pronicheva describes her ordeal to Soviet Historians, 24 April 1946 | ehri online course in holocaust studies"
573:"B09 Babi Yar Survivor Dina Pronicheva describes her ordeal to Soviet Historians, 24 April 1946 | ehri online course in holocaust studies"
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1078:. Rainer A. Blasius, Gerd R. Ueberschär (Originalausg ed.). Frankfurt a.M.: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag. 1999. pp. 246f, 257.
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1026:. Ray Brandon, Wendy Lower, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 2008. pp. 295–296.
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35:
Pronicheva on the witness stand at a Kyiv war-crimes trial of fifteen members of the German police responsible for the occupied
858:. Ray Brandon, Wendy Lower, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 2008. p. 310.
633:. Ray Brandon, Wendy Lower, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 2008. p. 291.
488:. Ray Brandon, Wendy Lower, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 2008. p. 294.
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saved Pronicheva by claiming she worked for him and so moved them to a former army barracks where she worked for the Germans.
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Der Nationalsozialismus vor Gericht : die alliierten Prozesse gegen Kriegsverbrecher und Soldaten 1943-1952
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After leaving hospital she went to Shuliavka, where she was identified and captured. She was then held in
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Germans raping and murdering Jewish women and killing a child and an old woman. She then began vividly
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According to her written testimony to a 1946 trial of 15 accused Germans, Dina Pronicheva was born in
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Pronicheva was one of the very few survivors of the massacre. At least 28 other survivors are known.
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Testimony of Dina Pronicheva about the Annihilation of the Jews in Babi Yar on September 29-30, 1941
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955:"Babyn Yar Massacre 80 years on: 'I played dead as an SS man trod on my chest'"
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of the Soviet Union veteran, and a survivor of the 29–30 September 1941
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The Shoah in Ukraine : history, testimony, memorialization
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The Shoah in Ukraine : history, testimony, memorialization
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The Shoah in Ukraine : history, testimony, memorialization
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The Shoah in Ukraine : history, testimony, memorialization
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The Shoah in Ukraine : history, testimony, memorialization
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368:— a friendly neighbour bribed a policeman to let Vlodya go."
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Pronicheva's story is referenced in D.M. Thomas' 1981 novel
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1214:(1st American ed.). New York, N.Y., U.S.A.: Viking.
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The Shoah in Ukraine: history, testimony, memorialization
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Jewish actress and Babi Yar massacre survivor (1911–1977)
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539:"What Happened at Babi Yar : a Yad Vashem Podcast"
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Later, Germans discovered them, but a companion of the
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United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Photo Archives
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989:http://www.kby.kiev.ua/book1/documents/doc63.html
978:http://www.kby.kiev.ua/book1/documents/doc27.html
391:She later related her horrifying story to writer
311:Second Escape and Work for Nazi German Occupation
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359:Possible Additional Escape from Gas Chamber Van
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330:Third Escape, Hospitalization and Imprisonment
248:fires broke out in Kiev on 24 and 25 September
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242:Germans Hunting for Jews after Fires in Kyiv
1252:Babi Yar: A Document in the Form of a Novel
1211:Memories and hallucinations : a memoir
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432:discusses the usage of Pronicheva's story.
204:who also worked for the German occupation.
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744:. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
806:BABYN YAR. CONTEXT. R13/ DINA PRONICHEVA
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456:. Indiana University Press. p. 12.
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276:Seeing Hair Turn White Before Her Eyes
395:, who incorporated it into his novel
294:First Escape and Vivid Hallucinations
181:; 7 January 1911 – 1977) was a
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364:called for the “soul destroyer” — a
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1133:A Survivor of the Babi Yar Massacre
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237:Experience under German Occupation
208:Multiple Contradictory Testimonies
189:, military communications-trained
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346:Fourth Escape and Theatrical Work
200:of Jews by Nazi German forces in
1376:20th-century Ukrainian actresses
401:, published in censored form in
254:Experience Arriving at Babyn Yar
246:Pronicheva testifies that after
167:Dina (Vera) Mironovna Pronicheva
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23:Dina (Vera) Mironovna Pronicheva
1361:Ukrainian women in World War II
1249:), trans. David Floyd, (1970),
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1121:Анатолій Кузнєцов. «Бабин яр»
738:Holocaust in the Soviet Union
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175:Діна Миронівна Пронічева
141:37th Army (Soviet Union)
39:region (24 January 1946)
1147:March 14, 2008, at the
342:for twenty-eight days.
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1208:Thomas, D. M. (1988).
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428:. Thomas' 1988 memoir
1351:People from Chernihiv
1255:, Jonathan Cape Ltd.
680:"Written Testimonies"
355:on 28 December 1943.
155:Battle of Kyiv (1941)
122:Years of service
62:Chernigov Governorate
1346:Actresses from Kyiv
1326:Holocaust survivors
1048:on 3 February 2023.
880:on 3 February 2023.
766:on 3 February 2023.
510:on 3 February 2023.
187:Kiev Puppet Theatre
1293:2022-03-01 at the
586:on 3 February 2023
549:on 4 February 2023
340:Lukyanivska Prison
1386:Female puppeteers
1356:Soviet puppeteers
1247:Anatoly Kuznetsov
1172:978-0-253-35084-8
1033:978-0-253-35084-8
865:978-0-253-35084-8
809:, 25 January 2021
751:978-0-8032-2270-0
684:www.yadvashem.org
640:978-0-253-35084-8
543:www.yadvashem.org
495:978-0-253-35084-8
463:978-0-253-35084-8
393:Anatoly Kuznetsov
285:Execution Ordered
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436:References
418:In fiction
409:Later life
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405:in 1966.
231:37th Army
227:Chernihiv
221:Biography
191:37th Army
171:Ukrainian
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1381:Babi Yar
1291:Archived
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1277:IMDb
1257:ISBN
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382:NKVD
202:Kyiv
130:Unit
125:1941
78:Kyiv
72:Died
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1275:at
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