Eichenfeld massacre

The Eichenfeld massacre was a 1919 attack against the Mennonite colonists of Eichenfeld by the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine. Rising tensions between the native Ukrainian peasantry and Mennonite landowners had culminated with attacks on the latter, as insurgents took control of southern Ukraine and began carrying out reprisals against those that had collaborated with the Central Powers and the White movement.

Eichenfeld massacre
Part of the Ukrainian War of Independence
LocationEichenfeld (now Novopetrivka), Ukraine
Coordinates48°03′59″N 34°59′02″E
Date8 November 1919 (1919-11-08)
TargetLandowners and their adult sons
Attack type
Massacre
Deaths136
VictimsUkrainian Mennonites
PerpetratorsRevolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine
MotiveAnti-German sentiment, class conflict

In October 1919, Eichenfeld, a village of the Jasykowo sub-colony that had previously played host to a notable Selbstschutz detachment, was targeted for reprisals by the insurgents and local collaborators. The insurgents carried out a campaign of executions against the village's landowners and their adult sons, starting a series of anti-Mennonite massacres perpetrated by the insurgents until their defeat at the hands of the Red Army, which brought an end to the violence.

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