I just stumbled across this article. I have not fact checked it. I found it on the "Wayback Machine" so apparently it is otherwise unavailable. I'm no expert in WW II in Ukraine so I can't comment on the article's accuracy.
THE PRAGUE POST
NOT Everything is Illuminated
October 07, 2004
Everything Is Illuminated distorts
history by omitting crucial facts, including an important link to the Czech
Republic
By Ivan Katchanovski
As the recent controversy about The Passion of the Christ and the election of a movie star as governor of California show, movies are not only entertainment but also sources of negative and positive stereotypes. An upcoming Hollywood film, much of which was filmed in Prague this summer, promotes such negative stereotypes. Furthermore, the book on which it was based, Everything Is Illuminated, distorts history by omitting crucial facts.
Among the omissions in author Jonathan
Safran Foer's tale is the mass execution of residents of a Ukrainian village in
retaliation for having helped their Jewish neighbors. Ironically these Jewish
neighbors quite possibly included Foer's grandfather. Furthermore, Foer also
ignores an important link to the Czech Republic.
The best-selling book deals with a
tragic chapter in Jewish history. It presents a fictional story based on a real
trip undertaken by the young American author to Ukraine to locate a woman who
possibly saved his Jewish grandfather during World War II.
Because my research on the politics of
mass terror happened to deal with the area of Ukraine depicted in the movie and
in the book, I decided to seek an answer to a question no one was asking: What
did happen in real life as opposed to the fictional account given in the book
and movie?
When Foer, who uses his real name and
names of real places in Ukraine in his book, went to Ukraine to locate a
rescuer of his grandfather, he found nothing. So he wrote the novel based on
his imagination. It took me about the same amount of time as the author had
spent researching to find published sources and to make a trip from the United
States to a part of Ukraine portrayed in the book.
Trachimbrod, or Trochimbrod in
Ukrainian, was a Jewish village in the Volyn region near the city of Lutsk. The
village was also called Sofievka, after a German-born mother of a Russian czar
who sanctioned the establishment of Jewish agricultural colonies, including
Trochimbrod, in the beginning of the 19th century. Its population consisted of
1,500-2,000 Jews before the start of World War II, but it almost doubled when
Nazis brought in Jews from nearby villages and small towns and established a
ghetto after they occupied Ukraine.
The Nazis liquidated the Trochimbrod
ghetto in August and September 1942, with a German killing squad executing
several thousand Jews. The local police force, which at that time consisted
primarily of Ukrainians, helped round up Jews. Fewer than 200 survivors managed
to escape the massacres in the ghetto and in another nearby Jewish village.
The story of their rescue, pieced
together from materials of the Klubochin village museum, eyewitness accounts
and memoirs of Jewish, Ukrainian and Russian partisans is very different from
the one depicted in the book. On Nov. 4, 1942, the Nazis with the help of the
local police force executed 137 residents (including women, elderly people and
36 children) of Klubochin, a Ukrainian village located a couple of miles from
Trochimbrod. Afterward they burned the village. As it turns out, this massacre
was a reprisal for the actions of Ukrainian partisans who had helped
Trochimbrod Jews. These partisans from Klubochin and neighboring villages took
up arms against the Nazis and their collaborators, supplied weapons to a Jewish
resistance group in Trochimbrod and executed a local peasant for killing Jews
who escaped the Nazi massacres. The Klubochin partisans accepted Jewish
partisans from Trochimbrod into their unit and provided protection to more than
150 Jewish survivors who escaped from the Nazi massacre in this village and
nearby smaller Jewish settlements and were hiding in a forest near Klubochin.
It's quite likely that Foer's grandfather was one of these survivors.
Many of these Jews later joined another
Soviet/Ukrainian partisan unit in the region. Most were killed during combat
with the Nazis. Only about 40 Jews from Trochimbrod survived until the end of
the war.
