Alternate names: Sławatycze [Pol], Slovotitch [Yid], Slavatiche and Славатичи [Rus], Slavatyche, Slavatich, סלאואטיצ'ה . 51°45' N, 23°33' E, 55 miles NE of Lublin, 26 miles SE of Biała Podlaska, 25 miles SSW of Brest, on the Bug River (Poland-Belarus border).
- JOWBR Landsmanshaft:
Waldheim Cemetery, Forest Park, USA -
- Museum of the History of Polish Jews
- Jewish Records Indexing Poland Town Page
- Słownik Geograficzny Królestwa Polskiego (1880-1902), X, pp. 772-773: "Sławatycze".
- Shtetl Finder (1980), p. 94: "Slovotitch".
- Pinkas HaKehilot, Poland, Vol. 7 (1999), pp. 355-356: "Sławatycze".
- Encyclopedia of Jewish Life (2001), p. 1199: "Slawatycze".
The cemetery was destroyed during WWII. Stolen gravestones were used in construction. Overgrown and forgotten, in 2008, the cemetery waws cleaned, the fence repaired, and a gate installed by the Foundation for the Preservation of the Jewish Heritage in Poland and finantial support of descendants of Slawatycze Jews and by the Jewish Community of Warsaw. Gravestones retrieved from the city were placed on the cemetery.In May 2008, the cemetery was rededicated and a plaque commemorating the Jews of Sławatycze was unveiled.
Burial list [Jan 2015]