Before the International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of the Holocaust, 27 June 2024, there was a memorial sign on the grave of over 5,000 Jews near the village of Gzdavka Druga in the Odessa region.
Jews from the Odessa and Zhytomyr regions, as well as those deported from Bessarabia, attended the hour-long labor camp created by the Rumanians at the fall of the leaves in 1941. More than 2,000 people died from hunger and illness, and 2,772 people were shot during the winter of 1941-1942. Unfortunately, there are only 93 names and nicknames available. Following the act of the ChGK, the bodies were thrown into a tank river measuring 3.5 by 4 meters.
The grave was discovered in 2007, when gas was laid near the village. Then the Jewish community of Odessa reported zusil for the proper re-dusting of the open brushes, the remains were placed near six small trumpets, and a stone protection was created.
Odessa Holocaust Research Center in full cooperation with the United Nations The Jewish community of Ukraine has been recognized as one of the largest places of mass worship in the Odessa region, probably the largest in Ukraine. The project was supported by the homeland of Lemberg from Odessa.
Members of the Jewish community of the Baltic Republic visited the grave and recited Kaddish and Yizkor.