Burial Grounds in Rohatyn

The Old Jewish Cemetery in Rohatyn:

Old Jewish Cemetery Rehabilitation Project by Rohatyn Jewish Heritage

The cemetery is located in town E, at B. Lepkogoand S. Bandery Street. The Jewish cemetery was established in the 17th century with last known Hasidic burial end 19th century. No other towns or villages used this unlandmarked cemetery. The isolated suburban flat land and hillside has no sign or marker. Reached by Bandery and B. Lepkogo St., access is open to all. No wall, fence, or gate surrounds site. 1 to 20 common tombstones, none in original location with more than 75% toppled or broken, date from 19th century. The cemetery contains no known mass graves. Municipality owns site now used for agriculture (crops or animal grazing). Properties adjacent are agricultural and residential. The cemetery boundaries are unchanged since 1939. Occasionally, private visitors and local residents stop. The cemetery was vandalized during World War II and not in the last ten years. There is no maintenance now. Within the limits of the cemetery are no structures. Only small part of tombstones remains which may prompt administration to destroy the cemetery. Part of the cemetery washes out in thaws. The hill needs retaining wall. Water drainage is a seasonal problem. Very serious threat: weather erosion (Serious threat: vandalism (Moderate threat: uncontrolled access, existing and proposed nearby development. Slight threat: pollution and vegetation. Hodorkovskiy Yuriy Isaakovich of Kiev, Vozduhoflotskiy Prospect 37a, Apt. 23 [Phone: (044) 2769505] visited site on 1/6/96. Interviewed was Glukovskiy Yuriy Pavlovich of (03435) 21731 work [Phone: (03435)21214] on 1/6/96. Hodorkovskiy completed survey on /06/1996. Documentation: Wasintynski: B. Ludnosc Zydowska w Polsce w wiekach XIX i XX Warszawa, 1930; Jewish Encyclopaedia; the main plan of town. The source of this information is ROGATIN II: US Commission No. UA08200101

The New Jewish Cemetery in Rohatyn:

New Jewish Cemetery Rehabilitation Project by Rohatyn Jewish Heritage

The cemetery is located at NE part of Rohatyn, near station. The last known Hasidic burial was 1940. No other towns or villages used this unlandmarked cemetery. The isolated suburban hillside has no sign or marker. Reached by turning directly off a public road, access is open to all. No wall, fence, or gate surrounds site. 1 to 20 stones, more than 75% toppled or broken, date from 1930. The cemetery has no special sections or known mass graves. Some tombstones have traces of painting on their surfaces. Municipality owns site now used for waste dumping. Properties adjacent are commercial or industrial and residential. The cemetery boundaries are smaller now than 1939 because of new roads or highways and commercial or industrial development. Rarely, local residents visit. The cemetery was vandalized during World War II. There is no maintenance now. Within the limits of the cemetery are no structures. Vegetation overgrowth is a constant problem, disturbing graves. Serious threat: vegetation and vandalism. Moderate threat: uncontrolled access, pollution, existing and proposed nearby development. Slight threat: weather erosion. Hodorkovskiy Yuriy Isaakovich of Kiev, Vozduhoflotskiy Prospect 37a, Apt. 23 [Phone: (044)2769505] visited site on 1/6/96. Documentation: Wasintynski: B.Ludnosc Zydowska w Polsce w wiekach XIX i XX Warszawa, 1930; Jewish Encyclopaedia. The source of this information is ROGATIN I: US Commission No. UA08200102

Mass Grave:

Rohatyn's Shoah Killing Sites and Mass Graves by Rohatyn Jewish Heritage

Mass Grave Memorials Project by Rohatyn Jewish Heritage

The Mass Grave is located at NE part of town, the land of PMK-2 and Utility Service. The Hasidic mass grave was dug in 1943. Hodorov and Burshtyn Jews were murdered at unlandmarked mass grave. The isolated suburban flat land has signs or plaques in local language mentioning the Holocaust. Reached by crossing other public property (PMK 2), access is open with permission. No wall, fence, or gate surrounds the mass grave. 1 to 20 common tombstones, all in original location with none toppled or broken, date from 20th century. No stones were removed. The site contains marked mass graves. Municipality owns property used for mass burial site. Properties adjacent are commercial or industrial. Rarely, local residents visit. This mass grave was not vandalized. Local/municipal authorities did re-erection of stones. There is no maintenance now. Within the limits of the mass grave are no structures. Vegetation overgrowth and water drainage are seasonal problems, preventing access. Moderate threat: pollution, vegetation, existing and proposed nearby development. Slight threat: uncontrolled access, weather erosion and vandalism. Hodorkovskiy Yuriy Isaakovich of Kiev, Vozduhoflotskiy Prospect 37a, Apt. 23 [Phone: (044) 2769505] visited site on 1/6/96. Interviewed was Boykevich Oleg Iosifovich [Phone: (03435) 21822] on 1/6/96. Documentation: Wasintynski: B. Ludnosc Zydowska w Polsce w wiekach XIX i XX Warszawa, 1930 Jewish Encyclopaedia. The source of this information is ROGATIN III: US Commission No. UA08200501

WW1 Military Cemetery in Rohatyn:

Location on Google Maps

Photos of WW1 Military Cemetery by Alex Denysenko

The crosses are marked with the zinc plates showing the ID numbers of soldiers. All crosses are identical, they are made of concrete; the same type of crosses of civilian graves could also be found at the cemetery located around the nearby wooden church of the Holy Spirit . (Source: Alex Denysenko)