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Boremel

Community
Boremel
Poland
The first Jews settled in Boremel (Michałówka) in the 18th century. In 1897, under the Russian Empire, the local Jews numbered 1,047, comprising 87.5 percent of the total population. During World War I, Boremel suffered severe damage. After the war, it was incorporated into the independent Polish Republic. Between 1919-1921, a Tarbut Zionist Hebrew-language school operated in the town, but later it was closed down by the Polish authorities. In 1921, the 857 local Jews comprised ninety-five percent of the total population. In the interwar period, Zionist parties and youth movements (Hashomer Hatzair, Beitar, Gordonia) were active there, as were Zionist pioneering training communes, such as those of HeHalutz and HeHalutz Hatzair. After September 17, 1939, in the aftermath of the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact, the Red Army entered Boremel, and the town became part of Soviet Ukraine. The Germans occupied Boremel on June 25, 1941. At the time of the German invasion, local Ukrainians took the opportunity to rob the Jews, and a few of the latter were killed. The Germans ordered systematic requisitions of Jewish property and valuables. The German authorities established a Jewish council (a "Judenrat"), consisting of seven men, and a Jewish police force. The Jews had to wear yellow patches and perform forced labor, with almost all the young Jewish men being taken to Dubno and Równe for work. Most never returned; in all likelihood, they were killed in those places, along with the local Jews. Of those Jews who remained in Boremel, many were taken to work on farms in the surrounding villages. Apart from these work assignments, Jews were not permitted to leave the village. In June 1942, the Germans established a ghetto at the edge of the town. Some Jews were killed for leaving the ghetto in an attempt to obtain some food. Despite German prohibitions, some Jews managed to barter their remaining possessions for food. Apparently in late September or early October 1942, the members of the Judenrat were murdered outside the town, on the bank of the Styr River. That same month, a German unit, assisted by the Ukrainian auxiliary police, liquidated the inmates of the ghetto outside the town, at the same murder site. According to one survivor's recollections, on the night of the murders Moshe Shloyme Ashers set the ghetto on fire, and then hanged himself. After the liquidation of the ghetto, several dozen Jews who had managed to hide were found and shot dead. Boremel (Michałówka) was liberated by the Red Army in March 1944.
Boremel
Dubno District
Wolyn Region
Poland (today Boremel
Ukraine)
50.466;25.177
Last Name First Name Year of Birth Place of Residence Fate
Barnshtein Yisrael 1917 Burmal, Poland murdered
Barshap Beril Boremel, Poland murdered
Barshap Etil Boremel, Poland murdered
Beich Eliezer Boremel, Poland murdered
Beich Malka Boremel, Poland murdered
Beich Mania Boremel, Poland murdered
Beich Mendel Boremel, Poland murdered
Beich Rivka Boremel, Poland murdered
Beich Yaakov Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Bluma Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik David Doda 1925 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Ester 1914 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Frida 1904 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Frida Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Khaia Sara Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Khana 1905 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Khana Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Moshe Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Moshe 1920 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Reizel 1929 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Reizil Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Sara 1880 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Shenda 1927 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Shmuel 1902 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Tuvia Boremel, Poland murdered
Bereznik Tuvia 1904 Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Beni Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Beril Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Bluma Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Eliezer Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Eliezer Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger First name unknown Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger First name unknown Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Mikhal Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Nakhum Nunia Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Peril Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Shlomo Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Shmuel Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Tzipa Boremel, Poland murdered
Berger Yisrael Boremel, Poland murdered
Bernshtein Jacov 1887 Boremel, Poland murdered
Bernshtein Branshtein Iosif Boremel, Poland murdered
Bernshtein Branshtein Lana Boremel, Poland murdered
Bichik Malka Boremel, Poland murdered
Bichik Matil Boremel, Poland murdered
Bichik Pesakh Boremel, Poland murdered
Bichik Pesakh Boremel, Poland murdered
Bichik Rakhel Boremel, Poland murdered
Bichik Sara Boremel, Poland murdered
Bik Feiga 1914 Beremelia, Poland murdered