In 1939, the city of Artemivsk (now
Bakhmut) had a Jewish population of 5,299, comprising 10% of the city's total population. Following the beginning of
Operation Barbarossa, many of Artemivsk's Jews fled eastwards to escape the German offensive. Between 31 October and 1 November 1941, German forces took the city, and subsequently began to issue edicts restricting the Jewish population, such as an order on 19 November 1941 requiring Jews to wear
armbands indicating their Jewish ancestry. Due to its proximity to the front, the 17th Army ordered the killing of the city's Jews to be suspended for the time being. On January 7, 1942, the town commander, Major Heinz Tsobel, issued an announcement to the Jewish inhabitants of Artemivsk, written on the instructions of the
Sicherheitsdienst of the Reichsführer SS (SD) and signed by the collaborationist Mayor Holovnia: • In order to make them live separately, all Jews of Bakhmut, men and women of all ages, are to meet at 8 am on 9 January in the former
NKVD station premises in the park. • Each person is allowed to bring with them 10 kg of luggage and 8 days of food reserves. • At the aforementioned meeting place, keys to apartments must be handed over with the name and address (street, house number) of the owner. Entering empty Jewish apartments or seizing objects from civilians is considered theft and is punishable by death. • Opposition to this order, especially delaying one's appearance or absence from the designated meeting place, shall be punished severely. • Employed Jews must quit. Following the convocation of Artemivsk's Jewish population on 9 January 1942, they were herded onto trucks and transported to the abandoned
alabaster mines within the city on 11 January 1942. After the Jews were taken into the mines, shots were fired, and the mine was sealed, leaving those who had not been killed by gunfire to suffocate. The Extraordinary State Commission for the Determination of Atrocities committed by the Nazi occupiers described the massacre in its inspection report as follows: "As the cave filled with people, they were shot standing or kneeling, another group was driven in and killed in a heap of corpses and dying people, with the bodies of the dead piled up in several rows. The commission assumes that the dead included wounded who had been buried alive in the cave by the Nazi occupiers." == Aftermath ==