A week ago the sight was unthinkable: a memorial at the site of one of the worst massacres of the Holocaust, engulfed in smoke and flame from an airstrike.
Yet last Tuesday a Russian attack near the Babyn Yar memorial complex in Kyiv achieved exactly that. Five people died in the strike targeting the television broadcast tower next door, and firefighters battled to extinguish a fire inside the Jewish cemetery.
Events in Ukraine since Vladimir Putin announced his invasion are grim echoes of the atrocities committed on European soil in the 20th century: desperate people squeezing on to trains out of cities; refugees lining up on the border; families separated as able-bodied men stay behind to fight.
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