Mavrino
According to various sources, the inmates of the Pavlograd Jewish labor camp who were unable to work anymore, as well as Jewish children, were taken to the village of Mavrino, some distance from Pavlograd, and killed at pits and trenches on the outskirts of the village. While the adults were shot, the children were mostly buried alive.
More information: Yad Vashem
Plant No. 359 in Pavlograd
Germans and Latvians guarded the camp located on the territory of Plant No. 359 and regularly shot its Jewish inmates. For example, in November 1941 670 Polish Jews were shot in the camp.
More information: Yad Vashem
Jewish cemetery
According to Soviet reports, at the end of December 1941-early January 1942 dozens of civilians of Pavlograd, of all ages and both sexes, all obviously Jewish, were taken by truck to the Jewish cemetery near the vehicle plant (today a machinery plant). The victims were cruelly abused before being murdered; then their bodies were thrown into a ditch. The massacres were perpetrated by Germans and local auxiliary policemen. The same location continued to be used as a murder site for local Jews during the whole period of the German occupation of Pavlograd.
More information: Yad Vashem
Plant No. 2
According to Soviet reports, the territory of Plant No. 2 outside Pavlograd served as a murder site for Pavlograd Jews in the period from November 1941 to January 1942. It is unknown how many people were murdered there or who perpetrated these massacres.
More information: Yad Vashem
Military Barracks in Pavlograd
According to Soviet reports, the area of the military barracks outside of Pavlograd served as a murder site for the Jews of Pavlograd between November 1941 and January 1942. It is unknown how many people were murdered there or who perpetrated these massacres.
More information: Yad Vashem