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[Page 242]
56°21' 23°15'
Zagare (Zhager in Yiddish) is one of the oldest settlements in Lithuania. It lies on both banks of the Svete River on the Latvian border, about 40 km. (nearly 25 miles) from the district administrative center of Siauliai (Shavl), where an estate named Zagare was built and which eventually developed into a town. In 1495 the town received permission to hold markets. A hundred years later a church was built on the right bank of the river: houses were built around it and streets were paved according to a relatively modern plan. By the end of the seventeenth century there were one hundred homes. This area was called New Zhager and the older settlement on the left bank, Old Zhager, these two settlements being managed by different administrative units. A wooden bridge over the river Svete connected the two areas.
In time the population of New Zhager exceeded that of Old Zhager and the economic and social conditions as well as the quality of life were far superior to that in the older area. A noble family named Narishkin, who from 1850 was the owner of the Zhager estate and part of New Zhager, exerted great influence on its development as economic activity grew rapidly. In 1861 there were three small factories producing buttons, belts and sundry items. They employed ninety workers. More small industries for processing agricultural products and other foods were established. One of the workshops produced candles.
In contrast, the economic development of Old Zhager, whose land now belonged to the noble family Heiman, was slow. In 1897 there were 27 shops compared to 121 in New Zhager, while 90 artisans lived in the old town compared to 640 in the new.
Over the years Zhager residents suffered many adversities: the RussianSwedish war in 1705; a cholera epidemic in 1848; the Polish rebellion in 1863; the great famine in the region in 1867, and inevitably, fires in 1864, 1881, 1909 and 1911. A Cossack battalion brought into the town to restore order during the revolution of 1905 caused many problems for the residents of Zhager. For a very short time the revolutionaries established a symbolic autonomic framework, called The Zhager Republic.
From the end of the nineteenth century until World War I New and Old Zhager combined and became a district administrative center: government and other institutions had offices there. There was also extensive commercial dialogue with Latvia and the town attracted buyers from Germany and England to its annual fairs. Not unexpectedly, Zhager's population increased. While Czarist Russia was in control (17951915), Zhager was in the Kovno Province (Gubernia) and in the Shavl (Siauliai) district.
However, from 1918 to 1940 under independent Lithuania, the absence of trade with Latvia and Russia was a severe blow to the local economy. The
[Page 243]
population decreased to its level of sixty years previously. During this period Zhager was a county administrative center, a status it kept during Soviet rule (19401941) and during World War II under Nazi rule (19411944).
Jewish Settlement until and after World War I
The Jewish community in Zhager was one of the first in Lithuania, in particular in the Zamut (Zemaitija). Its earliest development can probably be traced back to the sixteenth century. The first Jews in the town collected taxes for the authorities and rent for the landowners and traded in salt and metals that they imported from abroad. Others exported honey, wax and leather, while there were also active Jewish artisans. In 1766 there were 840 Jews and by 1847 the number had increased to 2,266.
The two separate communities each had its own rabbi, cantors, shokhtim and cemetery.
The Old Zhager Community
Because of overcrowding and difficult living conditions, sanitation was very bad, and when a cholera epidemic reached the town, 973 Jews succumbed. At the end of the nineteenth century Old Zhager had 1,629 (64%) Jews out of a total of 2,527 residents. There were 210 houses, of which 158 were Jewish owned.
Most Jews made their living from crafts (mainly tailoring and shoemaking) from agriculture (vegetable and cherry growing) and from small trades after the wholesalers had moved to New Zhager. There were then about 500 Jewish craftsmen. The synagogue, the Beth Midrash and the bathhouse were among the few buildings constructed of stone.
Jewish children studied in its few Hadarim. In 1893 a Jewish school for girls with two classes opened in Old Zhager.
Despite the continuing economic deterioration, the community continued to extend help to other communities in trouble. For example, in 1884 a fire almost ruined the nearby town of Laizeve (Laizuva) and both Zhager communities donated 70 rubles for its restoration.
Among the rabbis who officiated in Old Zhager were:
YekutielZalman, died in 1848
Tsemakh Zaksh (17961863), served in Zhager 18151863
Hayim Luria, from 1858 in Zhager
HayimTseviHirsh Broida
YehudahLeib Rif
YehudahLeib Broida (official rabbi).
[Page 244]
The New Zhager Community
About 50 Jewish families occupied the entire market square in New Zhager in 1790. These families operated 30 shops and bars in the town and its surroundings. The leasing fees for all these buildings totalled 900 rubles per annum. By this time the main institutions of the community, including prayer houses and the cemetery, were in use. The town's rabbi, Berl Itskovitz, was responsible for the payment of the Jews' leasing fees for their houses and business premises.
After the Napoleonic wars, the authorities, acting on Jewish requests, increased the number of market days and fairs. Some sources claim that the value of goods sold at each fair was about 4,000 rubles and the turnover for the Jews accounted for 900 rubles. The Jews established factories for candles; for a beverage made of honey (probably mead with malt); cords; leather; buttons, for processing pig bristles, etc. The flax processing plant, owned by Mosheh Elyashev, employed 100 workers.
In 1897 the Jews of greater Zhager totaled about 60% of the population: 5,443 Jews (1,629 in Old Zhager and 3,814 in New Zhager) out of 9,129 residents. They occupied 329 of the total of 450 plots. Most Jews made their living from crafts, small industry, agriculture and trade. In contrast to Old Zhager, in New Zhager the relatively large number of important merchants was significant. The New Zhager merchants exported flax (about 4,000 wagons per year) and grains (about 1,000 wagons per year) to Germany and other countries and imported goods (about 300 wagons) from abroad. The pleasant commercial center built in the center of the town was also occupied mainly by Jewish merchants.
The sound economic situation of most of the Jewish population encouraged a favorable attitude towards them by the authorities, who granted them considerable freedom to conduct their affairs through the Civic Management which was created in 1880. One of the heads of the Narishkin family opened his splendid garden to the Jews, a garden spread over an area of 80 hectares, which in time became the urban park.
During this time, there were four Jewish educational institutions: a boys' school with thirty pupils in 1897/98; a girls' school with fiftythree young ladies, a Talmud Torah located in a magnificent building built through donations by Zhagerborn Klonimus Ze'ev Wissotzky (the founder of the tea firm in Russia) and another where a further 100 boys studied. In this school Hebrew, Russian, German and arithmetic were already being taught in 1900. For some of the time NathanNeta Vainberg was the teacher of the three languages.
The Russian government school had a complement of 154 Jewish boys and 24 girls. Boys and men studied religious subjects at the four Batei Midrash in town.
