I would like to tell about a place where about 30 executed Jews are buried. [...] In the autumn of 1942 about 50 Jews were brought, most probably of Hungarian origin, to Fajsławice in Krasnystaw County, Lublin Voivodeship, which was once under German management. They were hired to do some melioration work in the former Fajsławice estate. [...] As a result of hard work and superhuman effort, poor nutrition and brutal treatment, they died or were killed. Their co-workers would carry bodies and bury them near the park at the pond every morning. [...] It all can be confirmed by Aleksander Prokop, the former farmer in Fajsławice estate, who gained land as a result of agricultural reform and who still cultivates his land there. The bones of executed people are buried in one part of his field. |