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1. The Liquidation of the Bialystok Ghetto
- www.us-israel.org
- The Liquidation of the Bialystok Ghetto.
- "The Bialystok General District. ...
- "In the first half of October 1942, the Reich Security Main Office issued an order to local SS authorities in the Bialystok General District to liquidate all the ghettos in the district and deport the Jews. But after the intervention of the German army and German civilian authorities that employed Jewish labor in wareconomy enterprises, it was decided that the liquidation of the Bialystok ghetto would be postponed. ...
- "The deportation of the Jews from the Bialystok district to Treblinka and, in part, to Auschwitz commenced after the deportation of most of the General Government Jews had been completed. ... At the end of this period, only 30,000 Jews from the entire General District remained in the Bialystok ghetto. ...
- in the summer of 1943, Himmler issued an order to Gauleiter Erich Kock, the head of the Bialystok General District, and to the local commander of the Security Police to liquidate the Bialystok ghetto and deport its inhabitants to the General Government. ... Globocnik personally came to Bialystok to coordinate the liquidation of the ghetto with the local German authorities. ...
- From Bialystok 7,600 Jews were sent to Treblinka. ... But the Bialystok ghetto, the last ghetto in the entire district, was finally liquidated. ... Bialystok who were deported and murdered in Treblinka came to about 118,000. ...
2. Bialystok
- ettc.uwb.edu.pl
- A Brief History of Bialystok.
- Bialystok is the largest city in the north-eastern part of Poland. ... Bialystok has a population of 350,000.
- Its history started in the 15th century when Raczko-Tabutowicz received the area of forests at the Bialystok River. ... Jan Klemens Branicki, a commander in chief, became the heir of the Bialystok area. ... Several artists and scientists came to Bialystok to take advantage of Branicki's patronage. ... Bialystok was not large, yet neat and charming. ... In 1834 custom duties on goods from the Polish Kingdom were introduced and therefore the textile industry in Bialystok started to develop on a larger scale. ... Bialystok was a town of mixed nationalities: Polish, Russian, Jewish and German. This was one of the reasons for the creation of an artificial language, Esperanto, by Ludwik Zamenhof, who lived in Bialystok.
- After the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, Bialystok was far away from the battlefield for many months. ... On 13 August 1915 German soldiers appeared in Bialystok. ... At that time Bialystok had 165 industrial establishments, mostly small-sized. ... Limitations in the absorptive capacity of the home market, together with high prices for Bialystok products on foreign markets, led to a severe stagnation of the industry lasting up to the beginning of 1926. ...
- When on February 19, 1919 Bialystok was liberated from German occupation, the town already had a partly organized elementary schooling system. ... During 1919 to 1939 elementary schooling in Bialystok proceeded in two directions: state-operated schools, which were in the minority; and a considerable number of private schools. ... Bialystok also had three music schools.
3. Bialystok
- www.marchoftheliving.org
- Bialystok.
- City in northeastern Poland; seat of the Bialystok district.
- The Jewish presence in Bialystok is first noted in the 17th century.
- First occupied by the Germans on September 15, 1939, Bialystok was handed to the Soviet Union a week later. On June 27, 1941, the Germans took Bialystok for the second time, burning, shooting and and torturing 2,000 Jews on what came to be known as Red Friday.
- The Bialystok Ghetto uprising was fought from August 16-20, 1943, on the eve of what was to be the liquidation of the ghetto. ... Within three weeks, the Jews of Bialystok were sent to Treblinka, Majdanek, the Poniatowa or Blizyn labour camps, or Aushwitz. ...
- Bialystok was liberated by the Soviet army in August 1944. ...
4. BIALYSTOK’S MODEL OF SLA THEORY
- web.mala.bc.ca
- 2625 Clean MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 BIALYSTOK’S MODEL OF SLA THEORY.
5. Central Europe Review - To Be a Belarusan in Bialystok
- www.ce-review.org
- To Be a Belarusan in Bialystok .
- Apparently, in this case "unity" does not mean sticking together for the sake of Bialystok's future but rather unifying along religious and nationalist lines. This is an observation made, not by some disappointed Belarusan or a blindly anti-right-wing leftist voter, but one expressed on the pages of Kurier Poranny (Morning Courier), a Bialystok daily, not associated with any political force and valued for its impartiality.
- In an article entitled "Big City of Bialystok," (Kultura 8, 1998), Wnuk describes how the city's authorities carry out their policy of erasing Belarusans and their culture from Bialystok's image, creating a wholly artificial picture of the city - which has always been a city of many cultures. ...
- "The victorious Catholic right-wing make it no secret that they want no Orthodox officials (and no ineffectual ones either) in the Bialystok region. ...
- And since the words "Orthodox" and "Belarusan" are synonymous in the minds of Bialystok authorities, both groups are discriminated against equally.
- Bialystok's 250th anniversary was celebrated without any reference to Belarusans' and/or Orthodox followers' contribution to the city's development.
- When Member of Parliament Jozef Mozolewski (AWS) said that the money originally allocated for the renovation of the Suprasl Monastery was a "thank you" from the former Communists for the Belarusans' vote, the true reasons underlying the policy of Bialystok's authorities became clear. ...
- 1) For those with a command of Polish, the Kurier Poranny (Morning Courier) from Bialystok maintains a website. This daily provides impartial and quality coverage of current affairs in the Bialystok region, including minority problems. ...
6. Bialystok Ghetto
- www.deathcamps.org
- Bialystok Ghetto.
- The city of Bialystok is situated in North-Eastern Poland, 188 km from Warsaw and 54 km from the border with Belarus. ... Bialystok became part of Prussia in 1795 before being annexed to Russia in 1807. ... On the outbreak of war on 1st September 1939, the Jewish population of Bialystok had risen to approximately 50,000. ...