[Page 245]
In the 1840s eighteen Jewish families from Yanishok (Joniskis) and Zhager (among them the K. Z. Wissotzky family) moved to Dubne, about 30 km. (20 miles) from Dvinsk, to establish an agricultural settlement on land that the government had allocated, without charge, for an experimental farm which eventually failed.
In autumn 1881 a raging fire broke out and the HaMelitz newspaper reported that more than 400 buildings, including the synagogue and the Beth Midrash, burned down and about 1,000 families were left without a roof over their heads. Thanks to the newspaper HaMelitz appeal for assistance and other requests, help arrived in the form of money, food and clothes. A committee led by the local physicians Dr. Hertsberg and Dr. Hentch was very active in managing the restoration work, greatly helping the Jewish population for many years. It is noteworthy that Dr. Hentch was a Christian gentleman.
In the years 1880 to 1890 there was a surge of emigration from Zhager to South Africa and America. A society named Rodfei Tsedek Anshei Zhager (The Pursuers of Justice from Zhager) was established in Philadelphia in 1887. By 1895 there already was a large community of former Zhager Jews in Johannesburg: they generously supported their relatives back home. The list of donors was published in the Hebrew newspaper HaTsefirah.
The rabbis who officiated in NewZhager were:
Berl Itskovitz
Shimon Hurvitz (18101900), later rabbi in Leipzig, published many books on Judaica
Eliyahu Shik (18091876), famous for his fight against conscription of poor Jewish children to serve in the Czar's army for twenty five years (according to an order which Czar Nikolai the First had issued in 1827): he died in Kobrin.
UriDavid Apiryon (lived in the nineteenth century)
HayimYits'hak Korb (18701957), during 19301950 was head of a Yeshivah in Chicago. In 1952 he emigrated to Jerusalem, where he died.
Ya'akovJosef Harif.
Many Jews in Zhager, and in particular in Old Zhager, were fanatically orthodox. For many years it was a center of the Musar movement initiated by the Zhagerborn Yisrael Salanter. However, many merchants who travelled to Koenigsberg, Leipzig and other German towns on business imported, together with the goods, new ideas and many books representing the best of European literature. Among these travellers was a group of erudite religious people, not fanatics, who avidly read secular and scientific books. This group
[Page 246]
was the Khahmei Zhager (Zhager Scholars) and was formed soon after Haskala. Among its members and supporters were:
Hayim Zak, honored by all the town's people
Shneur Zaksh, researcher of Judaica
Refael Neta Rabinovitz, author of the book Dikdukei Sofrim
Rabbi Shimon HaLevi Hurvitz, later the rabbi of Leipzig
The writer Ya'akov Dinezon
The bibliographer Avraham Freidos
BenZion Zaltsberg who published a research work on Koheleth
Eliezer Atlas, in due course one of the editors of the Hebrew periodicals HeAsif and HaKerem
Avraham Idelson, later the editor of the Jewish Russian periodical Razsviet which was published in St. Petersburg
Tsevi Kan, a specialist in Judaica
Simhah Hilman, a future workers leader in the USA
Tsevi Izakson, in time the chairman of the Agrarians Union in Israel, and many others.
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The Synagogue (Picture taken by and courtesy of Elkan Gamzu, July 2005) |
[Page 247]
The most prominent and erudite of the learned men of Zhager were the Mandelshtams. The family originated in Germany and its descendants were among the leaders of the Haskalah movement in Russia and among the great writers and scientists in that country. In particular Josef Mandelshtam and his three sons Benjamin, AryehLeon and Yehezkel were famous, since, in addition to their chosen professions, they were also involved in Bible research, writing poetry and imparting their knowledge to the Jewish people. The son of Yehezkel, Max (Imanuel), whose education had its roots in a Heder in Zhager, eventually became a famous ophthalmologist in Kiev and assistant to Theodor Herzl in promoting Zionism. HayimJosef the son of Mosheh Mandelshtam published articles on Zhager in HaMelitz. It is worthwhile mentioning that Zhager, quite a small town, produced a long line of erudite men, intellectuals, writers, researchers and public figures who were well known in the Jewish world.
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The AronKodesh in NewZhager |
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The Synagogue in OldZhager |
Dr. Hertsberg, who had done so much after the devastating fire of 1881, contributed an important endowment to Zhager's cultural life. In July 1898 he opened a bookshop and a library in the main street of New Zhager which existed for many years. Shortly before World War I a branch of the Berlin Yiddishe Literarishe Gezelshaft (The Jewish Literature Society) was active locally, its main activities being to maintain reading evenings and lectures on literature and social subjects. Sh. Yakobzon was the chairman of the Society, V. Yakobzon, the secretary: they were supported by Aizik Novazenetz and Avraham Sheinfeld.
The Bund, with its many Jewish workers, had much influence, but later the Hibath Zion movement and Zionism became the strongest local social force.
There are at least five tombstones of Zhager Jews in the old cemetery in Jerusalem:
Rabbi Tsevi, son of Zerakh, died in 1861
Fruma, daughter of Shemuel, died in 1863
Yehezkel, son of Ze'ev Katz, died in 1870
Leib, son of Yisrael Be'eri, died in 1873
Duber, son of Leib, died in 1899.
[Page 249]
In lists of donors for the settlement of EretzYisrael published in HaMelitz in the years 1894, 1895, 1897, 1898, 1900, 1902 and 1903, the names of 315 Zhager Jews appear. The fund raisers were B. Segal and BZ. Goldberg (see Appendix 1). In a 1909 list there are another 18 donors (see Appendix 2).
The donors to the Persian famine victims in 1872 published in HaMagid, include 142 Zhager Jews. (see Appendix 3).
The religious antiZionist Agudath Yisrael party was also active in Zhager. In a list of yearly membership fees paid to this party dated 1914, 64 names from New Zhager appear and also 10 from Old Zhager (see Appendix 4).
Zhager Jews exhibited a strong solidarity with their Lithuanian neighbors. When Czarist rule prohibited the printing of books in Lithuanian, Zhager Jews helped the Bookcarriers (Knygnesiai in Lithuanian) to smuggle Lithuanian literature from abroad into the country. Zhager Jews took part in the 1905 revolution and several were detained, exiled and even shot by the Russians.
During World War I most Zhager Jews left their town for Russia or emigrated elsewhere.
Zhager under Independent Lithuania rule (19181940)
After World War I and the delineation of the border between the two new independent states, Latvia and Lithuania, Zhager declined into one of the remotest and poorest towns in Lithuania. Many of its Jewish residents did not return and quite a few of those who did later emigrated to America, South Africa and EretzYisrael. The major problem was that the nearest railway station was about 28 km. (17 miles) distant. This caused insurmountable problems for local commercial and social activity. There was no road to Zhager passable in winter and the only commercial activity was confined to the market days on Tuesdays and Fridays.
