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Chełm

Chełm (Polish: [xɛwm] (listen); Ukrainian: Холм, romanizedKholm; German: Cholm; Yiddish: כעלם, romanizedKhelm) is a city in southeastern Poland with 60,231 inhabitants as of December 2021.[1] It is located to the south-east of Lublin, north of Zamość and south of Biała Podlaska, some 25 kilometres (16 miles) from the border with Ukraine. Chełm used to be the capital of the Chełm Voivodeship until it became part of the Lublin Voivodeship in 1999.

Chełm
Cathedral on Góra Chełmska
Chełm
Chełm
Coordinates: 51°07′56″N 23°28′40″E / 51.13222°N 23.47778°E / 51.13222; 23.47778Coordinates: 51°07′56″N 23°28′40″E / 51.13222°N 23.47778°E / 51.13222; 23.47778
Country Poland
Voivodeship Lublin
CountyCity County
Established10th century
City rights1235
Government
 • City mayorJakub Banaszek (PJG)
Area
 • Total35.28 km2 (13.62 sq mi)
Highest elevation
153 m (502 ft)
Lowest elevation
80 m (260 ft)
Population
 (31 December 2021)[1]
 • Total60,231
 • Density1,707/km2 (4,420/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
22-100 to 22-118
Area code+48 082
Car platesLC
Websitewww.chelm.pl

The city is of mostly industrial character, though it also features numerous notable historical monuments and tourist attractions in the Old Town. Chełm is a multiple (former) bishopric. Its name comes from the Proto-Slavic or Celtic word "cholm", a hill, in reference to the Wysoka Górka fortified settlement.[2] Chełm was once a vibrant multicultural and religious centre populated by Roman Catholics, Orthodox Christians, Protestants and Jews. The population was homogenized after World War II.

History

The first traces of settlement in the area of modern Chełm date back to at the least 9th century. The following century, a fortified town (gord) was created and initially served as a centre of pagan worship. The etymology of the name is unclear, though most scholars derive it from the Proto-Slavic noun denoting a flat hill. The town's centre is located on a hill called góra chełmska. However, it is also theorized that the name is derived from some Celtic root. In 981 the town, then inhabited by the Slavic tribe of Buzhans, was conquered by Kievan Rus', along with the surrounding Cherven Towns. According to a local legend, Vladimir the Great built the first stone castle there in 1001. Following the Polish capture of Kiev in 1018, the region returned to Poland before it fell back to Kievan rule in 1031.

In 1235, Danylo Romanovych of Halych granted the town a city charter and moved the capital of his domain in 1241–1272 after destruction of Halych by Mongols in 1240–1241. Danylo also built a new castle atop the hill in 1237, one of the few Ruthenian castles that withstood Mongol attacks, and established an Orthodox eparchy (diocese) centered at the Basilica of the Birth of the Virgin Mary. Until the 14th century, the town developed as part of Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia and then as part of the short-lived Princedom of Chełm and Belz (see Duchy of Belz). In 1366, king Casimir III the Great of Poland took control of the region after his victory in the Galicia–Volhynia Wars. On 4 January 1392, the town was relocated and granted rights under Magdeburg Law, with vast internal autonomy and the town saw an influx of Polish and other Catholic settlers.

A Latin Rite Catholic diocese of Chełm was created in 1359, but its seat was moved to Krasnystaw after 1480.[3] Renamed as Diocese of Chełm–Lublin in 1790, it was suppressed in 1805, but since 2005 Chełm is nominally restored and listed by the Catholic Church as Latin titular bishopric.[4]

The Orthodox bishopric entered communion with the see of Rome in the late 16th century as Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Chełm–Bełz, retaining its Byzantine Rite, but in 1867 it became part of the imperial Russian Orthodox Church,[3] and is now the Archdiocese of Lublin and Chełm of the Polish Orthodox Church.

The town was the capital of a historical region of the Land of Chełm, administratively a part of the Ruthenian Voivodeship in the Lesser Poland Province of the Polish Crown. The city prospered in the 15th and 16th centuries. It was then that The Golem of Chełm by Rabbi Elijah Ba'al Shem of Chelm became famous, but the city declined in the 17th century due to the wars which ravaged Poland. In the 18th century, the situation in eastern Poland stabilized and the town started to slowly recover from the damages suffered during the Swedish Deluge and the Khmelnytsky uprising. It attracted a number of new settlers from all parts of Poland, including people of Catholic, Orthodox, and Jewish faiths. In 1794, the Chełm Voivodeship was established. Chełm was one of the first towns to join the Kościuszko's Uprising later that year. In the Battle of Chełm of 8 June 1794, the forces of Gen. Józef Zajączek were defeated by the Russians under Valerian Zubov and Boris Lacy, the town was yet again sacked by the invading armies. The following year, as a result of the Third Partition of Poland, the town was annexed by Austria.

