The Germans occupied Wiśniowiec on July 1, 1941. Almost immediately, local Ukrainians, with encouragement from the Germans, looted Jewish property and attacked Jews. On July 10 or 12, 35 Jews who had been taken hostage were murdered by the Ukrainian auxiliary police in the building of the former Soviet police station in the town. On July 30, 400 Jewish men, including the local rabbi, were shot to death outside the town. On September 4, 1941, a total of 146 Jews, residents of Wiśniowiec Stary, the old part of the town located on the right bank of the Goryn River, were shot to death outside the town. On March 16, 1942, the German authorities ordered the establishment of a ghetto in Wiśniowiec within three days. Several hundred Jews from the surrounding villages, including Świniuchy, Wyżgródek, and Oleśkincy, were relocated to Wiśniowiec around this time. Once the Jews had constructed the ghetto, it is estimated that more than 4,000 Jews were forced into it, and the Judenrat, that had been set up beforehand, took charge of its internal affairs. The chairman of the Judenrat was Koylnbrener, a refugee from Łodź. The small ghetto encompassed the area along one street. A high fence surrounded it, and all windows facing outward were blocked up. Every day the Judenrat had to send several dozen Jews for forced labor. The ghetto was very overcrowded and hunger and disease were rampant.
On August 11-12 (or 14-15), 1942 most of the ghetto's inmates (mainly women and children) were shot to death in a ravine south-west of the town by German units and Ukrainian auxiliary police. Steiger, the "landwirte" (the senior German official) of Wiśniowiec, who also exercised authority over the ghetto of Wiśniowiec, headed this murder operation. In the following weeks the search for those Jews who had managed to hide during the initial ghetto clearance continued, with several follow-up murder operations during which the Gendarmerie (German rural order police) and Ukrainian auxiliary police murdered several hundred Jews. Thus, a week after the initial liquidation of the ghetto, 400 Jews were shot to death at the ravine outside the town, and after two more weeks – another 300. In the fall of 1942 several hundred more Jews were shot to death. By November 1942 the ghetto no longer existed and, consequently, there were no more Jews living in the town. A few young Jews who succeeded in escaping from Wiśniowiec reached the still existing ghettos of Zborów and Zbaraż in Eastern Galicia, that was part of the Generalgouvernement.
Wiśniowiec was liberated by the Red Army on March 6, 1944.
names.headerTitles.lastName | names.headerTitles.firstName | names.headerTitles.birthYear | names.headerTitles.placeOfResidence | names.headerTitles.fate |
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Adler | Chaja | 1897 | Wiszniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Adler | Eidel | 1930 | Wiszniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Aizenberg | Brina | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered | |
Balaban | Zvi | 1905 | Wisznowec, Poland | murdered |
Barabakh Barabak | Israel | 1895 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Baran | Bejla Ester | 1904 | Wisnowiec Nowy, Poland | murdered |
Baran | Eliezer | Wisnowiec Nowy, Poland | murdered | |
Baran | Moshe | Wisnowiec Nowy, Poland | murdered | |
Baran | Tzira | Wisnowiec Nowy, Poland | murdered | |
Becker | Peretz | 1900 | Wiśniowiec Nowy, Poland | murdered |
Beker | Perec | 1902 | Wiszniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Beker | Serl | 1912 | Viszniev, Poland | murdered |
Belc | Doba | 1880 | Wisznowec, Poland | murdered |
Belc | Mirjam | 1904 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Belc | Riva | 1908 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Berenblith | Babczia Babtzia | 1913 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Berger | First name unknown | 1891 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Berger | First name unknown | 1923 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Blinder | Azriel | 1908 | Wiśniowiec Nowy, Poland | murdered |
Blinder | Azriel | 1915 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Blinder | Chaim | 1878 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Blinder | Khaim | Wiszniowiec, Poland | murdered | |
Blinder | Menashe | Vishnevets, Poland | murdered | |
Blinder | Pavel | 1911 | Vishnevets, Poland | was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union |
Brik | David | Wisnowiec Nowy, Poland | murdered | |
Brik | Shlomo | Wisnowiec Nowy, Poland | murdered | |
Briliant | Mejer | 1908 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Bronsztein | Bejla | 1922 | Wisniovets, Poland | murdered |
Burak | Sonia | 1911 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzkaya | Mina | Vishnevets, Poland | murdered | |
Chatzki | Aleksander | 1875 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Alexander | 1883 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Batsheva | 1911 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Chaya | 1885 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Elisheva | 1910 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Fabel Pavel | 1919 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Lea | 1908 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Michael | 1883 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Sosya | 1901 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chatzki | Tova | 1918 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chusid | Berta | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered | |
Chusid | Beryl | 1900 | Wiecshnewiec, Poland | murdered |
Chusid | First name unknown | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered | |
Chusid | First name unknown | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered | |
Chusid | Mendel | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered | |
Chusid | Razie | 1902 | Wiecshnewiec, Poland | murdered |
Chusid | Reyzie | 1895 | Wisniowiec, Poland | murdered |
Chusid | Yankel | 1908 | Wiecshnewiec, Poland | murdered |
Chusid | Yetta | 1927 | Wiecshnewiec, Poland | murdered |
Chusid | Zelda | Wiszniowiec, Poland | murdered |