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Obj. ID: 48581
Jewish Funerary Art
  Old Holocaust Memorial at the Poboy Anti-Tank Trenches in Iziaslav, Ukraine, 1949

© Center for Jewish Art and PEU, Photographer: Unknown, 1990

Memorial Name

No given name

Who is Commemorated?

The roughly one thousand Jewish residents of Izyaslav murdered at this site during the Holocaust.

Description

This monument took the shape of a short obelisk with a flat top with smooth sides carved from a block of granite. It's base was a connected cube of the same stone.

On the monument's front face is a plaque with an inscription. When the monument was first erected in 1949, the inscription was Russian, but after Ukraine gained it's independence the plaque was replaced by one in Ukrainian (after 1991). Neither inscription mentioned the Jewish identities of the victims.

Inscription

Russian (earlier) inscription:

Здесь
покоятся
мирные
жители
растрелянные
немецкими
фашистами
в 1941 г.

Translation: Here are buried innocent residents [of Iziaslav] who were shot to death by the German Fascists in 1941

 

Ukrainian (later) inscription:

Тут
захороненi
мирнi жителi
м. Iзяслав
розстрiлянi
нiмецькими
фашистами

Translation: Here are buried innocent residents of the town of Iziaslav who were shot to death by the German Fascists

Commissioned By

Unknown

Summary and Remarks
Remarks

2 image(s)

sub-set tree:

Name/Title
Old Holocaust Memorial at the Poboy Anti-Tank Trenches in Iziaslav | Unknown
Object Detail
Monument Setting
Date
1949
Synagogue active dates
Reconstruction dates
Artist/ Maker
Historical Origin
Unknown
Community type
Unknown |
Congregation
Unknown
Site
Unknown
School/Style
Unknown|
Period Detail
Collection
Unknown |
Documentation / Research project
Unknown
Iconographical Subject
Unknown |
Textual Content
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Material / Technique
Granite
Material Stucture
Material Decoration
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Material Inscription
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Material Cloth
Material Lining
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Unknown
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Extant
Documented by CJA
Surveyed by CJA
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Present Usage Details
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Architectural Significance type
Historical significance: Event/Period
Historical significance: Collective Memory/Folklore
Historical significance: Person
Architectural Significance: Style
Architectural Significance: Artistic Decoration
Urban significance
Significance Rating
0
Ornamentation
Custom
Contents
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Pricking
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Direction/Location
Façade (main)
Endivances
Location of Torah Ark
Location of Apse
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Location of Reader's Desk
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Suggested Reconsdivuction
History/Provenance

In 1939, the Jewish population of Iziaslav numbered 3,208 individuals, roughly 28% of the population. Few local Jews managed to flee when the war began, and when the Germans occupied the town city on July 5th, 1941, they were made to wear yellow badges on their chests and backs. In August 1941, members of the local police and Germans killed over 1,000 Jews, and the rest were herded into a ghetto.

The Ghetto was destroyed in June 1942, when the rest of the Jewish victims were murdered except, for a small group of skilled workers, who were murdered in January 1943. Iziaslav was liberated by the Red Army on February 28th, 1944.

This monument was erected at this site in 1949 by the local Jews. It was vandalized several times with antisemitic graffiti. When Ukraine gained its independence the inscription was replaced with a similar one in Ukrainian, though the inscription still didn't reference the Jewish identities of the victims ("Izyaslav," Yad Vashem)

According to records at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Center, this memorial was placed at the site of the first "killing action" at Iziaslav during the Holocaust, on August 30th, 1941. Roughly 1,000 Jewish residents of Iziaslav, mostly women, children, and the elderly, were murdered and buried here (ibid.).

An new, additional monument, was erected nearby by the Tsal Kaplun Foundation in 2019 (see ID 48448).

Main Surveys & Excavations
Sources
Type
Documenter
|
Author of description
Adam Frisch | 2023
Architectural Drawings
|
Computer Reconstruction
|
Section Head
|
Language Editor
|
Donor
|
Negative/Photo. No.
The following information on this monument will be completed: