Zelva

Zelva (Belarusian: Зэльва, Russian: Зельва, Polish: Zelwa, Lithuanian: Zelva, Želva, Yiddish: זעלווא) is a town in Grodno Region, Belarus, the administrative center of Zel’va district. It is situated by the Zel’vyanka River.

Zelva

Зэ́льва

Yiddish: זעלווא‎
Flag
Seal
Zelva
Coordinates: 53°09′N 24°49′E
Country
Subdivision
Belarus
Hrodna voblast
First mentioned1258
Area
  Total15 km2 (6 sq mi)
Elevation
138 m (453 ft)
Population
  Total6,678
Time zoneUTC+3 (FET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (not observed)
Area code(s)+375-1564

History

In 1921, 1344 inhabitants were Jews.[1] During World War II, Zelva was occupied by Nazi Germany from 1 July 1941 until 12 July 1944 and administered as a part of Bezirk Bialystok. When the Germans entered the town, they killed 40 to 50 Jewish men and kept the Jews of the town imprisoned in a ghetto in very harsh conditions. On November 1942, the Jews were deported and murdered at the Treblinka extermination camp.[2]

gollark: It's totally possible to draw borders using a verifiable deterministic algorithm anyone interested can rerun.
gollark: Under *negative* utilitarianism yes, but bad.
gollark: These are all somewhat arbitrary, but something something is-ought problem.
gollark: Utilitarian-ly speaking, most people would prefer not to die and/or this reduces total and average happiness. Rights-based ethical systems would say that you do not have a right to kill people.
gollark: And some technological things have an outsized impact compared to other things.

References


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