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 Compiled by Deborah G. Glassman
First Posting by DGG Dec 2004, Updates July 2005, Nov 2007, Winter 2008, May 2008. Most Recent Update November 2008. There are around 130 separate pages on this site in 2008, All copyright of each page (unless designated elsewhere on the specific page) is retained to Deborah G. Glassman.
Copyright © 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008
Deborah G. Glassman

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Remembering 5000 Lyakhovichi Jews Murdered in the Holocaust
by Deborah Glassman, copyright 2007
All indices and tables on this page are ©Deborah Glassman 2007 and may not be reproduced in whole or part without her written permission.




This is a page in our Documents section. Click the button labeled "Documents" in the left-hand column to reach all of the other resources of the Document area.

We have Holocaust Records across several pages. There is a table of links to each individual article (it will take you directly to the part of the page with that report) on our first page Holocaust Records

Eyewitness Report of the Nazi Murder of Jews in Lyakhovichi
The Black Chronicle: tragedy of the Lyakhovichi Jews by Zalman Rabinowitz and Yosef Peker, c.1952
translated from the Yiddish by Wilfred Kay, 2008.

Wilfred Kay provided the information about his search for his brothers and sisters that we report in The Katz Children of Pultusk and Lyakhovichi and it included details about Lyakhovichi right after the war that we had not previously had available. The webmaster was grateful to Mr. Kay and he was similarly grateful for the Lyakhovichi research community's assistance in his efforts. He translated this article by two of the men he met in Lyakhovichi in 1945, they were among the eight Lyakhovichi Jews that got on a train for Warsaw, Poland when it was clear that there was no one left in the town itself to save, and that survivors would not be making their way back to the now desolate town.

The Germans occupied Lyakhowici June 23, 1941.
On that same day, the Jews were ordered to assemble in the Synagogue yard. There the Germans demanded from the Jews their valuables: gold, silver, furs, cows, all valuable items. The next day they were ordered to wear yellow patches and to stay off the sidewalks. On the 25th, all were ordered to report to work, no exceptions. For two months they worked 16 hours a day building a road, guarded by armed Germans and Belarussians, beaten for the slightest reason.

June 28th, without any reason, the leaders of the community were arrested: Baruch Meier BERKOWITZ, Leibl SEGEL, Meier MALOWITZKI, Jankiel DELOMITZKI, the young brothers KERBAL, Aaron EPSTEIN, the military police sergeant MELNIK, (brother of Moshe MELNIK). They were tortured and killed in the Kominke forrest.

July 8th, at 5 in the morning, on the way to work, we noticed the town was surrounded by German police, Latvians and their helpers - the Belorussians. They beat us and drove us back to town.They assembled us in the Market Square; we met there our grandfathers, fathers, mothers, and children. They were beaten, they sat there with their arms raised, in the same position till 3 pm. Those who tried to run away were shot on the spot. That day we saw people lying in the street in their own blood, struggling with death. The 85 year old BEDER, R. Iser, who was on his death bed and couldn't follow the order, was killed with the bayonet on a rifle by Demian, a Belarus from Latwer St. That was the horrible scene I witnessed from the roof of a house; I will never forget it. Many tried to run accross the bridge over the river Wiedma, on the road to Baranowici, but the Germans posted Latvians and Belorussian guards with machine guns. 150 men found their death on the banks of the river.

From the 6000 Jews assembled, 1500 were selected as useful elements. 1000 succeeded in running away and hid; the remaining 3500, in groups of 150, were driven to the prepared graves, which we dug earlier; the Germans told us the ditches were for the town's garbage. The slaughter took place at Little Latwe, 500 meters to the right of the railroad station, on a hill. They were machine gunned by Latvians and Belorussians; the wounded were shoved into the ditch. This went on until 9 in the evening. The ground was moving for 24 hours.

