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Jewish Families from Dębica, Poland

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Profiles

  • Ignatz (Ignacy) Ulmann (1907 - 1942)
    Ignatz Ignaz ULMAN/N: b. 1907, Krakow - d. 1942, Debica, HOLOCAUST cf. Yad Vashem Page of Testimony: Ignatz Ulman was born in Krakow, Poland in 1907 to Shmuel and Sara. He was a merchant and ma...
  • Leon Ulmann (c.1935 - c.1942)
    cf. Yad Vashem Page of Testimony: Leon Ulman was born in Berlin, Germany to Ignatz and Gusta nee Liebenheimer. He was a child. Prior to WWII he lived in Berlin, Germany. During the war he was in De...
  • Gustava Ulmann (1906 - 1942)
    Gusta Auguste? ULMAN/N, née LIEBENHEIMER: b. 1906, Debica - d. 1942, Debica, HOLOCAUST cf. Yad Vashem Page of Testimony: Gusta Ulman nee Libenheimer was born in Debica, Poland in 1906 to Leib and ...
  • Ida Liebenheimer (deceased)
    cf. Yad Vashem Pages of Testimony submitted for family ...
  • Leib Liebenheimer (b. - bef.1926)
    cf. Yad Vashem Pages of Testimony submitted for family ...

This project seeks to collect all of the Jewish families from the town of Dębica, Poland, also known as Dembitz, Debitsa, Dembica, Dembits, Dembitsa, Dembiza.

KehilaLinks - Dębica

Yizkor - Dembitz

Gesher Galicia - Dębica

Background

Dębica ([d%C9%9Bm%CB%88bit%CD%A1sa]; Yiddish: דעמביץ‎ Dembitz) is a city in southeastern Poland with 46,693 inhabitants, as of 2 June 2009.[1] It is the capital of Dębica County. Since 1999 it has been situated in the Podkarpackie Voivodeship; it had previously been in the Tarnów Voivodeship (1975–1998). Dębica belongs to the historic province of Lesser Poland, and for centuries it was part of the Sandomierz Voivodeship.

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Location and Economy

Dębica lies at the border of two geographical regions of Poland - the Carpathian Piedmont in southern districts of the town, and the Sandomierz Basin in its north, along the Wisłoka river. Since the mid-1930s Dębica, in spite of its size, has been a large industrial hub. A number of companies were then created thanks to governmental industry development programs.

Since the early 1990s a relatively large number (in proportion to the city's size) of successful companies have been started and run by local residents:

- Bicycle, motorcycle and electric car manufacturer Arkus and Romet Group
- Sportatut - producer of sports nutritionals - Chemical industry manufacturers (paint producers such as Sniezka Brzeznica & Plastbud Pustkow) - Marble producer Jabo Marmi and brickyard Iglobud - Food companies such as Igloomeat and Animex Poludnie

Transport

The section of the highway going westwards from Dębica to Tarnów was completed in October 2014 giving the city a direct connection with the western Polish border and in consequence with all of Western Europe. A car journey to Kraków (approximately 120 km) takes around an hour, while Rzeszow, the capital of the Subcarpathian Voivodeship located to the East of Debica, can be easily reached in less than 30 minutes. Debica lies by an important railway line stretching between the western and eastern Polish borders.

Education

Debica has been home to two branches of higher education institutions:

  • Wyższa Szkoła Informatyki i Zarządzania in Rzeszów, branch in Dębica
  • University of Economics in Kraków, branch in Dębica

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History

One of the oldest documented references to this area dates back to the year 1293. It records a settlement by the name of Dambicha, belonging to the noble Gryfita family. In 1305, the village was raided by the Tatars, who burned a wooden church. The church was rebuilt in 1318, and by 1325, Dębica was the seat of a deanery, located on the outskirts of the mighty Sandomierz Wilderness. The town was conveniently located along the main merchant route from Kraków to Lwów, but was unable to compete with older urban centers of the area, Pilzno and Ropczyce. In 1446, King Władysław Warneńczyk allowed annual fairs to be organized on Ash Wednesdays, which resulted in quick development of the town. For many years however Dębica was a small place, located in the Pilzno County, Sandomierz Voivodeship, province of Lesser Poland.

  • Lacking a defensive wall that would defend it, it was vulnerable to invasions of the Tatars, Swedes, and Hungarians, who burnt or ransacked the town every few years.
  • As a result of these events, there are few historical monuments in Dębica. One of these is the Saint Jadwiga church, originally from the 14th century, but completely rebuilt in the late 19th century.
  • In 1474, Dębica, together with other towns of southern Lesser Poland, was ransacked by the Black Army of Hungary.
  • In 1502, a Crimean Tatar raid caused widespread destruction, and as a result of it the town was burned and depopulated.
  • To prevent complete disappearance of Dębica, its owners exempted residents from all taxes for 14 years, also allowing them to collect free timber and firewood in local forests.
  • In 1504, Dębica was exempted from royal taxes by King Aleksander Jagiellończyk. Due to all these privileges, Dębica emerged in the 16th century as a local center of skilled craftsmen.

In 1554, most of Dębica burned, together with a wooden parish church of St. Margaret. In the late 16th century, the population of the town was app. 700. Like almost all Lesser Poland’s towns and cities, Dębica was completely destroyed in the Swedish invasion of Poland, when Swedes and Transylvanians of George II Rakoczi burned and ransacked the town (1655 - 1660). After the invasion, the population of Dębica was reduced to app. 200, with only 30 houses.

