The extent of the damage was not immediately clear. Israeli journalist Ron Ben Yishai, a veteran war correspondent, visited the site after Tuesdayâs attack and reported Wednesday that the recently opened memorial did not appear to have been hit. He reported that the closest damage was to TV tower complex less than 1,000 feet away.
Moscow has said itâs only targeting military infrastructure, but missiles and artillery shells have struck residential areas in Kyiv, Kharkiv and across Ukraine.
Initial reports that the strike had hit the Holocaust memorial carried particular symbolic weight. âTo the world: what is the point of saying ânever againâ for 80 years, if the world stays silent when a bomb drops on the same site of Babyn Yar? At least 5 killed. History repeating â¦â Zelensky tweeted.
The Yad Vashem Holocaust museum in Jerusalem in a statement denounced the strike and called on the international community âto safeguard civilian lives as well as these historical sites because of their irreplaceable value.â
âWe continue to follow with grave concern the outrageous acts of aggression being perpetrated against civilian targets in Ukraine,â it said.
Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said in a statement that Israel would help to rebuild any damage to the site. He condemned the attack, but did not mention Russiaâs role in it. Israel, while supporting Ukraine, has avoided publicly criticizing Russia.
Babyn Yar, or Babi Yar, is a ravine on the outskirts of Kyiv where, over two days in September of 1941, more than 33,000 Jews were shot to death by Nazi-led killing squads in a campaign against the Soviet Union.
The Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial opened last year after repeated delays. The centerâs chairman, Natan Sharansky, was born in Ukraine and was one of the most famous ârefuseniksâ â Jews in the Soviet Union who openly opposed bans on Jewish emigration.
News of the strike also resonated in Jewish communities worldwide in the wake of Putinâs claim that he invaded Ukraine to âdenazifyâ its government and stop a âgenocide,â an assertion with no factual basis and which analysts say is aimed at discrediting Zelensky and other Ukrainian nationalists opposed to Russian control.
âPutin seeks to distort and manipulate the Holocaust to justify an illegal invasion of a sovereign democratic country is utterly abhorrent,â Sharansky said in a statement Tuesday. âIt is symbolic that he starts attacking Kyiv by bombing the site of the Babyn Yar, the biggest of Nazi massacre.â
Zelensky is also Jewish, and some of his family members died in the Holocaust. While his grandfather survived, three of Zelenskyâs great-uncles were executed as part of the German-led genocide of European Jews during the war. About 1.5 million of the 6 million Jews killed were Ukrainian.
There are several Ukrainian nationalist paramilitary groups, such as the Azov movement and Right Sector, and a far-right party, Svoboda, which holds one seat in parliament. But they have little public support.
Putinâs rhetoric is aimed at selling the war to Russians back home, for whom talk of fighting fascism still deeply resonates, said Timothy Snyder, a professor of history at Yale University.
Critics of Putinâs rhetoric, including Zelensky, say he is exploiting the trauma of the war and twisting its history for his own interests.
Practicing Judaism and Jewish rituals was effectively banned in the Soviet Union. Zelensky in a 2020 interview said he grew up in an âordinary Soviet Jewish familyâ that like âmost Jewish families in the Soviet Union were not religious. You know religion didnât exist in the Soviet state as such.â
When Putin invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, there were at least an estimated 43,000 Jews living in Ukraine. Like other Ukrainians, since the war began some have fled their homes for other cities or other countries, and some have stayed.
The Washington Post verified videos of the Kyiv TV tower strike on Tuesday that appeared to show that the structure and the area immediately surrounding it were hit at least two times.
In one video, a man stopped at an intersection is filming the TV tower from about a quarter-mile away. A few seconds into the video, a ball of fire explodes at the site. It takes a few moments for the sound of the blast to reach the onlookers.
âEveryone get down,â a man yells as he exits the car. âCloser to the ground, further away from the glass. There may be one more strike.â
From another vantage point, the bomb appears to hit close to the Babyn Yar Holocaust memorial site, which sits just west of the tower.
The frame of the TV tower was still standing after the strike. The Ukrainian Interior Ministry said that the strike on the tower interrupted service, adding that backup channels would be accessible soon.
Berger and Lee reported from Washington. This report has been updated.