The first census by the new Lithuanian government, taken in 1923, counted 4,730 residents living in Zhager. Of these 1,928 (61%) were Jews.
Following the law of autonomies for minorities issued by the Lithuanian government, the minister for Jewish affairs, Dr. Menachem (Max) Soloveitshik, ordered elections for community committees (Va'adei Kehilah) to be held in the summer of 1919. In Zhager the elections took place in the first half of 1920 and a committee of eleven members was elected. In 1921 the committee consisted of one General Zionist, two Tseirei Zion, one artisan, two from the workers list and five nonparty men.
In 1931 there were 59 shops, 51 (86%) of them in Jewish hands. The distribution according to type of business is given in the table below:
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Type of business | Total | Owned by Jews |
Groceries | 5 | 5 |
Grain and flax | 2 | 2 |
Butcher shops and Cattle Trade | 21 | 19 |
Restaurants and Taverns | 2 | 1 |
Food Products | 1 | 1 |
Beverages | 1 | 0 |
Textile Products and Furs | 8 | 8 |
Leather and Shoes | 7 | 6 |
Haberdashery and house utensils | 1 | 1 |
Medicine and Cosmetics | 5 | 2 |
Watches, Jewels and Optics | 2 | 2 |
Radio, Bicycles, Sewing Machines | 1 | 1 |
Hardware Products | 2 | 2 |
Other | 1 | 1 |
According to that Government survey (in 1931) there were twentyfive workshops and light industries owned by Jews: four barber shops, two workshops for processing pig bristles, two spinneries, two boot makers, two sewing workshops, one flour mill, one bakery, one sawmill, one weaving workshop, one chocolate and candy factory, one milliner, one felt factory, one dyeing plant, one offalcleaning workshop, one tinsmith's workshop, one soda water factory and one power plant.
[Page 251]
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Youth from OldZhager, most of whom emigrated to South Africa |
In 1937 there were fiftyfive Jewish artisans: fifteen boot makers, ten tailors, eight butchers, five dressmakers, three tinsmiths, two bakers, two barbers, one hatter, one locksmith, one carpenter, one knitter, one painter, one photographer, one watchmaker and three others.
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A group of Zhager men |
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The Jewish Popular Bank (Folksbank), with 287 members in 1927, played an important role in the financial affairs of Zhager's Jews.
Except for a few outbreaks of hostility by Lithuanians against their Jewish neighbors, there was, on the whole, fair surface amity between them.
The nine members of the municipal council included four Jews but in the 1934 elections only three Jews were successful.
In the early 1930s aggressive competition from Lithuanian cooperatives increased. Because of the difficult economic conditions, inevitable feelings of depression, and being cut off from Latvia, many Jewish merchants and also youth moved from Zhager, particularly to the nearest town of Joniskis (Janishok).
Despite the annulment of the autonomy in 1925, the end of the Va'ad HaKehilah and the continuing decrease in number of Jews, almost all institutions continued their activities: seven prayer houses; the old age home; the Bikur Holim society; two bath houses; two libraries (one Yiddish and one Hebrew) and two schools. 135 children studied in the school of the religious Yavneh network. In 1922 the Tarbuth society organized evening courses for adults, with fifty participants.
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The market square |
The town had two fire brigades, both manned by many Jewish volunteers. There were sport organizations Maccabi and HaPoel and also some Zionist parties and youth organizations (HaShomerHaTsair was one). The table below shows the election results of Zhager Zionists for the Zionist congresses:
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Congress No. |
Year | Total Sheh |
Total Votes | Labor Party
|
Revisionists | Gen Zion
|
Gro | Miz | ||||||
16 | 1929 | 33 | 10 | | 1 | 4 | 1 | | | 1 | ||||
18 | 1933 | | 64 | 45 | 12 | 7 | | | | |||||
19 | 1935 | 255 | 261 | 161 | #151; | 46 | 52 | | 2 |
By 1939 there were 5,443 residents including about 1,000 (18%) Jews. Of 36 telephone subscribers 15 were Jews.
Despite the inevitable disruptions caused by World War I and thereafter, the rivalry between Old Zhager and New Zhager Jews remained unchanged. The Old Zhager people thought that they were more important: after all, the first Jewish settlement was established there. But the New Zhagers thought that they were superior because most of the Jewish community lived there. These differences caused unnecessary controversy at times. This oldtime split was resolved and family relations preserved thanks to the actions of Rabbi Yisrael Rif, the rabbi of New Zhager and his son, Yits'hakZundl Rif, the rabbi in Old Zhager.
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Zhager branch of Maccabi |
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Zhager in World War II and Afterward
During Sovietization (19401941), after Lithuania had been annexed to the Soviet Union, almost all Jewish institutions and all Zionist parties and youth organizations were disbanded and the Hebrew school closed. The Yiddish library founded by the Libhober fun Visen (Fans of Knowledge) association was one of the few institutions which continued to exist. Several shops were nationalized. A short time before the German invasion of Lithuania several Jewish families were exiled to Siberia, among them the teacher and Bible researcher Meir Kantorovitz (Elyoeini).
Three days after the outbreak of war between Germany and the Soviet Union, on June 25th, 1941, the Germans occupied Zhager, assisted by armed Lithuanians calling themselves Nationalist antiSoviet Partisans. Together with the municipality they imprisoned hundreds of Jewish men in the synagogue and subjected them to great cruelty. The old rabbi, Yisrael Rif, a tall man, was insulted and assaulted violently. He and a short Jew were forced to harness themselves to a cart and pull it through the streets of the town to the amusement of the Lithuanian onlookers. Many Jews were shot in the Jewish cemetery and in a nearby grove.
In July all Jews were concentrated into one quarter, a socalled ghetto. They were joined by Jews from Zheimel (Zeimelis), Tirkshle (Tirksliai), Trishik (Tryskiai), Yanishok (Joniskis), Loikeve (Laukuva), Ligum (Lygumai), Linkeve (Linkuva), Pokroi (Pakruojus), Kelm (Kelme), Krok (Kriukai) and Radvilishok (Radviliskis). Altogether they comprised about 7,000 people. Each day the Lithuanians forced most of the men into various types of hard labor, all the while maltreating them. Before going out to work, the men were forced to spit in the face of Rabbi Rif and any man refusing to fulfil this order was killed on the spot. In order to avoid the slaughter the rabbi ordered them to obey. Humiliated and hungry, crowded into the small ghetto without sanitary facilities or medical help, they suffered greatly at the hands of these Lithuanians and Latvians. Gangs frequently burst into the ghetto to rob, rape and pillage.
