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Iwieniec

Community
Iwieniec
Poland
The Jewish community of Iwieniec seems to have been established in the mid-18th Century. The town is renowned for its pottery and tiles industry, so it is no surprise that many local Jews made their living from the manufacture and sale of ceramics. In 1897, 1,343 Jews lived in the town, comprising 50.3 percent of its total population. After 1920, Iwieniec became part of Poland, and 945 Jews lived there in 1921. In the 1920s, the town underwent a degree of economic revival. It had three schools that catered to the Jewish community: a Hebrew-language Tarbut school, an Orthodox Horev school, and a Polish state school; there was also a Hebrew-language kindergarten there. In 1939, on the eve of World War II, Iwieniec was home to an estimated 1,200 Jews. In September 1939, the Soviets occupied the town, and all forms of independent Jewish social and political life were suppressed. The more affluent Jewish businessmen were deported to the east. In June 1941, the Soviet-German War broke out; the Wehrmacht entered the town on June 27. On the next day, the Germans shot 34 Jews as punishment for alleged "medical malpractice" in the treatment of a downed German pilot. On July 14, an SS unit from nearby Wolożyn shot 14 members of the "Jewish intelligentsia". On September 5, a unit of the SiPo (the German security police) murdered 50 (or 76, according to another account) Jews. Sometime in the fall of 1941, most probably in November, a ghetto was established in Iwieniec. From time to time, the Germans would send able-bodied Jews from Iwieniec to the Nowogródek Ghetto and the Dworzec labor camp, while simultaneously moving Jews from Rubieżewicze and elsewhere to Iwieniec. On June 9, 1942, the Nazis liquidated the Iwieniec Ghetto. Its inmates, who numbered 1,025 (or about 800, according to other sources), were taken to the northern edge of the town and murdered there. Only a few Jewish "specialists" were left in the town for a while, but they, too, were probably killed later. Iwieniec was liberated by the Red Army on July 6, 1944.

Iwieniec
Wolozyn District
Nowogrodek Region
Poland (today Ivyanets
Belarus)
53.890;26.752
names.headerTitles.lastName names.headerTitles.firstName names.headerTitles.birthYear names.headerTitles.placeOfResidence names.headerTitles.fate
Abramovits Chana 1905 Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Abramovits Elisheva Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Abramovits Fima Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Abramovits Salom 1904 Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Chana Dobrushka Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Abramovitz Shalom Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Abramson First name unknown Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Abramson Yaakov Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Aizemberg Rujl Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Aizemberg Sloime 1905 Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Chaia Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Chaim Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Chaim Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Ema Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Ezer Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Ezer Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Gabi Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Gabriel Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Liuba Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Menukhka Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Shmuel Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Shmuel Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Sonia Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Akun Sonia Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Alperin Tevie 1895 Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Alpershteyn Yelizaveta 1919 Ivenets, Poland not stated
Arman Khaim 1904 Ivenets, Poland not stated
Aykbinder Iosif Ivenets, Poland not stated
Baranovich Abram 1913 Ivenets, Poland not stated
Baranovitz Sonia Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Baranovitz Sonia 1914 Ivanitz, Poland murdered
Baranovitz Sonia Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Baranovitz Yudele Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Baranovitz Yudele Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Baranovitz Zelda Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Baranovitz Zeldele Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Beich Khashka Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Beich Liba Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Beich Mirl Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Beich Mordekhai Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Beich Raikhel Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Beich Tzipka Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Belobzhetzkaya Beyla 1887 Ivenets, Poland was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Belobzhetzkaya Roza 1920 Ivenets, Poland was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Belobzhetzkiy Abram 1885 Ivenets, Poland was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Belobzhetzkiy Izrail 1922 Ivenets, Poland was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Berger Abram 1918 Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Berger Asher Iwieniec, Poland murdered
Berger Aszer 1908 Ivanic, Poland murdered
Berger Avremel Iwieniec, Poland murdered