This story stands in a sharp contrast to
claims made in the book. The author finds no Ukrainian rescuers of his
grandfather and implicates a fictional grandfather of the main Ukrainian hero,
Ukrainian neighbors and a Ukrainian-speaking Nazi general in the massacre in
Trochimbrod. The book even states, "Ukrainians back then were terrible to
the Jews. They were almost as bad as the Nazis."
The entire ethnic group is put alongside
an organization responsible for killing of tens of millions of people,
including millions of Ukrainians. The Nazis executed not only whole Ukrainian
families but also whole villages for rendering any aid, such as food or
shelter, to partisans, Jews or Soviet prisoners of war. They intended to
exterminate, enslave or expel to Siberia the absolute majority of Ukrainians,
whom they considered racially inferior. Several million Ukrainians died
fighting Nazi aggression. The number of Ukrainians who became victims of the
Nazi genocidal policy or who fought the Nazis during World War II was several
dozen times higher than the number of Ukrainians who collaborated with the
Nazis.
Like the information about the Jewish
Holocaust that was suppressed by the Soviet government, however, the Ukrainian
side of World War II remained largely unknown in the United States because of
Cold War politics. Only in 1992, when Ukraine became independent, was a
memorial sign erected on the site of the massacre in Trochimbrod, now just a
historical name because the village was razed during the war. Similarly, the
stories of the massacres in Klubochin and many other Ukrainian villages, such
as nearby Kortelisy, where the Nazis executed nearly 3,000 residents in a
single September 1942 day, remain completely unknown in the United States. On
average, Ukrainians suffered death and destruction on the level of the Sept.
11, 2001, terrorist attacks every day for more than two years during the Nazi
occupation of Ukraine.
While the book describes Ukrainians as
very unhelpful and even obstructive, the local people whom I met during my trip
to Ukraine were ready to lend a hand and provide information about Trochimbrod.
The director of the museum in Klubochin, Vasily Matsuyk, told me about Nazi
massacres in his village and in nearby Trochimbrod, as well as a story of a
Ukrainian family murdered by the Nazis for hiding Jews in Klubochin. Ivan
Filuyk, an elderly survivor of the massacre in Klubochin, vividly remembered
how he attended school in Trochimbrod along with several other Ukrainian
children. Valentina Shtinko, a journalist for Volyn, the main newspaper in the
region, published an article on the Trochimbroad memorial. I saw two
documentary films on regional television about a Jewish woman who survived the
massacre in Trochimbrod and was hidden by a peasant family and then was rescued
by Ukrainian partisans. She immigrated to Israel but later returned to Ukraine
and now lives in Lutsk.
There is even a possibility that the
woman who helped to rescue the author's grandfather was a Czech. Augustina, the
name of the women in the book and the film, sounds more Central European than
Ukrainian. Thousands of Czechs lived in the Volyn region before the Soviet
government expelled them to Czechoslovakia in the aftermath of World War II.
The Volyn Czechs were more closely linked and faced less-severe punishment than
their Ukrainian neighbors for hiding Jews during the war.
In the house in which I grew up in the
Volyn region, a Czech family had a concealed underground shelter used for
hiding Jews. The real-life hero of the movie might be actually found in the
Czech Republic.
Many people will read Everything Is
Illuminated and many more are likely to see the film version, directed by Liev
Schreiber and starring Elijah Wood of "Lord of the Rings" fame.
Sadly, they would remain utterly in the dark about the real events as opposed
to their fictional stereotypical portrayal. Similarly, they would remain
ignorant about the Czech link to the events depicted in the movie, which
ironically was filmed in the Czech Republic.
The author, a visiting scholar at the
Centennial Center of the American Political Association in Washington, D.C., is
working on a book-length manuscript on politics and terror in the Soviet Union.
He currently is conducting field research in Ukraine.
The Ukrainian village of Trachimbrod is not alone. Poles are also quite accustomed to see their rescuers of Jews largely invisible.
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