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The mass grave at the Narishkin Park (Picture taken and supplied courtesy of Elkan Gamzu, July 2005) |
On the day after Yom Kippur, 11th of Tishrei, 5702 (October 2nd, 1941), all Jewish men, women and children were ordered to the market square where the commander of a Sonderkommando (Special unit, a secondary unit of the operation Formation A) delivered a calming speech saying that they would be transferred to a new workplace where conditions would be better. Then the commander gave a signal, and from the surrounding yards, armed Lithuanians broke out shooting at the Jews with automatic weapons. During this action Alter Zagarsky shouted to others to escape and himself took out a knife and stabbed a Lithuanian to death. Another Jew, Avraham Akerman, also attacked a Lithuanian, biting him in the throat. These two were shot on the spot, but in the ensuing disturbance many Jews managed to escape. Additional armed Lithuanian groups were called in and rounded up the remaining Jews, capturing those who had escaped, and led them to the nearby Narishkin Park where pits had been prepared. There they shot and buried their victims, killing babies and small children by slamming their heads against the trees. Many Jews were thrown into the pits alive. Their clothing and other belongings were looted by their neighbors and by the murderers and local authorities.
Only a few Jews survived the gruesome bloodshed those who had been exiled and a few others who managed to escape to Russia at the outbreak of war. The researcher Meir Kantorovitz died in exile in 1980.
[Page 256]
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The monument at the murder site (Picture taken and supplied courtesy of Elkan Gamzu, July 2005) |
[Page 257]
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The inscription on the tablet of the monument in Lithuanian and Yiddish: At this site Hitler's murderers and their local helpers murdered about 3000 Jewish men, women, children from Shavl district on 2nd October 1941. |
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A monument in memoriam of about 40 Zhager Jews who were slaughtered at the Jewish cemetery in 1941 |
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At the beginning of the 1990s at the entrance to Narishkin Park two tablets were erected, bearing inscriptions in Lithuanian and Yiddish: At this site Hitler's murderers and their local helpers murdered about 3,000 Jews from the Shavl district, men, women, children on 2nd October 1941.
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Sources:
[Page 260]
A list of 142 Zhager Jewish donors to the victims of the famine in Persia in 1872
Note below that Zagare* means Zagare (new)
[Page 265]
A List of Zhager donors (from 1909) to buy land in EretzYisrael
Aizenshtat Yits'hak
Kaplan MoshehHayim
A List of Zhager Jews donors to the Settlement of EretzYisrael
(From Lithuania databases HaMelitz, compiled by Jeffrey Maynard)
The 1914 list of Zhager Jews who paid annual membership fees to the AgudathYisrael party
Apiryon Mendl
Blidon Mordehai
JewishGen, Inc. makes no representations regarding the accuracy of the translation.The reader may wish to refer to the original material for verification.
Preserving Our Litvak Heritage
Yizkor Book Project
JewishGen Home Page
Copyright © 1999-2024 by JewishGen, Inc.
The remains of the Zhager Jewish cemetery
(Picture taken and supplied by Elkan Gamzu, July 2005)
Yad Vashem Archives, M1/Q1407/181; M1/E1032/931, 1679/1556; M9/15 (6); 04/1; 033/1261; Koniuhovsky collection 071, files 102, 115
YIVO, New York, Lithuanian Communities Collection, files 437452
Oshri Hurben Lite (Yiddish)
Oshri Rabbi Yisrael RifZhager (Hebrew)
Dinezon Ya'akov Erinerungen, Der Pinkas (Yiddish), Vilna 1913
Vigoder MeirJoel, Sefer Zikaron (Hebrew), DublinLiege, 1931
Yerushalmi Eliezer, Pinkas Shavli (Hebrew)
Slutsky Yehudah, Dr. Mandelshtam (Hebrew), HaAvar 4, 1977
Kantorovitz Meir (Elyoeini), Bible Research from the Soviet Captivity, (Hebrew), Jerusalem, 1984
Yiddisher Lebn (Yiddish) Kovno, #124, 13.4.1923
Dos Vort (Yiddish) Kovno, 10.11.1934
Di Yiddishe Shtime, Kovno, 26.6.1931
Di Tsait, Kovno, 4.10.1933
HaMelitz, (Hebrew), St. Petersburg, 6.2.1862; 10.6.1879; 14.10.1879; 20.9.1881; 23.2.1884; 5.1.1884; 29.8.1884; 17.12.1885; 17.1.1886; 1893 #66; 4.7.1895
HaAvar (Hebrew), Vol.4, 1956; Vol 21, 1972.
Morgen Journal (Yiddish), New York, 10.6.1946
Kovner Tog (Yiddish) 8.6.1926
Masines Zudynes Lietuvoje (Mass Murder in Lithuania) Vol. 2, pages 225141
Janulaitis Augustinas Zydai Lietuvoje, Kaunas 1923
(From Lithuania databases HaMagid, compiled by Jeffrey Maynard)
Surname
Given Name
Comments
Town
Year
AHRENZOHN
Chaim
from old Zagare
Zagare*
1872
AHRENZOHN
Nachum
Zagare*
1872
ARKIN
Chaim Leib
Zagare*
1872
ARKIN
Dovid
Zagare*
1872
ARKIN
Mendil
Zagare*
1872
ARKIN
Shmuel
Zagare*
1872
ARKIN
Tuvia
Zagare*
1872
ARKIN
Yosef
Zagare*
1872
ASHRON
Ber
Zagare*
1872
ATLES
Eliezer Tzvi
Zagare*
1872
BALKIN
Eizik
