Brzesko | Lesser Poland Voivodeship

Brzesko Market Square on market day, 1929. ©photo from the archive of Prof. Charles Weiss Jr. A group of Brzesko Jews in front of the Teichtal glazier’s house, 1929. ©photo from the archive of Prof. Charles Weiss Jr. The Yitzhak Lipschitz Synagogue in the vicinity of today’s Żwirki and Wigury Square, 1929. ©photo from the archive of Prof. Charles Weiss Jr. The mikvah and behind it, the synagogue on Łazienna Street (now Pushkina Street), 1929. ©photo from the archive of Prof. Charles Weiss Jr. On the left, the new Hasidic shtiebel; the cheder sheni (Jewish house of study for older boys) in front (original caption by Schaje Weiss; these buildings used to be on Berka Joselewicza Street). ©photo from the archive of Prof. Charles Weiss Jr. Franciszek K., born in 1928: “Before the war, half of Brzesko’s population was Jewish. Jews lived mainly in the town center and were merchants and craftsmen. There was a synagogue and a Jewish cemetery in town”. ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum Franciszek K., born in 1928: “I remember the destruction of the Brzesko Synagogue, blown up by the Germans early in the war, a deliberate act to erase Jewish heritage.” ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum Franciszek K., born in 1928: “After the Brzesko ghetto was liquidated, the houses stood with their doors left open, belongings scattered on the ground. A haunting silence replaced the lives that were there.” ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum Cecylia P., born in 1931: “I lived in Okocim, but I remember the ghetto created in Brzesko on Wapienna Street, near the church. It was fenced, and it was forbidden to go closer." ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum Cecylia P., born in 1931: "One day, while I was with my mother in Brzesko, I saw a cart full of bodies of Jewish women and men. On top lay a heavy Jewish woman, and that image was etched into my memory." ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum Cecylia P., born in 1931: "Jews from Brzesko were also shot in a forest that belonged to nearby Okocim, commonly called ’Garbatka Forest.’ I think these were Jews who had fled from the ghetto. I heard shots coming from the forest." ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad In Janina K., born in 1914: "Before the war, Catholics and Jews lived harmoniously as neighbors. While there was a Jewish intelligentsia, most Jews worked in crafts and trade, which sometimes made our shopkeepers envious." ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum Janina K., born in 1914: “I remember my Jewish friends: Mundek Strauber, Lola Fürst, Anda Temamowna, who sat with me at my desk, and Leon Steinlauf. We had incredibly fascinating discussions on religious and cultural topics”. ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad -In Unum Janina K., born in 1914: "In 1941 the Germans created the ghetto. All Catholics living on the designated streets, including my family, had to leave their homes. The ghetto was divided into two parts and fenced off." ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum Janina K., born in 1914: "There was a hospital in the ghetto, in the synagogue building. During the liquidation of the ghetto, all the patients of this hospital were shot." ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum Janina K., born in 1914: "Before the war, the Kringer family, a Jewish family of four from Katowice, rented an apartment from us. I saw them being led to their execution. Only the son, Janek, survived." ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum The “new” Jewish cemetery in Brzesko at Czarnowiejska Street, the burial place of over 250 Jews from Brzesko and its surroundings murdered by the Germans during the Second World War. ©Victoria Bahr/Yahad – In Unum The monument at the burial site of several dozen Jews in the Jewish cemetery in Brzesko erected in 2017. ©Anna Brzyska, 2017 “In memory of the Jewish martyrs from Brzesko and its surroundings brutally murdered by the hitlerite oppressors in the years of extermination and buried in this cemetery (…) May their souls rest in peace”. ©Anna Brzyska, 2017 "Research conducted in 2017 confirmed that a mass grave is located at this spot, which is mentioned on the 1947 monument in this cemetery. In memory of about 200 Jewish martyrs buried in this earth. May their souls rest in peace." ©Anna Brzyska, 2017

Destruction of Jews in Brzesko

1 Killing site(s)

Kind of place before:
Jewish cemetery
Memorials:
Yes
Period of occupation:
1939-1944
Number of victims:
Over 250

Witness interview

Franciszek K., born in 1928: “The synagogue was blown up by the Germans early in the war. There were isolated shootings of Jews in town—Germans would arrive in trucks, storm homes, and shoot Jews wherever they found them. I recall one instance when they came to my parents’ home, searching for Jews who were indeed hiding there. Thankfully, they were neither found nor killed that time.

I also vividly remember seeing a Jewish man shot dead in front of a house, his body still moving. Later, a cart arrived to take him to the Jewish cemetery. These shootings took place even before the creation of the ghetto.

When the Germans eventually established the ghetto in Brzesko, it was divided by the Tarnów–Kraków road. As a result, our Catholic church ended up inside the ghetto, surrounded by barbed wire.

When the ghetto was finally liquidated, all the Jews were marched to the train station. The column, stretching incredibly long, passed right by my street. Every ten meters or so, there were guards with rifles, herding the Jews, who carried their belongings. They were taken in two separate groups, as there had been two ghettos. The people walked in rows of four or five, in the morning.

After the liquidation, I went to see the ghetto. It was an absolute mess—belongings scattered everywhere, the doors of houses left wide open, and a haunting silence where vibrant life had once been." (Witness N°YIU225P, interviewed in Brzesko, on September 12, 2013)

Polish Archives

"The Jewish cemetery in Brzesko is located at the intersection of Czarnowiejska, Brzoskowa, and Feliksa Dzierżyński streets. The section of the cemetery where Jews were shot is situated in the southwestern part. The execution, witnessed by Józef Nawalany, took place in an area measuring 22 by 17 meters.

