כ״ט תשרי ה׳תשפ״ו | October 21, 2025
Memorial Honors Holocaust Victims of Monastyrshchina
The Jewish community and local authorities in Monastyrshchina marked the completion of reconstruction work on the Holocaust memorial site with a ceremony and kaddish led by shliach and Chief Rabbi of the Smolensk region, Rabbi Levi Mondshine.
Attendees gathered around the newly renovated monument, which now features refreshed headstones, inscriptions, and landscaping to better preserve the memory of those lost. Community leaders and descendants of victims joined in paying tribute, laying wreaths and lighting memorial candles as part of the dedication.
Monastyrshchina once hosted a vibrant Jewish community: in the mid-1920s, about 1,370 Jews lived there—more than half the town’s population. Before the Nazi invasion in August 1941, the town had its own Jewish school, kindergarten, Yiddish cultural institutions, and a library.
Shortly after the occupation, a ghetto was established in Monastyrshchina in late 1941, gathering 800–1,000 Jews from the town and surrounding areas. During the bitter winter months, residents endured starvation and suffering. In February 1942, the ghetto was liquidated—its entire population was murdered and buried in mass graves. About 50 additional Jews discovered in hiding were also executed.
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