Zagare*
1872
BARSHTEIN
Shmuel
Zagare*
1872
BASKIN
Dovid
from old Zagare
Zagare*
1872
BISKOWITZ
Yehoshua
Zagare*
1872
BLUMBERG
Simcha
Zagare*
1872
BORZOWSKI
Chaim
Zagare*
1872
BROIDA
Mordechai
Zagare*
1872
CHAITKIN
Avraham
Zagare*
1872
CHEZKELOWITZ
Yudel
Zagare*
1872
DISLER
Yeshiahu
Zagare*
1872
DOVIDOWITZ
Zalman
from old Zagare
Zagare*
1872
DWALEINKI
Eli
Zagare*
1872
DWOLEIZKI
Avraham
Zagare*
1872
DWOLEIZKI
Mendil
Zagare*
1872
EIZEKZOHN
Avraham
Zagare*
1872
EIZENSHTAT
Moshe Zalman
Zagare*
1872
EPSHTEIN
Cheikel
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
EPSHTEIN
Leib
Zagare*
1872
FISHHOIT
Kalman
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Devorah
woman, mother of Yehuda Leib
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Dov Ber
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Eli Ber
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Eliezer
gvir
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Leib
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Nechamiah
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Raphel
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Shraga
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Tzvi
gvir
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Yechezkel
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Yechezkel Mendil
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Yechiel
Zagare*
1872
FRIDMAN
Yehuda Leib
son of Devorah
Zagare*
1872
FRIEDENZOHN
Yakov
Zagare*
1872
GOLDBERG
Hirsh
Zagare*
1872
GOLDBERG
Shalom Meir
Zagare*
1872
GOLDBERG
Tuvia
fil of Bendet
Zagare*
1872
HOPSHA
Shraga Meir
Zagare*
1872
HORWITZ
Gitel
woman
Zagare*
1872
HORWITZ
Leib
Zagare*
1872
KANTOR
Hirsh ben Yoel
Zagare*
1872
KIWIN
Yosef ben Leib
Zagare*
1872
KOHN
Tzvi
Zagare*
1872
KOTZ
Leib
Zagare*
1872
KREZER
Moshe
Zagare*
1872
KWEITZ
Meir
Zagare*
1872
KWITZ
Mendil
Zagare*
1872
LANE
Wolf
Zagare*
1872
LEWIMAN
Zalman
Zagare*
1872
LEWIN
Tzvi
boy
Zagare*
1872
LEWITAN
Shlomo
Zagare*
1872
LIPSHITZ
Moishe
Zagare*
1872
LURIA
Nechemiah
fil of Yakov
Zagare*
1872
LURIN
Yosef
Zagare*
1872
MANDELSHTAM
Tzvi
Zagare*
1872
MEINKIN
Dovid
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
MENDELZOHN
Yakov
Zagare*
1872
MINKEN
Abba
father of Shalom
Zagare*
1872
MINKEN
Shalom ben Abba
Zagare*
1872
MIYANISHOK
Pesach
from Joniskis (Yanishok)
Zagare*
1872
MOLWIDZKI
Abba
Zagare*
1872
MOLWIDZKI
Shalom
Zagare*
1872
MOSHAT
Yosef
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
MOZEZOHN
Yitzchok
Zagare*
1872
NACHUMZOHN
Lemel
Zagare*
1872
NATKIN
Ber
Zagare*
1872
NEIMARK
Avraham
from old Zagare
Zagare*
1872
NEIWIDAL
Beinish
Zagare*
1872
NEIWIDAL
Yitzchok
Zagare*
1872
NOIMESHZOHN
Shalom
Zagare*
1872
PINKUS
Yakov
Zagare*
1872
RABINOWITZ
Boruch
Zagare*
1872
RABINOWITZ
Zalman
Zagare*
1872
RITOW
Avraham
Zagare*
1872
ROZENBERG
Dovid Shlomo
Zagare*
1872
RUBIN
Shalom
father of Shephtil
Zagare*
1872
RUBIN
Shephtil
ben Shalom
Zagare*
1872
RUBIN
Zalkind
Zagare*
1872
SEGAL
Note
Zagare*
1872
SHAPIRO
Ber
Zagare*
1872
SHIK
Eli
Rabbi Gaon ABD
Zagare*
1872
SHLEZINGER
Eli
Zagare*
1872
SHMIDMAN
Shmuel Kopel
1872
SHNEIDER
Moshe
Zagare*
1872
SHUB
Shmuel
Zagare*
1872
TANKEL
Abba
Zagare*
1872
WEINBERG
Ber
Zagare*
1872
WEINER
Tzvi
Zagare*
1872
WEINERWITZ
Eli ben Hirsh Mendil
Zagare*
1872
WEINGEWER
Wolf
Zagare*
1872
WINDEROW
Yitzchok
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
YAFE
Abba
Zagare*
1872
YAFE
Eizik
Zagare*
1872
YAFE
Leib
Zagare*
1872
YAFE
Moshe
Zagare*
1872
YAFE
Shalom
Zagare*
1872
YAFE
Yeshayahu
Zagare*
1872
YAKOBZOHN
Hillel
Zagare*
1872
YAKOBZOHN
Mordechai
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
YAKOBZOHN
Nachum
Zagare*
1872
YAKOBZOHN
Nachum
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
YAKOBZOHN
Yakov
Zagare*
1872
YERMAN
Meir
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
YITZCHOK
Yafe
Zagare*
1872
YUDES
Yeshiahu
Zagare*
1872
ZAK
Chaim
gvir
Zagare*
1872
ZAKS
Hershil
Zagare*
1872
ZALELZOHN
Mendil
Zagare*
1872
ZALELZOHN
Shachna
Zagare*
1872
ZALELZOHN
Yitzchok
Zagare*
1872
ZALKIND
H
Apothecary
Zagare*
1872
ZELIKOWITZ
Leib
Zagare*
1872
Abba ben Yehuda Leib
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
Ari ben Yehoshua
Zagare*
1872
Bendet
sil of Tuvia Goldberg
Zagare*
1872
Hirsh ben Binyomin
Zagare*
1872
Leib ben Yitzchok
Zagare*
1872
Lesne
woman, mother of Nechama Hene
Zagare*
1872
Menashe
gsh
Zagare*
1872
Nechama Hene bas Lesne
Zagare*
1872
Note Yitzchok
Zagare*
1872
Pesach Tzvi
Zagare*
1872
Shephtil ben Boruch
Zagare*
1872
Shraga Levi
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
Tzvi Levi
msh
Zagare*
1872
Yakov
sil of Nechamiah Luria
Zagare*
1872
Yehoshua ben Abba
Zagare*
1872
Yeshiahu son of Rabbi Dovid
Zagare*
1872
Yeshiahu Tuvia son of the Rabbi
bridegroom
Zagare*
1872
Zalkind
msh
Zagare*
1872
Zalman
msh
Zagare*
1872
GOLDBERG
Yechezkel
businessman visiting Riga
Zagare, Lith.
1871
ZAKS
I
businessman visiting Riga
Zagare, Lith.
1871
New Zhager
Grinblat Sheftl
Idelson Shraga
Kantor Yeshaiya
Kikon Yekutiel
Klein BenZion
Naividel ShalomTuviyah
Tankel B.