Next morning, the order was for all Jews to assemble at the house of Baruch TUKACHINSKI; there, Sr. Lieutenant Kemp and Master Willi, assured that the surviving Jews will not be harmed. Kemp also demanded that all those in hiding must report and that they will be given work. 2000 Jews reported; the same day the ghetto was established, consisting of 28 houses, 100 persons to a room; there was no room for your head to lay down, the filth was unbearable. That is how we lived for seven months. A Judenrat was created, made up of: Itze ZMUDIAK, Shlomo ROSOWISKI and Iser MALOWITZKI. On the 6th month, under the leadership of Yosef PEKER and Zalman RABINOWITZ, it was decided to escape from the ghetto. When that became known to the Judenrat, Itze ZMUDSIAK threatened to report it to the German police, because it would endanger all the others if they escaped. We worked very hard during the seven months in the ghetto and didn't even get a piece of bread from the Germans. 70 men, I among them, worked on the construction of a road to Baranowici. In the ghetto, the Germans went after the women and girls. I remember well the case when The Germans demanded that Rive SHTEIN turn over her two beautiful young daughters; she resisted, so they shot her.

Summer 1942, 4 o'clock in the morning, we noticed that the ghetto was surrounded. From past experience we knew what to expect. A group of 40 men, I among them,[Zalman Rabinowitz], including Yosef PEKER, Aaron SEGAL, Moshe TZIRINSKI, Motel KWEDIUK, Dor KRAWETZ, Jakov LITZITZKI, Michael BUSEL, Meier ABRAMOWITZ and Chana PRESHTZITZKI, decided not to allow the Germans to come in to the Ghetto, to put up resistance. We assembled at the entrance to the ghetto; it turned into a big fight and shootings. The Germans started throwing hand grenades and fire bombs. In hours, the town was surrounded and set on fire by fire bombs. About 10 people succeded to escape under a hail of bullets, the rest were burned alive. At the same time, the German SS stormed the ghetto from Podlesie Street through the Jewish cemetary. Like wild beasts they started to liquidate the ghetto; the 'action' lasted late into the evening. An order was issued after the action for the member of the Juderat, Iser MALIWITZKI, to undress naked , to collect the bodies, load them on the wagons and take them to the mass grave. The 85 year old woman, Reisel MALOWITZKI, who was hidden in a bunker, was forced to undress and go on the wagon with corpses then she was shoved into the grave alive with the other bodies. The same thing happened to Iser MALIWITZKI. 300 people managed to hide.

The Germans ordered 70 able/fit people to report and demanded a list of the others; they also annonced that it was not allowed to live in the ghetto (200 hundred still lived there). The 300 survivors lived another 10 days. The Germans again surrounded the ghetto; we resisted the last slaughter. Herman Fritz, the county "Commandant," joined the last slaughter, he entered a bunker where Jews held out, a friend of ours, Sheie Dod YELIN, cut Herman's throat with a razor. Then came 1000 Germans and Latvians with a hail of bullets directed at the 3 houses where the 300 survivors held out; many were dead. It became obvious that there was no way out, then Meier ABRAMOWITZ set his own house on fire and called on others to run. Unfortunately, out of 300, only 4 managed to reach the forest: Zalman RABINOWITZ, Yosef PEKER, Motel KHWEDUK and Michael BUSEL. (The end)

Survivors' Photo

After the war, this picture below was taken of Lyakhovichi's survivors gathered in Munich a few years after the war. The names are those provided when the picture was submitted for the Yiskor book; "unknown" meant by the editor; "blurry" was similarly an editorial comment at that time. The caption was reviewed and translated by Wilfred Kay from the Yiddish. He had personal memories of a number of these people from meeting them in Lyakhovichi in 1945 after the war was over. He remembered the Peker brothers Yosef and Abram; Zalman Rabinowitz, and Mr. Strugach and, independently of captions, identified who was who. He remembers Mrs. Yosef Peker as being sweet and generous and helping him get papers that enabled his departure, but as with Mr. Strugach, he had always addressed her as Mrs. Peker and does not recall her first name. Do you know the name of Josef Peker's wife?


