Alternate names: Balbieriškis [Lith], Balbirishok [Yid], Balwierzyszki [Pol], Bal'verzhishki [Rus], Balberiskis, Balbirishuk, Balbirshuk, Balkerishki, Barbircheff, Bal'berishkis, Bal'biyerishkis, Balbieriškio, Russian: Бальвержишки. באַלבירישאָק-Yiddish. 54°32' N, 23°53' E, 21 miles E of Marijampolė, 11 miles NW of Alytus. On the left bank of the Neiman River, the town developed adjacent to the large estate established by German lumberman Hanus, who received a plot of land in wilderness of Suvalkija from Grand Duke Sigismund I the Old. The town was granted "the privilege" in 1530 [city privileges] and then lost it in 1776 during Prussia rule [1795-1807] due to diminished population. After Napoleon's 1815 defeat, Blbieriskis became Russian and then part of Suvalki Province where it developed into an important commercial center. 1897 Jewish population: 925. [March 2009]
Yizkors: Pinkasim fun Balbirishuk, Zidik, Yurbarik, Kovne, Vilne, Shnadau, Shkod, Mestislav Hadash, Pruzhani . Pinkas ha-kehilot; entsiklopediya shel ha-yishuvim le-min hivasdam ve-ad le-aher shoat milhemet ha-olam ha-sheniya: Lithuania (Jerusalem, 1996). Lite (vol. 1) (New York, 1951). 2001 population: 1180.
genealogical information [October 2012]
MASS GRAVES:
Prienai northern outskirts; 142; pic. # 215-216. Marijampole, near the barracks; 120; pic. # 159. Source: US Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad
Lithuania Jewish Cemetery Project has photo of the memorial that reads as follows: "My dear uncles, Rabbi Vainerio Pinchaso, Dovo, son of Zalmano and his wife Sarah, daughter of Rabbi Lev killed criminals along with the entire sacred Balbieriškis community as well as his sisters Toibės and Beilės Vainer and their aunts Feigl and her husband, Michalevičių Moišės the people killed in 1941 in Kaunas, Lithuania. amžinajam remembers.
Teatkeršija God for their blood. Let there be įpintos in the life of the soul in their unit." [Aug 2015]
OLD CEMETERY: The Jewish cemetery is in a pasture just off the Alytus-Balbieriskis road, to the right before reaching the town heading north. No road or path exists to the cemetery.
I visited the Balbieriskis Jewish cemetery on July 31, 1997 with guide Regina Kopilevich. Balbieriskis is north of Alytus in the Marijampole district of Lithuania. The Jewish cemetery is in a pasture just off the Alytus-Balbieriskis road, to the right before one reaches the town heading north. No road or path exists to the cemetery, so one must walk through a cow pasture to reach it. A wooden fence encloses the cemetery. The entrance is through a concrete archway marked with a plaque in Hebrew, Yiddish and Lithuanian reading "Old Jewish Cemetery." About 50 gravestones date from the 19th and 20th centuries, many with last names. The cemetery is in fairly good condition. The upright stones are very legible with very little overgrowth. Source: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Brooklyn, NY [date?]
2004: some overgrowth and the archway had lost its plaque. The cemetery is in a pasture just off the Alytus-Balbieriskis road and to the right before one reaches the town heading north. No road or path exists to the cemetery.
There was not much evidence of a Jewish past left, but an existing Jewish cemetery just outside of the town is in a pasture just off the Alytus-Balbieriskis road to the right before one reaches the town heading north. No road or path exists to the cemetery. One must walk through a cow pasture to reach it. A wooden fence encloses the site. The entrance is through a concrete archway had a plaque in Hebrew, Yiddish and Lithuanian reading "Old Jewish Cemetery" that disappeared in 2004. About fifty gravestones date from the 19th and 20th centuries, many with last names. The site is about 1/4 mi (or km?) south of the town, not very visible from the road. photos of gravestones. [March 2009]
Cemetery information. photos and gravestone photos. [September 2010]
NEW CEMETERY: no longer exists. [March 2009]