Jasionówka | Podlaskie Voivodeship

Zofia G., born in 1918, said: "Jasionówka was a peaceful home to Catholics, Jews, and Tatars. The Catholic priest, Father Łozowski, had a good relationship with the rabbi and tried to help the Jews when the war began."© Markel Redondo / Yahad - In Unum Zofia G., born in 1918: “When the war began, the Germans started to persecute the Jews. The Jews were forced into hard labor and had to wear armbands with the Star of David. Later, they were all sent to Bialystok ghetto.” © Markel Redondo / Yahad -In Unum Zofia G., born in 1918, said: "My first friend was Hana Radzik. Her parents owned a tannery, they produced glue for leather. During the German occupation, she and her fiancé were hiding here, and I provided them with food." ©Markel Redondo / Yahad-In Unum Zofia G., born in 1918: "Hana and her fiancé survived the war and emigrated to Palestine, where they had three children. Before she died, she asked her son to visit me and bring me a souvenir from Nazareth — and he did."  © Markel Redondo / Yahad - In Unu Ryszard M., born in 1931: “One day, the Germans gathered a group of Jews near the church wall. They were planning to shoot them — the machine gun was already in place. Then, Father Łozowski came and spoke with the Germans.” ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Ryszard M., born in 1931: “After the intervention of the priest, all the Jews, a group of about 100 hostages was released. Later, in winter, farmers were requisitioned to transport the Jews to Knyszyn train station.” ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Ryszard M., born in 1931: "The transport with the Jews left before dawn. I saw the sleds heading toward the station. Near Sofiówka, 20 Jews tried to escape; 5 got away, the rest were shot." ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Bronisław P., born in 1923: "I was requisitioned by the Germans to transport Jews from Jasionówka to the train station near Knyszyn.   The Germans had a list with the names of the people on each sled, including mine”. ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Bronisław P., born in 1923: “I was assigned to carry a Jewish woman and her three children. The children were quiet, and the family looked terrified. It was freezing, minus 30 degrees, and they had little clothing”. ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Bronisław P., born in 1923: "When we arrived in Knyszyn, the Jews were forced into the wagons, they were beaten with clubs. The frozen bodies of Jews were also being loaded into the freight cars”. ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Alojzy B., born in 1924: “The Jews sought help from the Catholic priest. He spoke with the Germans, asking them to stop the pogroms, but the Germans disregarded his pleas”. ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Alojzy B., born in 1924: “One winter morning, the sołtys of my village, Słomianka, requisitioned me to collect Jews from the square in Jasionówka. It was bitterly cold. Jews were waiting outside, children were crying”. ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Alojzy B., born in 1924: “I transported three elderly Jewish women from Jasionówka to the train station in Knyszyn on my sleigh. From there, the Jews were deported, probably to a death camp.” ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Bronisław P., born in 1923: "This is where the Jews were gathered before the deportation. They had to remain still, without moving, in the freezing cold. The Germans wanted them to freeze." ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum The gathering place where, on January 24–25, 1943, around 2,000 Jews from Jasionówka were assembled by German gendarmes before being transported by sled to the train station in Knyszyn. ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Bronisław P., born in 1923, led Yahad-In Unum’s team to the Jewish cemetery in Jasionówka, where during World War II the Jewish victims were buried. ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum Bronisław P., born in 1923: “Three or four Jews were hiding at a farmer’s place. They were caught and then shot in the forest. The Polish militiamen filled in the grave afterward. Later, someone reburied them in the Jewish cemetery.” ©Markel Redondo/Yahad Jewish cemetery, the burial site of numerous Jews, mainly pre-war residents of Jasionówka, who were either murdered or died during the deportation Aktion on January 24, 1943. ©Markel Redondo/Yahad - In Unum

Destruction of Jews in Jasionówka

1 Killing site(s)

Kind of place before:
Jewish cemetery
Memorials:
No
Period of occupation:
1939-1944
Number of victims:
Over 300

Witness interview

Alojzy B., born in 1924: "Before the war, I lived in Słomianka, a village located about 10km from Jasionówka. One winter day, the sołtys of Słomianka came to me and ordered me to prepare a horse and sleigh to go to Jasionówka. Three neighbors from our village went with me. We were ordered to pick up Jews in Jasionówka and transport them to the train station in Knyszyn, which was 17 km away from Jasionówka. On the way to Jasionówka, we saw the body of a Jewish woman lying by a tree. The Germans had killed her because she tried to escape.
When we arrived to Jasionówka, the gathered, frozen Jews were already waiting for transport to the station. They were sitting close together, covered with blankets because the cold that day was terrible. The Germans placed three elderly Jewish women on my sleigh. My neighbor also had to go to Jasionówka to pick up Jews. On his sleigh, he carried a family: a Jewish man with his wife named Sora, and their two children.
Behind us, German soldiers escorted us all the way to Knyszyn. We arrived at the train station around noon. The train was already waiting, with the cattle wagons wide open. The Germans shouted for the Jews to leave the sleighs and get into the wagons. After three women got off my sleigh, I went back home—I could not bear the situation. Later, my neighbor told me he heard the Jewish man telling his wife that he planned to escape on the way to the train station. When they passed through a pine forest, he jumped off the sleigh with one of his sons and hid among the trees. Sora and the other child were taken to the train station, while her husband and son escaped. Years later, I learned they survived the war. The remaining Jews from Jasionówka were transported by train to Białystok, and from there to an extermination camp." (Witness N°328P, interviewed in Słomianka, on May 18, 2014)

Polish Archives

Questionnaire on Mass Executions and Mass Graves

1. Date and location of the execution: January 24, 1943, in Jasionówka.

2. Type of execution (shooting, hanging, or other): Shooting.

3. Information about the executed victims:

o Poles, Jews, foreigners: Jews

o Number of people executed: approximately 300

o Origin of the victims: all were residents of Jasionówka

o Name, age, profession, and address: unknown; data unavailable; currently, there are no Jews in the commune of Kalinówka, as all survivors left in April 1945.