Yakobson Hirsh
Yavnovitz
Klatskin Mendl
Lamdan BenZion, Rabbi
Maldiner David
Shtein BenZion
Trubik Nisan
Yakobson Leib
Yakobson Shabtai
Surname
Given Name
Comments
Source in HaMelitz
Year
ABELSHON
Yitzchok
#167
1898
ABRAMZOHN
Leib
#167
1898
AIZIKOWITZ
T
#250
1894
AIZIKZOHN
Fani
#117
1898
ARKIN
D
#250
1894
ARKIN
Leib
#167
1898
ARONOW
Chaim
#118
1900
ARONOW
Chaim
#221
1903
ARONOW
Chaim ben Dov
#117
1898
ARONZOHN
Thereza
#274
1897
BALKAN
Aizik
# 228
1898
BALKIN
Aizik
#167
1898
BALKIND
Aizik
#250
1894
BALKIND
Aizik
#212
1895
BALKIND
Aizik uncle of Chaim Bentzion Balkind of Chwedana
#229
1899
BASKIN
Dovid
#167
1898
BIRZANSKI
Shmuel Eliezer
#195
1900
BIRZONSKI
Shmuel Eliezer
wed from New Zager
#138
1897
BIRZONSKI
Yudel Kanter
#167
1898
BLOCH
Gitl Malka wife of Bentzion Nachum Tankel
wed 5 Ellul in Zager
# 206
1897
BLUM
Aharon Yakov
# 228
1898
BLUM
Avraham brother of Yosef in Shkod
#218
1894
BLUM
Avraham brother of Yosef of Shkod
#218
1894
BLUM
Frida
#117
1898
BLUMBERG
Alechsander Ziskind
wed in Kursenai 19 Av
#195
1900
BLUMBERG
Mordechai
#90
1898
BLUMBERG
Yitzchik
from Dvinsk
# 228
1898
BLUMBERG
Yitzchok ben Yona Ber husband of Ch E Shmuelowitz
from Dvinsk
#61
1897
BLUMBERG
Yona Ber father of Yitzchok
from Dvinsk
#61
1897
BOBIN
Dovid Shlomo
in Pretoria, SA
#288
1897
BROIDA
Boruch uncle of Shalom Tuvia Neiwidel
# 228
1898
BROIDA
Gnese bas Yehoshua wife of Aba Heisman from Woliz
wed in Shavel 1 Nisan
#82
1895
BROIDA
Y
#250
1894
BROIDA
Yehoshua uncle of S T Neiwidel father of Gnese
Rabbi Gaon
#82
1895
BROIDA
Zalman ben Boruch husband of Paie Yavneh
wed 1898
# 228
1898
BROIDE
Yitzchok
#167
1898
BRUCHMAN
Dovid
#195
1900
BRUCHMAN
Dovid husband of Motle Izraelshtam
wed 10 February
#90
1898
CHATZES
Doshe
#167
1898
CHATZES
Tzvi Hirsh
#142
1898
CHAWSHA
Ch A
#250
1894
CHAWSHA
M A
#250
1894
CHEN
Sh
#250
1894
CHLZ
Y
#250
1894
COHEN
Tzvi father of Shmuel & uncle of Moshe Yanowski in Shveksna
#225
1902
DONIE
Robert
#167
1898
DWILAITZKI
Yete
#117
1898
DWOLEITZKI
Avraham
#167
1898
DWOLEITZKI
Eli
#167
1898
DWOLEITZKI
Moshe
#167
1898
DWOLEITZKI
Shoshana
#167
1898
EDELSON
Shaweli husband of Zinote Hoppenkopf
#117
1898
EIDELMANN
Sh
#250
1894
EIDELSOHN
Shmarihu husband of Shifra Hirshberg of Dvinsk
dentist, wed 3 Elul in Amalia
#201
1897
EIDELSON
Tzvi
#221
1903
EIDELZOHN
Sh
Dentist
#117
1898
EITZIGZOHN
Moshe
#167
1898
EITZINSOHN
Aharon husband of Ida Segal of Taurage
wed 20 Elul
# 196
1893
EIZENSHTADT
Y
#250
1894
EIZENSHTADT
Y
#117
1898
EIZENSHTADT
Yitzchok
#167
1898
EIZENSHTAM
Yitzchok
# 228
1898
EIZENSHTAT
Yitzchok husband of Yete Hirshhorn
wed 15 March
#117
1898
ELIASHAW
Moshe
#230
1895
EPSHTEIN
Binyomin
#167
1898
EPSHTEIN
Chaim Fishel
Rabbi
#29
1898
EPSHTEIN
Ida
#167
1898
EPSHTEIN
Tzvi Ari ben Chaim Fishel
born 6 Kislev 1896
#29
1898
ESTERMAN
Dovid Yitzchok
#167
1898
FEINBERG
Miriam
#117
1898
FERKIN
Yisroel
#118
1900
FINKELMAN
Eli
#90
1898
FISHHOIT
Frida
#117
1898
FISHHOIT
K
#250
1894
FRIDMAN
Alechsander
# 228
1898
FRIDMAN
Boruch
#90
1898
FRIDMAN
Heshil
#250
1894
FRIDMAN
Lazer
#167
1898
FRIDMAN
M
#250
1894
FRIDMAN
Mendil
#221
1903
FRIDMAN
Nechamiah
#221
1903
FRIDMAN
Nechemiah
#250
1894
FRIDMAN
Nechemiah
#167
1898
FRIDMAN
Rochel
#90
1898
FRIDMAN
Shalom
#221
1903
FRIDMAN
Shraga
# 228
1898
FRIDMAN
Tzirle
#167
1898
FRIDMAN
Yisroel husband of Freida Yafe
wed 1903
#221
1903
FRIDMAN
Yudel
#118
1900
FRIEDMAN
Alechsander
#117
1898
FRIEDMAN
Nechemiah
#117
1898
GAFINOWITZ
Yisroel
# 228
1898
GARFINKEL
