Ivan Lytvynchuk

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Ivan Lytvynchuk (pseudonym: Dubovyi; Іва́н Самі́йлович Литвинчу́к [Ivan Samiilovych Lytvynchuk], Iwan Łytwynczuk; 21 August 1920 - 19 January 1951) was a commander of the military district of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), a member of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN), a war criminal, and a Major. He is believed to have been one of the organizers and initiators of the Volhynian massacre, recognized as a genocide. His units were among the first in Volhynia to begin the extermination of Poles.

Nativename
Іван Литвинчук
NicknameDubovyi
Died19 January 1951 (aged 30)
Quick facts Native name, Nickname ...
Ivan Lytvynchuk
Native name
Іван Литвинчук
NicknameDubovyi
Born21 August 1920
Died19 January 1951 (aged 30)
Allegiance Ukrainian Insurgent Army
BranchParamilitary
RankColonel
Conflicts
AwardsCross of Combat Merit
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Biography

He was born in 1920 in Derman Druha, Volhynia,[1] into a family of an Orthodox priest (according to other researchers, he was born in Biskupice Ruskie).

He studied at the Volhynian Orthodox Theological Academy in Kremenets. Between 1937 and 1939, he was imprisoned by Polish authorities for underground activities in the OUN.[2]

In 1943, he organized UPA units in northeastern Volhynia and became the commander of the Military District (WO) UPA "Zahrawa".[3]

Prosecutor Piotr Zając[4] and historian Grzegorz Motyka[5] suggest his possible involvement (together with Dmytro Klyachkivsky and Vasyl Ivakhiv) in the decision to carry out the Volhynian massacre.[note 1] Units under Lytvynchuk's command were among the first in Volhynia to begin the extermination of Poles.[6] Lytvynchuk directly participated in the destruction of the Janowa Dolina settlement, where his units murdered approximately 600 Poles,[7] Lytvynchuk was particularly zealous in carrying out the murders of Poles, which he often boasted about.[8]

He died in 1952 by blowing himself up in a bunker attacked by the NKVD in Horokhiv Raion[9] in Volyn Oblast.

Commemoration

A Memorial Cross was erected at the site of Ivan Lytvynchuk's death, and a school in the village of Zolochiv, Lviv Oblast was named after him.[10]

Notes

  1. According to Ukrainian historians, there is no confirmation of this fact in OUN-UPA documents, to which Grzegorz Motyka responds by citing the analogous example of the lack of a written order from Stalin regarding the initiation of the Holodomor. See: Причини in Волинська трагедія: що сталося 70 років тому, і чого хоче польська сторона

References

Bibliography

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