- Following the invasion of Eastern Poland by the Soviet Union on 17 September, Bialystok became part of the area to be occupied by the Soviet Union under the terms of the Ribbentrop-Molotov pact. ... Following the outbreak of war between Germany and the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, the Germans re-occupied Bialystok on 27 June. ...
- Until 15 August 1941, Bialystok was under military rule; from that date it became a quasi-incorporated territory of the Reich attached to East Prussia, under the civilian administration of Erich Koch in his capacity of Oberpräsident of East Prussia. ... Between 18 September and 21 September 1941, 4,500 sick, unskilled and unemployed Jews were transferred to the ghetto at Pruzhany, 100 km south of Bialystok. ...
- The Bialystok ghetto rapidly became a centre of industry. ...
- In November 1942 Mordechai Tenenbaum (Josef Tamaroff) arrived in Bialystok from the Warsaw ghetto to bolster the resistance and "Bloc No. ...
- On 21 June 1942, he explained to a mass meeting of Bialystok Jews: "We have transformed all our inhabitants into useful elements. ...
- At that time, when there were still over 41,000 Jews in the Bialystok ghetto, the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) had issued an order for the liquidation of all ghettos in the Bialystok General District and the deportation of all Jews. But following the intervention of German military and civilian authorities, who were anxious not to lose their valuable Jewish workers, the liquidation of the Bialystok ghetto was postponed. ...
- On 19 February, at a conference held in Bialystok about the continuation of the deportations, it was announced that for economic reasons the Bialystok ghetto, with its remaining 30,000 inhabitants, would be left intact until the end of the war. ...
- This was not the first act of resistance in Bialystok. ...
- Much has rightly been written about the heroic and doomed Warsaw ghetto uprising, yet scant attention has been paid to the equally heroic and doomed Jewish resistance in Bialystok. ...
7. Hotels in Bialystok, Poland: Hotel GROMADA, Bialystok, Białystok, Poland
- www.hotelsinpoland.com
- Bialystok Białystok Poland: Hotels in Bialystok:.
- Hotel GROMADA, Bialystok Białystok, Poland.
- Białystok Bialystok hotel Bialystok hotel .
8. Bialystok - Current News & Information
- news.daylightonline.com
- Bialystok, Poland Travel Deals .
- Bialystok , Poland .
- Bialystok .
- Poland --> Bialystok Poland .
- The last bisons in Europe live in the Bialystok region of eastern Poland where their favourite food, the herbe de bison (hierochloe odorata hierochloe australis. ...
- Iwry was born and raised in Bialystok, Poland. ...
- He was born in Bialystok, Poland, and graduated from Warsaw University's Higher Institute for Judaic Studies in 1937, with accolades for his facility with. ...
- Iwry was born and raised in Bialystok, Poland. ...
- an error occurred while processing this directive Bialystok .
- Bialystok News Archives .
- Bialystok --> .
9. Wikipedia: Bialystok Voivodship
- www.factbook.org
- Wikipedia: Bialystok Voivodship.
- Bialystok Voivodship.
- Bialystok Voivodship (Polish: województwo białostockie) - a unit of administrative division and local government in Poland in years 1975-1998, superseded by Podlasie Voivodship. ...
- Capital city: Bialystok .
- Bialystok (277,800); .
- Bialystok Voivodship (2) (Polish: województwo białostockie) was a unit of administrative division and local government in Poland in years 1945-1975, superseded by Bialystok (1), Suwalki Voivodship and Lomza Voivodship.
- Bialystok Voivodship (3) (Polish: województwo białostockie) - a unit of administrative division and local government in Poland in years 1921-1939. ...
- Capital city: Bialystok .
10. Orthodox - News
- www.orthodox.bialystok.pl
- Mikolaja 3 15-420 Bialystok, POLAND tel/fax (+48 85) 742-40-88 email: kancelaria@orthodox. bialystok. ...
11. Bialystok 1990
- www.silinternational.com
- Bialystok 1990.
- Bialystok, Ellen. ...
- Bibliography module: Bialystok 1990 .
12. Yarmovsky Family History Web Site
- www.yarmovsky.info
- Bialystok.
- It was taken in Bialystok and shows Hene, Hyman, Shmuel David and Berl.
- The Yarmovsky family resided in at least three places in Europe: Porechany (also known as Paracany and Porzeczany, about 7 miles southwest of Lida), Belarus; Dyatlovo (also known as Dziatlava in Russian and previously known as Zdzieciol in Polish and Zhetl in Yiddish), Belarus; and Bialystok, Poland. ... By 1893, the family was located in Bialystok where their name was spelled as Jarmowska in Polish. ... , Bialystok, for many years.
- She married Aaron Davis (originally Aaron David Szturmak) in Bialystok in 1898 and later emigrated to England. ...
- sailing on the ship Tyrrhenia from Cherbourg, France arriving in NYC on 9/6/1923 from Bialystok, Poland enroute to her husband in NYC at 103 Norfolk St. ...
- She married Mordechai Sapiro and lived in Bialystok, Poland. ...
- Feigel Yarmovsky was born in 1881 and died in 1900 in Bialystok.
- S from Bialystok with her husband on the ship Gothland from Danzig arriving in NYC on 1/17/1921 enroute to Dina's brother Morris at 3507 14th St. ...
- Hyman (Chaim) Yarmovsky was born about 1893 in Bialystok (which was part of Russia at the time). ... His birthplace was shown as Bialystok. ...
- Bertha (Brine) Yarmovsky was born in 1894 in Bialystok. ...
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