 
Łuczkowski Square

Age of partitions

During the Napoleonic Wars in 1809, in the effect of the Polish–Austrian War, the town was briefly part of the Duchy of Warsaw. However, the Congress of Vienna of 1815 awarded it to Imperial Russia. The town entered a period of decline as the local administrative and religious offices (including the bishopric) were moved to Lublin. In the mid-19th century, the Russian Army turned the town into a strong garrison, which made the Russian soldiers a significant part of the population. The period of decline ended in 1866, when the town was connected to a new railroad. In 1875, the Uniate bishopric was liquidated by the Russian authorities and all of the local Uniates were forcibly converted to the Russian Orthodox Church. In the late 19th century, the local administrative offices were restored and in 1912 a local gubernia was created. During the Russian revolution of 1905 in the city was established the Ukrainian enlightenment society of Prosvita.

 
Early 20th-century view of Chełm

During World War I, in 1915 most of the Ukrainian and Russian population was evacuated to Sloboda Ukraine and the Russia, after which percentage of the Polish population rose significantly.[citation needed] The city fell under Austrian occupation. On 3 May 1918, Chełm was the site of a large Polish manifestation, as over 15,000 Poles gathered to celebrate the Polish 3 May Constitution Day.[5] In September 1918, apostolic visitor Ambrogio Damiano Achille Ratti (future Pope Pius XI) visited the city, greeted by the local Polish population.[5] On 2 November 1918, local members of the Polish Military Organisation and students of local schools, led by Gustaw Orlicz-Dreszer, disarmed Austrian soldiers and liberated the city from Austrian rule, nine days before Poland officially regained independence.[5] Chełm was one of the first liberated Polish cities of the former Russian Partition of Poland.[5] The Polish 1st Cavalry Regiment was established in Chełm, which soon liberated the nearby towns of Włodawa and Hrubieszów.[5] In the interbellum, Chełm was a county seat, administratively located in the Lublin Voivodeship (1919–1939) of the Second Polish Republic.

World War II

 
Former synagogue building

During the joint German-Soviet invasion of Poland, which started World War II, on 27 September 1939 the invading Soviet Red Army occupied Chełm, but withdrew two weeks later in accordance with the German-Soviet Frontier Treaty. As early as 7–9 October 1939 the city was occupied by German forces and renamed Kulm.[6][7] At the beginning of the war, Chełm's population was around 33,000 of which 15,000 were Jewish. On Friday, 1 December 1939, at 8 o'clock, around 2000 Jewish men were driven at dawn to the market-square ("Okrąglak" or "Rynek") surrounded by the German SS formations and local indigenous officials.[8] They were forced on a death march to Hrubieszów. Hundreds were murdered on the march, others were tortured and beaten. They were marched to the Soviet border where they were forced to cross the river under gunfire.[9][10][11] Eventually perhaps 400 of the men survived the Death March and 1600 were slaughtered.[12]

In January 1940, the Germans murdered 440 patients of the local psychiatric hospital, including 17 children, as part of the Aktion T4.[13] In June 1940, during the AB-Aktion, the Germans carried out mass arrests of Poles, who were then imprisoned in Lublin, and then often deported to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, while some were murdered in the region.[14] The local Polish mayor was murdered in a massacre of over 115 Poles committed by the Gestapo in the nearby Kumowa Valley in 1940.[15] In late 1940, Jews were confined to a small portion of Chełm, living in very overcrowded conditions, up to several dozen a room. Jews were conscripted for forced labor near Chełm and in other locations. The German Reich established 16 forced labor camps in the new Lublin district. Locals from neighboring villages and towns of Chełm also were forced to work in these camps. (also Khelm or Kulm in German), Some of the camps were connected to the main railroad line through a 40 km (25 mi) railroad branch line to the killing camps.

In 1942, during Operation Reinhard, the highly secretive Bełżec, Treblinka, and the Sobibór extermination camps were built near the forced labor camps. Their purpose was to murder all Polish Jews.[16] In May 1942, 1000 elderly Chełm Jews were sent to the Sobibór extermination camp where they were immediately murdered. In August, 3000 to 4000 more were sent, including most of the children in the ghetto. In October, the SS and their Ukrainian auxiliaries rounded up and deported another 2000 to 3000 Jews to Sobibor. In November, the remaining Jews were marched to the railway station. Most were sent to Sobibor. Those in hiding were hunted, and the SS burned several ghetto buildings and killed many people who emerged from hiding. Some Jews remained in the ghetto as laborers, but they too were murdered in January 1943. There were only an estimated 60 Jews from Chełm who survived the Holocaust. Some survivors managed to find shelter in the Chełm Chalk Tunnels. However, as many as 400 others who fled to the east at the beginning of the war returned to Chełm but quickly moved on.[17]

 
Memorial dedicated to the victims of the Stalag 319 POW camp

Following the 1941 Operation Barbarossa the Germans established a prisoner-of-war camp in Chełm, called Stalag 319 for the Red Army soldiers captured in eastern Poland and Ukraine or Belarus, on top of prisoners brought in from the West (mostly France) for the total of some 200,000 until July 1944. In three years, some 90,000 prisoners lost their lives there. The monument commemorating the victims of Stalag 319 was unveiled in Chełm in May 2009 in the presence of foreign diplomats.[18]

