| KALVARIJA: Kalvarija district, Marijampolė county |
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CEMETERY: New Cemetery: Burials from 1920-1940, about 100 stones. Cemetery is not maintained; and stones are mostly in poor condition. CEMETERY: Old Cemetery: about 6 stones that are almost unrecognizable exist in an area used as a latrine. MASS GRAVES: 9/l/41: 9 Elul and 7/41. 14 Tammuz. On July 1, 1941, all Jews were required to wear a yellow Mogen David, not use the sidewalks, taken into forced labor, and humiliated and abused in front of the local Lithuanians. Ninety men and women, including Lithuanian communists and Jewish intellectuals, were held in Zidruyevetz Hotel, beaten and abused over a period of days. On July 5, they were taken about two km out of town to a bluff on Orios Lake with previously prepared pits where they were shot and buried. On August 30, 1941, all Jews were assembled, supposedly for transfer to the Marijampole ghetto. A large number of wagons from surrounding villages were to transport their belongings, but loaded wagons went to the local synagogue where they were emptied. Some 8,600 Jews were put on those wagons and transported to barracks in Marijampole, joining Jews from the surrounding area and the local Jews. On Monday, September 1, 1941 [9 Elul, 5701], they were all taken to the banks of the Sesupe River where they were shot. Those few, who managed to escape, were caught by the Lithuanians and executed. A mob of Kalvarija's Lithuanians, led by their priest, destroyed all Jewish owned stores near the church. From the bricks, they built a wall around the church. During the war, about half of the houses in town were destroyed by fire. Nothing remained of the Jewish cemetery. The undamaged Beit Midrash became a local grain co-operative warehouse. In 1945, one Jewish family returned and lived in their house for about six months. Between 1970-1989, one Jew lived in Kalvarija. In the early 1990s, one Jewish cemetery was restored. [March 2009] "Clean-up at Jewish Kalvarija Cemetery" [November 2009] Story about restoration. [November 2009] |
| Last Updated on Friday, 20 November 2009 21:54 |



Alternate names: Kalvarija [Lith], Kalvarye [Yid], Kalwaria [Pol], Kalvariya [Rus], Kalvarien [Ger], Calvaria, Kalvaria, Kalwariya, Kalwarya, Yiddish: קאַלװאָריע. Russian: Калвария.