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EHRLICH Origin of surname

EHRLICH

Surnames derive from one of many different origins. Sometimes there may be more than one explanation for the same name. This family name is a patronymic surname based on a male ancestor's personal name, in this case of biblical origin.

The adjective Ehrlich, derived from the noun Ehre, that is "honesty/honor", means "honest" in German. As part of Jewish names, the term is also a variant of the Hebrew Aaron/Aharon. Aaron/Aharon, son of Amram and Jochebed, of the tribe of Levi, was the elder brother of Moses. He was the first high priest of the Jews, and the ancestor of the Cohanim. Numerous personal and family names are linked to this brother, spokesman and aide of Moses, among them Aron, Aren, Oren, Horn, Goren, Oron and Baron.

Distinguished bearers of the Jewish family name Ehrlich include the German immunologist, bacteriologist and chemotherapist Paul Ehrlich (1854-1915), who created the anti-syphilis drug called Salvarsan and won the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1908; the 20th century French merchant Charles Ehrlich; and the 20th century Polish-born Israeli minister of finance Simha Ehrlich.

Mojsze Erlich (1921-1942), member of of the group Hatikva of the youth organization Bnei Akiva (Bachad)-Belgium, born on 15 October 1921 in Warsaw, Poland. The family immigrated to Belgium in 1924 and settled in Antwerp. Along with his father, Yeruham, and his mother, Sara nee Scheinberg, he lived at 247, Provinciestraat, Antwerp. The parents owned a dairy shop. He studied at the Yeshiva Sha’arei Torah, that belonged to the Shomrei Hadas community in Antwerp, and also was a student at the local university.


The Bnei Akiva (Bachad) youth organization in Belgium was founded in 1933, and was a very important youth organization in the life of the Belgian Jews in the years before and during the Shoah. They were active even in the yeas 1940-1942, when Belgium was occupied by the Nazis. When their activities came to an end, some of the members joined the agricultural Hachshara ("training camp") in Bomal, Belgium, with the hope that one day they will be able to immigrate to the Land of Israel and live there as farmers.


Erlich was arrested by the Nazis in Antwerp and consequently detained in the transit camp at Malines-Mechelen, Belgium, and then deported to Auschwitz Nazi death camp on September 1, 1942, with Transport VII. His name appears under number 267 on the list of the deported. He never returned.

...............................................................................

This biography was originally published in the book The story of a Memorial, Bnei Akiva-Tikvatenu, Antwerp, in the Holocaust, edited by Jacques I. Offen and Salomon Hauser, published by Shamayim LTD, Israel 2010, and was recorded in Beit Hatfutsot's databases, courtesy of the authors.

Ricardo Mario Ehrlich Szalmian (b. 1948), biologist, biochemist and politician, Mayor of Montevideo (2005-2010), born in Montevideo, Uruguay, into a family of Jewish immigrants from Poland.  
Ehrlich was arrested in 1972 for his connections to the Movimiento de Liberación Nacional – Tupamaros (MLN) guerrilla movement. He was released in 1972 and moved to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and then to Strasbourg in France. While in Strasbourg he earned a Ph.D in science from the local university. He returned to Uruguay in 1987.

Ehrlich is a biochemist by profession. In 1990 he was appointed Director of the Institute of Biology seven years later was elected Dean of the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Montevideo, a position he held until February 2005. In the mayoral election of 2005 Ehrlich emerged as the candidate for the Frente Amplio. He held this office until February 26, 2010. From 2010 until 2015  he was a member of the cabinet of President José Mujica and Minister of Education and Culture of Uruguay.

Georg Ehrlich (1897-1966) sculptor, graphic artist, born in Vienna, Austria (then part of Austria-Hungary). He studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule arts school in Vienna From 1912 until 1915.  During WW1 he served in the Austrian army. During 1919-1921 he lived in Munich, Germany, and during 1921-1923 in Berlin. He returned to Vienna in 1924. In 1937 he first moved to France and in 1938 he immigrated to Great Britain. While in Paris, Ehrlich received a gold medal. at an international art exhibition. In 1947 he was in a visit to the United States, but returned to Britain, probably two years later. In 1963 he moved to Italy and then to Switzerland. Ehrlich held numerous international exhibitions and his works of art are shown at various museums, including Tate Gallery, Victoria and Albert Museum, British Museum, the garden of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London as well as at other collections in United States, England, Italy, and Israel. Ehrlich died in Luzern, Switzerland on 1st July, 1966 and is buried in Vienna.

