| 
 
 Bukachevtsy Natives in the Holocaust
Bukachevtsy Natives who lived in Germany
Below you will find two lists of people born in Bukachevtsy who moved to 
Germany.  While we do not know the fates of all of them, we assume that they 
perished in the Holocaust. 
Liste der jüdischen Einwohner in Deutschland im Zeitraum von 1933 bis 1945 
(translates to List of Jewish Residents in Germany from 1933 to 1945 
The following people, born in Bukachevtsy, are listed as residents of Germany 
from 1933 to 1945 on this list which was compiled by the Bundesarchiv (German 
Federal Archives). The list was presented to the United States Holocaust 
Memorial Museum in Washington, DC in February, 2009. 
 
From a press release of the USHMM: 
The list was compiled by the foundation “Remembrance, Responsibility, and 
Future” and the German Federal Archives. It contains information on the 
approximately 600,000 Jewish citizens in Germany when the Nazi Party came to 
power. It is the only such list available in North America and will be 
accessible through the Museum’s archives.
 The list makes it possible for the first time to gain a nearly complete overview 
of the Jewish population in Germany before the Holocaust and is an important 
document for reconstructing Jewish history in Germany. The list was compiled in 
cooperation with the German Federal Archives and with the financial support of 
the German government
 
We do not know the certain fate of most of these Bukachevtsy natives.  But we 
have Yad Vashem Pages of Testimony for two.  Chuno Grosnas, son of Wolf Leib and 
Rosa, was married to Sheindel, lived in Lamberg, Westphalia, Germany (south of 
Hamburg) before the war and perished in Poland in 1942.  Nechemia Weissmann, son 
of Yehoshua and Leah, was married to Sheindel Heller, lived in Hamburg before 
the war and perished in Auschwitz.
 
	
		
			| 
			
			Last Name | 
			
			First Name | 
			
			Date of Birth |  
			| 
			
			Akselrad | 
			
			Chaie | 
			
			20 July 1886 |  
			| 
			
			Bergstein | 
			
			Gottlieb | 
			
			1 April 1891 |  
			| 
			
			Grosnas | 
			
			Chuno | 
			
			1888 |  
			| 
			
			Lichtigfeld | 
			
			Klara Weisberg | 
			
			11 Oct 1866 |  
			| 
			
			Luefschuetz | 
			
			Wolfgang | 
			
			24 January 1901 |  
			| 
			
			Weissmann | 
			
			Nechemia | 
			
			25 December 1888 |  
 
 
	
		
			| 
			
			Gedenkbuch
 
 |  
			| 
			
			The 
			
			
			
			Gedenkbuch 
			
			is a memorial or yiskor book for the Jews of Germany, listing almost 
			150,000 people.  For each victim, the book cites the last known 
			place of residence in Germany, the birth date, the death date (if 
			known) and circumstances of death.   
			 
			
			Zbaszyn, now known as Bentschen,  was a German-Polish border 
			town.  In 1938 Germany deported over 17,000 Polish Jews to 
			Zbaszyn but the Poles refused to allow them entry.  They stayed 
			there in deplorable conditions for many months till the Polish 
			government allowed them to enter the country.  There is more 
			information on Bentschen on a site hosted by Yad Vashem and one 
			hosted by 
			
			
			
			HEART 
			(Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team). |  
			| 
			
			Gedenkbuch. Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der national- 
			sozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933 - 1945; 
			Bundesarchiv; Koblenz, 2006
 |  
 
	
		
			| 
			
			Last Name | 
			
			First Name | 
			
			Maiden Name | 
			
			Date of Birth | 
			
			Living in | 
			
			Deported to Concentration Camp | 
			
			Date of Death | 
			
			Place of Death |  
			| 
			
			Akselrad | 
			
			David | 
			
			  | 
			
			23-Sep-1886 | 
			
			  | 
			
			Sachsenhausen | 
			
			27-Feb-1940 | 
			
			Sachsenhausen |  
			| 
			
			Alt | 
			
			Chaya  | 
			
			Siedler | 
			
			9-May1888 | 
			
			Stettin | 
			
			  | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Baumrind | 
			
			Benzion | 
			
			  | 
			
			2-Jun-1888 | 
			
			  | 
			
			Bentschen (Zbaszyn) | 
			
			   | 
			
			probably Belzec |  
			| 
			
			Berger | 
			
			Jacob | 
			
			  | 
			
			19-Jun-1884 | 
			
			Wolfenbüttel | 
			
			  | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Berger | 
			
			Pepi | 
			
			  | 
			
			23-May-1899 | 
			
			Recklinghausen & Szczecin | 
			
			1942-1943, Majdanek; 1944-1945, Auschwitz; 1945-19 Jun, Buchenwald | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Bergwerk | 
			
