Byten Ghetto, the Glossary
Byten Ghetto (summer 1941 – December 25, 1942) was a Jewish ghetto and a place of forced resettlement of Jews from the town of Byten in the Ivatsevichy district of the Brest region and nearby settlements during the persecution and extermination of Jews by Nazi Germany during World War II.[1]
Table of Contents
5 relations: Brest Region, Ivatsevichy District, Judenrat, Nazi Germany, World War II.
- Brest Region
- Ivatsevichy District
- Jewish ghettos in Nazi-occupied Belarus
Brest Region
Brest Region, also known as Brest Oblast or Brest Voblasts (Bresckaja voblasć; Brestskaya oblast), is one of the six regions of Belarus.
See Byten Ghetto and Brest Region
Ivatsevichy District
Ivatsevichy District or Ivacevičy District (Івацэвіцкі раён; Ивацевичский район) is a district (raion) of Brest Region in Belarus.
See Byten Ghetto and Ivatsevichy District
Judenrat
A Judenrat was an administrative body established in German-occupied Europe during World War II which purported to represent a Jewish community in dealings with the Nazi authorities.
Nazi Germany
Nazi Germany, officially known as the German Reich and later the Greater German Reich, was the German state between 1933 and 1945, when Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party controlled the country, transforming it into a totalitarian dictatorship.
See Byten Ghetto and Nazi Germany
World War II
World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a global conflict between two alliances: the Allies and the Axis powers.
See Byten Ghetto and World War II
See also
Brest Region
- Brest Region
- Byten Ghetto
- Damachava Ghetto
- Davyd-Haradok Ghetto
- FC Mikashevichi
- FC Niva Dolbizno
- Hantsavichy Ghetto
- Horodno Ghetto
- Ivatsevichy Ghetto
- Kamyenyets Ghetto
- Motal Ghetto
- Osovcy (air base)
- The Holocaust in Baranavichy District
- Tsyelyakhany Ghetto
- Vowchyn Ghetto
- Vysokaye Ghetto
- Zhabinka Ghetto
Ivatsevichy District
- Byten Ghetto
- Ivatsevichy
- Ivatsevichy District
- Kosava, Belarus
- Tsyelyakhany
- Tsyelyakhany Ghetto
- Volya, Ivatsevichy District
Jewish ghettos in Nazi-occupied Belarus
- Antonovka Ghetto
- Baran Ghetto
- Baranavichy Ghetto
- Brześć Ghetto
- Byten Ghetto
- Damachava Ghetto
- Drahichyn Ghetto
- Dzyatlava Ghetto
- Gorodishche Ghetto
- Grodno Ghetto
- Hantsavichy Ghetto
- Ivatsevichy Ghetto
- Kamyenyets Ghetto
- Lida Ghetto
- Minsk Ghetto
- Mir Ghetto
- Mogilev Ghetto
- Molchad Ghetto
- Motal Ghetto
- Navahrudak Ghetto
- Pińsk Ghetto
- Rakaŭ Ghetto
- Svislach Ghetto (Mogilev region)
- Słonim Ghetto
- Tsyelyakhany Ghetto
- Vawkavysk Ghetto
- Vitebsk Ghetto
- Vowchyn Ghetto
- Vysokaye Ghetto
- Zhabinka Ghetto
- Łachwa Ghetto