The
shtetl Krystynopol was
predominantly Jewish for most of the town's history. Today
there is barely a trace of the original town. Although
information regarding Krystynopol's history is scant, here is the
story of the rise and fall of this community:
The
noble family of Potocki from Kraków, Poland, owned vast
amounts of land in the region. In May 1685, Feliks Kazimierz
Potocki (1630-1702) bought land in the
village of Nowy Dwór (New Garden). In 1692, he founded
Krystynopol on
this land and made the town his home. He
named the town after his wife,
Princess Krystyna Lubomirska (1640-1699).
Later, Feliks
Potocki's grandson, Franciszek Salezy Potocki (1700-1772) built a
large palace there [1].
Jewish settlers arrived soon after Potocki
founded
Krystynopol. The earliest Jewish community existed around
1740. In 1765, there were 759 Jewish taxpayers [2]. By
1880, there were 2,747 Jews, comprising 78 percent of the total
population. The predominant Jewish business was grain trading,
and Belz Hasidism dominated Jewish life [3].
The 1900 census
counted 2,651 Jewish residents, 75
percent of the total population of 3,522 [4]. The census revealed
these additional statistics:
Area in hectares = 1,060
(equivalent to 2,610 acres)
Number of men = 1,728
Number of
women = 1,794
Number of houses = 408
Number of factories =
1
Number of horses = 57
Number of cattle = 135
Number of
sheep = 1
Number of pigs = 218
During World War I, Cossack attacks, mass expulsions and the decline of grain trade caused the Jewish population to drop to 2,086 (74 percent of the total population of 2,809). Zionist organizations gained popularity [3].
Many Krystynopol
Jews settled in New York City, founding
several organizations (landmanshaftn) to aid fellow immigrants (click
here for more information on Krystynopol Jews in New York) [5].
Published
eight years after the conclusion of World War I, the 1926/7 Poland
business directory counted five synagogues in Krystynopol.
Businesses in the town included a cement factory, mills and
tanneries. The 1930 directory additionally noted sawmills and
the production of chemical products [6,7].
In 1939, most
Krystynopol Jews were expelled by the
Germans and left with the Soviet forces. They crossed the Bug
River to be in Soviet-controlled Sokal and Witkow Nowy. In the
summer of 1940, many of these Jews were exiled to Siberia [3]. In
September 1942, remaining Krystynopol Jews were deported to the death
camp in Belzec. The Jewish cemetery, founded in the 1700s, was
destroyed during that time (click here for more
information on the
Jewish cemetery in Krystynopol).
Krystynopol
became a part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. Its
name was changed to Chervonograd in 1953. Coal mining began in
the 1950s and Chervonograd's population grew rapidly, from 12,000 in
1959, to 83,600 in 2000 [1].
Krystynopol Jews in New
York City:
This
is a list of Krystynopol-related landsmanshaftn incorporated in
Manhattan, 1848 to 1920 [5]:
| Name of landsmanshaftn |
Year of incorporation |
| Krystenopoler Sick and
Benevolent Association |
1896 |
| Krystynopolo and Austria Congregation of the City of New York | 1896 |
| Independent First Krystynopoler Sick and Benevolent Association | 1902 |
| First Krystynopoler Young Men's Benevolent Association | 1906 |
| First Krystynopoler Young Men's and Young Ladies Benevolent Society | 1908 |
| Krystonopoler Congregation of
New York |
1911 |
| Progressive Krystynopoler Young Men's Benevolent Society | 1912 |
Founded in
1896, the synagogue Cristonopoler
Congregation Brith Isaac was at 90 Columbia Street, Lower East Side
Manhattan. In 1919, its spiritual leader was Rabbi Aaron
Hafner, its president was Issac Axelrod and its secretary was Leib
Lustig. The congregation had 100 members and the services were
in Hebrew [8].
The First Krystenopoler Sick and
Benevolent Association maintained an area at the Montefiore Cemetery
in Queens, New York (block 83, gate 89/W), where there is a memorial to
Krystynopol.
The
following New York cemeteries have sections maintained by Krystynopol
landsmanshaftn [10]:
Montefiore
Cemetery
121-83 Springfield Boulevard
Springfield Gardens,
Queens, NY 11412
Block 83, gate 89/W
Mt.
Zion Cemetery
59-63 54th Avenue
Maspeth, NY 11378
Path
7 left, gate 5
Mt. Hebron Cemetery
130-04 Horace Harding
Expressway
Flushing, NY 11367
Block 4, path 1
Wellwood
Cemetery
Wellwood
Avenue
Farmingdale, NY 11735
Block 60, section 3
According to
the International Jewish Cemetery Project,
the Krystynopol Jewish cemetery is located at the center of
Chervonograd on Shevs'ka Street. The original size of the
cemetery was 1.5 hectares. At the time of the survey in 1995,
0.15 hectares remained, surrounded by housing. No grave markers
exist [11].
Citations
1) "Chervonohrad."
Wikipedia. 22 Apr.
2008. 3 May 2008 <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chervonohrad>.
2)
"Jewish Historical Institute Education." 2007. Jewish
Historical Institute, Warsaw, Poland. 3 May 2008
<http://www.jewishinstitute.org.pl/en/gminy/miasto/719.html>.
3)
Spector, Shmuel, ed. The Encyclopedia of
Jewish Life Before and After the Holocaust.
New York: NYU P, 2001. 684.
4)
Austro-Hungarian Empire. Statistischen Zentralkommision.
Gemeindelexikon der im Reichsrate Vertretenen
Königreiche und Länder, Vol. 12,_Galizien. Vienna,
1907.
5) Green, Ada, and Steven Siegel.
"Index to Incorporations of Jewish Locality-Related
Organizations of New York County (Manhattan) 1848-1920." 28 June 2004.
Jewish Genealogical Society of New York. 3
May 2008 <http://home.att.net/~landsmanshaft/ajhsintro.htm>.
6)
Księga Adresowa Polski (Wraz Z W. M.
Gdańskiem) DLA Handlu, Rzemiosł I Rolnictwa; Annuaire de la Pologne
(Y Compris La V. L. de Dantzig) Pour
Le Commerce, L'Industrie, Les Metiers et
L'Agriculture, 1926/7. Warsaw: Towarzystwo
Reklamy MięDzynarodowej, 1926. 1261-1262.
7)
Księga Adresowa Polski (Wraz Z W. M.
Gdańskiem) DLA Handlu, Rzemiosł I Rolnictwa; Annuaire de la Pologne
(Y Compris La V. L. de Dantzig) Pour
Le Commerce,
L'Industrie, Les Metiers et L'Agriculture, 1930.
Warsaw: Towarzystwo Reklamy MięDzynarodowej, 1930. 683.
8)
Schneiderman, Harry, ed. American Jewish
Yearbook 5680, 1919-1920. Vol. 21.
Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society of America, 1919. 467.
9) "The
Cemetery Project." 2006. The Museum of Family History. 4 May
2008 <http://www.museumoffamilyhistory.com/hm-chervonograd-om.htm>.
10) "Burial Societies in the New York Metro Area." 17 Oct.
2005. Jewish Genealogical Society of New York. 4 May 2008 <http://www.jgsny.org/searchcity.htm>.
11) "International Jewish Cemetery Project." JewishGen:
The Home of Jewish Genealogy. 30 Aug. 2005.
International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies. 4 May
2008 <http://www.jewishgen.org/cemetery/e-europe/ukra-c.html>.