Yisroel
#195
1900
GAWRONSKI
Shabasai
#167
1898
GLAS
Eliezer
#274
1897
GLASNER
Leopold husband of Sheine Chanah Yafe
wed 3 Ellul in Frankfurt on Main
#195
1900
GLAT
Aharon husband of batia Menucha
#29
1898
GLAT
Batia Menucha wife of Aharon
#29
1898
GLAT
Moshe Tzvi ben Aharon
born 1 Tevet 1896
#29
1898
GLAZER
Aizik
#117
1898
GLAZER
Sarah Tane wife of Shalom Gotler
wed 8 Nisan
#117
1898
GOLDBERG
Hawsha Yechezkel
#167
1898
GOLDBERG
Tzvi
#167
1898
GOLDBERG
Y
#250
1894
GOLDBERG
Yakov
#167
1898
GOLDSHTEIN
Kalman
Rabbi
#250
1894
GOLDSHTEIN
Kalman
Rabbi
#167
1898
GOLDSHTEIN
Yitzchok
#117
1898
GOLDSHTEIN
Yitzchok
#221
1903
GOLDSHTEIN
Yitzchok
#221
1903
GORDON
Hine Mirl
#167
1898
GOTLER
Shalom
#221
1903
GOTLER
Shalom husband of Sarah Tane Glazer
wed 8 Nisan
#117
1898
GRIN
Yekutiel
#167
1898
GRINBLAT
M Sh
# 159
1893
GRINBLAT
M Sh
#250
1894
GRINBLAT
M Sh
#117
1898
GRINBLAT
Moshe
#274
1897
GRITZMAN
Miriam
#118
1900
GRITZMAN
Mordechai Yosef
son born 1900
#118
1900
HATZES
Tzvi
# 228
1898
HAWSHA
Chaim Aharon
# 228
1898
HELLER
Ch
#250
1894
HELMAN
Reuven
#167
1898
HERTZBERG
father of Hadassah
Doctor
#167
1898
HERTZBERG
Hadassah wife of Dr. Lowenshtein from Mitau
wed
#167
1898
HIRSHFELD
Chaim
#221
1903
HIRSHFELD
Shmuel
#221
1903
HIRSHHORN
Yete wife of Yitzchok Eizenshtat
wed 15 March
#117
1898
HOPPENKOPF
Eliezer father of Zinote
#117
1898
HOPPENKOPF
Zinote bas Eliezer wife of Shaweli Edelson
wed 3 March
#117
1898
HORWITZ
Feige
#167
1898
IZRAELSHTAM
Hinde
#90
1898
IZRAELSHTAM
Motle wife of Dovid Bruchman
wed 10 February
#90
1898
IZRAELSHTAM
Shalom
#90
1898
IZRAELSHTAM
Shmuel
#90
1898
IZRAELSTAM
Shmuel
#195
1900
KANTER
Ester
#167
1898
KANTER
Pesach
#167
1898
KANTER
Sh
#250
1894
KANTOR
Hane
#167
1898
KANTOR
Shlomo
# 228
1898
KAPLAN
Eliahu
in Pretoria, SA
#288
1897
KAPLAN
Helena
#167
1898
KAPLAN
Shmuel husband of Shula Hana Hawsha of Shkod
wed 3 Elul
#195
1900
KISMAN
Yehuda
#117
1898
KLEIN
Elimelech
#117
1898
KLEIN
M
#250
1894
KOHN
Hirsh
#167
1898
KOHN
Sh Y
#250
1894
KORNOWSKI
Ritow
#167
1898
KOTZ
L
#250
1894
KOTZ
Leib
#250
1894
KREMER
Rivka wife of Leib Gershon from Tukum
wed
#117
1898
LEIBSON
Tzvi
#142
1898
LEMGIN
Mordechai husband of Miriam Mandelshtam
wed 28th August 1898 in Dubbeln
# 228
1898
LEWI
Zalman
# 228
1898
LEWITAS
Avraham
#117
1898
LEWITAS
Chaya Sara
#117
1898
LEWITAS
Miriam
#117
1898
LEWITAS
Sh M
#250
1894
LISIS
T
#250
1894
LISIS
Tuvia
# 228
1898
LISOS
Aizik
#167
1898
LISOS
Leib
#167
1898
LISOS
Leib
New Zager
#29
1898
LISOS
Nite
#117
1898
LISOS
Rivka
#117
1898
LISOS
Shalom
#167
1898
LISOS
Toibe
#117
1898
LUNTZ
Chaya
#90
1898
LURIA
Leib
#167
1898
LURIA
Tz A
#250
1894
LURIA
Tzvi Ari
# 228
1898
MANDELSHTAM
Ch Y
#250
1894
MANDELSHTAM
Ch Y
#250
1894
MANDELSHTAM
Ch Y
#274
1897
MANDELSHTAM
Ch Y
#167
1898
MANDELSHTAM
Chaim Yosef
#195
1900
MANDELSHTAM
Chaim Yosef
#225
1902
MANDELSHTAM
Miriam wife of Mordechai Lemgin
wed 28th August 1898 in Dubbeln
# 228
1898
MANDELSHTAM
son of Chaim Yosef
wed
#225
1902
MANDELSHTAM
Tzvi Leib
#167
1898
MARGOLIOS
N
#250
1894
MAWSHOWITZ
Bertha
#167
1898
MEHL
Yitzchok Michel
#117
1898
MELAMED
Sh
#250
1894
MELAMED
Tzvi
#117
1898
MELER
Bentzion
# 228
1898
MELLER
Bentzion Shmuel
#227
1894
MENDELSHON
Nachum
#167
1898
MENDELZOHN
A
#250
1894
MENDELZOHN
N
#250
1894
MENDELZOHN
Nachum
in Pretoria, SA
#288
1897
MICHALOWITZ
Batia
#167
1898
MICHALOWITZ
Yette
#167
1898
MILL
Bentzion
Rabbi
#167
1898
MILWITZKI
Sheftil
#117
1898
MIRENOWITZ
Boruch
#221
1903
MORFLER?