From 1942 through to 1945, Chełm was one of numerous locations of the Volhynian massacres of Poles by supposed death squads of OUN-UPA and groups of Ukrainian nationalists. The city and its environs allegedly witnessed revenge killings as well,[19][20] between Ukrainians and its Polish self-defence.[21][22] As noted by historians Grzegorz Motyka and Volodymyr Viatrovych, the subject is highly controversial, because in 1944, Roman Shukhevych, leader of OUN-UPA, supposedly issued an order to fabricate proofs of Polish responsibility for war crimes committed there.[23][24]

Chełm in Jewish literature

 
Jewish cemetery in Chełm

By the end of World War II, only a remnant of Chełm's Jewish population of c. 18,000 survived. They managed to emigrate to Israel, the USA, Canada, Latin America, or South Africa. Chełm became well-known thanks to Jewish storytellers and writers such as Isaac Bashevis Singer, a Nobel Prize-winning novelist in the Yiddish language, who wrote The Fools of Chełm and Their History (published in English translation in 1973), and the great Yiddish poet Ovsey Driz [he; ru; uk; yi] who wrote stories in verse. Notable adaptations of the Chełm Jewish folklore include the comedy Chelmer Khakhomim ("The Wise Men of Chelm") by Aaron Zeitlin, The Heroes of Chelm (1942) by Shlomo Simon, published in English translation as The Wise Men of Helm (Simon, 1945) and More Wise Men of Helm (Simon, 1965), as well as the book Chelmer Khakhomim by Y. Y. Trunk.[25] Allen Mandelbaum's "Chelmaxioms : The Maxims, Axioms, Maxioms of Chelm" (David R. Godine, 1978) treats the wise men of the Jewish Chełm as scholars who are knowledgeable but lacking sense. The Chełm stories emulate the interpretive process of Midrash and the Talmudic style of argumentation,[26] and continue the dialogue between rabbinic texts and their manifestation in the daily arena.[27][28] The seemingly tangential questioning that is typical of the Chełm Jewish Council can be interpreted as a comedic hint at the vastness of Talmudic literature. The combination of paralleled argumentation and linguistic commonality allows the Jewish textual tradition, namely Talmudic, to shine through Chełm folklore.[29]

Demographics

 
Wysoka Górka, medieval hill fort

After Poland's independence, the Polish census of 1921 found a population of 23,221, with 12,064 Jews, 9,492 Roman Catholics (Poles), 1,369 Orthodox Christians (Ukrainian, Ruthenians and Belarusians) and 207 Lutherans (Germans).

In September 1939, at the onset of World War II, Jews constituted 60% (18,000) of the city's inhabitants.[30]

Number of inhabitants by year

Year Population Source
1995 69426   [1]
2000 69012  
2005 68160  
2010 66537  
2015 64270  
2020 61135  
2021 60231  

Sights and landmarks

The main landmarks and tourist attractions of the city are Góra Chełmska with the Baroque Basilica of the Birth of the Virgin Mary and the Chełm Chalk Tunnels, located underneath the city, a unique structure in Europe and the world. The town's main historic square is the Plac Łuczkowskiego (Łuczkowski Square), which is filled with colourful historic townhouses and contains a preserved old well.

Sports

Politics

 
Municipal office

Most influential Members of Parliament (Sejm) elected from the Biała Podlaska/Chełm/Zamość constituency (2006) included: Badach Tadeusz (SLD-UP), Bratkowski Arkadiusz (PSL), Byra Jan (SLD-UP), Janowski Zbigniew (SLD-UP), Kwiatkowski Marian (Samoobrona), Lewczuk Henryk (LPR), Michalski Jerzy (Samoobrona), Nikolski Lech (SLD-UP), Skomra Szczepan (SLD-UP), Stanibuła Ryszard (PSL),[31] Stefaniuk Franciszek (PSL), Żmijan Stanisław (PO) and Matuszczak Zbigniew (SLD).

Symbols

The flag of Chełm is a rectangle with 2:3 proportions, divided into two parallel, horizontal stripes of the same width (upper – white, lower – green). On the upper strip, in the center, there is the coat of arms of Chełm.

Notable people

International relations

Twin towns – Sister cities

Chełm is twinned with:

