Khaybakha is located in the center of Galanchozhsky District, on the left bank of the Gekhi River. It is located east of Aka-Bass and south-west of Grozny. The nearest settlements to Khaybakha are Yalkhara in the north-west, Aka-Bass in the west, and Charmakha in the east.
History
On the doorway of the battle tower in the village, there is a petroglyph in the form of a human hand, palm down. In 1990, there was a plan to build a large memorial to the massacre at the site of Khaybakha, with a special fund set up to raise money. However, this was disrupted by the First and SecondChechen Wars, and the memorial was never built. In 2019, it was announced that the memorial would be built. In 2008, Ramzan Kadyrov described author Stepan Kashurka as a "hero", who "wrote in his book the truth about the tragic fate of the mountain village of Khaybakha". As a result, 200,000 rubles were set aside in the Akhmat Kadyrov fund to build a monument to Kashurka. In 2019, Khaybakha was named as one of the first 7 settlements in Galanchozhsky District to be rebuilt in order to resettle the area.
Khaybakh Massacre
On 27 February 1944, the residents of the village of Khaybakha fell victim to the genocide and deportation of the Chechen and Ingush people by Soviet troops. However, unusually, extremely heavy snow had fallen the night before in Khaibakha and nearby auls. As a result, the Soviet troops told residents in Khaybakha and all other villages in Nashkha to go to the stable in Khaybakha while an alternative transport route was set up for them. However, the stable, full of straw, was locked when more than 700 people, who could not descend from the mountains, were inside. The stable was then set ablaze, with anyone who escaped the burning structure being shot. The village has since become notorious for the massacre.
Ruins
As of 2020, there are several standing buildings in Khaybakha; the battle tower, two residential towers, and a newly constructed mosque. However, due to Russian military exercises in the area around Khaibakha between 2005 and 2007, the battle tower was partially destroyed. As a result, only the lower half of the structure remained standing, until it was fully restored in November of 2019. The foundations of most former houses also remain in the village, as well as two Muslim cemeteries.
Media
The massacre in Khaybakha was depicted in the film "Ordered to Forget". However, this film was banned in Russia due to "insufficient evidence" to prove that the massacre, an event that is denied by the Russian government, ever happened.