Alternate names: Mszana Dolna [Pol], Amshana, משאנה דולנה [Yid], Meshana Dolna. 49°41' N, 20°05' E, 29 miles SSE of Kraków, 29 miles W of Nowy Sącz. Jewish population: 410 (in 1921). Yizkor: Zichron Dovid
US Commission No. POCE000748
Mszana Dolna is located in Nowy Sacz at 49º41 20º04, 53 km from Nowy Sacz and 55 km from Krakow. Cemetery location: Zakopianska St. Present town population is 5,000-25,000 without Jews.
- Town: Urzad Miasta i Gminy, ul. Pilsudskiego 2, 34-630 Mszana Dolna, Burmistrz, tel. 223.
- Regional: Wojewodzki Konserwator Zabytkow, mgr. inz. Zygmunt Lewczuk, ul. Kilinokiego 68, 33-300 Nowy Sacz, tel. 238-38 wew 234.
- Caretaker with key: J. Kotarba, Mszana Dolna 1a (lives near cemetery).
Piotr Antoniak, ul. Dobra 5 m 36, 05-800 Pruszkow completed survey 8 Sept 1992. He visited the site 22 Aug 1992. Person interviewed: J. Kotarba, Mszana Dolna 1a.
UPDATE: Mszana Dolna is located in Krakow administrative district, not Nowy Sacz: There is a mass grave in Mszana Dolna as Jews from this small town and villages around were concentrated in Mszana (ghetto without fence) and later executed. There is a monument there for 881 people but local inhabitants say that there were many more of them. This place is called "Na Stawach." It was out of the town at that time but now has some houses around. The place is very well looked after. A distance to the cemetery is about 1.5 km. This area was exceptional in that in this part of the country Germans did not send Jews to the camps. Reportedly, many managed to escape and lived hidden in villages. However, I met one man only in Kasinka (about 10 km from Mszana) who had a Yad Vashem distinction. I also met one lady in Mszana, Mrs. Gadek, whose father was executed there. She was saved by friends of her father (her mother died before the war) in Krakow and adopted by the family. I do not know if she is alive now, I talked with her some four years ago. Source: Stefan Swiszczowski: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. [11 November 2000]