Online Store Contact us About us
Yad Vashem logo

Mikhaylovskoye

Community
Mikhaylovskoye
Russia (USSR)
The Voroshilovskoye County was part of the Ordzhonikidze District, which had lain outside the Pale of Settlement prior to the Russian Revolution. Therefore, no Jews lived in this area before World War II. However, in the wake of the German invasion of the USSR on June 22, 1941, the Ordzhonikidze District came to house a large number of civilian evacuees, including many Jews from Ukraine, Bessarabia (present-day Moldova), and Belarus. With the beginning of the German summer offensive in late June 1942, the Wehrmacht launched its invasion of the North Caucasus. German troops occupied Mikhaylovskoye in early August 1942. As soon as the village came under German control, the occupiers began to comb the area for Jews. They were aided in this task by the local police force. In mid-August, the German authorities arrested 13 Jews and shot them at the cemetery. Later, in September 1942, German soldiers and local policemen arrested 200 Jewish evacuees, killed them in gas vans, and buried the bodies at the nearby aerodrome. That same September, sixteen Jewish evacuees from the Russkiy farmstead were killed at the cemetery in Mikhaylovskoye. In November 1942, the Germans arrested another ninety Jewish evacuees. These, too, were killed in a gas van and buried in pits at the aerodrome. The Red Army liberated Mikhaylovskoye in late January 1942.
Mikhaylovskoye
Voroshilovskiy Ordzhonikidzevskiy Kray District
Ordzhonikidzevskiy Kray Region
Russia (USSR) (today Mikhaylovsk
Russia)
45.133;42.033
Last Name First Name Year of Birth Place of Residence Fate
Bruker Iosif 1908 Shpakovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bruker Leontopa 1908 Shpakovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Furman Ita 1905 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Furman Lyusik 1938 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Furman Manya 1928 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Furman Sema 1932 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Leventul Etlya 1886 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Leventul Shmil 1876 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Riter Rokha 1919 Shpakovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Rozner Bebi 1911 Shpakovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Rozner Reka 1912 Shpakovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Vaysman Khasya 1901 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Zigilnan Khaim 1912 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Zigilnan Lyuba 1937 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Zigilnan Zelda 1939 Mikhaylovskoye, Russia (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union