			Hilda  | 
			
			Dickman | 
			
			3-Jun-1876 | 
			
			Herne | 
			
			29 Jul 1942, Theresienstadt ghetto; 23 Sep 1942, Treblinka | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Dickmann | 
			
			Chaim | 
			
			  | 
			
			17-Jun-1890 | 
			
			Stettin | 
			
			  | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Dickmann | 
			
			Hersch | 
			
			  | 
			
			22-Jan-1899 | 
			
			Stettin | 
			
			  | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Dickmann | 
			
			Minna | 
			
			 Lieder | 
			
			4-Feb-1891 | 
			
			Stettin | 
			
			  | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Dickmann | 
			
			Minna | 
			
			 Holler | 
			
			14-Apr-1892 | 
			
			Stettin | 
			
			  | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Holler | 
			
			Abraham | 
			
			  | 
			
			3-Jun-1884 | 
			
			Osnabruck, Essen, Saarbrucken | 
			
			1940, Sachsenhausen | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Holler | 
			
			Abraham Hersch | 
			
			  | 
			
			16-May-1881 | 
			
			Mainz | 
			
			1943, Auschwitz | 
			
			14-Sep-1943 | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Lerner | 
			
			Golde | 
			
			  | 
			
			18-Jan-1906 | 
			
			Remschied | 
			
			1942, Auschwitz | 
			
			26-Sep-1942 | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Lichtigfeld | 
			
			Jacob | 
			
			  | 
			
			28-Feb-1928 | 
			
			Dusseldorf | 
			
			27 Oct 1941, Lodz Ghetto | 
			
			28-Mar-1942 | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Lieder | 
			
			Betty | 
			
			  | 
			
			24-Mar-1884 | 
			
			Szczecin | 
			
			12 Feb 1940, Piaski, Ghetto | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Lieder | 
			
			Josef | 
			
			  | 
			
			11-Jul-1881 | 
			
			Szczecin | 
			
			12 Feb 1940, Piaski, Ghetto | 
			
			21-Apr-1940 | 
			
			Lublin, Ghetto |  
			| 
			
			Lieder | 
			
			Rosa  | 
			
			Nagelberg | 
			
			2-Jan-1889 | 
			
			Szczecin | 
			
			12 Feb 1940, Piaski, Ghetto | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Messing | 
			
			Dina | 
			
			Holler | 
			
			6-Nov-1896 | 
			
			Leipzig | 
			
			1941, Tarnow Ghetto | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Nagelberg | 
			
