About
Parczew
Parczew is a town in eastern Poland, with a population of 10,352 (2004).
Situated
in the Lublin Voivodeship (since 1999), previously in Biała Podlaska
Voivodeship (1975-1998). It is the capital of Parczew County.
History
The town
is one of the oldest in the Lublin region. A settlement known by the name
existed already in the 12th century, and was granted a town charter in 1401. An
organized Jewish community existed in the town since the early 16th century. Just
before the outbreak of World War II the Jewish community numbered 5,000, more
than half of the town's population. During the German occupation, in the course
of the Holocaust, the Jewish population was first confined to a ghetto, then
its inmates were deported to Treblinka in September, 1942 and murdered there. A
number of Jewish partisan groups operated in the forests around the town.
After the war, Parczew was one of the very few shtetls in which an attempt was
made to re-establish the Jewish community. About 200 Jews were inhabiting the
town by early 1946. In February 1946
local anti-communist partisan unit seized control the town and carried out a
pogrom. In the following hours three Jewish men were executed, and most Jewish
households were robbed. After these events almost all Jews fled the town to
seek refuge in larger cities.