One quarter of all Holocaust victims lived on the territory that now
forms Ukraine, yet the Holocaust there has not received due attention.
This book delineates the participation of the Organization of Ukrainian
Nationalists (OUN) and its armed force, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army
(Ukrainska povstanska armiia--UPA), in the destruction of the Jewish
population of Ukraine under German occupation in 1941-44. The extent of
OUN's and UPA's culpability in the Holocaust has been a controversial
issue in Ukraine and within the Ukrainian diaspora as well as in Jewish
communities and Israel. Occasionally, the controversy has broken into
the press of North America, the EU, and Israel.
Triangulating sources from Jewish survivors, Soviet investigations,
German documentation, documents produced by OUN itself, and memoirs of
OUN activists, it has been possible to establish that: OUN militias were
key actors in the anti-Jewish violence of summer 1941; OUN recruited for
and infiltrated police formations that provided indispensable manpower
for the Germans' mobile killing units; and in 1943, thousands of these
policemen deserted from German service to join the OUN-led nationalist
insurgency, during which UPA killed Jews who had managed to survive the
major liquidations of 1942.