Talk:Annopol

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Not Anipoli. but what is?[edit]

Which is the Hassidic Anipoli (and is it the same as Hanipol)? After editing this (Polish) Annopole entry, I received a message pointing me to a third Annopol, or rather Hannopil, besides Annopol-Rachow. It, like the Rachow one is in the Ukraine, and it too (like the other two) had a majority of Jews living there before the Holocaust during WWII. The mass graves (used as agricultural fields - shocking!!) are from which of the Annopols?

From the disambiguation pages there are at least 16 towns with a name similar to Annopol. What about these other Annopols? Did they too have a large community of Jews, and what happened to those Jews in WWII?

If you have answers, or links, please point me to them. Please also see the detailed discussion below. פשוט pashute ♫ (talk) 21:32, 2 May 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Detailed discussion on Annapol history[edit]

Here are my sources:

  • Hanopil in the Ukranian wikipedia, including two images from there on the wikimedia commons. This seems to be the town where the Maggid of Mezritch is burried.

From Annopole (disambiguation):

Then there is this source about several mass graves - that are being used as regular agricultural fields (shocking!). Where are these graves. Are they all around the same Annopol? And which Annopol is it?

Could anybody help me straighten out the sources and history. At Yad Vashem there definitely has been a mix up, and so has there been here, in the English WP entries.

So:

  • Which is (Reb Zushe's) Anipoli?
  • Where is an established source, setting the Maggid of Mezritch and Zusha of Anipoli's gravestones where they are?
  • Is the scribe David Sofer of Hanipol from which town?
  • What was the history and fate of each of these 16 town's Jews? Any survivors? And survivor organizations?
  • What are the sources by which these histories are recorded.
  • Which of the Annopols has the mass graves, and who is buried there?

פשוט pashute ♫ (talk) 21:32, 2 May 2013 (UTC)[reply]

OK. My mistake was due to the changes this place went through. There is a nearby small village Rachow which was called Annopol-Rachow, then it was incorporated into the city as a neighborhood and the city name is sometimes now referred to as Annopol-Rachow.
The Hassidic town of Reb Zussia (Zusche) is Hannopil, Khmelnytskyi Oblast (Yiddish: Hanipoli) in the Ukraine. פשוט pashute ♫ (talk) 08:57, 10 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]

External links modified[edit]

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