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KRZEPICEKRZEPICE, town in Kielce province, S. Poland. Jewish presence in Krzepice is attested to as early as 1633. In 1730 a synagogue was built. The 1765 census recorded 116 Jewish poll tax payers in Krzepice and vicinity. A separate Jewish quarter, Nowokrzepice (New Krzepice), was founded in 1795 and a synagogue established. Between 1823 and 1862 the Russian authorities restricted Jewish emigration from the interior of the [Encyclopaedia Judaica (Germany)] Holocaust PeriodThe Germans captured Krzepice on Sept. 1, 1939, and within a few weeks a fine ("contribution") of 20,000 zlotys was imposed upon the Jewish community; the confiscation of Jewish property also began. In March 1940 the transport of Jewish youth to forced-labor camps began and continued at an accelerated rate throughout 1941. In June 1942 the large majority of the Jews were transported to *Auschwitz. Some tried to escape and found temporary refuge in the Czestochowa ghetto. After the deportation of June 1942, only a few families of artisans remained in the city, and they were later transferred to the Sosnowiec ghetto. [Aharon Weiss] BIBLIOGRAPHY:K.S. Muznerowski, Krepice w przszłosci (1914); M. Baliński and T. Lipiński, Starożytna Polska, 2 (1845), index; Lódź, Wojewódzkie Archiwum Państwowe, Anteriozia piotrkowskiego rządu gubernskiego, nos. 2517–19; R. Mahler, Yidn in Amolikn Poyln in Likht fun Tsifern (1958), index; B. Wasiutyński, Ludność żydowska w Polsce… (1930), 30. ADD. BIBLIOGRAPHY: "Tavnit Sefer Zikaron le-Kehilat Kshepitz ve-ha-Sevivah," in: Sefer Klobuck (1960), 222, 264, 266. Source: Encyclopaedia Judaica. © 2008 The Gale Group. All Rights Reserved. |
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