Skalat

Скалат

A town in the district of Tarnopol, Ukraine. Until the Second World War, in eastern Galicia, Poland.

Skalat was founded in the 16th century. After the partition of Poland in 1772, it was annexed by Austria, together with the whole of Galicia. Between the two world wars it belonged to an independent Poland.

Jews have lived in Skalat since the beginning of the 17th century. By the end of the century, the town had an organized community with a synagogue and a rabbi.

In 1765, about 700 Jews lived there; in 1890 they numbered about 3250, accounting for 55 percent of the total population. Most of the Jewish inhabitants were Hassidim.

At the end of the 19th century, frightened by unrest and riots following a big fire, many Jewish inhabitants fled overseas. In the United States, an organization of Skalat Jews was established, which helped the Jewish community in Skalat. The synagogue, which had been destroyed during the fire, was rebuilt by the architect Tarnovsky, and decorated with murals by the Jewish painter, Sak.

In addition to the synagogue, there were 10 prayer and study houses in Skalat, among them kloises (a house of torah learning and prayer) of the Ryzyn, Belz and Wiznic Hassidim, and of the artisans' association Yad Haruzim. The community also had a hevra kadisha and a bikur holim society.

The last rabbis officiating in Skalat between the two world wars were Rabbi Itzhak Rosenblatt and Rabbi Binyamin Wolowicz. Both were killed during the Holocaust.

The Skalat Jews took a very active part in the life of the town. At the end of the 19th century 18 Jews were elected to the town council, which had a total of 30 members. The Jewish lawyer, Arnold Ehrlich, was mayor of Skalat at the beginning of the 20th century. In 1933 the 16-man council had six Jewish members.

In the early days of the First World War Skalat was occupied by the Russians, and 4,000 refugees from Husiatyn and Podwoloczyska came to Skalat.

The shortage of housing and food created tension between the Jews of Skalat and the refugees, in connection with the distribution of money from the Kiev Assistance Fund for Jewish refugees.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the Skalat Jews were leaseholders and merchants. Some of them were innkeepers and bartenders. In the 19th century, they had difficulties in earning a living. Some of them were employed on the estates, some were commission agents and others traded in grains. In 1869, when Suesskind Rozensztok, a rich Jew, bought the local nobleman's estate, many Jews found work there. At the end of the 19th century, there were about 129 Jewish wool, cattle, copper and iron goods, leather and spices. Tailors, tinsmiths, furriers, watchmakers, barbers, bakers and brewers.

At the beginning of the 20th century, a Jewish doctor and two Jewish lawyers lived in Skalat.

Between the two wars, most of the Skalat Jews were retail traders and artisans.

The admorim of Husiatyn, Rabbi Mordechai Shraga Friedmann who died at the end of the 19th century, and after him, his son, Rabbi Israel came to Skalat every year and stayed there from Lag Ba'Omer until after Shavuoth. During the visits of the admorim, hundreds of Hassidim from Galicia and the whole of Poland flocked to Skalat. The visitors increased the income of the hostel owners and temporary restaurants, and of craftsmen.

After the First World War, in independent Poland, the economic situation of the Jews worsenend. A gmiluth hassadim fund and a cooperative bank, supported by the Joint, assisted the needy. At that time, many families left the town. In 1921, the community numbered about 2,900 Jews, that is, 49 percent of the total population.

At the beginning of the 20th century, Zionist groups organized themselves in Skalat. In 1902 the Ahavat Zion Union was established, and in 1904 the Yehuda organization. The Zionist youth movement set up a drama circle which also gave performances in the nearby towns.

Between the two world wars, Zionist activities in Skalat increased and branches of all the Zionist movements were set up. The local Gordonia youth branch created a training group in the vicinity of the town in 1925.

In the same year the Agudat Ezra, and later Hanoar Hazioni, Hanoar Hamizrahi, Ahva, Bnei Akiva and Betar branches, were established.

In 1909 the Zionists opened a Hebrew school which was attended by 70 pupils. After the First World War, this school reopened and about 100 pupils studied there. In 1927 a Jewish kindergarten was set up in Skalat. After 1933, Zionist representatives had a majority on the community committee which had been previously dominated by Hassidim.

In 1939 more than 4,000 Jews lived in Skalat, out of a total population of about 7,000.

