Poltava was occupied on September 19, 1941. Many Jews succeeded in leaving Poltava before the German troops entered the city. From the very first days of the occupation the German authorities began to abuse and despoil the Jewish population. The Jews were required to wear a patch with the Star of David and were conscripted for forced labor, even if they were advanced in years. Anyone disobeying orders was shot. In Poltava the Germans conducted two censuses. The Jewish council that was made responsible for counting the Jewish population registered 5,000 Jews (including 2,800 adults) in September, 1941. The second census, that apparently took place in October 1941, registered 3,500 Jews living in the city. The Germans conducted two major murder operations in Poltava, the first in late September and the second in late November, 1941. Those Jews who had avoided the registration were later captured and shot. In addition German sources report the murder of 161 Jews in early October 1941. Poltava was liberated by the Red Army on September 23, 1943.