4. Was the execution based on any accusations, or was it a reprisal or other type of order?

o Unknown motive

5. Who carried out the execution? Gendarmerie, Gestapo, SS, police, Wehrmacht?

o Gendarmerie, Gestapo, SS, police (approx. 70 people)

6. Are the names of the perpetrators known? If so, list them:

o Names unknown; they arrived by car from an unknown location and left immediately after the execution.

7. Were the bodies burned or destroyed in another way? If so, where?

o No; the bodies were buried in the Jewish cemetery.

8. Where were the bodies buried? Exact location:

o Jewish cemetery in Jasionówka

9. Description of the grave(s): dimensions, estimated number of victims per grave:

o Two mass graves:

1. 5m × 2m — approx. 20 people

2. 3m × 2m — approx. 15 people

10. Has there been an exhumation of the bodies? Was a protocol made at the grave site?

• No

11. Are there any reasons to request a future exhumation?

• No

[RG-15.019M Reel #1 (pp. 405–404 in the PDF); Village of Jasionówka, Białystok county and voivodeship; Testimony of Jan Fiedorowicz, 47 years old, resident of the village of Kalinówka (Białystok county), profession unknown, dated September 25, 1945. He bases his testimony on his own observations as well as those of other inhabitants of the commune.]

 

 

 

Historical note

Jasionówka is a village in Mońki County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Jasionówka. It lies approximately 16 km (10 mi) east of Mońki and 33 km (21 mi) north of the regional capital Białystok.

 

The first Jews probably appeared in Jasionówka toward the end of the 17th century. The Jews were known for their craft skills as well as their passion and talent for trade. The community, which had been dependent on the Jewish community of Tykocin since its founding, became independent around the middle of the 18th century. In the 1930s, Jasionówka was home to 1,879 residents, of whom 1,279 were Jews. Bronisław P., born in 1923, and interviewed by Yahad-In Unum in 2014, recalled that many Jews lived in Jasionówka, Korycin, and Knyszyn. According to Bronisław, the Jewish community in Jasionówka was larger than the non-Jewish population. They had two synagogues—one wooden and one made of stone—two cemeteries, and a rabbi named Bielicki who lived in the village. Bronisław attended school with Jewish children but remembered that they also had their own Jewish school in the village. He also recalled Jewish merchants trading horses and cows, while others ran shops in the village. Another Yahad-In Unum witness, Zofia G., born in 1918, recalled that many Jewish children attended the Polish school because it was free, while the Jewish school was paid. She remembered her first and dearest friend, Hana Radzik, whose family owned a glue factory in Jasionówka. Hana survived the war and later emigrated to Palestine, where she lived to old age. Another of her classmates, Rochla, also survived the war and emigrated to Palestine.

 

In September 1939, on the eve of the WWII, over 1,500 lived in Jasionówka.

 

 

Holocaust by bullets in figures

In September 1939, Jasionówka was briefly occupied by German troops before being taken over by the Red Army. The Germans reoccupied the town on June 27, 1941, marking the beginning of escalating violence against the Jewish population.

 

Despite the efforts of a local priest, Cyprian Łozowski, a pogrom immediately broke out in Jasionówka with the participation of local inhabitants. Approximately 70 Jews were murdered, and many of their homes were looted and set on fire. In July 1941, another pogrom took place, during which around 50 people—including Jews and Belarusians—were killed. Shortly afterward, toward the end of 1941, a significant portion of the Jewish community was forcibly expelled to Suchowola.

 

In the autumn of 1942, a ghetto was established. Approximately 400 refugees from nearby towns were relocated in the already overcrowded Jewish district of Jasionówka.

 

On January 24–25, 1943, the ghetto was surrounded by German gendarmes. Around 2,000 Jews then residing in Jasionówka were gathered in the town square and transported by sled to the train station in Knyszyn. During this operation and in the period that followed, approximately 300 people were killed or froze to death, including 30 who were killed in Jasionówka on the day of the deportation.

 

Many details about the Aktion in Jasionówka have been provided by local residents, including those who were requisitioned to transport Jews to the train station in Knyszyn, as documented in interviews conducted by Yahad–In Unum. Bronisław P., born in 1923, was assigned to take a mother and her three children by sled to the train station in Knyszyn. He recalls that the temperature that day dropped to minus 30 degrees Celsius, and the Jews were not allowed to move or warm themselves in any way. Many of them froze to death while still gathered in the square, as well as on the way to Knyszyn. The Germans threw the bodies of the frozen dead into the wagons alongside the living.

 

Three days later, the train reached the transit camp in Białystok, where prisoners were denied food and water. Eventually, they were deported to the Treblinka killing center and murdered in gas chambers.

 

Alojzy B., born in 1924, who transported three elderly women by sled that day, recalled that some people managed to escape on the way to the station. According to historical sources, around 300 individuals escaped during the transport, and another 100 avoided deportation by hiding in bunkers within Jasionówka. Some were shot during nighttime escape attempts, while others successfully fled to the forest or found shelter with local farmers. However, most of those who escaped were eventually captured and killed by the Germans.

 

After the Red Army liberated the area, approximately 80 Jewish survivors returned to Jasionówka. All of them later emigrated to Palestine or Western Europe.

 

 

Jewishgen

https://cdp.jewishgen.org/eastern-europe/poland/jasionowka

Other links

Nearby villages

  • Suchowola
  • Siemiatycze
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