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English
Holocaust memorial unveiled in Dokshytsy
The unveiling ceremony for a Holocaust memorial was held Friday in Dokshytsy, a city of 7,500 residents in the north of Belarus.
The memorial is located at an old Jewish cemetery where Jews were massacred by Nazi troops during World War II.
The commemoration was organized by the local government; Voluntas, a Belarusian-registered international charity; and US citizen Aaron Ginsburg.
Fourteen relatives of the massacre’s victims arrived from the United States, Russia and South Africa to attend the ceremony, Franklin J. Schwarz, director of the Voluntas international relations department, told BelaPAN.
The park on the territory of the cemetery was renovated with donations from Jewish communities abroad and funds provided by the local government, Mr. Schwarz said.
Aleh Pinchuk, chairman of the Dokshytsy District Executive Committee, initiated the renovation project, which included straightening up old gravestones, building a fence around the cemetery and putting up black marble stones and a memorial slab bearing an inscription that reads, in Belarusian, “Remember the Jewish life that once teemed here,” Mr. Schwarz said.
Ceremony participants visited the Dokshytsy general education school to thank its students for taking care of the park and the cemetery. They also expressed gratitude to local residents for honoring the memory of their ancestors and enabling the story of the Jewish community in Dokshytsa to become part of Belarusian history.
On May 23, 1942, most of the Jewish residents of Dokshytsy were herded into a ravine near the cemetery and shot dead.


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