• OUR LADY of CZĘSTOCHOWA: St Sigismund church, Słomczyn; source: own resourcesMATKA BOŻA CZĘSTOCHOWSKA
    kościół pw. św. Zygmunta, Słomczyn
    źródło: zbiory własne
link to OUR LADY of PERPETUAL HELP in SŁOMCZYN infoPORTAL LOGO

Roman Catholic parish
St Sigismund
05-507 Słomczyn
85 Wiślana Str.
Konstancin deanery
Warsaw archdiocese
Poland

  • St SIGISMUND: St Sigismund church, Słomczyn; source: own resourcesSt Sigismund
    St Sigismund church, Słomczyn
    source: own resources
  • St SIGISMUND: XIX century, feretry, St Sigismund church, Słomczyn; source: own resourcesSt SIGISMUND
    XIX century, feretry
    St Sigismund church, Słomczyn
    source: own resources
  • St SIGISMUND: XIX century, feretry, St Sigismund church, Słomczyn; source: own resourcesSt SIGISMUND
    XIX century, feretry
    St Sigismund church, Słomczyn
    source: own resources
  • St SIGISMUND: XIX century, feretry, St Sigismund church, Słomczyn; source: own resourcesSt SIGISMUND
    XIX century, feretry
    St Sigismund church, Słomczyn
    source: own resources
  • St SIGISMUND: XIX century, feretry, St Sigismund church, Słomczyn; source: own resourcesSt SIGISMUND
    XIX century, feretry
    St Sigismund church, Słomczyn
    source: own resources

LINK to Nu HTML Checker

GENOCIDIUM ATROX

GENOCIDE perpetrated by UKRAINIANS on POLES

Data for 1943–1947

Site

II Republic of Poland

Dryszczów

Brzeżany pov., Tarnopol voiv.

contemporary

Nadrichne

Berezhany rai., Ternopil obl., Ukraine

Murders

Perpetrators:

Ukrainians

Victims:

Poles

Number of victims:

min.:

26

max.:

26

Location

link to GOOGLE MAPS

events (incidents)

ref. no:

02780

date:

1943.08

site

description

general info

Dryszczów

Rajter Stefan, 19, was murdered by Ukrainians.

source: Żurek Stanisław, „The 75th anniversary of the genocide – August and the summer of 1943”; in: portal: Volhynia — web page: wolyn.org [accessible: 2021.02.04]

perpetrators

Ukrainians

victims

Poles

number of

textually:

1

min. 1

max. 1

ref. no:

02594

date:

1943.08.27

site

description

general info

Dryszczów

27.VIII.1943. Dryszczów area Brzeżany. The Ukrainians murdered Reiter, 23 years old of Polish nationality. At night, six armed The Ukrainians came to Reiter's homestead, the widow of the village administrator murdered by the Ukrainians in 1939, demanding to see her son. Their mother told them that the son was at the mill. The Ukrainians did not believe it, so they went to the barn and found Reiter there, whom they kidnapped while beating. The next evening, the family found Reiter's body in the river with a stone tied around its neck.

source: Żurek Stanisław, „The 75th anniversary of the genocide – August and the summer of 1943”; in: portal: Volhynia — web page: wolyn.org [accessible: 2021.02.04]

source: Central Archives of Modern Records, in: AK, ref. No. 203 /XV/ 9, sh. 170—174

On the night of August 27–28 this year. The Ukrainians kidnapped Reiter Stefan, a farmer in Dryszczów, commune of Buszcze, county Brzeżański, from the house of his mother, breadwinner of the family consisting of his mother and 2 brothers, father, who were murdered by Ukrainian nationalists in September 1939. Reiter Stefan was drowned alive in Młynówka, because a scream was heard: „do not drown me”.

source: Żurek Stanisław, „The 75th anniversary of the genocide – August and the summer of 1943”; in: portal: Volhynia — web page: wolyn.org [accessible: 2021.02.04]

source: „1943, September 12 - Report of the PolKO in Brzeżany for the RGO Delegate Leopold Tesznar on the murders of the Polish population in the Brzeżany and Podhajecki poviats”; in: National Ossoliński Institute, Wrocław, in: No. 16721/2, p. 89—90

perpetrators

Ukrainians

victims

Poles

number of

textually:

1

min. 1

max. 1

ref. no:

05594

date:

1944.03.12

site

description

general info

Dryszczów

On March 12, 1944, Stefania and Jarosław Wawryków – the daughters of Mikołaj and Maria, were murdered.

source: Żurek Stanisław, „Calendar of the genocide – March 1944”; in: portal: Volhynia — web page: wolyn.org [accessible: 2021.02.04]

source: prof. dr hab. Jankiewicz Leszek S., „Supplement to the list of losses of the Polish population provided by Komański and Siekierka for the Tarnopol province (2004)”; in: Listowski Witold (ed.), „OUN-UPA genocide in the South-Eastern Borderlands”, in: Kędzierzyn-Koźle 2015, vol. 7

perpetrators

Ukrainians

victims

Poles

number of

textually:

2

min. 2

max. 2

ref. no:

05665

date:

1944.03.16–1944.03.17

site

description

general info

Dryszczów

In Dryszczów the following died: Drozdowska Adela, 30, Ilnicki Bronisław, 32, Ilnicka Franciszka, 55, Ilnicki Władysław, Jankowski Szczepan, 40, Klementowski Henryk, 40, Klementowski Michał, 40, Konopelski No, 12, Konopelski N 14, Ogrodnik N 40, Leszczeńska Józefa 45, Pawłowska N and two children, Niżałowski Antoni 19, Wilczyski Jan 40, Zowicz Maria 40 with four children, Sługocka Emilia 19.

source: Żurek Stanisław, „Calendar of the genocide – March 1944”; in: portal: Volhynia — web page: wolyn.org [accessible: 2021.02.04]

source: Kubów Władysław, „Terrorism in Podolia”, in: Warsaw 2003

perpetrators

Ukrainians

victims

Poles

number of

textually:

22

min. 22

max. 22

LETTER to CUSTODIAN/ADMINISTRATOR

The authors of this study kindly ask its readers to note that any correspondence sent to the Genocidium Atrox portal — to the address given below — may be published — in verbatim or its parts, including the signature — unless it contains relevant explicite stipulations. Email address will not be published.

If you have an Email client on your communicator/computer — such as Mozilla Thunderbird, Windows Mail or Microsoft Outlook, described at Wikipedia, among others — try the link below, please:

LETTER to CUSTODIAN/ADMINISTRATOR

If however you do not run such a client or the above link is not active please send an email to the Custodian/Administrator using your account — in your customary email/correspondence engine — at the following address:

EMAIL ADDRESS

stating the following as the subject:

GENOCIDIUM ATROX: DRYSZCZÓW

EXPLANATIONs

  1. Lack of info about the perpetrators in the description of a given event (Incident) indicates that the blame should be attributed to the perpetrators listed in general info section.
  2. The name of the site used during II Republic of Poland times indicates an official name used in 1939.
  3. English contemporary name of the site — in accordance with naming conventions used in Google Maps.
  4. Contemporary regional info about the site — if in Ukraine than in accordance to administrative structure of Ukraine valid till 2020.
  5. General explanations ⇒ click HERE.
  6. Assumptions as to the number of victims ⇒ click HERE.