Images
of Skidel Today
Just
outside of Skidel stands the train station, exit point for many of our recent ancestors.
Although it is forbidden to photograph train stations in Belarus (for security reasons),
we took the risk.
When
the Germans came in 1941, they took an interest in Skidel because of the airport
nearby. Skidel's downtown was bombed and burned within the first days of the German
advance into this area. Today, the downtown area has still not been rebuilt and remains
a large park containing a few monuments to Lenin and Soviet heroes of the war. According
to survivors however, the Russian army fled just before the Germans arrived.
This
small outdoor market, across the street from the "downtown park" described
above, was the only commerce visible anywhere in Skidel during our visit in 1996.
On a few tables, Polish toiletries, dry goods, and grocery items were offered for
sale.
Outside
of the central area, there are side streets with homes that survived the bombing.
Two of these are shown below.
Although
the Jewish schools, hospitals, synagogues, cemetery, homes, and factories are all
gone, the Catholic Church outside of town was recently restored. The Church sits
in a beautiful wooded area frequented by picnickers, walkers, and bicyclists.
Compiled by Linda Hugle
Updated by LH 07 January, 1999
Copyright ©
1996 Linda Hugle
All photographs copyright 1996 Linda Hugle
Click
here for "Town without Memory" and more pictures of Skidel.
History
1928 Businesses
Travel
Sarnatzky Family