Sh
#250
1894
MOZESZOHN
Y Y
#250
1894
NEIWIDEL
Sh T
# 159
1893
NEIWIDEL
Shalom Tuvia
#170
1897
NEIWIDEL
Shalom Tuvia
#198
1900
NEIWIDEL
Shalom Tuvia nephew of Boruch Broida
# 228
1898
NEIWIDEL
Shalom Tuvia nephew of Rabbi Yehoshua Broida
#82
1895
OSHRATZ
Chana wife of Avraham Yitzchok
wed Adar Sheni 5
#118
1900
PAKTMAN
Yitzchok
#221
1903
PEKIN
Moshe
from Shavel
#221
1903
PERKIN
Ete
#167
1898
PERKIN
Ete
#221
1903
PERKIN
Rivka
#221
1903
PERKIN
Yisroel
#117
1898
PERKIN
Yisroel
#35
1900
PERKIN
Yisroel
#221
1903
PERKIN
Yitzchok
# 228
1898
PILVERMACHER
Yosef
#221
1903
RABINOWITZ
Sh Y
#117
1898
RAZOMNE
Yosef Yakov
#168
1895
RIF
Yehuda Leib
Rabbi ABD
# 228
1898
RITOW
A
#250
1894
RITOW
Avraham
# 228
1898
ROZENBERG
Leib
#117
1898
ROZENFELD
Ch
#250
1894
ROZING
Nachum Zev
#29
1898
ROZOMNA
Y Y
#250
1894
ROZOMNI
Yete
#117
1898
ROZOTAI
Yosef Yakov
# 228
1898
ROZUMNA
Yosef Yakov
#195
1900
SEGAL
B
Official Collector
# 171
1893
SHAPOW
Eliezer
#117
1898
SHEIN
Gavriel
#167
1898
SHEIN
Leib
#167
1898
SHEIN
Yulius
#167
1898
SHEINIGZOHN
Moshe
#250
1894
SHER
Hinde Gite
#221
1903
SHIR
Eliezer
#221
1903
SHKOT
Y
#250
1894
SHLAPABERSKI
Eidel
#167
1898
SHLAPABERSKI
Polina
#117
1898
SHMUELOWITZ
Chana Feiga wife of Uri
#61
1897
SHMUELOWITZ
Chaya Ester bas Uri wife of Yitzchok Blumberg
#61
1897
SHMUELOWITZ
Uri husband of Chana Feiga father of Chaya Ester
#61
1897
SHMUELOWITZ
Y
in Dublin, Ireland
#61
1897
SHMULIA
N
#250
1894
SHOCHAT
Leib
#221
1903
SHOCHAT
Leib friend of Rabbi Chaim Shochat ABD Abel
#195
1900
SHTEIN
Bentzion
#221
1903
SHTEIN
P
#221
1903
SHTEIN
Sh M
#250
1894
SHTZUPOK
Avraham
# 228
1898
TANKEL
B
#250
1894
TANKEL
Bentzion
#250
1894
TANKEL
Bentzion Nachum ben Zelig Meir husband of Gitl Malka Bloch
wed 5 Ellul in Zager
# 206
1897
TANKEL
Benzion Nachum
# 228
1898
TANKEL
Chana Gitl wife of Zelig Meir
# 206
1897
TANKEL
Moshe Aharon
#221
1903
TANKEL
Moshe Bentzion
#118
1900
TANKEL
Zelig Meir
# 228
1898
TANKEL
Zelig Meir husband of Chana Gitl father of Bentzion Nachum
# 206
1897
TASKIN
A
#250
1894
TZALELSOHN
Mina wife of Tzvi Kurshan of Vieksna
wed 10 Elul
#195
1900
TZALELZOHN
Shlomo Chen
#167
1898
TZIONI
Rivka dil of Rabbi Chaim Tzvi
wed 14 Av
#195
1900
WEINBERG
Ch
#250
1894
WEINSHTOK
Tzvi Hirsh
from Telshen
# 228
1898
WEIS
Eli ben Leib
wed 19 Av
#195
1900
WEIS
Leib father of Eli
#195
1900
WOLFSON
Shlomo
#118
1900
YAFE
A
#221
1903
YAFE
Aba
#118
1900
YAFE
Ari
#167
1898
YAFE
B
#250
1894
YAFE
B R
#221
1903
YAFE
Chana
#117
1898
YAFE
Emma
#221
1903
YAFE
Freida wife of Yisroel Fridman
wed 1903
#221
1903
YAFE
Frida
#117
1898
YAFE
Hillel brother of Freida
from Riga
#221
1903
YAFE
M
#250
1894
YAFE
Sarah mother of Sheine Chanah
#195
1900
YAFE
Sheine Chanah wife of Leopold Glasner
wed 3 Ellul in Frankfurt on Main
#195
1900
YAFE
Simcha
#134
1900
YAFE
Simcha fiance of Toibe Zegerman of Salant
engaged
#239
1899
YAFE
Y
#250
1894
YAFE
Yakov
# 228
1898
YAKOBSON
Avraham
#167
1898
YAKOBZOHN
Hirsh
#250
1894
YAKOBZOHN
Leib
#167
1898
YAKOBZOHN
Tzvi
# 228
1898
YAKOBZOHN
Y
#250
1894
YAVNEH
Paie wife of Zalman Broida
wed 1898
# 228
1898
YEDAKIN
Sh
#250
1894
YEGERMAN
A
#250
1894
YOWROWITZ
Moshe
#221
1903
YUDELOWITZ
Shalom
#90
1898
ZACHS
Y
#250
1894
ZAK
Hinda Gitl
#212
1895
ZAK
Hinde Gite
#167
1898
ZAKS
Heshil bil of Rabbi Meir Michel Hawsha of Shkod
#195
1900
ZAKS
Tzesne
#117
1898
ZAKSH
Moshe
#221
1903
ZALTZBERG
B
#227
1894
ZALTZBERG
Bentzion
#250
1894
ZEGERMANN
Asher
#167
1898
ZENERMAN
Asher
#212
1895
ZIMAN
Avraham Menachem ben Heshil
born 1 Tevet 1896
#29
1898
ZIMAN
Choda Golda
#29
1898
ZIMAN
Heshil husband of Choda Golda
#29
1898
ZIMAN
Simcha
Motz
#117
1898
ZIMANSOHN
Folk uncle of Fani
#195
1900
ZOMSER
Shmuel
# 228
1898
ZUSMAN
Bentzion
#274
1897
Chaim Tzvi fil of Rivka Tzioni
Rabbi ABD Zager Yashan
#195
1900
Fani daughter of sister of Folk Zimansohn
wed
#195
1900
Arenov Tsevi
Arkin Mordehai
Asasin Leib
Blas Josef
Blidun Hayim
Blum AvrahamYa'akov
Blum Josef
Brokhman David
Bruker Mendl
Dvoloitsky Shakhna
Eszon ShemuelKhone
Esterman David
Fridman Yehudah
Goldberg Azriel
Goldberg Tsevi
Gitelson Peretz
Gotlib Shalom
Gotler Shalom
Helman Asher
Kantor Yudl
Kimelfeld Pinhas
Lan Ya'alovMosheh
Lerman Aizik
Levitas Leib
Lisus Mordehai
Lisus Aizik
London Meir
London Yits'hak
Maister YehudahMeir
Mandelshtam Josef
Markushevitz Yits'hak
Meler BenZion
Melamed A.S.
Milvitsky Sheftl
Milvitzky Eliezer
Naividel ShalomTuviyah
Nurok Noakh
Peretsman Tsevi
Rabinovitz Leib
Rozenberg Leib
Rozenfeld Nahum
Sarok Josef
Shalamov Mordehai
Shapov Mordehai
Sheininzon Mosheh
Shikshtein Yehezkel
Shokhat David
Shor Elazar
Shtein ShelomohMosheh
Tankel MoshehAharon
Tankel AbaEliezer
Todes Shalom
Trumpeitsky ShalomTsevi
Vagenheim Mihah
Viner Josef
Volkin AvrahamShimon
Yakobzon Tsevi
Yankelson TseviLeib
Yavnovitz Mosheh
Yankelevitz Hayim Dr.
Zagarzky Yekutiel
Zlot Khone
Zegerman Asher
Feldman BenZion, Rabbi
Fishhoit Fishl
Hilman Shemuel
Hirshberg ShemuelEliyahu
Gavronsky Shabtai
Kahn HayimMendl
Levitas AvrahamElia
Olshvang MoshehYits'hak
Pshedmeisky Tsevi, Rabbi
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