References

Notes
  1. ^ a b c "Local Data Bank". Statistics Poland. Retrieved 17 August 2022. Data for territorial unit 0662011.
  2. ^ "Historia miejscowości – Informacje o mieście – Chełm – Wirtualny Sztetl". sztetl.org.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  3. ^ a b Halina Lerski, Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966–1945 (ABC CLIO 1996 ISBN 978-0-313-03456-5), p. 63
  4. ^ Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 868
  5. ^ a b c d e "To był dla Chełma dobry rok". Super Tydzień Chełmski (in Polish). 10 November 2018. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  6. ^ "Communal History – Chelm". Encyclopedia Judaica 1972, Keter Publishing House Jerusalem Ltd. Chelmer Organization of Israel. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  7. ^ "The Jews of Chełm & Escape from Borek Forest". Holocaust Education & Archive Research Team. HolocaustResearchProject.org 2008. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  8. ^ Bakalczuk-Felin, Meilech and Moshe M. Shavit. "Preface". The History of the Jews in Chelm. JewishGen, Inc. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  9. ^ Berkenstat Freund, Gloria and Ben-Tzion Bruker, Lazar Kahan, Y. Herc, Yitzhak Groskop, J. Grinszpan. "The Slaughter of the Jews in Chelm". Destruction of Chelm. 2013 by JewishGen, Inc. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  10. ^ Meltzer, Rae and Dr. Philip Frydman. "The Beginning and the History of a Yiddish Community". The History of the Jews in Chelm. 2013 by JewishGen, Inc. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  11. ^ Berkenstat Freund, Gloria, Irene Szajewicz and Gitl Libhober. "Witness Testimony by Gitl Libhober". DESTRUCTION OF CHELM. 2013 by JewishGen, Inc. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  12. ^ Megargee, Geoffrey (2012). Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos. Bloomington, Indiana: University of Indiana Press. p. Volume II 623. ISBN 978-0-253-35599-7.
  13. ^ "440 krzewów dla uczczenia pamięci pomordowanych w 1940 roku". Radio BonTon Chełm 104.90 FM (in Polish). 24 October 2017. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
  14. ^ Gałan, Alina (2003). ""Akcja AB" na Lubelszczyźnie". Biuletyn Instytutu Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). No. 12-1 (35–36). IPN. p. 53. ISSN 1641-9561.
  15. ^ Gałan, p. 54
  16. ^ Aktion Reinhard Camps. Sobibor Labour Camps. 15 June 2006. ARC Website.
  17. ^ Dobroszycki, Lucjan (2012). Survivors of the Holocaust. Bloomington, Indiana: University of Indiana Press. pp. 72, 79. ISBN 978-1-56324-463-6.
  18. ^ Jacek Barczyński (8 May 2009). "Obóz Stalag 319". Media Regionalne. Dziennik Wschodni. Archive.is. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  19. ^ Ihor Ilyushin (11 September 2009), Chapter 5, pp. 264–266, in the Ukrainian language. From: Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. Institute of Ukrainian History, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine.
  20. ^ Grzegorz Motyka, Zapomnijcie o Giedroyciu: Polacy, Ukraińcy, IPN
  21. ^ "Orthodox New Martyrs canonized". The Byzantine Forum 2013. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  22. ^ Marples, David R. (2007). Heroes and villains: creating national history in contemporary Ukraine. Budapest: Central European University Press. p. 210. ISBN 9789637326981.
  23. ^ Motyka, Grzegorz (2011). Od rzezi wołyńskiej do Akcji "Wisła". Kraków: Wydawnictwo Literackie. p. 228. ISBN 978-83-08-04576-3. Sprawa dotyczyła wsi wymordowanych przez UPA.
  24. ^ Jasiak, Marek. "Overcoming Ukrainian Resistance", in Ther, Philipp; Siljak, Ana (2001). Redrawing nations: ethnic cleansing in East-Central Europe, 1944–1948. Oxford: Rowman & Littfield. p. 174.
  25. ^ "The Myth of Chełm in Jewish Literature"
  26. ^ Rogovin, Or. 'Chelm as Shtetl.' Prooftexts. 29.2 (2009): 242–272. Print.
  27. ^ Krakowski, Stefan; Kalish, Aryeh-Leib (2007). "Chelm". In Berenbaum, Michael; Skolnik, Fred (eds.). Encyclopaedia Judaica. Vol. 4 (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference. pp. 588–589. ISBN 978-0-02-866097-4 – via Gale Virtual Reference Library.
  28. ^ Herr, Moshe David (2007). "Midrash". In Berenbaum, Michael; Skolnik, Fred (eds.). Encyclopaedia Judaica. Vol. 14 (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference. pp. 182–185. ISBN 978-0-02-866097-4 – via Gale Virtual Reference Library.
  29. ^ Harshav, Benjamin. The Meaning of Yiddish United States of America: University of California Press, 1990. 112. Print.
  30. ^ Rosemary Horowitz. Memorial Books of Eastern European Jewry: Essays on the History and Meanings of Yizker Volumes. McFarland. 2011. pp. 73–74
  31. ^ Link in Polish 27 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine with relevant pop-ups.
  32. ^ . Sister Cities International. Archived from the original on 8 January 2015. Retrieved 25 March 2014.

