Obj. ID: 58419 Holocaust Monument to Jewish artisans in Dzisna, Belarus, 1950s, 2000s
Memorial name:
No official name.
Who/What is Commemorated?
17 (18) Jewish artisans, killed on January 22 (May 12), 1943.
Description
The monument is an obelisk standing on a three-stepped base. It bears the original plaque dating back to the 1950s, as well as the plaque affixed in the 1990s. On the original plaque, there is a Russian ethnically neutral inscription, while the plaque of the 1990s bears two Stars of David and non-identical Hebrew and Belarusian inscriptions.
Inscription
On the original plaque (1950s), in Russian:
Здесь похоронены 18
советских граждан
г. Дисны
зверски убитые
немецкими фашистами
12 мая 1943 г.
Translation: Here are buried 18 / Soviet citizens / of the town of Dzisna / who were brutally killed / by the German fascists / on May 12, 1943.
On the plaque of the 1990s:
In Hebrew
פה נקברו
אחרוני היהודים מגיטו דיסנה
17 בעלי מלאכה
[?] על ידי הנאצים ועוזריהם
[?]ו בטבט תש"ג 22.1.1943
יהיה זכרם ברוך
Translation: Here are buried / the last Jews from the Dzisna Ghetto / 17 artisans / [?] by the Nazis and their helpers / on [?] Tevet 5703, 22.1.1943 / May their memory be blessed.
In Belarusian
Тут пахаваны
апошнія яўрэі гетто г. Дзісна.
17 рамеснікаў, забітых
нацыстамі 22 снежня 1943 г.
Няхай будзе бласловенна
іх памяць
Translation: Here are buried / the last Jews from the Dzisna Ghetto / 17 artisans, killed / by the Nazis on January 22, 1943. / May their memory be blessed.
Commissioned by
The victims' relatives.
"On July 3 [1941], German troops entered Dzisna. A short while later, someone cut a German telephone wire. On July 14, the Germans assembled all the town's men, Jews and non-Jews alike, in the square in front of the Orthodox church. They picked ten men as hostages and executed them. Seven of the victims were Jews; two were Poles, and one was a Belarusian. The rest of the men were ordered to bury the dead. The German soon introduced anti-Jewish decrees (the requirement to wear a Star of David on one's clothing, a prohibition on leaving the town, forced labor, etc.). In late July, a Jewish council and Jewish police unit were formed. In early August, a ghetto was established in the southern section of the town, straddling both banks of the Dzisenka River (a tributary of the Dvina). In addition to the Jews of Dzisna, some of the Jews from the towns of Łużki and Miory, and from the nearby villages, were moved into this ghetto. It was not fenced off. Many inmates were killed by the guards while attempting to leave the ghetto. Many others died of starvation and typhus.
On March 28, 1942, the SD entered the ghetto and took away thirty Jews; in the morning, they shot them in the commandant's office.
On the night of June 14-15, 1942, a squad of the Security Police (SiPo), reinforced by gendarmes and local policemen, surrounded the ghetto, and then entered it. The Jews tried to resist, setting the ghetto houses on fire. Only a minority of the inmates were able to escape by taking advantage of the confusion: The Germans strafed the ghetto with machine guns and threw hand grenades into it; the policemen shot those trying to swim across the river. Several hundred Jews managed to reach the forest, but the majority of them were seized by the local police or by peasants over the following days. The rest of the ghetto inmates were shot by the Nazis near the village of Ościewicze (known as Vostsevichi in Belarusian), some three kilometers south of Dzisna. According to German sources, 2,181 Jews from Dzisna were killed on that day, whereas Soviet documents put the number of victims at 3,800. Seventeen Jewish artisans, together with their families, were spared by the Germans during the massacre, but they were murdered by the local police in Dzisna in January 1943.
Some of those who had successfully escaped into the forests eventually came to the Glębokie Ghetto, where they shared the fate of its inmates. Others joined the Soviet Morozov partisan brigade. Most of the fighters of this brigade perished in 1943, during a German anti-partisan operation. Only a few Jews from Dzisna survived World War II" [Yad Vashem: Untold Stories].
The earliest monuments to the perished Jews of Dzisna were erected in the 1950s by their relatives [Zeltser, 140; Yad Vashem]. Among them was the obelisk under discussion. According to its original plaque, it is dedicated to 18 victims of fascism, killed on May 12, 1943. However, the plaque affixed in the 1990s (as well as Yad Vashem) mentions 17 victims, killed on January 22, 1943.
In the 2000s, the obelisk was replaced by a stele to which the aforementioned two plaques were affixed.
Another monument that arose in the 1950s was the monumental obelisk. It commemorated 3,800 victims of the massacre that took place on June 14, 1942. Presumably, in the 1980s, the obelisk was replaced by a stele.
In the 1950s, there was a monument that commemorated 28 Jews from the Dzisna Ghetto, killed on March 13, 1942. In the 1990s, the old monument was replaced by a new one.
"Dzisna,"
Untold Stories - Murder Sites of Jews in Occupied Territories of the USSR (Yad Vashem project), https://collections.yadvashem.org/en/untold-stories/community/14622430.
For the original image, see
Wikipedia, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ghetto_Disna_2a.jpg.
Il'ya, Al'tman (ed.), Kholokost na territorii SSSR (Moskva: ROSSPEN, 2011), pp.271-2.
Shulman, Arkadi, "Gorod, v kotorom zhivet istoria," shtetle.com., http://shtetle.com/Shtetls/disna/disna.html (accessed January 12, 2026)
Zeltser, Arkadi, Unwelcome Memory: Holocaust Monuments in the Soviet Union, trans. A.S. Brown (Jerusalem: Yad Vashem, 2018), p.140.



