Patroha Jewish Cemetery 2

Cemetery Information

Country
Hungary
Region
Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg
District
Kisvárdai
Settlement
Pátroha
Site address
The cemetery is located on Hajnal street, about 75m past the intersection with Táncsics Street.
GPS coordinates
48.17692, 21.9989
Perimeter length
132 metres
Is the cemetery demolished
yes
Type and height of existing fence
No fence
Preservation condition
Demolished Jewish cemetery that has not been built over
General site condition
The cemetery has been demolished. The territory is now used as an agricultural field.
Number of existing gravestones
No tombstones preserved
Date of oldest tombstone
N/A
Date of newest tombstone
N/A
Urgency of erecting a fence
High
Land ownership
Municipality
Preserved construction on site
No
Drone surveys
No

Historical overview

There were two Jewish cemeteries in Pátroha. This cemetery was established as early as 1870, since it appears on the cadastral map of that year. It was demolished at an unknown time.

Pátroha is a village in Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg county, in the Northern Great Plain region of eastern Hungary. The village is located around 35km away from the county capital, Nyíregyháza. There are no sources regarding when the first Jews settled in the village, though, by the late 17th century, Pátroha had a significant Jewish community (compared to other villages in the area). In 1770, the village had 24 Jews across 4 Jewish families. At the time, the Jews worked for wineries owned by the nobles. Following the growth of the Jewish community, Jews mainly worked as traders, and some worked in small-scale industry or in agriculture.

The community belonged to the rabbinate of Kisvarda. In 1941, Pátroha Jews accounted for 107 people of Pátroha’s total population of 3,180. In that same year, the youth of the settlement were sent to forced labour battalions. The Jews of Pátroha were confined in the Kisvárda Ghetto along with Jews from the neighbouring towns. On the way to the ghetto, a crucifix served to mark the collection point for Jews before entering the ghetto. During the march to the crucifix, Jews were robbed by the local gendarmerie. By the end of May 1944, the remaining Jews of Pátroha were deported to the death camps in Auschwitz.

In 1949, only eleven Jews were still living in the settlement.