The Holocaust Period

In the years 1939 to 1941 following the Molotov-Ribbentrop Agreement of August 1939) Skalat was under Soviet rule. At that time political and social activities were banned and private business activities were prohibited. In the autumn of 1940, under pressure by the authorities, the craftsmen organized in cooperatives. Jews supporting the new regime occupied important positions in the local administration and the state-owned shops. After the outbreak of war between Germany and the USSR on June 22, 1941, the local population began to persecute the Jews. 200 Jews escaped with the retreating Red Army.

The town was occupied by the Germans on July 5, 1941. 20 Jews were murdered by German soldiers. The local administration passed into the hands of Ukrainians, and their nationalist representatives instigated anti-Jewish riots. On July 6, a massacre of local Jews was organized during which 560 persons were murdered.

In the middle of July, a Judenrat (Jewish council) and a Jewish police force were set up. The Judenrat complied with the demands of the Germans, and also took care of the community's needs. A home for the aged and public kitchens were opened.

On July 19, the Skalat Jews were forced to pay a contribution (ransom) amounting to 600,000 rubles within five days. In the summer and autumn of 1941 the Judenrat undertook to deliver about 300 people a day for forced labor. In the autumn of 1942, 200 young people from Skalat were sent to the Burke Wielkie labor camp. Jews from the nearby communities, Grzymalow and Podwoloczyska, were brought to Skalat. That winter Jews from Skalat were sent to labor camps set up in the district.

In February and March 1942, the Jews of the town were transferred to one quarter. In July, a group of young Jewish women were sent to the labor camp in Jagielnice, and in August of the same year the Germans forced the Judenrat - threatening to liquidate the entire Jewish community - to hand over 600 sick and old people. They were taken from the synagogue to Tarnopol, where they joined those selected for deportation to the Belzyc death camp. The cooperation of the Judenrat and the Jewish police in turning over the people, and their murder, caused bitter disputes and recriminations in the community. After this liquidation action, the Jews of Skalat began to hide in bunkers.

On October 21, 1942, a second action took place. SS units and German and Ukrainian policemen surrounded the Jewish quarter and started shooting. 2000 Jews were herded into the synagogue. On the next day they were deported to the Belzyc death camp. 153 were shot in the streets while trying to flee. 50 Jews escaped and returned to Skalat. On November 9, 1942, another action took place, following which 1100 Jews were deported to Belzyc. 100 men were sent to the Hlobcek labor camp. The area of the Jewish quarter was reduced and became a closed ghetto where hunger and illness prevailed.

On November 11, 1942, the Germans broke into the ghetto and herded about 700 Jews into the synagogue. They were taken to pits previously dug outside the town and massacred there. 50 sick people from the Jewish hospital and the medical staff were among them. Some of the victims were buried alive.

After this massacre a group organized itself for armed resistance, under the leadership of Michael Glanc. The members of this group started to acquire arms and searched for Jews who had escaped to the woods. It is assumed that the Germans knew about these preparations for resistance and that is why the liquidation of the ghetto was carried out before the planned date.

On June 9, 1943, the last action took place. 600 Jews were shot and killed by machine-gun fire and thrown into pits outside the town, which was then declared Judenrein. About 400 Jews remained in the town's labor camp. 200 of them were murdered on June 30, 1943, and the rest escaped to the surrounding woods.

A few days later, the Germans declared that the inmates of the labor camp were permitted to return to the town. Owing to the terrible conditions in the woods and the hostile attitude of the local population, about 100 Jews returned and were employed in the nearby quarries. On July 28, 1943, the camp was liquidated, and the inmates were killed. 20 Jews who tried to escape were caught by Ukrainian peasants and handed over to the Germans.

About 300 Skalat Jews survived by hiding in the surrounding forests and the Germans promised a reward for every Jew delivered to them. In the summer of 1943, about 30 Jews joined the Soviet partisan units Kowpak Brigade. Only seven of them survived; most of them fell fighting the Germans.

In March 1944 the town was liberated by the Red Army. About 190 Jewish survivors returned to Skalat, but most of them left again. Some of them emigrated to Eretz Israel, and some to other countries.

According to information received from a former Skalat resident who visited the town in 1967, Skalat was not rebuilt after the war. Most of the Jewish-owned houses were destroyed and the big synagogue, the Shul, now houses a workshop. A stadium was built on the Jewish cemetery. Some of the tombstones were used to build the wall and pave sidewalks. A wood is growing on the communal graves outside the town.


In 1967 only about 1500 people lived in Skalat.

