Welcome to the ShtetLinks site for Bielsk Podlaski (also known in Yiddish as Bielsk
Podliask). We hope this site will help you learn more about your ancestral shtetl, how
your ancestors lived and perhaps help you discover names of ancestors or relatives. Some
original source materials listing names of people from Bielsk Podlaski are contained in
this site. This site also contains links to external resources pertaining to our shtetl
and Jewish life in Poland. If you have photos, documents, stories or materials that you
would like to contribute to this site, or if you find any errors, please email the coordinator, who
will be happy to assist with the scanning of photos or other materials you may have.
Remember to bookmark this page.
NOTICE: The Bielsk Public Library
Director is seeking information about the library's history prior to 1940. If you have
information or stories about the library please email Mark Gordon.
This site is hosted at no cost by JewishGen, Inc., the Home of
Jewish Genealogy. If you have been aided in your research by this site and wish to further
our mission of preserving our history for future generations, your JewishGen-erosity is greatly
appreciated.
Tour the Bielsk Podlaski Virtual Cemetery, containing a list of
legible headstones linked to a photo of each stone, and a link to a report in the
International Cemetery Project on status of the Jewish cemetery in Bielsk Podlaski.
The Bielsker Bruderlicher Unterstitzungs Verein (translated as
Brotherly Assistance Society) was a mutual aid society established by people from Bielsk
Podlaski. Materials available on this site include a membership directory and pages from
souvenir journals with many names of people from Bielsk Podlaski and surrounding areas who
belonged to this society founded in New York. The souvenir journals are a testament to the
rich social activities of the Verein. Now includes the complete Souvenir Journal of
the Loan Fund's 20th Anniversary Banquet, the BBUV's incorporation papers from 1888 and
the complete 1928 40th Anniversary Souvenir Journal.
Video of Jewish Cemtery in Bielsk Podlaski (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mL4xn05bEkw)
Jewish Life in the Old Country
While not specific to Bielsk Podlaski these materials can perhaps give us a glimpse of
the life our ancestors lived.
Philosophers, Fiddlers and Fools (2001)
(2002)
(2003)
(2004)
(2005).
This wonderful and moving program contains music, stories and memories from a world now
vanished. (requires free RealPlayer
software).
The Steven Spielberg Jewish Film
Archive'sVirtual Cinema has a
number of films that you can view for free on the Internet. These films can provide an
idea of how our ancestors might have lived in Poland before the Holocaust. Films include
the following five taken in 1939 before the holocaust:
Jewish
Life In Bialystok (including footage of the great synagogue in Bialystok and a
young girl eating a bialy)
The Wolf Lewkowicz Collection, a set of
almost 200 Yiddish letters (with English translations) written by Wolf Lewkowicz, sent
from Poland to his nephew in the United States, Sol J. Zissman, from 1922 to 1939. They
provide insight into Jewish life in pre-war Poland.
Have you ever dreamed of walking in the footsteps of your ancestors? JewishGen
ShtetlSchleppers will help you realize this dream. Please click on the following links for
Warsaw tours itineraries, pricing, and departure dates.
Search the Ellis
Island database for records of immigrants from Bielsk Podlaski. Searching for Bielsk,
without using a surname, returns 1,171 records. Searching for Billsk returns 19 records.
Locate records of Jewish
passengers in the Ellis Island database. This is not a complete database of all Jewish
immigrants through Ellis Island but may be of great assistance in locating your ancestors.
Bielsk
Podlaski holdings in Eastern European archives identified by the Miriam Weiner Routes to Roots Foundation. The RTR
inventory shows holdings in five different archives. Materials include census records
taken in eleven different years, birth, death, marriage, emigration, army and notary
records.
The YIVO Institute for Jewish Research has
the Book in the Holy Memory of the Bielsk-Podliask Jews which contains an English
section (see link at the top of this page to read this section). The main body of the book
is a few hundred pages in Hebrew or Yiddish with photos and a necrology.
The JewishGen Online Worldwide
Burial Registry (JOWBR) is a database of names and other identifying information from
cemeteries and burial records worldwide, from the earliest records to the present.
Lost
Jewish Worlds - Grodnoon the Yad
Vashem web site mentions the movement of Jews from Bielsk Podlaski to Treblinka in a
recounting of the German occupation.
Deportations
to Treblinka (on the Svisloch
ShtetLinks page) refers to deportations of 11,000 Jews from the Bielsk Podlaski area to
Treblinka in 1942.
Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation,
established by Steven Spielberg to videotape and preserve the testimonies of Holocaust
survivors and witnesses. The foundation has collected more than 50,000 testimonies. Videos require the free QuickTime player.
Search JewishGen. Search the JewishGen Family Finder for
others researching Bielsk Podlaski. Also search the message archives for references to
Bielsk Podlaski.
Books
Jewish Bialystok and Surroundings In Eastern Poland by Tomasz Wisniewski. Two
pages of this book are specific to the history of and present conditions in Bielsk
Podlaski.
History of the Jews in Poland and Russia by Simon Dubnow.
This site is hosted at no cost by JewishGen, Inc., the Home of
Jewish Genealogy. If you have been aided in your research by this site and wish to further
our mission of preserving our history for future generations, your JewishGen-erosity is greatly
appreciated.