Tatarka common graves | |
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Location | Tatarka , near Odesa |
Coordinates | 46°25′29″N 30°36′54″E / 46.42472°N 30.61500°E |
Victims | between 3,500 and 5,000 |
The Tatarka common graves were mass graves discovered in April–August 1943, during World War II, by Axis-allied Romanian troops occupying Transnistria, on a lot of 1,000 m2 (11,000 sq ft) in Tatarka, now Prylymanske , in Odesa Raion, near Odesa. Some 42 separate common graves of several dozen bodies each were identified, containing between 3,500 and 5,000 bodies, of which 516 were exhumed, studied, and buried in a cemetery before the region became a front line. The commission set up by the Romanian authorities to investigate these graves reported that among the dead were persons arrested in the Moldavian ASSR in 1938–1940 and in Bessarabia and northern Bukovina in 1940–1941.[1][2]: 262 [3]: 46–47 [4]: 252
Excavation of the Tatarka site was resumed in 2021. After the discovery of new documents from the Romanian archives by an Odesa-based historian, Oleksandr Babich, further 29 mass graves were found.[5] The graves contain the remains of between 5,000 and 8,000 people executed by the NKVD.[6]