(1st row, seated, R to L) Yosef Peker (x), his wife, Moshe Strugach with his son and his wife; (2nd row, standing, R to L) Moshe Inditsky (xx), Isaac Birger, Gershon Zayetz, unknown, Avraham Peker, Zalman Rabinowitz, unknown, Avraham Cherni, Isaac Pinsky, Yakov Greenberg, Michal Bussel, a Baranowitzer (of the family of Chayuta [Gavza] Bussel ); (3rd row, R to L) unknown, Avraham Rabinowitz (xxx), unknown, blurred, Shalom Mednitsky, unknown, Shaul Kerbel)

What is New on our Holocaust Pages
NEW!!! Translation of the Eyewitness Report to the Nazi Murders in Lyakhovichi. (posted just above this introduction)

Midway between updates we have added three important new articles.

The search for the Katz children
An Eyewitness Report to the Nazi Massacres in Lyakhovichi
Searching for Jewish Children in Russian Orphanages in WWII

We hope to keep outgrowing the existing pages, as we identify more of the so far unidentifed 4,600+ members of our community who were murdered by the Third Reich. Can you help us learn their names? Upcoming pages are so far scheduled to include: more analysis of testimonies at Yad Vashem; stories of various Lechovichers who made it to various Soviet cities; some Soviet investigational reports; and memoirs.

Yehuda Bauer wrote a superb report for the Shoah Resource Center of Yad Vashem on Baranovichi's Jewish community in the Holocaust which has to be relevant to Lyakhovichi just a few miles away. It is a 48 page pdf file which you can view without downloading. Click "back" on your browser to return to this page. Yehuda Bauer brings all of his scholarship and historical acumen to bear on the question of what was life like in Baranovichi during the Holocaust. His stated aim is " to describe the town and its history during the Holocaust, and, second, to provide a basis for comparison with other towns and cities in Poland and Lithuania." You need to read this article! Jewish Baranowicze in the Holocaust by Yehuda Bauer, published by the Shoah Resource Center of Yad Vashem.

The table at the bottom of the left-hand column of this page will be significantly augmented at our May 2008 update by a new a list of relatives of those who perished at the Nazis hands
. It was also derived from material extracted from the Pages of Testimony kept at Yad Vashem. As I noted for the earlier list covering victims whose surnames began with A-E - The Pages of Testimony are depositions of facts designed to be used in bringing murderers to justice and with the secondary purpose of creating a permanent memorial. They were sworn by those who knew the victims as relatives, neighbors, schoolmates, work acquaintances, etc. Because of a translation problem in software and sometimes lack of clarity on the forms, the relationship between the deponent and the victim is not always clear, and sex and relationship are frequently inverted on the form (grandmothers called grandsons, women called nephews). I have therefore given it as “deponent” unless it is very clear. But if you don't investigate further, you will miss people who the original record can indicate are cousins, nephews, neices, et al. Remember, the Page of Testimony gives many more details and everyone should visit Yad Vashem's site to learn more. I have not eliminated duplicates that are given by multiple deponents - if a person is reported by five people they will appear here five times. I have not eliminated a person whose testimony was given twice by the same person if they were given at different times - a later affidavit may provide new information on the witness if not the deceased. And sometimes they have different information filled in at different times - there is more than one person whose parents were not provided in one form and were given in another. A mother's name is, as was given in the report, there is no assumption that this is a maiden name. Maiden names are listed separately, when they are provided. This new index was created by the examination of individual records and covers only the victims whose surnames begin F through K (though the relatives can be of any surname). We hope to continue this process for other relatives in the near future, adding addtional linked pages.

More indices of Holocaust material are also scheduled for May 2008. The webmaster has worked her way through some of the lists, removing duplicates that are by the same deponent given on the same day. There are a number of new additions to people who should be linked to Lyakhovichi lists but were not previously reported . And we have searched in more related databases, so check back before June 1, 2008 to see this even larger resource. And let us share the information in your larger knowledge base. Who in your family died in the Holocaust. Has a memorial page been created for them? Does your family have any pictures of these cousins, aunts, siblings?

