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Drohobycz Ghetto

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Nazi ghetto in occupied Ukraine

Drohobycz Ghetto
Commemorative plaque at the ghetto house
of Polish writer and artistBruno Schulz
Drohobycz
Drohobycz
Drohobycz location south ofBelzec in World War II, with Nazi-Sovietdemarcation line marked in red
Drohobycz Ghetto is located in Ukraine
Drohobycz Ghetto
Drohobycz Ghetto
Drohobych in modern-day Ukraine(compare with above)
Also known asDrohobych Ghetto
LocationDrohobycz,German-occupied Poland (now Ukraine)
49°13′N23°18′E / 49.21°N 23.30°E /49.21; 23.30
DateJuly 1941 toNovember 1942
Incident typeImprisonment, starvation, mass shootings, deportations toBełżec extermination camp
OrganizationsNazi GermanSS,Order Police battalions
Victims10,000 Jews

Drohobycz Ghetto orDrohobych Ghetto was aNazi ghetto in the city ofDrohobych in WesternUkraine duringWorld War II. The ghetto was liquidated mainly between February and November 1942, when most Jews were deported to theBelzec extermination camp.

Background

During the interwar period,Drohobych was a provincial town in theLwów Voivodeship of theSecond Polish Republic with 80,000 inhabitants,[1] the seat of Drohobycz county with an area of 1,499 square kilometres (579 sq mi) and population of around 194,400 people. Drohobycz belonged to the Lwów region of south-easternKresy, with a sizable Jewish population; exceeding that of Ukrainian and Polish.[2]

After the 1939 German-Sovietinvasion of Poland, interwar Poland was divided in September 1939 between Nazi Germany and the USSR (see map). The town was annexed to theSoviet Ukraine. Drohobych became a centre of the newly expandedDrohobych Oblast in the Soviet zone of occupation. Therepression of Poles and Polish citizens by the NKVD circled around the mass deportations of men, women and children to Siberia.[1]

History

Further information:The Holocaust in German-occupied Poland andHolocaust in Ukraine

In early July 1941, during the first weeks of the GermanOperation Barbarossa, the city was captured by theWehrmacht, and theDistrict of Galicia was created. Drohobych had a petrol-producing plant essential for the German war effort. In September 1942, Drohobych became the site of a large, open type ghetto,[3] holding around 10,000 Jews in anticipation of the final deportations to killing centres inOperation Reinhard.[1] Jewish men of working age remained at the local refinery.[3]

Memorial Wall at former ghetto

The first deportation action of 2,000 Jews from Drohobych to theBelzec extermination camp took place in late March 1942 as soon as the killing centre became operational.[3] The next deportation lasted for nine days in 8–17 August 1942 with 2,500 more Jews loaded ontofreight trains and sent away for gassing. Another 600 Jews were shot on the spot while attempting to hide or trying to flee. The ghetto was declared closed from the outside in late September. In October and November 1942 some 5,800 Jews were deported to Belzec. During these round-ups about 1,200 Jews attempting to flee were killed in the streets with the aid of the newly formedUkrainian Auxiliary Police.[3][4] The remaining slave-workers were transferred to labor facilities, with about 450 people murdered in February 1943. The last of the Drohobycz Jews were transported in groups to Bronicki Forest (las bronicki, i.e. Bronica Forest) and massacred over execution pits between 21 and 30 May 1943.[3]Felix Landau, an SS Hauptscharführer of Austrian origin serving with anEinsatzkommando z.b.V based in Lemberg, participated in the mass executions of Jews, and wrote about it in his daily diary.[5]

One of the most notable inmates of the Drohobych Ghetto wasBruno Schulz, educator, graphic artist and author of popular booksStreet of Crocodiles and theCinnamon Shops.[6] He painted murals for the children's room of one of the German officials before being shot, and after the war, became the most famous Polish writer detained and killed in the Ghetto. The mathematiciansJuliusz Schauder andJózef Schreier lived in the ghetto before their deaths in 1943.[7] Drohobych was liberated by the forces of the Red Army on 6 August 1944.[8] There were only 400 survivors who registered with the Jewish committee after the war ended.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^abc"Drohobych".Polacy na Wschodzie.KARTA Center with the Poles in the East Project. 2006. RetrievedApril 10, 2012.
  2. ^"Drohobycz – local history".Virtual Shtetl. Museum of the History of Polish Jews. RetrievedApril 6, 2012.
  3. ^abcdefArad, Yitzhak (2009).The Holocaust in the Soviet Union. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 277, 282, 237.ISBN 978-0803222700. Retrieved28 May 2014.
  4. ^Howard Aster, Peter J. Potichnyj (1990).Ukrainian-Jewish Relations in Historical Perspective. CIUS Press. p. 415.ISBN 0920862535. Retrieved28 May 2014.
  5. ^The Lost. Searching for Bruno Schulz by Ruth Franklin (The New Yorker, December 16, 2002)
  6. ^"Hitler's Furies" byWendy Lower.ISBN 0547807414
  7. ^Georgiadou, Maria (2004).Constantin Carathéodory: Mathematics and Politics in Turbulent Times. Springer Science & Business Media.ISBN 9783540203520.
  8. ^События 1944 года (Events of 1944) at Hronos.ru

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