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  1. Vinnytsia massacre. The Vinnytsia massacre was the mass execution of between 9,000 and 11,000 people in the Ukrainian town of Vinnytsia by the Soviet secret police NKVD during the Great Purge in 1937–1938, which Nazi Germany discovered during its occupation of Ukraine in 1943. [3] The investigation of the site first conducted by the ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VinnytsiaVinnytsia - Wikipedia

    During the Soviet Union, "Niva" from Vinnytsia was on good terms, not among the best, but it showed decent results against the background of other clubs of the Ukrainian SSR. Vinnytsia won the championship of the republic twice, in 1964 and 1984, and in 1972 and 1973 Lokomotiv even won the Cup of Ukraine. On 2 January 2021, Niva player Artur ...

  3. Mar 21, 2002 · regional center of Vinnitsa Oblast (district), Ukrainian SSR. Jews had been living in Vinnitsa since the sixteenth century; on the eve of World War II, the Jewish population was approximately 25,000, out of a total of 92,868. In the first few days after the German invasion of the Soviet Union, in June 1941, 17,500 of the city's Jews managed to ...

  4. At the end of World War I in 1918, Ukraine was invaded by Soviet Russia as the Russian puppet government of the Ukrainian SSR and without official declaration it ignited the Ukrainian–Soviet War. Government of the Ukrainian SSR from very start was managed by the Communist Party of Ukraine that was created in Moscow and was originally formed out of the Bolshevik organisational centers in Ukraine.

  5. Very few survived until Vinnitsa was liberated in March 1944. Members of the Reicharbeitsdienst (Reich Labor Service) and the SS watch as an SS man shoots a Jew in Vinnitsa, Ukraine, in July 1941, on the edge of a killing pit. In the initial months of the occupation, thousands of Jews from Vinnitsa were murdered.

  6. Vinnitsa. Vinnytsya Cathedral (background), Vinnytsya, Ukraine. Vinnytsya, city, west-central Ukraine, lying along the Southern Buh river. It was first mentioned in historical records in 1363 as a fortress belonging to Prince Algirdas of Lithuania. Vinnytsya was often raided by the Tatars and passed later to Poland and finally, in 1793, to Russia.

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  8. Jul 16, 2022 · Vinnytsia was hit by Russian missiles on Thursday, July 1. The videos of the attack show a scene that has become a recurring feature of the nearly five-month-long of the war: thick black smoke in ...

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