  • The owners of the town allowed first Jews to settle in Dębica. First settlers arrived in 1676–1690. They expanded the town's population, and had a positive influence on the town's economy.
  • In the late 17th century, the so-called New Dębica was established, around the now non-existing St. Barbara church, app. one kilometer (0.62 miles) west of Old Dębica.
  • Both Dębicas had two different mayors, who were governed by one wójt. In the course of the time, the towns merged, and the market square of New Dębica now serves as the center of the town.
  • Dębica was completely destroyed during the Great Northern War, and the destruction was so severe that the town slowly turned into a farming village. In the late 18th century, it belonged to the Radziwiłł family.
  • A battle between Poles and Russians took place here during the Bar Confederation, and in 1772 (see: Partitions of Poland), Dębica was annexed by the Habsburg Empire, as part of Galicia, where it remained until November 1918.

Austrian authorities decided that it should no longer be regarded as a town, but rather a village and renamed it Dembitz. This decision marked the decline of the town. In the second half of the 19th century, the Austrian government decided to build a main West-East railroad line (see Galician Railway of Archduke Charles Louis), connecting two major urban centres of Galicja - Kraków and Lwów. A railroad station was built in Dębica, and at the end of the 19th century, another, northbound line was constructed, joining Dębica and the town of Sandomierz, which was located on the Austrian-Russian boundary.

In 1900 a high school was opened, and in 1908 students from this school founded one of the oldest sports clubs in Poland, Wisłoka (whose name comes from the River Wisłoka, which flows by the town).

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  • Just before World War I, Dębica was again incorporated as a town. The war was a disaster for the town, as it was almost completely destroyed. During several campaigns Dębica was occupied by Russian, Austrian, Hungarian and German troops, which fought in this area for many months in 1914 - 1915. The Russians wanted to get through the Carpathian Range towards Slovakia, Bohemia and Hungary, while the Central Powers managed to stop them at the beginning of 1915.
  • In 1918, after Poland regained independence, Dębica was included in the Kraków Voivodeship (1919-1939), in the county of Ropczyce. The economical situation of the town did not change - there was no industry, very few jobs available and surrounding villages were strongly overpopulated.
  • In 1936, the Polish government announced creation of Central Industrial Area. Dębica started to develop very fast; so fast, that in 1937 the county's capital was moved here from Ropczyce. Some time in 1938 or 1939 works on another rail connection from Dębica to Jasło, via Pilzno were started. the Second World War stopped this construction, and after the war it was not continued.

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World War II

The occupation of Dębica by Nazi Germany started on September 8, 1939. The Germans created a ghetto for town's Jewish population, eventually killing most of them either on the spot or in Auschwitz concentration camp. In the forested hills south of the town, strong underground forces operated, with numerous units of the Home Army (AK). It was too dangerous for AK's officers to stay in Dębica, thus the headquarters of a local underground district (known as Deser) were located at a nearby village of Gumniska, located in the hilly area south of the town.

Resistance fighters were very active here, often attacking the main Kraków-Lwów rail line, used by German troops. In early 1944, units of local Armia Krajowa district unsuccessfully tried to blow up a train with Hans Frank, which was passing through the village station at Czarna Tarnowska, some 15 kilometres (9 miles) west of Dębica.

As a reprisal, on February 2, 1944, the Germans murdered 50 Poles by rail track in Dębica (also see Otto Schimek).

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Reconstructed camp barracks with a watchtower and the barbed-wire fence in the village of Pustków. On the outskirts of Dębica in the village of Pustków near Blizna and several neighbouring ones, the Germans established a massive military base in the fall of 1941 for weapon's testing and the training of new Ukrainian collaborationist military formations including the SS Galizien Division

It is estimated that in the duration of the SS Heidelager training base operation, some 15,000 slave-labor prisoners perished there including 7,500 Jews, 5,000 Soviet POWs, and 2,500 Poles; on top of an estimated 1,000 Soviet soldiers who died in the area during the Nazi-Soviet war. Their remains are buried in the cemetery along the road to Pustków Drips.

Originally the cemetery was located inside the ring IV (Dąbrówki). Later the graves of soldiers were exhumed and moved. In one of the tombs is buried a Russian colonel killed in the fighting.

  • Implicated in war crimes was the SS-man Alois Kurz (ID 382378) who, from 1940 to 21 April 1941, served in the SS Regiment Westland, then was assigned to a construction battalion for the SS training ground and labor camp serving the SS Truppenubungsplatz Heidelager (de) in Pustków.
  • Also implicated in war crimes was Wilhelm Schitli, Commander of the "Jewish camp" at the SS training area HL-Heidelager from October 1942 to September 1943.

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Post-war

After the war, in new, Communist Poland, Dębica again became seat of a county, but the town was moved from Kraków to Rzeszów Voivodeship. In 1946, an execution of anti-communist activists took place there (Public execution in Dębica (1946). In 1975, after administrative reform, counties in Poland ceased to exist and were replaced by numerous and small Voivodeships. Dębica again was moved - this time from Rzeszów to the newly created Tarnów Voivodeship. In the late 1970s Dębica gained importance as a centre of food and agriculture production.

Sports

There are two major sports clubs in Dębica. Klub Sportowy (Sports Club) Wisłoka, founded in 1908, is one of the oldest sports organizations in the country.

  • Wisłoka is famous for its wrestlers, who have won numerous medals in the Olympic Games, World and European Championships.
  • Other fields in which Wisłoka's athletes achieved significant achievements are: soccer, boxing, cycling and karate. The club was sponsored by Tire Company Dębica and it had its heyday in the 1970s.

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Famous personalities connected with Dębica

Sources

Debica - Wikipedia

Debica - The Shtetl