Memorial Book of David-Horodok

Translation of
Sefer zikaron Dawidgrodek
(Davyd-Haradok, Belarus)

Published by the JewishGen Press

Editor of Original Yizkor Book: Y. Idan et.al., Tel Aviv, Former Residents of David-Horodok in Israel
Project Coordinator: Gayle Justman
Cover Design: Irv Osterer
Layout, formatting and indexing: Jonathan Wind
Book Summary: Bruce Drake
8.5”x11” Hardcover, 516 pages with original photographs and illustrations

Available from for $40.00

Details:

Davyd-Haradok was a small town in southwestern Belarus in a swampy, sparsely populated area that stretched along the Belarusian-Ukrainian border, just under 50 miles from Pinsk. The history of its Jewish community dates back to at least the seventeenth century and ended with the Holocaust.

After the second partition of Poland in 1793, the regions encompassing Davyd-Haradok were cut off from Poland and annexed to Czarist Russia. It again became part of Poland after World War I when that country was reconstituted as an independent nation. After the Nazi occupation during World War II, the Soviet Union captured the town from the Germans and controlled it until Belarus emerged as an independent state in 1991.

The book paints a picture of a remote town with houses mostly built of wood, windows without shutters and roofs covered with bales of hay. The streets were without sidewalks or thoroughfares and, during the spring when the snow was melting, they would turn into bogs. As one writer put it: “The marketplace was a bog, the streets were bogs, and one could only move from street to street with difficulty.”

There are extensive sections on the Zionist movement in the town and the secular, Hebrew-language Tarbut school that flourished there, profiles of personalities who stood out in the Jewish community and accounts of townspeople who died during the Holocaust as well as those who lost their lives in Israel during its struggle to survive as a nation. The section on the Holocaust recounts the horror of those years after the Germans took the town in July 1941. By the time Soviets forces reentered in 1944, no Jews were left alive in David-Horodok.

A chapter on a visit to the town after the Germans were driven out provides this coda: “I found mounds with overgrown grass in place of the houses. Instead of joyous laughter and childish playful screaming, places that once had beckoned with the glow of their homely warmth, now presented a fierce and frightening picture… Every remaining house, every tree that stood like a solitary wounded limb – cries, screams, laments and anxiously asks: Where are the gray and respectable old folks who would rest in our shade? Where has the happy laughter fled.”

 

Alternate names for the town:

Davyd-Haradok [Bel], David Gorodok [Rus], Dawidgródek [Pol], David Horodok [Yid], Davidgrodek, Davidgrudek, Dawid-Gródek

Davyd-Haradok, Belarus is located at 52°03' N 27°13' E, 129 miles S of Minsk.

 

Nearby Jewish Communities:

Remel 5 miles E
Rubel 9 miles SW
Lakhva 13 miles NNW
Kazhan-Haradok 14 miles NW
Belogusha 15 miles WSW
Mikashevichi 16 miles NE
Stolin 19 miles SW
Stachava 21 miles W
Turov 22 miles E
Luninyets 22 miles NW
Lenin 23 miles NNE
Plotnitsa 24 miles W
Bukcha 27 miles SE
Drozdin, Ukraine 28 miles S
Zhytkavichy 30 miles ENE

 


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