Borshchiv Ghetto
Borshchiv Ghetto – Jewish ghetto established and operated by Nazi Germany in the Ukrainian town of Borshchiv in April 1942.
Ghetto history
The ghetto was formed in Borshchiv on 1 April 1942 and operated until July 1943. There were about 4 thousand people.[1][2] At first there was no fence around, but the Jewish were not allowed to go outside. People both from Borshchiv and with Ozeryany, Melnytsia-Podilska, Skala-Podilska, Kryvche, Korolivka partly Chortkiv and Zolochiv.
26 September: about 100 prisoners, mostly old and sick, were shot on the square, about 800 were sent to Bełżec .[3] A group of youth was sent to Yaniv concentration camp in Lviv .
13 March 1943 other 400 people were sent to Bełżec. 19 April 1943 in a Jewish cemetery (in the outskirts of town, on the road to the village Verhnyakivtsi) German and Ukrainian police shot about 800 people. 5 June another 700 people were executed at the cemetery. 9–14 June, additional 1800 ghetto prisoners were killed. Then the Nazis considered Borschiv "Judenfrei" ("free of Jews").[3]
Some Jews, however, were hiding in various recesses both in the ghetto and in other places. So first occupation authorities announced that those who come alone will not be destroyed, and will be in labor camp. About 360 people believed, they were executed on 14 August.[4]
Several Jewish physicians from the ghetto were saved by UPA, where they helped in the fight against the Nazis. In 1943 doctor Tayblis from a village Korolivka and doctor Monya Helyar from the village Turylche were rescued.[5]
Some people succeeded in hiding until the end of the war. For example, Saul and Esther Stermer, their six children and several other Jewish families from Korolivka hid in a cave Verteba near the village Bilche Zolote Bilche Zolote.[6] When raids intensified and two of the escapees were killed, they went into the cave Priest's Grotto. There 38 people were hiding for 511 days. Local farmers helped Jews: brought food and reported some news. For example, one farmer gave a wain of barley. People ground barley, and so eat.[7] In 1993, a police officer from New York, an amateur caver found the remains of their settlement in Priest's Grotto cave .[8]
Some children who escaped death, secretly lived in families of peasants.[2] Many residents of Borshchiv Raion were awarded the title "Righteous Among the Nations".[2]
Commemoration
Passer, stop for a moment!
In this mass grave buried
thousands of Jewish residents of Korolivka,
Borshchiv, Skala-Podilska, Ozeryany,
Melnytsia-Podilska and Kryvche,
murdered by the Nazis in 1941–1943.
Pray for their souls,
that such will never happen again to anyone.
In Borshchiv at the site of the destroyed Jewish cemetery during the Soviet occupation a sports complex was built.[9] In 1990, after Ukraine gained independence, part of the stadium was issued for the construction of the monument. It was finally established in 2011.
Borshchiv Holocaust in culture
In April 2005, one of the most popular American magazine for family reading "Reader's Digest" published an article by Peter Lane Taylor's "Underground" about Zaid Shtermer and other left in caves.[10]
American documentary filmmaker Janet Tobias in her film "No Place on Earth" described the life of Jews who were hiding in the Verteba and Priest's Grotto caves.[11] Staged scenes, however, were not filmed in Ukraine, but in Hungary, in a similar cave.[12] Filming in Priest's Grotto would require much time and money. Esther Stermer, her children and grandchildren in the movie were played by Hungarian actors.
See also
References
- ↑ Ірина Мадзій. П'ятдесят років єврейська дівчинка жила під українським прізвищем // Золота пектораль. — 14 квітня 2014
- 1 2 3 Понад 150 тисяч євреїв було знищено на Тернопільщині // Тернопільський пресклуб. — 28 січня 2013
- 1 2 Олександр Пагіря. Місця нацистського терору на території Тернопільщини, 1941–1944 рр.
- ↑ The Jewish Ghetto.
- ↑ Мизак Н. С. М 583 УПА «Захід» і збройне підпілля ОУН у боротьбі за Українську Самостійну Соборну Державу у 1942–1960 рр. — Чернівці-Торонто: Прут, 2011. — 436 с.; іл.
- ↑ Dailymail Astonishing bravery of the Jewish family who escaped the Holocaust by hiding in an underground cave — for a year-and-a-half
- ↑ Таємниці тернопільських печер.
- ↑ 511 Days of Total Darkness: The Incredible True Story Behind the Documentary No Place on Earth
- ↑ Катерина Дударчук. Історико-культурні гомогенні ресурси Тернопільської області: сучасний стан збереження і використання в міжнародному туризмі // Історія української географії. — 2012. — Випуск 26. — С.123–127.
- ↑ Міщанське братство Тернопіль «300 днів під землею, або як євреї на Тернопільщині рятувалися від нацистів»
- ↑ "No Place on Earth" official page
- ↑ Deutsche Welle «Дети подземелья» из украинских пещер: история евреев, победивших смерть.