
Olkeniki in Flames; A Memorial Book to the Community of Olkenik in the Vilna District (Valkininkai, Lithuania) - Hardcover
Olkeniki in Flames; A Memorial Book to the Community of Olkenik in the Vilna District (Valkininkai, Lithuania) - Hardcover
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by Shlomo Farber (Editor), Nina Schwartz (Cover Design by), Stefanie Holzman (Index by)
Valkininkai is a small town in what is now Lithuania about 30 miles southwest of the capital Vilnius. Prior to World War II, it had been part of the Russian Empire and later Poland. The Russians and Poles called it Olkeniki. After the German occupation during the war, it was annexed by the Soviet Union but emerged as an independent state in 1990, becoming the first Soviet Republic to break away from Moscow.
The town sat along the so-called "kings road", which led from Vilnius to Krakow and consisted of about 10 streets and alleys, all of which were concentrated around a large market. The houses of the Jews were mostly one-story wooden houses, covered with wooden shingles. In 1897, the population included 1126 Jews among 2619 inhabitants. Many earned livings as traders or craftsmen or by providing accommodations to travelers along the Kings Road. The surrounding forests also were a source of a thriving timber trade operated by the town's Jews.
At the end of the 19th century, Jews constructed an extraordinary wooden synagogue in Baroque style with oak carvings and wooden decorations inside that amazed both locals and passers-by. It stood from 1800 to 1941 when it was destroyed by a bomb dropped by a Nazi airplane that ignited a fire that also consumed most of the town's buildings. The book has a long chapter detailing the synagogue's history.
The Germans seized the town in June 1941 and, by Rosh Hashanah at the end of September, its Jews had been sent to the nearby town of Eisiskes, where they were shot, along with the Jews of the area's other localities. The few who survived in the ghettos, in the forests, in Siberia, and in the Red Army, returned to the town in 1944 to find it destroyed. The square of the old synagogue and the Beit Midrash was desolated, and weeds had overgrown their foundations. The Holocaust section of the book contains detailed accounts of the travails the people suffered during this period.
The book also contains two reference materials: a list of the names of townspeople who survived the Holocaust and important dates in the life of the town, spanning the years from the late 16th century to its end in 1941.



