The Jewish Council in Lyakhovichi, which was established by the Nazis to aid in the destruction of the Nazi-organized Lyakhovichi ghetto, walked the hell-path that was common to these organizations. The leaders thought they could delay the murders the Nazis planned, if they provided services the Nazis wanted. They thought they could keep more people alive a little longer if they stayed within rules that the Nazis officers said were important. As Bauer's book shows, some are remembered almost as saints. But the book Judenrat: The Jewish Councils in Eastern Europe under Nazi Occupation by Isaiah Trunk, published in 1996 by the University of Nebraska Press shows that there were few who could walk the tightrope successfully. His book specifically mentions the Lyakhovichi ghetto council headed by Itzie Zmudziak and the strong efforts of young members of Zionist and political groups to reach the partisans in the marshes and forests. The Simon Wiesenthal Center commemorates Zalman Rabinowicz, Josef Peker, and Haim Abramowicz, as leaders of the resistance in the Lyakhovichi ghetto. Shmuel Mordkowski of Lyakhovichi is remembered as a renowned partisan who repeatedly struck at the Nazis from the Pripet Marshes. There were two aktions in Lyakhovichi (Fall 1941 and June 1942) which murdered thousands. The Nazis scheduled a final liquidation and the resistance fighters went into action with armaments that they had been smuggling in at high cost. Each weapon smuggled in, was also one less person smuggled out, and was also that much less money for food to be illegally purchased. Armed resistance slowed the Nazi progress, but in the end, the survivors were the ones that escaped to the partisans in the forest, and less than ten Jews survived in Lyakhovichi itself. Eighty Jews are known to have survived in the armies of the Soviet Union, dozens who were victims of the harsh Soviet deportation policies found themselves after the war alive in Siberia, Kazakhastan, Turkemenistan, and various Autonomous Republics and the Russian interior.Do you have information on the particular criminals whom we should hold accountable in Lyakhovichi? Do you know more about the circumstances of anyone who escaped? Have you read a witness report of a death we should also tell? Wilfred Kay answered those questions by translating the report above which though movingly written in Yiddish has been unavailable to English-language-only speakers for sixty years, thank-you so much, Wilfred! And Wilfred has since also added the report on the Trial for War Crimes of Yosef Grunevich which is on our page Holocaust, page 3

 

599 Residents of Lyakhovichi,
who Died in the Holocaust

Around five thousand Jews are reported dead in three Aktions in Lyakhovichi. There was a ghetto and a "judenrat" in Lyakhovichi. There was a ghetto and judenrat in nearby Baranovichi. There were repeated efforts especially among young men and women from teens through thirties, to escape into Soviet territory, and to join up with partisan organizations functioning in this forested section of the Pripet marshes. There are reports of those who escaped, at least temporarily, from Nazi hands, by hundreds of different innovative means, and yet 5,000 Jews were reported dead by various competent authorities including the Nazi organizations themselves. We know the names of less than 400 people. Contact Yad Vashem to provide depositions and let us know about any new (or missed) registrations so we can help bear witness. This list is of the 599 that were reported as of December 2004. This material was extracted and formatted by Deborah G. Glassman, January 2005

 

Abbreviations - Bar=Bar.; Now=Nowogrodek.; Bel=Belarus or Belorussia; L= Lachowicze or Lechowitz, or Lyakhovichi or other spelling variant.

599 Residents
of Lyakhovichi
who Died in the Holocaust

SURNAME

FirstName

Residence

"Township"