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EHRLICH Origin of surname
EHRLICH

Surnames derive from one of many different origins. Sometimes there may be more than one explanation for the same name. This family name is a patronymic surname based on a male ancestor's personal name, in this case of biblical origin.

The adjective Ehrlich, derived from the noun Ehre, that is "honesty/honor", means "honest" in German. As part of Jewish names, the term is also a variant of the Hebrew Aaron/Aharon. Aaron/Aharon, son of Amram and Jochebed, of the tribe of Levi, was the elder brother of Moses. He was the first high priest of the Jews, and the ancestor of the Cohanim. Numerous personal and family names are linked to this brother, spokesman and aide of Moses, among them Aron, Aren, Oren, Horn, Goren, Oron and Baron.

Distinguished bearers of the Jewish family name Ehrlich include the German immunologist, bacteriologist and chemotherapist Paul Ehrlich (1854-1915), who created the anti-syphilis drug called Salvarsan and won the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1908; the 20th century French merchant Charles Ehrlich; and the 20th century Polish-born Israeli minister of finance Simha Ehrlich.
Written by researchers of ANU Museum of the Jewish People
Mojsze Erlich

Mojsze Erlich (1921-1942), member of of the group Hatikva of the youth organization Bnei Akiva (Bachad)-Belgium, born on 15 October 1921 in Warsaw, Poland. The family immigrated to Belgium in 1924 and settled in Antwerp. Along with his father, Yeruham, and his mother, Sara nee Scheinberg, he lived at 247, Provinciestraat, Antwerp. The parents owned a dairy shop. He studied at the Yeshiva Sha’arei Torah, that belonged to the Shomrei Hadas community in Antwerp, and also was a student at the local university.


The Bnei Akiva (Bachad) youth organization in Belgium was founded in 1933, and was a very important youth organization in the life of the Belgian Jews in the years before and during the Shoah. They were active even in the yeas 1940-1942, when Belgium was occupied by the Nazis. When their activities came to an end, some of the members joined the agricultural Hachshara ("training camp") in Bomal, Belgium, with the hope that one day they will be able to immigrate to the Land of Israel and live there as farmers.


Erlich was arrested by the Nazis in Antwerp and consequently detained in the transit camp at Malines-Mechelen, Belgium, and then deported to Auschwitz Nazi death camp on September 1, 1942, with Transport VII. His name appears under number 267 on the list of the deported. He never returned.

...............................................................................

This biography was originally published in the book The story of a Memorial, Bnei Akiva-Tikvatenu, Antwerp, in the Holocaust, edited by Jacques I. Offen and Salomon Hauser, published by Shamayim LTD, Israel 2010, and was recorded in Beit Hatfutsot's databases, courtesy of the authors.

Ricardo Ehrlich

Ricardo Mario Ehrlich Szalmian (b. 1948), biologist, biochemist and politician, Mayor of Montevideo (2005-2010), born in Montevideo, Uruguay, into a family of Jewish immigrants from Poland.  
Ehrlich was arrested in 1972 for his connections to the Movimiento de Liberación Nacional – Tupamaros (MLN) guerrilla movement. He was released in 1972 and moved to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and then to Strasbourg in France. While in Strasbourg he earned a Ph.D in science from the local university. He returned to Uruguay in 1987.

Ehrlich is a biochemist by profession. In 1990 he was appointed Director of the Institute of Biology seven years later was elected Dean of the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Montevideo, a position he held until February 2005. In the mayoral election of 2005 Ehrlich emerged as the candidate for the Frente Amplio. He held this office until February 26, 2010. From 2010 until 2015  he was a member of the cabinet of President José Mujica and Minister of Education and Culture of Uruguay.

Georg Ehrlich

Georg Ehrlich (1897-1966) sculptor, graphic artist, born in Vienna, Austria (then part of Austria-Hungary). He studied at the Kunstgewerbeschule arts school in Vienna From 1912 until 1915.  During WW1 he served in the Austrian army. During 1919-1921 he lived in Munich, Germany, and during 1921-1923 in Berlin. He returned to Vienna in 1924. In 1937 he first moved to France and in 1938 he immigrated to Great Britain. While in Paris, Ehrlich received a gold medal. at an international art exhibition. In 1947 he was in a visit to the United States, but returned to Britain, probably two years later. In 1963 he moved to Italy and then to Switzerland. Ehrlich held numerous international exhibitions and his works of art are shown at various museums, including Tate Gallery, Victoria and Albert Museum, British Museum, the garden of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London as well as at other collections in United States, England, Italy, and Israel. Ehrlich died in Luzern, Switzerland on 1st July, 1966 and is buried in Vienna.

