i

Clay Pit near the Glinniki village

On July 28, 1941, some 200 men, including the rabbi of Annopol, were rounded up in the village and taken to the clay pit of the brick factory near the village of Glinniki, where they were shot by the 10th Infantry Regiment of the SS and the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police. Those who had tried to go into hiding were tracked down with dogs in the potato field and in the nearby village.

More information: Yad Vashem

Ponora

In July 1941, some twenty-five Jewish men were taken out of the village and shot dead by Ukrainian policemen in a field near the village of Ponora. The bodies of the victims were then brought back to Annopol by cart and buried at the local Jewish cemetery.

More information: Yad Vashem

Clinic in Annopol

According to one testimony, in 1942 a group of Jews – mostly artisans and able-bodied men, who had been kept alive in Annopol for work – were transported to the ghettos of Slavuta and Shepetovka. The trucks were not large enough to accommodate all the deportees, and the Jews left over after the deportation were shot dead near the local clinic.

More information: Yad Vashem