This translation of the Memorial or Yizkor Book for the Jewish Community of Radzyn Poland. It contains first-hand accounts of rich life in community before the Shoah. There are eyewitness accounts of the murders of the Jews of Radzyn in the Holocaust .
The Jewish community in Radzyn Podlaski located in the Lublin district of Poland can be dated back to the 16th century. In 1827 there were 875 Jews in the town and in 1921 more than half of the total 4,833 population was Jewish. The Jewish congregation of the Shtetl consisted mainly of merchants, shoemakers, tailors, old clothes dealers, watchmakers, tinsmiths, hat makers, draymen and peddlers. In the 19th Century, Radzyn became famous among the Jews of Poland as a center of Torah learning and following World War I vigorous Zionist activities flourished. In 1939-1944 it all came to a sudden end in the Shoah when 4,000 Jews of Radzyn and the vicinity were murdered by the German Nazis. Today there are no Jews left in the town. This book serves as a memorial to that now vanished culture, community and individuals.
The book contains all the photographs and images and maps of the origiinal Hebrew and Yiddish Yizkor Book.
Radzyn Podlaski, Poland: 51°47' N, 22°37' E
Alternate names for the town are: Radzyn Podlaski [Polish], Rodzinn[Yiddish], Radzyn [Russian], Radzyn, Radzin, Kozirynek
Nearby Jewish Communities:
Czemierniki 7 miles S
Stok 7 miles WNW
Wohyn 7 miles ESE
Kock 13 miles SW
Serokomla 13 miles WSW
Lukow 14 miles NW
Adamow 15 miles WSW
Miedzyrzec Podlaski 16 miles NNE
Parczew 16 miles SE
Firlej 17 miles SSW
Jeziorzany 20 miles SW
Lubartow 22 miles S
Ostrow Lubelski 22 miles SSE
Zbuczyn 22 miles NNW
Rossosz 23 miles ENE
Kamionka 23 miles SSW
Michow 23 miles SW
Lomazy 25 miles ENE
Baranow 25 miles SW
Wisznice 26 miles E
Sosnowica 27 miles SE
Biala Podlaska 28 miles NE
Siedlce 30 miles NNW
Chapters
- The Shtetl, a Jewish Mother
- The Past Generations
- Radzyner Chasidism
- Life and Youth
- Destruction and Extinction
- New Roots
- Yizkor