Obj. ID: 34039
  Memorials Small Monument at the Killing Site near Bialynicy (Belynichi), Belarus, 1965
Memorial name:
No official name.
Who is Commemorated?
Jewish victims of Bialyničy [communists and civilians].
Description:
The monument at the killing site of the Belynichi Jews is erected in the tract of Mkha River. Later another monument dedicated to the local Holocaust victims was erected nearby:
It is surrounded by the post-war cemetery.
The monument is shaped like an irregular pentagon on a two-step pedestal.
It bears a metal plaque with a Soviet five-pointed star and an epitaph that doesn't refer to the victims' nationality. Nine names of the local Jewish community's victims are mentioned.
The territory of the monument is surrounded by a fence.
Inscription:
In Russian:
Здесь похоронены
[Список жертв]
И другие коммунисты и мирные граждане, расстрелянные
немецко-фашистскими захватчиками в годы Великой
Отечественной Войны 1941-1945 гг.
Translation: At this site [the list of victims] and other communists and civilians, shot to death by the German-fascist invaders during the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945, are buried.
Commissioned by
Probably, relatives of the victims.
sub-set tree: 
| In the Mkha Rover tract, near Zadrutskaia Sloboda village
According to Yad Vashem, in January 1939, 781 Jews lived in Belynichi, accounting for approximately 25 percent of the total population. Germans occupied the town on July 6, 1941. After the first murder operation conducted in August or September 1941, the remaining Jews of Belynichi were concentrated in a ghetto. Later, Jews from the neighboring localities of Shepelevichi, Golovchin, Neroplya, and others were deported to it as well. Although the ghetto was not fenced in, the inhabitants were not allowed to leave, and Belarusian collaborators were posted as guards. The Jews in the ghetto were killed on December 12, 1941 [Yad Vashem: The Untold Stories].
Memorialization activities in Belynichi started presumably in the 1960s. At the killing site, the victims' relatives erected the present monument in memory of several families [Litin]. As was common in the Soviet Union, the inscription does not specify the ethnicity of the victims.
In 1965, on the initiative of the victims' relatives, the first general monument at the killing site was erected. In 1983, for the 40th anniversary of the Belarus liberation, it was replaced by the present-day government monument that became the place of commemorative ceremonies [Smilovitsky].
In the 1960s, on the initiative of the local official Iosif Belynicha, an attempt of the reinterment in the Jewish cemetery was undertaken. However, due to the subsequent difficulties, the remains of only seventy victims were transferred [Smilovitsky]. The mass grave is also marked by a monument.
Aleksandr Litin, "Belynichi," in Holokost na territorii SSSR, ed. Il'ia Al'tman, 71.
"Belynichi,"
Untold Stories - Murder Sites of Jews in Occupied Territories of the USSR (Yad Vashem project), https://collections.yadvashem.org/en/untold-stories/community/14621526-Belynichi.
Marat, Botvinnik, Pam'atniki Genotsida Evreev Belarusi (Minsk: Belaruskaia navuka, 2000), p.294-295.
Smilovitskii, Leonid, "Po sledam evreiskikh kladbishch Belarusi: Belynichi," Zhurnal-gazeta "Masterskaia," ed. Evgenii Berkovich., https://club.berkovich-zametki.com/?p=54483 (accessed December 25, 2023)
Zeltser, Arkadi, Unwelcome Memory: Holocaust Monuments in the Soviet Union, trans. A.S. Brown (Jerusalem: Yad Vashem, 2018), pp.219, 221, 233.