			Ben Zion | 
			
			  | 
			
			20-Dec-1904 | 
			
			Stettin | 
			
			  | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Nagelberg | 
			
			Frieda  | 
			
			Holler | 
			
			23-Sep-1900 | 
			
			Hamburg | 
			
			28 Oct 1938 Bentschen (Zbaszyn) | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Nagelberg | 
			
			Isaak | 
			
			  | 
			
			17-Feb-1893 | 
			
			Hamburg | 
			
			28 Oct 1938 Bentschen (Zbaszyn) | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Schreier | 
			
			Selig | 
			
			  | 
			
			15-Oct-1889 | 
			
			Berlin | 
			
			28 Oct 1938 Bentschen (Zbaszyn) | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Weissmann | 
			
			Jozef | 
			
			  | 
			
			1-Jan-1867 | 
			
			Hamburg | 
			
			Summer 1939, Bentschen (Zbaszyn) | 
			
			   | 
			
			  |  
			| 
			
			Weissmann | 
			
			Nechemia | 
			
			  | 
			
			25-Dec-1888 | 
			
			Hamburg | 
			
			Summer 1939, Bentschen (Zbaszyn) | 
			
			  | 
			
			  |  
Tracing the Past, 
a non-profit organization dedicated to the research and memorialization of the 
Holocaust, has put a searchable version of the German Minority Census on-line.  
There is a great deal of useful information on those Bukachevtsy people who 
lived in Germany in 1939.
 German Minority Census, 1939
 The German government conducted a census in May 1939 (including annexed Austria 
and the Sudetenland) that required the head of each household to fill out a card 
which indicated the Jewish background of each of the resident's four 
grandparents. By 1942, the cards of households with one or more residents with a 
Jewish grandparent marked on their card, the so-called "Minority Census," were 
collected and and sent to the Reich Genealogy Office.
 
 By the 1990s the cards were in the custody of the German Federal Archives. The 
cards are about 87% complete, lacking only for Thüringen, the Rhine Province, 
the districts of Erfurt and Minden, and several districts of Bavaria. Many of 
the districts included are areas that are now part of Poland (such as Silesia 
and Pomerania) and Russia (Königsberg / Kaliningrad).
 
 
Microfilm copies of of the supplementary cards of the German "Minority Census" 
of 1939 are publicly available in the United States at the 
Family History Library 
of Salt Lake City, Utah; the 
Leo 
Baeck Institute 
in New York and the 
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 
in Washington, DC; and a copy of the census is in Israel at 
Yad 
Vashem 
in Jerusalem. 
The database contains the names of all of the people who lived in the household 
where one or more people had at least one Jewish grandparent. This means that 
there are also a number of non-Jewish individuals in the database, making it 
source material for finding more biographical information on non-Jewish spouses.
 
Of the approximately 410,000 original entries, about 275,000 (or around 67%) of 
the "Minority Census" are available online, searchable by family name, first 
name, maiden name if applicable, birth date, birth place, street address and 
city.   
	
		
			| 
				
					| 
					
					Family Name | 
					
					First Name | 
					
					Maiden Name | 
					
					Date of Birth | 
					
					Place of Birth | 
					
					Address in Germany | 
					
					City in Germany |  
					| 
					
					Akselrad | 
					
					David  | 
					
					  | 
					
					20.07.1886  | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Johanniterstr. 31II. | 
					
					Würzburg / Bayern |  
					| 
					
					Berger  | 
					
					Jacob  | 
					
					  | 
					
					19.06.1884  | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Grosser Zimmerhof 21 | 
					
					Wolfenbuttel |  
					| 
					
					Bergwerk | 
					
					Hilde | 
					
					Dickmann | 
					
					03.06.1876 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Schulstrasse 69 | 
					
					Herne |  
					| 
					
					Brüll | 
					
					Rosa | 
					
					Brull | 
					
					15.07.1857 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Hauptstrasse 8 | 
					
					Lichtenberg/Berlin |  
					| 
					
					Guttmann | 
					
					Ella | 
					
					Dickmann | 
					
					16.04.1893 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Stoltingstrasse 9 | 
					
					Stettin |  
					| 
					
					Guttmann | 
					
					Mendel | 
					
					  | 
					
					16.01.1890 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Stoltingstrasse 9 | 
					
					Stettin |  
					| 
					
					Haller | 
					
					Abraham | 
					
					  | 
					
					03.06.1884 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Kollegienwall 2 a | 
					
					Osnabruck |  
					| 
					
					Holler | 
					
					Abraham | 
					
					  | 
					
					16.05.1881 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Grosse Emmeranstrasse 39 | 
					
					Mainz |  
					| 
					
					Lieder | 
					
					Josef | 
					
					  | 
					
					11.07.1881 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Barnimstrasse 62 | 
					
					Stettin |  
					| 
					
					Lieder | 
					
					Rosa | 
					
					   | 
					
					02.01.1889 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Barnimstrasse 62 | 
					
