In The Holocaust by Bullets, Father Patrick Desbois documented for the
first time the murder of 1.5 million Jews in Ukraine during World War
II, based on wartime documents, interviews with locals, and the
application of modern forensic practices on long-hidden gravesites.
Nearly a decade of further work by his team, drawing on interviews with
5,000 neighbors of the Jews, has resulted in stunning new findings about
the extent and nature of the genocide.
The mass killings took place across the Eastern Front, in seven
countries formerly part of the Soviet Union invaded by Nazi Germany.
They followed a secret template, or repeatable script, that included a
timetable and involved local inhabitants in the mechanics of death to
ensure complicity, whether it was to cook for the killers; to clear,
dig, and cover the graves; to witness their Jewish neighbors being
marched off; or to take part in the slaughter.
Narrating in lucid, powerful prose that has the immediacy of a crime
report, Father Desbois assembles a chilling account of how, concretely,
these events took place in village after village, from the selection of
the date to the twenty-four-hour period in which the mass murders
unfolded. Today, such groups as ISIS put into practice the Nazis'
lessons on making genocide efficient.