Skalat

Skalat

Скалат

A town in the district of Tarnopol, Ukraine. Until the Second World War, in eastern Galicia, Poland.

Skalat was founded in the 16th century. After the partition of Poland in 1772, it was annexed by Austria, together with the whole of Galicia. Between the two world wars it belonged to an independent Poland.

Jews have lived in Skalat since the beginning of the 17th century. By the end of the century, the town had an organized community with a synagogue and a rabbi.

In 1765, about 700 Jews lived there; in 1890 they numbered about 3250, accounting for 55 percent of the total population. Most of the Jewish inhabitants were Hassidim.

At the end of the 19th century, frightened by unrest and riots following a big fire, many Jewish inhabitants fled overseas. In the United States, an organization of Skalat Jews was established, which helped the Jewish community in Skalat. The synagogue, which had been destroyed during the fire, was rebuilt by the architect Tarnovsky, and decorated with murals by the Jewish painter, Sak.

In addition to the synagogue, there were 10 prayer and study houses in Skalat, among them kloises (a house of torah learning and prayer) of the Ryzyn, Belz and Wiznic Hassidim, and of the artisans' association Yad Haruzim. The community also had a hevra kadisha and a bikur holim society.

The last rabbis officiating in Skalat between the two world wars were Rabbi Itzhak Rosenblatt and Rabbi Binyamin Wolowicz. Both were killed during the Holocaust.

The Skalat Jews took a very active part in the life of the town. At the end of the 19th century 18 Jews were elected to the town council, which had a total of 30 members. The Jewish lawyer, Arnold Ehrlich, was mayor of Skalat at the beginning of the 20th century. In 1933 the 16-man council had six Jewish members.

In the early days of the First World War Skalat was occupied by the Russians, and 4,000 refugees from Husiatyn and Podwoloczyska came to Skalat.

The shortage of housing and food created tension between the Jews of Skalat and the refugees, in connection with the distribution of money from the Kiev Assistance Fund for Jewish refugees.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the Skalat Jews were leaseholders and merchants. Some of them were innkeepers and bartenders. In the 19th century, they had difficulties in earning a living. Some of them were employed on the estates, some were commission agents and others traded in grains. In 1869, when Suesskind Rozensztok, a rich Jew, bought the local nobleman's estate, many Jews found work there. At the end of the 19th century, there were about 129 Jewish wool, cattle, copper and iron goods, leather and spices. Tailors, tinsmiths, furriers, watchmakers, barbers, bakers and brewers.

At the beginning of the 20th century, a Jewish doctor and two Jewish lawyers lived in Skalat.

Between the two wars, most of the Skalat Jews were retail traders and artisans.

The admorim of Husiatyn, Rabbi Mordechai Shraga Friedmann who died at the end of the 19th century, and after him, his son, Rabbi Israel came to Skalat every year and stayed there from Lag Ba'Omer until after Shavuoth. During the visits of the admorim, hundreds of Hassidim from Galicia and the whole of Poland flocked to Skalat. The visitors increased the income of the hostel owners and temporary restaurants, and of craftsmen.

After the First World War, in independent Poland, the economic situation of the Jews worsenend. A gmiluth hassadim fund and a cooperative bank, supported by the Joint, assisted the needy. At that time, many families left the town. In 1921, the community numbered about 2,900 Jews, that is, 49 percent of the total population.

At the beginning of the 20th century, Zionist groups organized themselves in Skalat. In 1902 the Ahavat Zion Union was established, and in 1904 the Yehuda organization. The Zionist youth movement set up a drama circle which also gave performances in the nearby towns.

Between the two world wars, Zionist activities in Skalat increased and branches of all the Zionist movements were set up. The local Gordonia youth branch created a training group in the vicinity of the town in 1925.

In the same year the Agudat Ezra, and later Hanoar Hazioni, Hanoar Hamizrahi, Ahva, Bnei Akiva and Betar branches, were established.

In 1909 the Zionists opened a Hebrew school which was attended by 70 pupils. After the First World War, this school reopened and about 100 pupils studied there. In 1927 a Jewish kindergarten was set up in Skalat. After 1933, Zionist representatives had a majority on the community committee which had been previously dominated by Hassidim.

In 1939 more than 4,000 Jews lived in Skalat, out of a total population of about 7,000.

