ten thousand Soviet evacuees had been drowned off Tallinn, and twenty-three thousand Hungarian Jews murdered at Kamenets Podolsk, in the same three day period. But these were far from the only deaths in those few August days.
by Martin Gilbert
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In a brief span of three days during the war, numerous tragic events unfolded that led to significant loss of life. Specifically, ten thousand Soviet evacuees tragically drowned near Tallinn, highlighting the perilous circumstances of the time. Additionally, the horrific massacre of twenty-three thousand Hungarian Jews at Kamenets Podolsk further exemplifies the gruesome violence occurring during this period.

These events were not isolated incidents; rather, they were part of a broader context of suffering and death that marked those few days in August. The scale of the violence and the resultant fatalities illustrates the profound human tragedy that characterized the Second World War, reflecting the horrors endured by many during this dark chapter in history.

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