According to ESJF European Jewish Cemeteries Initiative (ESJF), the Torchyn Jewish Cemetery is located on the southern outskirts of town (and dates from at least the 18th century given the date of the oldest tombstone, 1796). There are 12 tombstones currently visible with more possibly existing under the brush, which ESJF states is severely overgrown. ESJF has at least 9 pictures of the cemetery showing the fence it installed in September 2020 and various tombstones and it has a 3D model of the cemetery. ESJF indicates that there may have been a grave on the cemetery site for the victims of Khmel’nytsky’s 1648-1649 uprising by the Cossacks but that is not definitive. The cemetery was demolished during or after WWII.
As discussed on the History page, in August 1942 the Nazis shot and killed 2,000 Jews at the cemetery site. In 1960, a memorial to the 2,000 Jews was constructed. The natives of Torchyn from Israel installed a second monument in 1993. The families of the victims organized memorial ceremonies near the monument for many years. The Bezalel Narkiss Index of Jewish Art and Material Culture has pictures of the Holocaust Memorial dated from 1993.