External links

  • (In Polish) eChełm.pl
  • (In Polish)
  • Essay on the history of Chełm
  • Chełm in photography
  • Organization for Chelmers in Israel
  • Remember Jewish Chełm
  • "Here Their Stories Will Be Told..." The Valley of the Communities at Yad Vashem, Chełm, at Yad Vashem website.

chełm, this, article, about, city, lublin, voivodeship, other, places, with, same, name, chelm, disambiguation, legendary, city, fools, jewish, humor, chelm, polish, xɛwm, listen, ukrainian, Холм, romanized, kholm, german, cholm, yiddish, כעלם, romanized, khel. This article is about the city in Lublin Voivodeship For other places with the same name see Chelm disambiguation For the legendary city of fools see Jewish humor Chelm Chelm Polish xɛwm listen Ukrainian Holm romanized Kholm German Cholm Yiddish כעלם romanized Khelm is a city in southeastern Poland with 60 231 inhabitants as of December 2021 1 It is located to the south east of Lublin north of Zamosc and south of Biala Podlaska some 25 kilometres 16 miles from the border with Ukraine Chelm used to be the capital of the Chelm Voivodeship until it became part of the Lublin Voivodeship in 1999 ChelmCathedral on Gora ChelmskaFlagCoat of armsChelmShow map of Lublin VoivodeshipChelmShow map of PolandCoordinates 51 07 56 N 23 28 40 E 51 13222 N 23 47778 E 51 13222 23 47778 Coordinates 51 07 56 N 23 28 40 E 51 13222 N 23 47778 E 51 13222 23 47778Country PolandVoivodeship LublinCountyCity CountyEstablished10th centuryCity rights1235Government City mayorJakub Banaszek PJG Area Total35 28 km2 13 62 sq mi Highest elevation153 m 502 ft Lowest elevation80 m 260 ft Population 31 December 2021 1 Total60 231 Density1 707 km2 4 420 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code22 100 to 22 118Area code 48 082Car platesLCWebsitewww chelm plThe city is of mostly industrial character though it also features numerous notable historical monuments and tourist attractions in the Old Town Chelm is a multiple former bishopric Its name comes from the Proto Slavic or Celtic word cholm a hill in reference to the Wysoka Gorka fortified settlement 2 Chelm was once a vibrant multicultural and religious centre populated by Roman Catholics Orthodox Christians Protestants and Jews The population was homogenized after World War II Contents 1 History 1 1 Age of partitions 1 2 World War II 1 3 Chelm in Jewish literature 2 Demographics 2 1 Number of inhabitants by year 3 Sights and landmarks 4 Sports 5 Politics 5 1 Symbols 6 Notable people 7 International relations 7 1 Twin towns Sister cities 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThe first traces of settlement in the area of modern Chelm date back to at the least 9th century The following century a fortified town gord was created and initially served as a centre of pagan worship The etymology of the name is unclear though most scholars derive it from the Proto Slavic noun denoting a flat hill The town s centre is located on a hill called gora chelmska However it is also theorized that the name is derived from some Celtic root In 981 the town then inhabited by the Slavic tribe of Buzhans was conquered by Kievan Rus along with the surrounding Cherven Towns According to a local legend Vladimir the Great built the first stone castle there in 1001 Following the Polish capture of Kiev in 1018 the region returned to Poland before it fell back to Kievan rule in 1031 In 1235 Danylo Romanovych of Halych granted the town a city charter and moved the capital of his domain in 1241 1272 after destruction of Halych by Mongols in 1240 1241 Danylo also built a new castle atop the hill in 1237 one of the few Ruthenian castles that withstood Mongol attacks and established an Orthodox eparchy diocese centered at the Basilica of the Birth of the Virgin Mary Until the 14th century the town developed as part of Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia and then as part of the short lived Princedom of Chelm and Belz see Duchy of Belz In 1366 king Casimir III the Great of Poland took control of the region after his victory in the Galicia Volhynia Wars On 4 January 1392 the town was relocated and granted rights under Magdeburg Law with vast internal autonomy and the town saw an influx of Polish and other Catholic settlers Baroque Basilica of the Birth of the Virgin Mary A Latin Rite Catholic diocese of Chelm was created in 1359 but its seat was moved to Krasnystaw after 1480 3 Renamed as Diocese of Chelm Lublin in 1790 it was suppressed in 1805 but since 2005 Chelm is nominally restored and listed by the Catholic Church as Latin titular bishopric 4 The Orthodox bishopric entered communion with the see of Rome in the late 16th century as Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Chelm Belz retaining its Byzantine Rite but in 1867 it became part of the imperial Russian Orthodox Church 3 and is now the Archdiocese of Lublin and Chelm of the Polish Orthodox Church The town was the capital of a historical region of the Land of Chelm administratively a part of the Ruthenian Voivodeship in the Lesser Poland Province of the Polish Crown The city prospered in the 15th and 16th centuries It was then that The Golem of Chelm by Rabbi Elijah Ba al Shem of Chelm became famous but the city declined in the 17th century due to the wars which ravaged Poland In the 18th century