 

The southeastern edge of the cemetery borders Czarnowiejska Street. At this location, the cemetery is enclosed by a brick palisade, measuring 1.5 meters high in the corner and 2 meters high on the western side. On the west side, bushes now grow about 11 meters from the palisade—vegetation that did not exist at the time of the 1942 shooting." [Prosecutor Krakow/Brzesko/ DSC01950 Report of May 31, 1968, on the prosecutor’s visit to the Jewish cemetery, where shootings of Jews took place, as part of the investigation into crimes committed by officials of the German gendarmerie against Polish citizens of Polish and Jewish nationality between 1942-1944. (...)]

 

Historical note

Brzesko is a town in southern Poland, in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship. It lies approximately 25 km (16 miles) west of Tarnów and 50 km (31 miles) east of the regional capital, Kraków.

The Jewish presence in Brzesko likely dates back to the 16th or 17th century. By 1765, around 180 Jews over the age of one lived in the town. In 1820, Jewish residents owned 59 of the 149 houses classified as burgher properties. Throughout the 19th century, the Jewish community played a dominant role in local trade, and by 1867 nearly all commercial enterprises were operated by Jews.

By the late 1800s, the community had established several institutions, including a hospital for the poor and a charitable sick fund located in the Small Market Square. They also maintained a ritual bath (mikveh), a religious school, two synagogues, and two cemeteries—an older one on Głowackiego Street and a newer burial ground on Czarnowiejska Street. In addition, several smaller prayer houses continued to function up until the outbreak of World War II.

The First World War and the years that followed were challenging for the residents of Brzesko. During this period, anti-Jewish violence erupted, including a pogrom in 1918 in which at least six Jews were killed. The interwar years also brought economic hardship. Most Jewish residents earned their living through small-scale trade and peddling. By 1921, Brzesko had around 70 workshops and small state-run businesses employing 114 people—mainly the owners and their families—specializing in tailoring, metalwork, food production, and construction. Many Jews also worked in liquor sales, the livestock and produce trade, and various crafts. The community included professionals such as judges, lawyers, doctors, and civil servants.

Religiously and ideologically, Brzesko’s Jews were diverse, with strong Hasidic traditions alongside progressive and Zionist movements.

On the eve of the Second World War in 1939, Brzesko was home to 2,119 Jewish residents, making up about half of the town’s total population.

 

Holocaust by bullets in figures

Brzesko was occupied by Wehrmacht troops on September 5, 1939. Shortly afterward, Einsatzgruppe I arrived. A new German administration was established, and the town was incorporated into Tarnów County, part of the Kraków District within the General Government.

Anti-Jewish measures in Brzesko began immediately after the occupation. In September 1939, the synagogue on Asnyka Street was set on fire. Soon after, Jews were subjected to forced labor, financial levies, and the requirement to wear armbands with the Star of David. A Judenrat was created, overseeing local Jews as well as those from nearby Szczurowa and Borzęcin (239 Jews in 1940). In 1941, the old Jewish cemetery was destroyed; tombstones were removed by Jews under German orders and used to pave an alley in the town’s Market Square. Alongside these measures, Jews were routinely subjected to shootings by German forces.

In the fall of 1941, the Germans established an open ghetto in Brzesko, divided into two sections and marked by signs. By the summer of 1942, the ghetto held about 6,000 Jews from Brzesko and nearby villages, as well as deportees from Kraków and Germany. In the spring of 1942, six Jews were shot by the Germans in the town square. On April 13, 1942, German forces—including three local Order Police officers—shot about 50 Jews, who were buried in two mass graves, each measuring 4 by 5 meters, at the town’s Jewish cemetery. Another major Aktion followed on June 18, 1942, when German forces, assisted by Ukrainian auxiliaries, killed nearly 200 Jews at the same cemetery and deported over 400 others.

By the summer of 1942, the Brzesko ghetto was officially sealed. On July 23, additional Jews from the Tarnów district were relocated there. The ghetto’s final liquidation took place on September 17–18, 1942. All remaining Jews were gathered in the market square, stripped of their belongings, and deported to the Bełżec killing center. Those who were sick or unable to walk were shot on the spot. Around 70 Jews were temporarily spared to clear the ghetto, tasked with removing furniture from Jewish homes and placing it at the ghetto’s edge, where locals could buy it. Once the work was completed, they were transferred to the Tarnów ghetto.

A small number of Jews managed to escape the deportations to Bełżec, but most were later found and executed in numerous subsequent shootings. According to Yahad witness Janina K., born in 1914, the day after the ghetto’s liquidation, 17 Jews—including members of the Kringer family—were led to the Jewish cemetery, shot, and buried. On December 22, 1942, the Gestapo and gendarmerie killed several dozen more Jews, who were also buried in the cemetery. Known victims include Apel Chaim, Dora, Herman, Jakub, and Mendel; Chaim and Mendel Ebenholz; and Regina and Tobiasz Mikołajewicz. In 1943, another 28 Jews—likely those found in hiding—were executed at the same site. In total, only about 200 Jews from Brzesko survived the Holocaust.

In 1947, A. Grunberg and S. Bransdorfer initiated the erection of a monument at the Brzesko Jewish cemetery in memory of approximately 200 Jews killed there on June 18, 1942.

The cemetery also holds a mass grave of Jewish men, women, and children from the Zakliczyn ghetto. They were murdered in December 1942 and initially buried at the killing site; in 1947, their remains were exhumed and reinterred in Brzesko.

 

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