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Hancewicze

Community
Hancewicze
Poland
Jews received permission to live in Hancewicze in 1903. Although the Jewish population increased prior to World War I, its more intensive growth took place in the interwar period, when Hancewicze became an important center of the wood-processing industry. About 60 percent of the local Jews were involved in this activity. Some of them owned sawmills and other wood-processing facilities, while others made their living in the industry as commercial agents or as simple workers. The rest of the Jews engaged in small-scale trade or artisanship. The Jewish community supported an orphanage, a Tarbut school, and a Yiddish school, as well as a library. Various Zionist political groups were active in Hancewicze. In 1921 the Jewish population of Hancewicze amounted to 485 people, or about 48 percent of the total population.

The Soviets occupied Hancewicze in September 1939. Around this time 200-300 Jewish refugees from central and western parts of Poland arrived in Hancewicze and settled there. Jewish political and social activities were banned by the authorities. Ten Jewish owners of large businesses and their families were deported by the Soviets to the eastern part of the USSR. By 1941 the number of local Jews was about 3,000.

Hancewicze was occupied by the Germans on June 29 or 30, 1941. The next day non-Jewish residents of the village carried out a pogrom during which 16 Jews were murdered and much Jewish property was looted. The German occupiers forced the Jews to carry out such tasks as road construction and timber felling. Starting from August 1941, they had to wear special armbands to indicate their Jewish identity. Most local Jews were murdered in the course of a number of operations, all of them in July–August 1941. Some of these murders took place in Hancewicze and some in various places in the forest outside of the town.

After the Jews of Hancewicze were killed, starting from the fall of 1941, several hundred Jewish men, mostly young and capable of working, were taken in groups from Lenin and Pohost Zagorodski towns to a work camp that had been established in Hancewicze. In the beginning of 1942 they were joined by Jews from Łuniniec. On August 14-15, 1942 around 320 prisoners escaped from the camp. The Jews who remained in the camp, as well as several dozen of the escapees, were murdered after they were either caught or had voluntarily returned to the camp. The survivors joined several partisan units in the area.

Hancewicze was liberated by the Red Army on July 7, 1944.

Hancewicze
Luniniec District
Polesie Region
Poland (today Hantsavichy
Belarus)
52.758;26.429
names.headerTitles.lastName names.headerTitles.firstName names.headerTitles.birthYear names.headerTitles.placeOfResidence names.headerTitles.fate
Abramowicz Aharon Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Isser 1921 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Mordchai 1919 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Ajzenberg Mosze 1898 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Ajzenberg Sonia 1905 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Ajzikowizki Riwka 1895 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Altshuler Malka 1911 Gantsevichi, Poland murdered
Altshuler Zakhar 1900 Gantsevichi, Poland murdered
Andruseier First name unknown 1931 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Andruseier Matus Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Andruseier Shifre 1899 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Andruseja Szifra Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Angelowicz Hinda 1916 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Ayzenshteyn Srol Itzko 1890 Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Banchik First name unknown Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Banshchik First name unknown Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Banshchik Gutel Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Banszczyk Gutel Gugul 1911 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Banszczyk Josef 1914 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Banszczyk Josef 1914 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Banszczyk Pejsach 1917 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Banszczyk Szlomo Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Banszecki Ita 1913 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Baranchuk Berko Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Baranchuk Ya Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Baranchuk Yakov 1892 Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Barantzuk Branchuk Berl Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Bas Jakob 1875 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Bas Jenta 1916 Chancowicz, Poland murdered
Bass Abram Gantsevichi, Poland murdered
Bass Golda 1886 Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Bass Yaakov 1885 Ancewicz, Poland murdered
Bass Yankel Gantsevichi, Poland murdered
Begun First name unknown Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Begun Masha 1920 Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Belfer Bora Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Belfer Michla Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berenshteyn Sh Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Berenson Bejla Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berenson Slawa 1923 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berenson Zenia Zhenia Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berensztejn Branshtein Etl 1908 Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berezin Beila Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berezin Dina Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berezin Efraim Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berezin Efroim Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berezin First name unknown Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berezin First name unknown Hancewicze, Poland murdered
Berezin Golda 1915 Gantsevichi, Poland not stated
Berezin I Gantsevichi, Poland not stated