CEMETERY: The only trace of the former cemetery is a Holocaust memorial erected in 1979 along Aleje Zjednoczenia but does not mention the executions that occurred here during WWII. What the Nazis did not destroy was obliterated when post-war communist authorities created a city park there. Not one matsevah remains. [June 2009]
US Commission No. POCE000393
Alternate name: Parczewa (Partseva) (Yiddish). Parczew is located in Biala-Podlaska at 51º38 22º54, 50km NNE of Lublina. The cemetery is located at Aleja Zjedroczenia (Zjedroczenia Avenue). Present population is 1,000-5,000 with no Jews.
- Town: Urzad Miasta i Gminy, ul. Warszawska 1, 21-200 Parczew; tel. 541434.
- Local: Urzad Miasta i Gmiy, ul. Warszawska 1, 21-200 Parczew; tel. 541434.
- Regional: PSOZ-WKZ, ul. Brzeska 41, 21-500 Biala Podlaska.
The Jewish population (census) before World War II was 5000. There had been a Jewish community in Parczew since the early 16th century. The Orthodox cemetery on urban flat land has a sign in both Yiddish and Polish mentioning Jewish soldiers. Reached by turning directly off a public road, access is open to all with no fence or wall. No gravestones are visible. The cemetery contains marked mass graves. Municipality owns site used for recreation. Properties adjacent are used both for recreation and residential. The cemetery was vandalized during World War II. Since then, the municipal authorities clear vegetation periodically.
Michal Witwickiu, ul. Dembowskiego 12/53, 02-784 Warszawa, tel: 6418345 completed survey on 10/08/1991. The private archives of Jan Jagielski were consulted.
BOOK: Gruber, Ruth Ellen. Jewish Heritage Travel A Guide to East-Central Europe. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1992. p. 77