The Holocaust Period

In the years 1939 to 1941 following the Molotov-Ribbentrop Agreement of August 1939) Skalat was under Soviet rule. At that time political and social activities were banned and private business activities were prohibited. In the autumn of 1940, under pressure by the authorities, the craftsmen organized in cooperatives. Jews supporting the new regime occupied important positions in the local administration and the state-owned shops. After the outbreak of war between Germany and the USSR on June 22, 1941, the local population began to persecute the Jews. 200 Jews escaped with the retreating Red Army.

The town was occupied by the Germans on July 5, 1941. 20 Jews were murdered by German soldiers. The local administration passed into the hands of Ukrainians, and their nationalist representatives instigated anti-Jewish riots. On July 6, a massacre of local Jews was organized during which 560 persons were murdered.

In the middle of July, a Judenrat (Jewish council) and a Jewish police force were set up. The Judenrat complied with the demands of the Germans, and also took care of the community's needs. A home for the aged and public kitchens were opened.

On July 19, the Skalat Jews were forced to pay a contribution (ransom) amounting to 600,000 rubles within five days. In the summer and autumn of 1941 the Judenrat undertook to deliver about 300 people a day for forced labor. In the autumn of 1942, 200 young people from Skalat were sent to the Burke Wielkie labor camp. Jews from the nearby communities, Grzymalow and Podwoloczyska, were brought to Skalat. That winter Jews from Skalat were sent to labor camps set up in the district.

In February and March 1942, the Jews of the town were transferred to one quarter. In July, a group of young Jewish women were sent to the labor camp in Jagielnice, and in August of the same year the Germans forced the Judenrat - threatening to liquidate the entire Jewish community - to hand over 600 sick and old people. They were taken from the synagogue to Tarnopol, where they joined those selected for deportation to the Belzyc death camp. The cooperation of the Judenrat and the Jewish police in turning over the people, and their murder, caused bitter disputes and recriminations in the community. After this liquidation action, the Jews of Skalat began to hide in bunkers.

On October 21, 1942, a second action took place. SS units and German and Ukrainian policemen surrounded the Jewish quarter and started shooting. 2000 Jews were herded into the synagogue. On the next day they were deported to the Belzyc death camp. 153 were shot in the streets while trying to flee. 50 Jews escaped and returned to Skalat. On November 9, 1942, another action took place, following which 1100 Jews were deported to Belzyc. 100 men were sent to the Hlobcek labor camp. The area of the Jewish quarter was reduced and became a closed ghetto where hunger and illness prevailed.

On November 11, 1942, the Germans broke into the ghetto and herded about 700 Jews into the synagogue. They were taken to pits previously dug outside the town and massacred there. 50 sick people from the Jewish hospital and the medical staff were among them. Some of the victims were buried alive.

After this massacre a group organized itself for armed resistance, under the leadership of Michael Glanc. The members of this group started to acquire arms and searched for Jews who had escaped to the woods. It is assumed that the Germans knew about these preparations for resistance and that is why the liquidation of the ghetto was carried out before the planned date.

On June 9, 1943, the last action took place. 600 Jews were shot and killed by machine-gun fire and thrown into pits outside the town, which was then declared Judenrein. About 400 Jews remained in the town's labor camp. 200 of them were murdered on June 30, 1943, and the rest escaped to the surrounding woods.

A few days later, the Germans declared that the inmates of the labor camp were permitted to return to the town. Owing to the terrible conditions in the woods and the hostile attitude of the local population, about 100 Jews returned and were employed in the nearby quarries. On July 28, 1943, the camp was liquidated, and the inmates were killed. 20 Jews who tried to escape were caught by Ukrainian peasants and handed over to the Germans.

About 300 Skalat Jews survived by hiding in the surrounding forests and the Germans promised a reward for every Jew delivered to them. In the summer of 1943, about 30 Jews joined the Soviet partisan units Kowpak Brigade. Only seven of them survived; most of them fell fighting the Germans.

In March 1944 the town was liberated by the Red Army. About 190 Jewish survivors returned to Skalat, but most of them left again. Some of them emigrated to Eretz Israel, and some to other countries.

According to information received from a former Skalat resident who visited the town in 1967, Skalat was not rebuilt after the war. Most of the Jewish-owned houses were destroyed and the big synagogue, the Shul, now houses a workshop. A stadium was built on the Jewish cemetery. Some of the tombstones were used to build the wall and pave sidewalks. A wood is growing on the communal graves outside the town.


In 1967 only about 1500 people lived in Skalat.