Powet or Region

Country

Year of
Birth

-

Klara

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1905

-

Zisa

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1920

-

Baruch

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

ABRAMOVICH

David

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1913

ABRAMOWICZ

Lea

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

ABRAMOWICZ

Reizel

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1905

ANGELOVICZ

Yisroel

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1924

ANGELOVITZ

Brakha

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1882

ANGELOVITZ

Yaakov

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1909

ANGELOWIC

Mery

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1870

ANGELOWIC

Sara

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

ANGELOWIC

Mery

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1860

ANGELOWIC

Berl

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1899

ANGELOWIC

Rachel

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1912

ANGELOWICZ

Zisl

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1920

ANGELOWICZ

Motel

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1915

ANGELOWICZ

Mechel

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1918

ANGELOWICZ

Leib

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1888

ANGELOWICZ

Boruch

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1884

ANGELOWICZ

Bracha

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1882

ANGELOWICZ

Yaakov

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1895

ANGELOWICZ

Icchok

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1882

ANGELOWICZ

Sara

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1886

ANGELOWICZ

Zisl

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1924

ANGELOWICZ

Zisel

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1918

ANGELOWICZ

Fruma

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1920

ANGELOWICZ

Jakov

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1890

ANGELOWICZ

Sara

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

ANGILAVICH

Yaakov

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1910

ANGILOVICH

Bracha

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1885

ANGILOWICZ

Sara

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

ANGILOWICZ

Jakob

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1926

BADER

Isak

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1878

BADER

Joszua

L.

Bar

Now

Poland

1900

BARANCHUK

Mosche

Lechovich

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1897

BARANCHUK

Chana

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1905

BARANCHUK

Chanan

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1929

BARMAN

Brakha

Lachowitz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

BARNAK

Pinchas

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1913

BARNAK

Pinie

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1913

BARNAK

Rasza

Suwalki

Suwalki

Bialystok

Poland

1919

BARNAK

Dinka

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1866

BARNAK

Haim

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1910

BARNAK

Rasha

Suwalki

Suwalki

Bialystok

Poland

1919

BARNAK

Pope

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1904

BARNAK

Guta

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1911

BARNAK

Rasha

Suwalki

Suwalki

Bialystok

Poland

1919

BARNAK

Refael

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1903

BARNCHUK

Lea

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1923

BASZKER

Szaja

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1882

BASZKIER

Rachel

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1880

BASZKIER

Moses

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1913

BASZKIER

Moses

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1913

BASZKIER

Hirsz

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1923

BASZKIER

Rachel

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1880

BEDER

Bracha

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1869

BELIC

Sima

Lechovicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1907

BELIN

Drezi

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1905

BELIN

Mojsze

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1904

BELIN

Simon

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1901

BERGER

Stefa

Warszawa

Warszawa

Warszawa

Poland

1918

BERKOVICH

Velvl

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1920

BERKOVICH

Ilia

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1920

BERKOVITZ

Pesja

Lechovicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1891

BERKOWICZ

Mynachem

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

BERMAN

Eizick

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

BERMAN

Bril

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

BERMAN

Rachel

L.

Bar.

Now..

Poland

BIRGER

Gisia

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1888

BIRGER

Chaia

Bar.

Now.

Bel

1875

BIRGER

Josef

Bar.

Now.

Bel

1878

BIRGER

Rubin

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1912

BLEZOWZKI

Dawid

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1906

BLEZOWZKI

Haja

Bar.

Now.

Bel.

1904

BLOZOWSKI

Mordekhai

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1937

BLOZOWSKI

Yitzkhak

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1939

BLOZOWSKI

David

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1905

BOBROW

Raicha

Lechevitz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

ng

BORSTEIN

Froma

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

ng

BORSZEIN

Bluma

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

ng

BOSAK

Avraham

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1924

BREVDA

Khana

Lechovich

Bar.

Now.

Poland

ng

BREVDA

Moshe

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

ng

BREVDA

Tzipora

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1924

BREVDE

Miriam

Kleck

Nieswiez

Now.

Poland

1921

BREWDE

Mirl

L.

Bar.

Now.

Bel

1920

BRIMBERG

Roschke

Baranovitsh

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1880

BROMBERG

Abram

Warszawa

Warszawa

Warszawa

Poland

BROMBERG

Hersh

Warszawa

Warszawa

Warszawa

Poland

BRUCK

Schalom

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1907

BRUCK

Jenke

Dolginovo

Wilejka

Wilno

Poland

1909

BRYMBERG

Roszka

Bar.

Now.

1887

BUKSHPAN

Khaia

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

BUKSHPAN

Dov

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1888

BUKSZPAN

Berko

Bereznica

Bar.

Now.