					Stettin |  
					| 
					
					Wachtel | 
					
					Toni | 
					
					Akselrad | 
					
					23.10.1882 | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Rosengasse 1 | 
					
					Wurzburg |  |  
Josef Lieder was the son of Natan and Yehudit and was married to Rosa Nagelberg. 
Isaak Nagelberg, also known as Isidor, was the son of Joel and Chana, and was 
married to Frieda Holler.  He returned to Bukachevtsy from Zbaszyn and was 
killed there. Frieda Holler Nagelberg, the daughter of Eli and 
Chaya, was married to Isidor Nagelberg.  She returned to Bukachevtsy from 
Zbaszyn and was killed there 
Jozef (Yossel) Weisman was born in 1878, the son of Yehoshua and Leah, and was 
married to Rachel.  He returned to Bukachevtsy from Zbaszyn and was killed 
there. 
Additional information from Bukachevtsy vital records:
Abraham Hersch Holler was the son of Brane Holler and Cudek (sic) Schwartz, both 
from Bukachevtsy
 Benzion Baumrind is listed as the son of Chaya Baumrind of Bukachevtsy, no 
father listed (His father was Benjamin Mandel. Benzion,  and along with his wife 
Chaya and son Benjamin, returned to Bukachevtsy and they were all killed there.  
This information came from Solomon Mandel, a survivor, who remembered these 
events. Solomon's grandfather Meshulum Zalman was a brother of Benjamin.)
 
David (David Mechel) Akselrad (Axelrad) was the son of Chana Lieder and Yossel 
Axelrad, both from Bukachevtsy 
Ella Dickmann Guttman is listed as the daughter of Berish and Sosie Dickmann 
JewishGen Holocaust Database
You can find Bukachevtsy natives listed on five different databases included on 
the 
JewishGen Holocaust Database. 
A list of the five databases, with links, follows.  You can learn more 
about each database and what it includes, by reading the detailed descriptions 
on Jewishgen.com. The table below provides the basic information from each 
database.  The amount of information on each database varies, some contain 
more extensive information.  Be sure to do your own search on the Holocaust 
Database so as to obtain the maximum information. 
APP - 
Auschwitz Prisoners Photos, 1941-1942  
NBJ - 
North Bavarian Jews 
PMQ - 
Polish Medical Questionnaires 
SHP - 
Sharit haPlatahWJ - 
Westphalian Jews 
 
 
	
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
	
		| Last Name | First 
		Name | POB | DOB | Residence | Database |  
		| Akselrad | David | Bukaczowce | 20-Jul-1886 | Wurzburg | NBJ |  
		| Wachtel | Chaje | Bukaczowce | 24-Oct-1882 | Wurzburg | NBJ |  
		| Schechter | Barbara | Bukaczowce | 1941 | Fohrenwald | SHP |  
		| Tauber-Hochman | Franka | Bukaczowce | 1910 | Schweden | SHP |  
		| Hammer | Felicie Julie | Bukaczowce | 7-Dec-1894 | Kolomea | PMQ |  
		| Kleiner | Szymon | Bukaczowce | 22-Aug-1882 |  | APP |  
		| Berger | Pepi Lieder | Bukaczowce | 23-May-1899 | Recklinghausen | WJ |  
 
Le Mémorial de la Déportation des Juifs de France 
The information below is from an online database of the "Memorial to the Jews 
Deported from France", available at https://stevemorse.org/france . 
This valuable search engine provides access to information on the fate of the 
78,000 Jews who were either deported from France or who died in camps in France 
under the Nazi occupation and the Vichy regime.  A search on Bukaczowce gave us 
this sad information.
 
 
	
		
			| 
				
					| 
					
					Surname | 
					
					Given Name | 
					
					Age | 
					
					Date of birth | 
					
					Place of birth | 
					
					Place of birth former/other/nearby name | 
					
					Place of birth in 2012 Memorial | 
					
					Address | 
					
					Internment/Transit Camp | 
					
					Convoy Number | 
					
					Date of convoy |  
					| 
					
					
					SCHARF | 
					
					BERTHA | 
					
					19 | 
					
					21-Nov-22 | 
					
					Bukachevtsy, Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine | 
					
					Bukaczowce | 
					
					Bukarzowice | 
					
					Venant du camp d'internement, Gurs (Pyrénées-Atlantiques) | 
					
					Rivesaltes | 
					
					33 | 
					
					16-Sep-42 |  |  
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