Eisiskes Jewish Cemetery 1

Cemetery Information

Country
Lithuania
Region
Vilnius County
District
Šalčininkai
Settlement
Eišiškės
Site address
To locate the cemetery, start on J.Pauliaus II street, heading west. Turn right onto Ąžuolų street and the cemetery is located around 120m down, on the right hand side, surrounded by trees.
GPS coordinates
54.17051, 25.00143
Perimeter length
175 metres
Is the cemetery demolished
no
Type and height of existing fence
No fence
Preservation condition
Unfenced Jewish cemetery
General site condition
The majority of the cemetery was demolished, leaving two only surviving tombstones. There is a kindergarten which is located accross the site of the cemetery and the adjacent sites. The cemetery site is built up with walking paths, a playground, and there is a metal-mesh fence around the kindergarten running throught the site. One gravestone is along the walking path, the other gravestone is inside the kindergarten's fencing. Since most of the cemetery is overbuilt, fencing the entire cemetery may be problematic. It might be possible to fence off the gravestones. He site is located too close to the Belarusian border.
Number of existing gravestones
2
Date of oldest tombstone
19th (the part of the dated tombstone was cut off, the two last numbers of the date are unclear, presumably - 1847 or 1900s)
Date of newest tombstone
N/A
Urgency of erecting a fence
High
Land ownership
Municipality
Preserved construction on site
There is memorial dedicated to the former cemetery.
Drone surveys
No

Historical overview

Eisiskes (Eishishok in Yiddish) is a small town in southern Lithuania close to the border with Belarus.
The Jewish community of Eisiskes is likely among the first to exist in Lithuania. Exact information concerning the numbers of Jews in Eisiskes, their profession, and public institutions, can be found only from later centuries, particularly the 19th century when Eisiskes became a renowned center for the study of the Torah and for its learned Rabbis. According to the sources, there were approximately 660 Jews in 1847, however fifty years later in 1897, during the general census in Russia, the community had grown to 2,376 Jewish residents and comprised 70% of the population of the area. In 1925, when Eisiskes belonged to Poland there were 2,800 Jews out of 4,000 residents.
In the 19th century, the Jews dealt mainly in commerce and some were farmers. The Jews owned wide fields extending far beyond the river. Many Jews had vegetable gardens planted with potatoes, cucumbers, beets, carrots, and other produce, which satisfied all their needs and also left a considerable surplus to be sold on market days. The Jews were also involved with shopkeeping, peddling, and horse and hide dealing. At the center of the town, a row of shops selling upmarket goods and fabrics was located. Market day was on Thursday.
The Jewish life of Eisiskes concentrated around the shulhoyf in the center of the town that consisted of the Great Synagogue and two Beit Midrash. Eisiskes was renowned as a town of Torah study. There were two Yeshivas in Eisiskes. Many of the students of the town’s Yeshiva later became great biblical scholars.
The Germans occupied Eisiskes on June 23rd 1941, and on September 21st 1941, an SS unit entered the town, accompanied by Lithuanian auxiliaries. More than four thousand Jews from Eisiskes and its neighboring towns and villages were first imprisoned in the area of the synagogues and then taken in groups of 250 to the old Jewish cemetery where they were murdered.
The history of Jewish Eisiskes has been documented in the book “There Once Was A World“ by Yaffa Eliach, professor at Brooklyn College.
In the 18th century Jews in Eisiskes had two cemeteries: the old and the new. After filling the old cemetery a new one was established on the eastern outskirts of the town. The cemetery was in use until the destruction of the Jewish community during the Holocaust. During the Soviet time, the cemetery was destroyed and not a single tombstone remains in the cemetery. This cemetery was the second place of murder of the Jews of Eisiskes. There is a memorial stone with an inscription in Hebrew, Lithuanian, and English: “In this place 25-26.9.1941 the Nazis and their local collaborators cruelly murdered 1,500 Jews from Eishishkes and its environs.”
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