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Iwje

Community
Iwje
Poland
Extant documents first mention Jews in Iwje in relation to the early 17th century. In 1897 Iwje hade 573 Jews, who comprised 15.7 percent of the total population. Iwje was the birthplace of Shakhne Epshtein (1883-1945), a Soviet and American Jewish leftist journalist, who from 1942 to 1945 was the editor of the Soviet Yiddish newspaper Eynikayt, the newspaper of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee. After World War I Iwje became part of the second Polish Republic. Its Jewish population in 1921 rose to 2,076 or 76 percent of the total population. Throughout the 1920s a constellation of different Zionist groups existed in Iwje: Poalei Zion, Hehalutz, Hapoel Hamizrakhi, Hashomer Hatzair, and Beitar. At the same time a yeshiva operated in Iwje, along with the Beit-Yosef Musar yeshiva. The Tsisho Yiddish school of the 1920s was replaced by a Tarbut Hebrew-instruction school in the 1930s. According to some estimations, at the end of the 1930s about 3,000 Jews lived in Iwje. In September 1939 World War II began and Iwje was occupied by the Red Army. Units of the Wehrmacht entered Iwje on June 29, 1941. On August 2, 1941 a unit of the Security Police and the SS selected 220 Jewish men and shot them in the Stonewicze Forest, 1.5-2 kilometers southeast of Iwje. On the same day a Jewish council was established in the town and, somewhat later, a Jewish police force. Anti-Jewish decrees followed, e.g. a decree that prohibited Jews from consuming meat, butter, eggs, and alcohol, as well as from smoking. Furthermore, not only were contacts with non-Jews prohibited, but also contacts with Jews from nearby villages. Various accounts indicate different times for the establishement of the local ghetto - from July to October 1941. The latter date appears the most probable. In April 1942 the occupiers resettled Jews from Traby (which had had about 600 Jewish residents before the beginning of Operation Barbarossa), Lipniszki, Bakszty, Subotniki, and probably from other nearby villages, to Iwje. The ghetto population there rose to about 4,000 and epidemics of typhus and skin diseases took their toll. On May 12, 1942 the Germans selected 200-300 Jews who had legitimate working certificates and took them to the ghetto of Lida. Later they selected 1,200-1,300 more Jews who appeared healthy and able-bodied. The elderly and sick, as well as large families with small children, were taken to their deaths in the same Stonewicze Forest, where 2,300 Jews were killed on this day. After this operation, some young Jews succeeded in fleeing and to join the Soviet partisans. The Germans began to send groups of workers from Iwje to labor camps in Lida, Mołodeczno, Borisov, and other places. On January 20, 1943 all those still in the Iwje ghetto were sent to Borisov, where they died (most probably they were shot) in the peat bogs of Biała Bołota in March 1943. Iwje was liberated by the Red Army on July 8, 1944.
Iwje
Lida District
Nowogrodek Region
Poland (today Iŭye
Belarus)
53.934;25.775
Last Name First Name Year of Birth Place of Residence Fate
Abelevitz Arie Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Chana Rivka Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz First name unknown Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Gutka Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Iahse Ber Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Israel Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Lea Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Moshe Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Sheina Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Sima Iwje, Poland murdered
Abelevitz Tzvi Iwje, Poland murdered
Abilevich Moisey Ivye, Poland not stated
Abraham Israel Schije Shaia 1870 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abraham Jehoschua 1890 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abraham Sew 1890 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovich Abram Ivye, Poland murdered
Abramovich Abram Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovich Khaim Ivye, Poland murdered
Abramovich Shmuyel Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Aba Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Avraham Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Chaim Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz First name unknown Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz First name unknown Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz First name unknown Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz First name unknown Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Kalman Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Khaia Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Mordekhai Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Moshe Yitzkhak Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Raicha Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Sender Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Sinai Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Tzipora Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Tzipora Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Vite Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Yaakov Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Awraham Jcchak 1901 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Chaim Aron 1920 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Chaja 1922 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Leibil 1900 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Mordekhai Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Mosze 1870 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Reizl 1902 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowicz Tzipora Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramowizc Boba 1891 Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramson Chaim Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramson Chaim Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramson Icie Iwje, Poland murdered
Abramson Ida Iwje, Poland murdered