STROPKOV, SLOVAKIA
THE
HOLOCAUST
By 1942, the Jews were effectively removed from the social and economic life of Slovakia. In early spring, the Nazis demanded that the Slovakian government provide 20,000 young, healthy Slovakian Jews for slave labor.
The
first transport left Stropkov on March 24, 1942,
carrying several
hundred of the town's young women, as well
as some from
her "daughter" villages.
These
women
were destined for Auschwitz. Nearly all perished
within
a year of their arrival.
Later that week, hundreds of men aged 16 through 50
were also transported,
bound for the horrors of Majdanek. None survived. With
their husbands,
sons, and daughters gone, the remaining Jews
were now
left defenseless and broken. Bowing
to pressure
from the Vatican and influential Jewish groups, the
Slovakian government
then decided to deport those who remained--generally
mothers, children,
and the elderly--in "humanitarian family
transports."
And
so on May 23, 1942, two very large "family transports" left
Stropkov.
One transport carried c. 1,000 people to a ghetto in Rejowiec, a small town near Lublin, Poland. There, many died under the harsh conditions; the rest perished in Sobibor in August, 1942. Read about their last hours in an eye-witness account written by one of the few Jews who escaped with his life that fateful day.
The other transport carried c. 600 Jews to Zilina, Slovakia. From there, they were evidently sent to Auschwitz. None survived.
Other,
smaller transports left Stropkov through the summer of
1942. By this
time, even those few Jews who were protected by
economic exemptions
lived in constant fear.
A small
number
of Stropkov Jews evaded the transports
through
bribery,
adoption
of
Aryan identities,
escape
over
the Hungarian border,
hiding
in bunkers
in the deep Slovakian forests--any or all of the above.
To
see a comprehensive list of those Stropkovers and
villagers who perished
in the Holocaust (and those who survived), arranged family
by family, press
here.
In 1942, before the Holocaust, there were approximately 2000 Jews in the Stropkov region. By 1945, only some 100 were still alive.
Some
Holocaust survivors were emotionally unable
to return
"home" to Stropkov after the war. Others stayed
briefly, then
moved on. Over time, most of those who did re-settle
in the town
left too. Some were drawn to the security
of nearby
cities or to relatives
overseas. Most, however,
immigrated to the new State of Israel.
By the time the Communists occupied Slovakia, only a handful of Jews still lived in the Stropkov area. One of them, Jakub Grunfeld, cared for the Stropkov cemetery until his death in 1985. When he--the last Jew-- was buried there, a circle spanning centuries of Jewish history came to a close.