According to a report commissioned and accepted by the Romanian government, the participation in the pogrom that followed was widespread: Those participating in the manhunt launched on the night of June 28/29 were, first and foremost, the Iași police, backed by the
Bessarabia police and
gendarmerie units. Other participants were army soldiers, young people armed by SSI agents, and mobs who robbed and killed, knowing they would not have to account for their actions....In addition to informing on Jews, directing soldiers to Jewish homes and refuges, and even breaking into homes themselves, some Romanian residents of Iași also took part in the arrests and humiliation forced upon the convoys of Jews on their way to the Chestură (Police Headquarters). The perpetrators included neighbors of Jews, known and lesser-known supporters of antisemitic movements, students, poorly-paid, low-level officials, railway workers, craftsmen frustrated by Jewish competition,
"white-collar" workers, retirees and military veterans. Soon Romanian soldiers, police, and mobs started massacring Romanian Jews; at least 8,000 were killed in the initial pogrom. SSI agents played a major role in leading the pogrom, often accompanied by soldiers and policemen. The newly freed
Iron Guards indulged in their bloodthirsty brand of anti-semitism, leading mobs that stabbed or beat to death with crow-bars Jews on the streets of Iași. On rare occasions when the
Legionaires felt merciful, they merely shot the Romanian Jews. One eyewitness later testified: Sometimes, those who attempted to defend the Jews were killed with them. This was the case with engineer Naum, a gentile, brother-in-law of Chief Public Prosecutor Casian. Naum, a former Assistant Professor of Medical Chemistry at the Iași Institute of Hygiene, well-known in select circles as an eloquent defender of liberal views, attempted to save a Jew on Păcurari Street, outside the Ferdinand Foundation. The Romanian officer who was about to kill the Jew said to Naum, 'You dog, die with the
kike you are defending!', and shot him point-blank. The priest Răzmeriță was shot on Sărărie Street while attempting to save several Jews, dying with the victims he was trying to protect. While trying to defend some Jews on Zugravilor Street, outside
Rampa, the
lathe operator Ioan Gheorghiu was killed by railroad workers. The Italian journalist
Curzio Malaparte, who witnessed the pogrom first-hand, wrote about how "detachments of soldiers and gendarmes, groups of working men and women, groups of long-haired
Gypsies squabbled, shouting with joy, as they undressed the corpses, lifted them and turned them over." The Romanian authorities also arrested more than 5,000 Romanian Jews, forcing them to the railway station, shooting those who did not move quickly enough, and then robbing them of all of their possessions. The total number of victims of the Iași pogrom is unknown, but the figure is calculated to be over 13,266 identified victims by the Romanian government, and nearly 15,000 by the Jewish community of Iași. In the midst of the brutality, there were also notable exceptions – for example, in the town of Roman, by
Viorica Agarici, chairman of the local
Red Cross during World War II and one of the 54 Romanian
Righteous Among the Nations commemorated by the Israeli people at
Yad Vashem. On the night of 2 July 1941, after caring for the wounded of the Romanian Army coming from the Russian front, she overheard people moaning from a train transporting Jewish survivors of the Iași pogrom. Taking advantage of her position, she asked and received permission to give food and water to those unfortunate passengers. Her actions were strongly condemned by the community of Roman and she had to move to
Bucharest. Her story, as part of the story of the pogrom and its consequences, was vividly presented in the book "Pogrom", written by Eugen Luca. The book was originally published in Romanian, was then translated into both
Hebrew and
Czech, and can be found at Yad Vashem and at the Library of the
Holocaust Museum in
Washington, D.C. Unlike the
Nazi German evacuations and exterminations, which involved
black-ops, secrecy and deceit, the Iași pogrom was perpetrated by Romanian authorities and the Romanian Army in "broad daylight". ==War crimes trials==