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Krasnograd

Community
Krasnograd
Ukraine (USSR)
Krasnograd was founded in the 1730s as the Bilevska Fortress. In 1784, the fortress became a town, which was named Konstantinograd. At about the same time, Jews began to settle there. Initially, their numbers were small, and in the mid-19th Century Konstantinograd was home to only a few hundred Jews. The community saw significant growth toward the turn of the century, reaching 1,099 people (17 percent of the total population) in 1897. The Jews of Konstantinograd made their living primarily from crafts and from trade in agricultural produce. On the eve of World War I, Jews played a prominent role in the economic life of the town, owning most of the shops, all of the inns, a mill, and two printing houses. At about the same time, a Jewish savings-and-loan association was established in Konstantinograd, and it boasted approximately 700 members. In the early 20th Century, the town had several Jewish religious and general educational establishments, including a Talmud Torah school, a cheder metukan (a religious school with Hebrew as the language of instruction), a public school for Jewish children from poor families, and a private school for boys. In the same period, the Zionist movement gained in popularity among the Jews of Konstantinograd. In 1915, during World War I, Jewish refugees from Lithuania and Latvia arrived in Konstantinograd and received assistance from a local committee for aid to refugees. These Jews stayed in the town for the duration of the war, returning to their countries of origin only after those had gained independence. The Jews of Konstantinograd suffered from the upheavals of the Russian Revolution and Civil War. In April 1918, Ukrainian militants assaulted Jews in the town, killing three of them. Some of the Jews chose to leave Konstantinograd at the time and search for safer places. Following the establishment of Soviet rule, the town was renamed Krasnograd. From the mid-1920s until the late 1930s, Krasnograd had a Jewish school with Yiddish as the language of instruction. In the course of the 1920s and 1930s, the Jewish community of Krasnograd declined in numbers, with many local Jews – especially the younger ones – choosing to leave the town for larger cities in search of new educational and professional opportunities. In 1939, Krasnograd was home to 547 Jews, who made up 3.3 percent of the total population. German troops occupied Krasnograd on September 20, 1941. Most of the Jews had managed to leave the town before that date. Those Jews who stayed behind were abused and robbed by both the Germans and the local auxiliary policemen, and forced to perform various grueling tasks. In mid-May 1942, Soviet forces were briefly able to retake the town, but were driven out by the Germans at the end of that month. In late May or early June 1942, some 100 Jews who still lived in Krasnograd were registered by the local German commandant’s office and concentrated in one section of the town. The inmates of this makeshift ghetto were once again subjected to various abuses and confiscations, and Jewish women were raped. In late June 1942, all the Jews of Krasnograd were taken out of the city and shot dead at a site a few kilometers south of it. The Red Army liberated Krasnograd for good on September 18, 1943.
Krasnograd
Krasnograd District
Kharkov Region
Ukraine (USSR) (today Krasnohrad
Ukraine)
49.372;35.447
Last Name First Name Year of Birth Place of Residence Fate
Alistratova Katz Aleksandra 1905 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Anzig Khana Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Anzig Naftali Krasnogrod, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Anzig Ycchak Mojsze 1902 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Anzig Yosef Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Bankovskaya Laya 1933 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bankovskaya Rukhlya 1931 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bankovskaya Sarra 1911 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bankovski Iosif 1910 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bankovski Itzek 1941 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bankovski Leyb 1937 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bankovski Leyzer 1929 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bat Batz Sara Krasnogrod, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Berger Etya 1909 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Berger Lyubov 1928 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Berger Maria 1909 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Berger Raisa 1932 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Berger Stanislav 1935 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bernard Grigori 1913 Krasnogrod, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bershadskaya Genya Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Bershadskaya Pasha Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Bershadski David Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) perished during the period 1933-1945 in indirect relation with the Shoah
Bershadski Teva Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Bershadski Yefim Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Blazer Perl Krasnogrod, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Blokh Grigori 1918 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) killed in military service
Brailovskaya Aleksandra 1899 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Brailovskaya Anna 1918 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Brailovski Moisey 1879 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Braslavski Shleime 1891 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Brodyanski Berl 1877 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Budnitzkaya Bella 1920 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bukovetzkaya Auta 1915 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bukovetzkaya Ekhva 1935 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bukovetzkaya Fanya 1941 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bukovetzkaya Shifra 1896 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bukovetzki Abram 1925 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bukovetzki Eduard 1927 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Bukovetzki Gersh 1886 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Chernobylskiy Bentzion 1898 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Chudnovskaya First name unknown Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Chudnovskiy First name unknown Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Chudnovskiy Munya Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Dreitzer Musya 1924 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) murdered
Felzer Ginda 1905 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Felzer Khasia 1870 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Frayfeld Bella 1900 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Frayfeld Boris 1893 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Frayfeld Maria 1900 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union
Frayfeld Mihail 1923 Krasnograd, Ukraine (USSR) was registered following the evacuation/ in the interior of the Soviet Union