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  1. Zmievskaya Balka (Russian: Змиёвская балка, IPA: [zmʲɪˈjɵfskəjə ˈbaɫkə]), Zmiyovskaya Balka is a site in Rostov-on-Don, Russia at which 27,000 Jews and Soviet civilians were massacred in 1942 to 1943 by the SS Einsatzgruppe D during the Holocaust in Russia.

  2. Mar 21, 2021 · Natalia Yefimushkina looks out on Zmievskaya Balka, or the Ravine of Snakes, in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, where her grandparents were among the 27,000 predominantly Jewish people killed by the...

  3. Feb 12, 2019 · The Nazis executed an estimated 27,000 Jews, prisoners of war and others in Rostov-on-Don during their occupation, mowing down most of them in unmarked graves in an area in the western outskirts of town called Zmievskaya Balka (Snake Ravine) in August 1942.

  4. Aug 2, 2017 · MOSCOW - The Russian Jewish Congress will hold a March of the Living symbolic funeral procession on Friday in Zmievskaya Balka (Rostov-on-Don) to mark the 75th anniversary of the August 1942 extermination of the town’s Jewish population at the hand of the Nazis and their accomplices.

  5. What is considered to have been the largest extermination of Jews on the territory of Russia, is, sadly, the worst documented one. The exact date of Sabina’s murder is not known, but the first massacres in Zmievskaya Balka began in August 11-14, 1942. The site of Sabina’s death has become a scene of a recent controversy.

  6. May 31, 2010 · (lubavitch.com) The Jewish community of Rostov working in partnership with the city’s Chabad Rabbi, Chaim Danzinger have launched a project to establish a permanent memorial to 27,000 Jews and civilians murdered at Zmievskaya Balka 68 years ago.

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  8. Zmievskaya Balka is the largest burial spot of Holocaust victims in present-day Russia. In 1942, German invaders shot down or murdered in other ways nearly 27,000 people living in Rostov, mainly Jews.