Poland

BUKSZPAN

Berko

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1889

BUKSZPAN

Yekhiel

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1926

BUKSZPAN

Khaia

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

BUKSZPAN

Chaja

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

BULMAN

Yosef

Poltosk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1897

BURSHTEIN

Magdalena

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1923

BURSTEIN

Wolf

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

BUSLOVSKI

Ahhron

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1891

BUTENSKI

Nachum

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1900

BUTLENSKI

Mariem

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1902

CHAZANOWICZ

Ruchel

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

CHEJFEC

Rajzel

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

CHERNIKHOVSKI

Sara

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1918

CHERNIKHOVSKI

Sara

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1918

CHISIN

Noach

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

CUTUN

Ithok

Lachovici

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1904

CYRINSKI

Girsz

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1872

CYRYNSKA

Mina

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1914

CYRYNSKI

Tzvi

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1876

CYRYNSKI

Mowsza

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1913

DITKOWSKI

Michl

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

DOBKOWSKI

Chaja

Baranowice

Rybnik

Slask

Poland

1910

DOBKOWSKI

Israel

Bar.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1909

DUBINSKI

Eliezer

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1914

DUBINSKI

Hadasa

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1877

DUBINSKI

Awraham

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1912

EDELSZTEJN

Michel

Bialystok

Bialystok

Bialystok

Poland

1885

EFRAIMSKI

Sheina

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1904

EFRAIMSKI

Avraham

Lachowitz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1900

EFRAIMSKI

Sheina

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1904

EIZENBERG

Hinda

Lachowitz

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1870

EPSHTEIN

Shina

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1927

EPSHTEIN

Motl

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1896

EPSHTEIN

Keila

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1942

EPSHTEIN

Eshka

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1898

EPSHTEIN

Khaia

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1920

EPSHTEIN

Etlia

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1929

EPSHTEIN

Bela

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1924

EPSHTEIN

Lea

Lachowitz

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1915

EPSHTEIN

Yisrael

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1881

EPSHTEIN

Alter

Lachowitz

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1878

FAINSTEIN

Shahne

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1896

FAINSTEIN

Batia

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1896

FEJGELMAN

Rachel

Lachowitz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1916

FISHER

Sara

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

FOGELMAN

Sonia

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1885

FOGELMAN

Zeidl

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1920

FOGELMAN

Itka

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1913

FOGELMAN

Alter

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1880

FOGELMAN

Bluma

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1905

FRAJND

Jakob

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1890

FRAJND

Chaim

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1915

FRAJND

Abel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1917

FRAJND

Moshe

Lahiszyn

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1892

FRAJND

Ita

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1890

FREINT

Khaim

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1917

FREINT

Yaakov

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1898

FRIDMAN

Smil

Lachowitz

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1870

GAM

Ester

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

GAM

Ester

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

GAM

Nechama

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1925

GAM

Nechama

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1925

GAM

Lejb

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1905

GAM

Lejb

Liachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1905

GARBLOW

Chaim

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

GAVSHEYEV

Hasiya

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1892

GAVZE

Szaine

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1893

GAWZE

Alter

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1882

GAWZE

Iechiel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1905

GELFAND

Tunya

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1925

GELFAND

Brakha

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1898

GELFAND

Khaim

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1896

GELGOR

Batya

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1894

GERBER

Moisei

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1888

GERBER

Veniamin

L.

