Ivatsevichy

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Ivatsevichy
Івацэвічы
Ivacevichi.JPG
Flag of Ivatsevichy
Flag
Coat of arms of Ivatsevichy
Coat of arms
Ivatsevichy is located in Belarus
Ivatsevichy
Ivatsevichy
Coordinates: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Country  Belarus
Voblast Brest Voblast
Raion Ivatsevichy Raion
Mentioned 1508
Elevation 148 m (486 ft)
Population (2009)[1]
 • Total 22,958
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 • Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Postal code 225295
Area code(s) +375 1645
License plate 1
Website Official website (Russian)

Ivacevičy (Belarusian: Івацэвічы, Russian: Ивацевичи, Polish: Iwacewicze) is a city in the Brest Province of Belarus, an administrative center of the Ivacevičy district.

World War II

Before the Nazi-Soviet invasion of Poland, Iwacewicze was a provincial city in the Second Polish Republic, the seat of Kosów county with the population of around 1,500. It belonged to Polesie Voivodeship region of eastern Kresy, with a notable Jewish population.[2] Following the invasion, the number of Jews in Iwacewicze greatly increased due to influx of refugees from Nazi-occupied western part of Poland. After the German attack on USSR in June 1941, the Nazis carried out mass executions of Jews at the Żwirownia gravel pit nearby. Under a strong German guard, Jews were marched out of town and separated into smaller groups. They were shot in waves over the already dug-out pits. Before 1944, the Nazis executed there more than a thousand innocent victims including Polish and Belarusian.[3] In 1941 soon after the Nazi takeover of Iwacewicze, a ghetto was set up for about 600 Jews. They were fed starvation rations and forced to perform slave labor. On 14 March 1942 the ghetto was liqutated. All inmates were marched on foot to Słonim ghetto, and over the course of several months murdered there.[4]

After the liberation, in Soviet Belarus the area of the mass graves in Ivatsevichy was used to extract sand. During mining, the bones of the dead were constantly being unearthed, until finally in the 1960s, a stone memorial was placed at the pits, marking the already mined graves.[3]

Notes and references

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