the situation in eastern Poland stabilized and the town started to slowly recover from the damages suffered during the Swedish Deluge and the Khmelnytsky uprising It attracted a number of new settlers from all parts of Poland including people of Catholic Orthodox and Jewish faiths In 1794 the Chelm Voivodeship was established Chelm was one of the first towns to join the Kosciuszko s Uprising later that year In the Battle of Chelm of 8 June 1794 the forces of Gen Jozef Zajaczek were defeated by the Russians under Valerian Zubov and Boris Lacy the town was yet again sacked by the invading armies The following year as a result of the Third Partition of Poland the town was annexed by Austria Luczkowski Square Age of partitions Edit During the Napoleonic Wars in 1809 in the effect of the Polish Austrian War the town was briefly part of the Duchy of Warsaw However the Congress of Vienna of 1815 awarded it to Imperial Russia The town entered a period of decline as the local administrative and religious offices including the bishopric were moved to Lublin In the mid 19th century the Russian Army turned the town into a strong garrison which made the Russian soldiers a significant part of the population The period of decline ended in 1866 when the town was connected to a new railroad In 1875 the Uniate bishopric was liquidated by the Russian authorities and all of the local Uniates were forcibly converted to the Russian Orthodox Church In the late 19th century the local administrative offices were restored and in 1912 a local gubernia was created During the Russian revolution of 1905 in the city was established the Ukrainian enlightenment society of Prosvita Early 20th century view of Chelm During World War I in 1915 most of the Ukrainian and Russian population was evacuated to Sloboda Ukraine and the Russia after which percentage of the Polish population rose significantly citation needed The city fell under Austrian occupation On 3 May 1918 Chelm was the site of a large Polish manifestation as over 15 000 Poles gathered to celebrate the Polish 3 May Constitution Day 5 In September 1918 apostolic visitor Ambrogio Damiano Achille Ratti future Pope Pius XI visited the city greeted by the local Polish population 5 On 2 November 1918 local members of the Polish Military Organisation and students of local schools led by Gustaw Orlicz Dreszer disarmed Austrian soldiers and liberated the city from Austrian rule nine days before Poland officially regained independence 5 Chelm was one of the first liberated Polish cities of the former Russian Partition of Poland 5 The Polish 1st Cavalry Regiment was established in Chelm which soon liberated the nearby towns of Wlodawa and Hrubieszow 5 In the interbellum Chelm was a county seat administratively located in the Lublin Voivodeship 1919 1939 of the Second Polish Republic World War II Edit Former synagogue building During the joint German Soviet invasion of Poland which started World War II on 27 September 1939 the invading Soviet Red Army occupied Chelm but withdrew two weeks later in accordance with the German Soviet Frontier Treaty As early as 7 9 October 1939 the city was occupied by German forces and renamed Kulm 6 7 At the beginning of the war Chelm s population was around 33 000 of which 15 000 were Jewish On Friday 1 December 1939 at 8 o clock around 2000 Jewish men were driven at dawn to the market square Okraglak or Rynek surrounded by the German SS formations and local indigenous officials 8 They were forced on a death march to Hrubieszow Hundreds were murdered on the march others were tortured and beaten They were marched to the Soviet border where they were forced to cross the river under gunfire 9 10 11 Eventually perhaps 400 of the men survived the Death March and 1600 were slaughtered 12 In January 1940 the Germans murdered 440 patients of the local psychiatric hospital including 17 children as part of the Aktion T4 13 In June 1940 during the AB Aktion the Germans carried out mass arrests of Poles who were then imprisoned in Lublin and then often deported to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp while some were murdered in the region 14 The local Polish mayor was murdered in a massacre of over 115 Poles committed by the Gestapo in the nearby Kumowa Valley in 1940 15 In late 1940 Jews were confined to a small portion of Chelm living in very overcrowded conditions up to several dozen a room Jews were conscripted for forced labor near Chelm and in other locations The German Reich established 16 forced labor camps in the new Lublin district Locals from neighboring villages and towns of Chelm also were forced to work in these camps also Khelm or Kulm in German Some of the camps were connected to the main railroad line through a 40 km 25 mi railroad branch line to the killing camps In 1942 during Operation Reinhard the highly secretive Belzec Treblinka and the Sobibor extermination camps were built near the forced labor camps Their purpose was to murder all Polish Jews 16 In May 1942 1000 elderly Chelm Jews were sent to the Sobibor extermination camp where they were immediately murdered In August 3000 to 4000 more were sent including most of the children in the ghetto In October the SS and their Ukrainian auxiliaries rounded up and deported another 2000 to 3000 Jews to Sobibor In November the