On Porozow
Andrei Sikou's Blog. Andrei Silko's in-laws live in Porozow, and he
spends summers there. He has created a blog, mostly in Byelorussian but also
partially in Polish, about Porozow and its environs and history. You can see
it here.
Bernacki
Family. Ed Zwiebach has
some Porozow natives on his family tree, which he has posted on the web. You
can read about them here.
On Belarus
All-Belarus Database. JewishGen hosts this site, which incorporates
several databases containing more than a quarter of a million entries from
Belarus, here.
Background Notes on Belarus. This page on the U.S. State Department's website,
located here, includes information on the geography, people,
government, economy and political environment in modern Belarus, plus extensive
notes on U.S.-Belarussian relations.
Belarus Country Guide. You can find basic information about modern Belarus on the Columbus World
Travel Guide website here.
Belarus Special Interest Group. The home page of the Belarus SIG, which includes a
wealth of resources for conducting research on Belarus and its Jewish
communities can be found here.
National Historical Archives of Belarus in Grodno. This archive holds
records, books, periodicals and other items relating to the former Grodno
province, among other things, from the sixteenth to the early twentieth
century. This website details not only the holdings of the archive, but also
the procedures for commissioning genealogical research.
Jewish Holdings at the Grodno
Archives. This page contains
an inventory of Jewish records, including records from Porozow, that relate to
the former Grodno Gubernia and that are held not only in Grodno, but in several
other regional archives as well as the main archive in Minsk.
Resources for Grodno Gubernia. This page on the JewishGen website posted by the
Belarus Special Interest Group contains links to a host of pages relating to
the history of Grodno and records of its people.
Selected Records from the Grodno
Oblast Archive in the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. This is an
inventory of microfilms that contains documents captured by the Soviets when
they assaulted the German headquarters in Grodno. They are available to be
viewed and copied at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Interesting Facts about Grodno
Gubernia. These facts
include its 1887 population,
broken down by religion and social class and statistics on livestock and
buildings.
Grodno Documents. A page on documentary resources for the study of
towns in the former Grodno Gubernia can be found here.
Bialystok. Latitude: 53º 6' , Longitude: 23º 10'. Bialystok is today is the largest city in
northeast Poland, with a population of about 350,000. Early Jewish settlement in Bialystok, which
is situated on, and named for, the Biala River, was encouraged by
local manorial overlords. According to Encylopaedia Judaica, by 1765, 765 Jews lived in the town. Jews gravitated toward trade and the
textile industry, and by 1898, 80% of the textile mills were Jewish
owned. Just before the turn of the 20th century, Jews, nearly 48,000
strong, accounted for fully three quarters of the population of the town, and
nearly 90% of the merchants were Jewish. Bialystok was assigned to the Soviets
by the German-Soviet Pact of 1939, and held until the Germans invaded in June
1941. Thousands of Jews were immediately rounded up and killed, and a ghetto
was established. There was fierce resistance by the Jewish underground to its
eventual destruction in 1943. After the war, more than 1,000 Jews remained, of
whom 900 were locals and the balance were from neighboring villages. A
memorial to the Bialystok Jewish community can be found here, an account of the
liquidation of the Bialystok ghetto here, and vintage photos of
Bialystok here.
Grodno. Also known as Hrodno.
Latitude: 53º 41', Longitude: 23º 50'. The Encyclopaedia Judaica notes that the Grodno Jewish
community dates to 1389 and is one of the oldest in the former Grand Duchy of
Lithuania. Grodno became a significant center of Jewish learning and was home
to several notable rabbis, and also a center of commerce, its Jews engaged
primarily in agriculture and the timber industry. There were nearly 8,500 Jews
there in 1816, more than 85% of the population at the time. The Jewish
population increased tremendously in the nineteenth and early twentieth century
and stood at more than 21,000 in 1931. The late nineteenth century saw the rise
of both a socialist and a Zionist movement in Grodno. The Nazis occupied the
city in 1941 and most of the Jewish community was wiped out, though 2,000 Jews
resettled there in the post-war years. An extensive history of Grodno written
in 1999 by Ellen Sadove Renck can be found here, the 1911 edition of the
Encyclopedia Brittanica has an article about Grodno here, and information about Grodno
today can be found here.
Jalowka. Also known as Yaluvka.
Latitude: 53º 01', Longitude: 23º 54'. Jews first arrived in Jalowka in the late 17th
century, and soon played a major role in the economy of this town. There were
372 Jews there in 1847, and 668 by 1878, more than 60% of the population of the
town. Many were coppersmiths and carpenters, according to Tomasz Wisniewski’s
1998 book, Jewish Bialystok and Surroundings in Eastern Poland. About 100 Jewish
families lived there on the eve of World War II. Jalowka today is located in
Poland, and has no Jewish population. Information on the remains of the Jalowka
Jewish cemeteries can be found here.
Svisloch. Also known as Svislotch,
Swislocz and Sislevich. Latitude: 53º 02', Longitude: 24º 06'. Known as Sislevich in Yiddish,
Svisloch was one of the larger shtetlach in Grodno
Gubernia. Located on the Svisloch River, it had nearly 1,000 Jews in 1847 and
more than twice that number half a century later, giving it a substantial
Jewish majority. A market town, it was linked economically to Bialystok and
other towns in the area. According to a 1944 article entitled "Swislocz
- Portrait of a Shtetl" written by Abraham Ain, seventy percent of Svisloch’s Jews
earned their living from the local leather industry. A web page about the
former Jewish community of Svisloch can be found here, and the official website of
the Svisloch District of the Grodno Region Administration of the Republic of
Belarus (which includes Porozow) can be found here. The site contains general,
current information about the region, its history, culture, government and
economics.
Volkovysk. Also known as Vaukavysk,
Volkovyskas, and Wolkowysk. Latitude: 53º 10', Longitude: 24º 28'. According to theEncyclopaedia
Judaica, Jews were first mentioned as living in Volkovysk
in the late 16th century. By 1766 the number of Jews paying poll tax in the
area reached nearly 1,300. That number grew steadily throughout the nineteenth
century, and by 1921, there were more than 5,100 Jews there, or 46% of the
population. They primarily worked in trades and were shopkeepers. The Jewish
population was liquidated during the Holocaust when the Germans invaded
Belarus. Information on Jewish Volkovysk can be found here, and
a wonderful, illustrated travelogue of Emma Tait's September, 2005 trip to
Volkovysk can be found here.
Zelwa. Also known as Zelva. Latitude:
53º 09' , Longitude: 24º 49'. The Jewish presence in this small town on the
Zelvyanka River began in the second half of the seventeenth century. According
to Encyclopaedia Judaica, the local Jewish community was
under the jurisdiction of the Grodno kahal. Local Jews were involved in trade,
and numbered about 850 in the middle of the nineteenth century, a number
that grew to more than 1,800, or 66% of the population, by the end of the
century. The Jewish community was destroyed by the Nazis. Information about
Jewish Zelwa can be found here.
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