Dzerzhinsk

Minsk

Bel

1929

GERBER

Naftali

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1922

GLAZER

Ysrael

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1902

GLAZER

-

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1924

GLAZER

Zelig

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1920

GLAZER

Sara

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1904

GLOCER

Rakhel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1915

GLOCER

Rachel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1915

GOLDBERG

Elka

Lechovicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1906

GOLDBERG

Mosze

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1910

GOLDBERG

Sara

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

GOLDMAN

Ahron

Lachowitz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

GOLDMAN

Lea

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1895

GOLIBRODA

Gitel

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1892

GRABLOV

Beniamin

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1900

GREBLOW

Rachel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

GRINBERG

Gentile

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

GRINBERG

Yehoshua

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1925

GRINBERG

Asher

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1897

GRINBERG

Guta

Bar.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

GRINBERG

Asher

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

GUTTZEIT

Sheina

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1895

GUTZEID

Barukh

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1924

GUTZEID

Barukh

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1924

GUTZEIT

Chaya

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1908

GUTZEIT

Lota

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1910

GUTZEIT

Ela

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1901

HELLER

Alta

Pinsk

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1907

INDITZKY

Boshe

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1885

IUZIK

Tzvi

Lechovicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

IUZIK

Simkha

Lechowicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

JANOWICZ

Tajbl

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

JANOWICZ

Jerachmiel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

JELIN

Refael

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1898

JELIN

Guta

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1880

JOSELEWICZ

-

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1939

JOSELEWICZ

Tzvi

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

JOSELEWICZ

Moshe

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

JOSELEWSKA

Sara

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1904

JOSILEWICZ

Sara

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1904

JOSILEWICZ

Sheina

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

JOSZPA

Chana

Bar.

Bar.

1906

JUNISZ

Chana

Bar.

Bar.

KAGAN

Sara

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1912

KAGAN

Sara

Poland

Bar.

Bar.

1909

KAGAN

Benjamin

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1906

KAPLAN

Miriyam

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Bel

1892

KAPLAN

Sarah

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1914

KAPLAN

Elka

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1925

KAPLAN

Mosze

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

KAPLAN

Rivka

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1905

KAPLAN

Aba

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1900

KAPLAN

Batja

Lachovitch

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1878

KAPLAN

Michael

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1916

KAPLAN

Debora

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1918

KAPLAN

Khaim

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1924

KAPLAN

Michla

Poland

Bar.

Bar.

1896

KARBEL

Icchaak

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1925

KARBEL

Lea

Lachowice

Bobrka

Lwow

Poland

1890

KARBIL

Mojsze

Lechovicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1903

KATZ

Leah

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1932

KATZ

Szymon

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1927

KATZ

Sara

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1903

KATZ

Sara

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1903

KATZ

Szalom

Pultusk

Pultusk

Warszawa

Poland

1926

KERBEL

Jakob

Bar.

Bar.

1900

KERBEL

Avraham

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

KERBEL

Lea

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1901

KERBEL

Riwa

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1922

KERBEL

Syma

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1918

KERBEL

Sonia

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1913

KERBEL

Frumet

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1920

KERBEL

Rivka

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1914

KERBEL

Jchak

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1921

KERBEL

Gerszon

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1890

KERBEL

Ysrael

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1908

KERBEL

Yaakov

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1900

KERBEL

Hirsh

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1914

KERBEL

Reizel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1892

KERBEL

Fruma

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1920

KERBEL

Lea

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1890

KERBEL

Israel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1922

KERBEL

Khaia

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1910

KERBEL

David

Lachowitz

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

KERBEL

Leib

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1923

KERBEL

Shmuel

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1925

KERBEL

Enta

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1900

KERBEL

Mark

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1922

KERBEL

Gerszon

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1890

KERBEL

Moshe

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1903

KERBEL

Abraham

Lechovicz

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1886

KICHEL

Reizel

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1899

KICHEL

David

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1895

KICHEL

Benjamin

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1924

KIRZHNER

Bilha

Bar.

Bar.

KIRZNER

Szalom

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

KIRZNER

Bella

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

KITIN

Tana

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1927

KOERBEL

Israel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1914

KOERBEL

Sime

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1922

KOLODIZKI

Hinda

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1921

KUBEL

Shalom

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1916

KUKHAR

Khana

L.

Pinsk

Polesie

Poland

1924

KURLANCIK

Golda

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

LEISEROWICZ

Primet

Warsaw

Warszawa

Warszawa

Poland

LERER

Gitel

L.

Bar.

Bar.

Poland

1899

LEVIN

Mendel

Suwalki

Suwalki

Bialystok

Poland

1909

LEVIN

Miriam

Bar.

Bar.

LEW

Michael

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland

1898

LEW

Rivka

L.

Bar.

Now.

Poland