remaining Jews were marched to the railway station Most were sent to Sobibor Those in hiding were hunted and the SS burned several ghetto buildings and killed many people who emerged from hiding Some Jews remained in the ghetto as laborers but they too were murdered in January 1943 There were only an estimated 60 Jews from Chelm who survived the Holocaust Some survivors managed to find shelter in the Chelm Chalk Tunnels However as many as 400 others who fled to the east at the beginning of the war returned to Chelm but quickly moved on 17 Memorial dedicated to the victims of the Stalag 319 POW camp Following the 1941 Operation Barbarossa the Germans established a prisoner of war camp in Chelm called Stalag 319 for the Red Army soldiers captured in eastern Poland and Ukraine or Belarus on top of prisoners brought in from the West mostly France for the total of some 200 000 until July 1944 In three years some 90 000 prisoners lost their lives there The monument commemorating the victims of Stalag 319 was unveiled in Chelm in May 2009 in the presence of foreign diplomats 18 From 1942 through to 1945 Chelm was one of numerous locations of the Volhynian massacres of Poles by supposed death squads of OUN UPA and groups of Ukrainian nationalists The city and its environs allegedly witnessed revenge killings as well 19 20 between Ukrainians and its Polish self defence 21 22 As noted by historians Grzegorz Motyka and Volodymyr Viatrovych the subject is highly controversial because in 1944 Roman Shukhevych leader of OUN UPA supposedly issued an order to fabricate proofs of Polish responsibility for war crimes committed there 23 24 Chelm in Jewish literature Edit Jewish cemetery in Chelm Further information Jewish humour Chelm By the end of World War II only a remnant of Chelm s Jewish population of c 18 000 survived They managed to emigrate to Israel the USA Canada Latin America or South Africa Chelm became well known thanks to Jewish storytellers and writers such as Isaac Bashevis Singer a Nobel Prize winning novelist in the Yiddish language who wrote The Fools of Chelm and Their History published in English translation in 1973 and the great Yiddish poet Ovsey Driz he ru uk yi who wrote stories in verse Notable adaptations of the Chelm Jewish folklore include the comedy Chelmer Khakhomim The Wise Men of Chelm by Aaron Zeitlin The Heroes of Chelm 1942 by Shlomo Simon published in English translation as The Wise Men of Helm Simon 1945 and More Wise Men of Helm Simon 1965 as well as the book Chelmer Khakhomim by Y Y Trunk 25 Allen Mandelbaum s Chelmaxioms The Maxims Axioms Maxioms of Chelm David R Godine 1978 treats the wise men of the Jewish Chelm as scholars who are knowledgeable but lacking sense The Chelm stories emulate the interpretive process of Midrash and the Talmudic style of argumentation 26 and continue the dialogue between rabbinic texts and their manifestation in the daily arena 27 28 The seemingly tangential questioning that is typical of the Chelm Jewish Council can be interpreted as a comedic hint at the vastness of Talmudic literature The combination of paralleled argumentation and linguistic commonality allows the Jewish textual tradition namely Talmudic to shine through Chelm folklore 29 Demographics Edit Wysoka Gorka medieval hill fort After Poland s independence the Polish census of 1921 found a population of 23 221 with 12 064 Jews 9 492 Roman Catholics Poles 1 369 Orthodox Christians Ukrainian Ruthenians and Belarusians and 207 Lutherans Germans In September 1939 at the onset of World War II Jews constituted 60 18 000 of the city s inhabitants 30 Number of inhabitants by year Edit Year Population Source1995 69426 1 2000 69012 2005 68160 2010 66537 2015 64270 2020 61135 2021 60231 Sights and landmarks Edit Chelm Chalk Tunnels The main landmarks and tourist attractions of the city are Gora Chelmska with the Baroque Basilica of the Birth of the Virgin Mary and the Chelm Chalk Tunnels located underneath the city a unique structure in Europe and the world The town s main historic square is the Plac Luczkowskiego Luczkowski Square which is filled with colourful historic townhouses and contains a preserved old well Sports EditChelmianka Chelm Polish football club playing in the III liga AZS Chelm women basketball team 7th place in Sharp Torell Basket Liga in 2003 2004 seasonPolitics Edit Municipal office Most influential Members of Parliament Sejm elected from the Biala Podlaska Chelm Zamosc constituency 2006 included Badach Tadeusz SLD UP Bratkowski Arkadiusz PSL Byra Jan SLD UP Janowski Zbigniew SLD UP Kwiatkowski Marian Samoobrona Lewczuk Henryk LPR Michalski Jerzy Samoobrona Nikolski Lech SLD UP Skomra Szczepan SLD UP Stanibula Ryszard PSL 31 Stefaniuk Franciszek PSL Zmijan Stanislaw PO and Matuszczak Zbigniew SLD Symbols Edit The flag of Chelm is a rectangle with 2 3 proportions divided into two parallel horizontal stripes of the same width upper white lower green On the upper strip in the center there is the coat of arms of Chelm Notable people EditElijah Ba al Shem of Chelm 1550 1583 notable Jewish rabbi Solomon ben Moses of Chelm 1715 16 1781 notable rabbinic scholar Anna Ania Dabrowska born 1981 singer and songwriter Ida Haendel 1928 2020 classical violinist Mykhailo Hrushevsky 1866 1934 Ukrainian historian and politician Edward