Shocking Revelation: Jewish Infants Murdered to Supply Blood for German Soldiers
Few have heard of the mass grave at Vyritsa in Russia, where 1,362 Jewish bodies, including 675 infants and children, were discovered. They were killed in a horrifying way: their blood was systematically drained to aid wounded German soldiers.
- שירה דאבוש (כהן)
- פורסם כ"ז ניסן התשפ"ג

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We all know of the infamous concentration camps such as Auschwitz-Birkenau, Buchenwald, Bolzano, and Bergen-Belsen, as well as the lesser-known ones like Ebensee, Bolzano, and Plaszow. But how many have heard of the notorious site known as Vyritsa, located near St. Petersburg, Russia?
Few have heard of this chilling mass grave, where the bodies of 1,362 Jews, including 675 infants and children, were found. They were murdered in a particularly brutal manner, their blood methodically drained to save German soldiers wounded at the front.
The victims, nearly all without visible wounds, were found naked and without shoes by search teams in Novaya Borya village, Lomonosovsky District, Leningrad region.
Special excavation teams sent to dig at the site filled 50 sacks with human remains—skulls and bones. The excavation team leader, Viktor Ivanov, told the media, "We dig and dig, and it never ends. Babies and teenagers."
"Hundreds perished here due to chronic blood loss. Nearby was an SS concentration camp. I believe these children were kept alive to provide a regular supply of blood donations for injured German soldiers and officers."

"Most of the adult victims were women, including at least three who were pregnant," Ivanov explains. "There were no gunshot wounds on the bodies, and only a handful of victims showed signs of having been beaten. In most cases, there is no indication of their cause of death."
Sergey Bergovoy, a volunteer who worked on gathering the bones, said, "The remains were lying in piles. I was completely shocked, despite all my experience excavating mass graves. The hardest, most mysterious part here is that neither the elders nor the local historians remember anything of what happened here."

"There is no evidence in the military archives. I don’t understand why no one knows anything about what happened here," he adds. One theory is that the victims starved during the harsh Russian winters of World War II, but experts suggest that the children's remains are likely from the heinous "Blood Transfusion" concentration camp Vyritsa, near Gatchina, where over 300 'young prisoners' aged infants to 14 were held for one purpose: to draw blood for Wehrmacht soldiers and officers.
In this camp, the young children were allowed to be accompanied by their mothers. One survivor recounted that his sister, Elena, died there in the clinic. "She pleaded with me, 'Please, Alexander, take me away from here. I have no blood left.' But they continued coming to her for more. She died the next day."
Among all the bodies, excavation experts found a tag bearing the number 1410, but its significance remains unclear.