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| Piotrkow Trybunalski, PolandThe Ancestral Shtetlby Leonard MarkowitzPiotrkow Trybunalski (named Petrokov, in Russian and Petrikau, in German) is located in central Poland at 54º24´N/19º 41´E about 16 miles south of the city of Lodz. In 1487, a law was passed in Piotrkow, which severely restricted the commercial activities of Jewish residents. At that time, the city was where the High Tribunal issued legislation governing all of Poland, hence the name, Piotrkow Trybunalski. Jews were expelled from the city following a blood libel in 1590. King Jan Sobieski III, hero of the Battle of Vienna, granted Jews the right to again settle and trade in Piotrkow in 1679. A Chevra
Kaddisha (burial society) and a Bikkur Holim (society for visiting and aiding
the sick) were organized in the 1720s during the tenure of Eliakim Getz, the
first Rabbi of Piotrkow. In 1744, Emil Fishel led a successful Jewish defense
against an attack by a mob. The Jewish community of 800 people was then
compelled to leave the city and settle in the suburbs (Nowa Wies). A large
synagogue was built there in 1781. After the
second partition of Poland in 1793, Piotrkow was ceded to Prussia. By 1827,
there were 2,133 Jews in Piotrkow (45% of the total population). A small
industrial revolution occurred in the region after the Warsaw-Vienna railway
opened. Jews founded weaving mills and a growing Jewish proletariat was employed
in the timber, textile and service industries in and around Piotrkow. In 1861,
Jews obtained elective rights on the Municipal Council. In the 1880s, there were
30 chedarim (Jewish elementary schools), a Talmud Torah (Jewish middle school),
two Bet Hei Midrash (small buildings for Jewish adult study) and a private,
secular school. By 1917, the Jewish population of the city had grown to 14,890. When
Poland re-emerged as a nation after WWI, the Jewish population decreased
somewhat. In 1921, there were 11,630 Jews in Piotrkow (28% of the total
population). However, the Jewish community continued to thrive. Jews comprised
21% of the Municipal Council. On the eve of the Holocaust, there were 18,000
Jews in the city, which was one-third of the total population. When
the Germans and the Russians invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, about 2,000
Jews escaped from Piotrkow and attempted to find refuge in the larger towns in
the Soviet-occupied zone. On October 28 of that year, the Germans established a
ghetto in Piotrkow, which was the first one in Poland. The Jewish population of
the ghetto swelled because of the many transferees from the surrounding
villages. During
the week ending October 22, 1942, some 22,000 Jews of the Piotrkow ghetto were
deported to the death camp at Treblinka. About 4,000 Jews remained, half being
workers in the labor camps assigned to factories supporting the German army. The
other 2,000, hiding within the ghetto, were eventually found and executed in the
forests surrounding Piotrkow. Several attempts were made in the ghetto to
organize resistance. Between 1942 and 1944, about 500 Jews escaped from the
ghetto. They found refuge in the surrounding forests and joined Jewish partisans
who were fighting the Germans. Many of these partisans had escaped from the
labor camp attached to the Karo glassworks. They continued to harass the Germans
until the end of WWII. The labor camps in the area were liquidated in November
1944 and the survivors were deported to Ravensbruck and Buchenwald concentration
camps and to arms factories in Czechoslovakia. Currently,
the 19th century Great Synagogue (Duza) on Ulica Wojska Polskiego has
been turned into a library. Only the iron Stars of David, adorning the lamp
holders, indicate the original purpose of the building. Another smaller
synagogue, built in 1781, has been turned into a children’s library. ___________________________ Reprinted with kind permission from: Markowitz, Leonard. "Piotrkow Trybunalski, Poland: The Ancestral Shtetl." Four Jewish Families in Philadelphia. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 2000. LOC # 00-132239. Email: priluki@voicenet.com |
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