Ihnatowicz 1926 1988 cybernetic art sculptor Renata Reisfeld born 1930 Israeli chemist Rose Schneiderman 1882 1972 feminist and labor leader Joseph Serchuk 1919 1993 Sobibor uprising survivor and Jewish partisan Jozef Szydlowski 1896 1988 aircraft engine designer Szmul Zygielbojm 1895 1943 Bund leaderInternational relations EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Poland Twin towns Sister cities Edit Chelm is twinned with Kovel Ukraine Morlaix France Utena Lithuania Sindelfingen Germany Knoxville Tennessee US 32 References EditNotes a b c Local Data Bank Statistics Poland Retrieved 17 August 2022 Data for territorial unit 0662011 Historia miejscowosci Informacje o miescie Chelm Wirtualny Sztetl sztetl org pl in Polish Retrieved 2 February 2017 a b Halina Lerski Historical Dictionary of Poland 966 1945 ABC CLIO 1996 ISBN 978 0 313 03456 5 p 63 Annuario Pontificio 2013 Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978 88 209 9070 1 p 868 a b c d e To byl dla Chelma dobry rok Super Tydzien Chelmski in Polish 10 November 2018 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Communal History Chelm Encyclopedia Judaica 1972 Keter Publishing House Jerusalem Ltd Chelmer Organization of Israel Retrieved 14 July 2013 The Jews of Chelm amp Escape from Borek Forest Holocaust Education amp Archive Research Team HolocaustResearchProject org 2008 Retrieved 14 July 2013 Bakalczuk Felin Meilech and Moshe M Shavit Preface The History of the Jews in Chelm JewishGen Inc Retrieved 14 July 2013 Berkenstat Freund Gloria and Ben Tzion Bruker Lazar Kahan Y Herc Yitzhak Groskop J Grinszpan The Slaughter of the Jews in Chelm Destruction of Chelm 2013 by JewishGen Inc Retrieved 14 July 2013 Meltzer Rae and Dr Philip Frydman The Beginning and the History of a Yiddish Community The History of the Jews in Chelm 2013 by JewishGen Inc Retrieved 14 July 2013 Berkenstat Freund Gloria Irene Szajewicz and Gitl Libhober Witness Testimony by Gitl Libhober DESTRUCTION OF CHELM 2013 by JewishGen Inc Retrieved 14 July 2013 Megargee Geoffrey 2012 Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos Bloomington Indiana University of Indiana Press p Volume II 623 ISBN 978 0 253 35599 7 440 krzewow dla uczczenia pamieci pomordowanych w 1940 roku Radio BonTon Chelm 104 90 FM in Polish 24 October 2017 Retrieved 14 February 2021 Galan Alina 2003 Akcja AB na Lubelszczyznie Biuletyn Instytutu Pamieci Narodowej in Polish No 12 1 35 36 IPN p 53 ISSN 1641 9561 Galan p 54 Aktion Reinhard Camps Sobibor Labour Camps 15 June 2006 ARC Website Dobroszycki Lucjan 2012 Survivors of the Holocaust Bloomington Indiana University of Indiana Press pp 72 79 ISBN 978 1 56324 463 6 Jacek Barczynski 8 May 2009 Oboz Stalag 319 Media Regionalne Dziennik Wschodni Archive is Retrieved 10 August 2013 Ihor Ilyushin 11 September 2009 Rozdil 5 Bojovi diyi OUN i UPA na antipolskomu froii Chapter 5 pp 264 266 in the Ukrainian language From Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the Ukrainian Insurgent Army Institute of Ukrainian History Academy of Sciences of Ukraine Grzegorz Motyka Zapomnijcie o Giedroyciu Polacy Ukraincy IPN Orthodox New Martyrs canonized The Byzantine Forum 2013 Retrieved 14 July 2013 Marples David R 2007 Heroes and villains creating national history in contemporary Ukraine Budapest Central European University Press p 210 ISBN 9789637326981 Motyka Grzegorz 2011 Od rzezi wolynskiej do Akcji Wisla Krakow Wydawnictwo Literackie p 228 ISBN 978 83 08 04576 3 Sprawa dotyczyla wsi wymordowanych przez UPA Jasiak Marek Overcoming Ukrainian Resistance in Ther Philipp Siljak Ana 2001 Redrawing nations ethnic cleansing in East Central Europe 1944 1948 Oxford Rowman amp Littfield p 174 The Myth of Chelm in Jewish Literature Rogovin Or Chelm as Shtetl Prooftexts 29 2 2009 242 272 Print Krakowski Stefan Kalish Aryeh Leib 2007 Chelm In Berenbaum Michael Skolnik Fred eds Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 4 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference pp 588 589 ISBN 978 0 02 866097 4 via Gale Virtual Reference Library Herr Moshe David 2007 Midrash In Berenbaum Michael Skolnik Fred eds Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 14 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference pp 182 185 ISBN 978 0 02 866097 4 via Gale Virtual Reference Library Harshav Benjamin The Meaning of Yiddish United States of America University of California Press 1990 112 Print Rosemary Horowitz Memorial Books of Eastern European Jewry Essays on the History and Meanings of Yizker Volumes McFarland 2011 pp 73 74 Link in Polish Archived 27 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine with relevant pop ups City Directory Sister Cities International Archived from the original on 8 January 2015 Retrieved 25 March 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chelm Chelm official English language home page In Polish eChelm pl In Polish Chelm Online Essay on the history of Chelm Chelm in photography Organization for Chelmers in Israel Remember Jewish Chelm Here Their Stories Will Be Told The Valley of the Communities at Yad Vashem Chelm at Yad Vashem website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chelm amp oldid 1123215192, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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