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                | The German Army entered Bukachevtsy on July 3, 1941. 
                  Many Jewish residents were sent to the ghetto in nearby
                  Rohatyn.  From there many were killed and buried in a
                  mass grave in Rohatyn, while the majority were sent to the
                  Belzec death camp.  There were three separate "Aktions,"
                  September 21, 1942 (Yom Kippur),  October 26, 1942, and
                  January 19, 1943.
 
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				  Belzec
                  Memorial From
                  March through December 1942 about 500,000 Jews, most from 
                  Galicia
                  , were exterminated at Belzec.
 The corpses were buried in mass graves and there are no
                  records of the names of these people.
 
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              | Memorial to those who were murdered in Rohatyn
 
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                | The Rohatyn Holocaust memorial is in the middle of a field, on
                  the outskirts of town. There is one marker, in Cyrillic, which
                  commemorates the Soviet citizens who died during World War II,
                  with no mention of Jews. The more recent monument, put up by
                  Israelis, commemorates the 3500 Jews from Rohatyn and surrounding
                  communities who were killed by the Germans in March 1942.
 
				   
				     
                  Monument to those who perished in the Holocaust, Mt. Hebron
                  Cemetery, Flushing, N.Y.
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                | (Photographs
                  taken by Linda Cantor) |  
		 
          
            
              
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				  Memorial
                  to those from Bukachevtsy who were murdered, Mt. Zion,
                  Jerusalem
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				(Photograph
                contributed by Rosalie Lawrence and Ruth Holler Smith) | 
                                
                  				The inscription, translated by Beverly Shulster Beiman, reads
 
				In
                  Eternal Memory:
 This stone will be a monument to the memories of our 
                  blessed parents, brothers, sisters, wives and children (may
                  God avenge their deaths) from the city of BUKASHEVITZ and the
                  vicinity (Galicia, Eastern Poland) who were murdered and
                  slaughtered by the Nazis and their henchmen (may their names
                  be wiped from memory) in the years of the Shoa, 5701-5704
                  [1940-1943] May their souls be bound up in the bond of life.
 Bukashevitz
                  Organization in Israel and the Diaspora |  
	   
 
          
            
              
                |  Click
                  here to
                  read a detailed report on the murder of the Jews in the
                  Stanislawow Region.  This report, written by German
                  Holocaust scholar Dieter Pohl, appears on the website of the
                  Shoah Resource Center of Yad Vashem. (Yad Vashem Studies, Vol.
                  26, 1998, pp. 239- 265, translated by William Temple) |  
		 
          
        
            
              
                | 
  Click here
                  to see
                  Bukachevtsy residents and recorded Holocaust records.  |  
		 
          
            
              
                |  Click here
                  to see
                  Bukachevtsy residents recorded on the Project Heart
                  database. |  
		 
          
            
              
                |  Click here
                  to see Bukachevtsy residents who survived the Holocaust. |  
                |  |  
                |  Click 
				here to see the USC Shoah Foundation Survivor Interviews  |  
                |  |  
                |  Click here 
				to read the testimony on the Holocust by Bullets webpage  |  
        
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