Two Jews of Slonim, Mayer Abramovich and Hessel Mordukhovich, were charged in 1583 with having tortured the prisoner Vasili Ivanovich, who was accused of having murdered the Jews Yakub Heimelovich and Hersh Davidovich. In the books of the custom-house of Brest-Litovsk for 1583 Jewish merchants of Slonim are mentioned among the exporters of merchandise to Lublin.
The Jewish community of Slonim began to prosper in the second half of the eighteenth century, when Hetman Michael Oginski became the elder of the town and built there a palace, a theater, and many other buildings, established a printing-office, and laid the foundation of the Oginski Canal, which developed trade and industry by connecting the River Shara with the Dnieper. In 1795 Slonim became the capital of the government of the same name, but in the following year it became a district town, and since 1801 it has been part of the government of Grodno. Slonim has the usual charitable institutions, likewise seven synagogues and many prayer-houses. Among the rabbis who have officiated there may be mentioned Judah Löw ben Moses ha-Levi EDEL and Joshua Isaac ben Jehiel Schapiro (died there Dec. 3, 1872). The present (1905) rabbi is Judah Viernikowski. Among other prominent Slonim Jews of the nineteenth century may be mentioned Abraham Samuel Tenzer, Hirsch Arkin, Hillel Lipstein, Mordecai Rosenblum, Mordecai Samuel Weinikov, Eleazar Klaczko, Mendel Miller, Hayyim Pomeranz, Markel Shershevski, Noah Blostein, Isaac Elikowitz, Joshua Heshel Horodisch, and Asher Edelstein.
According to the census of 1897, the city of Slonim had a total population of 15,893 of whom about 10,588 were Jews; the population of the district was 213,611, including about 21,000 Jews.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Regesty i Nadpisi, S.V.; Russko-Yevreiski Arkhiv, vol. ii., Nos. 87, 260, 261; Suvalski, Keneset ha-Gedolah, p. 79, Warsaw, 1879.
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Slonim street map. ![]()
Slonim Jewish cemetery. (undated by Vitaly Pruss of the Belarus Jewish community)
Slonim Jewish cemetery. (undated by Vitaly Pruss of the Belarus Jewish community)
Slonim synagogue. (from the Union of Religious Jewish Congregations of the Republic of Belarus 5763 calendar, contributed by Yuri Dorn (iro@open.by))
Slonim synagogue. Today it is in terrible condition. (undated by Vitaly Pruss of the Belarus Jewish community)
Slonim synagogue. Today it is in terrible condition. (undated by Vitaly Pruss of the Belarus Jewish community)
Slonim synagogue. Today it is undergoing restorations. (undated by Vitaly Pruss of the Belarus Jewish community)
Slonim synagogue. Today it is undergoing restorations. (undated by Vitaly Pruss of the Belarus Jewish community)
Slonim synagogue. Today it is undergoing restorations. (undated by Vitaly Pruss of the Belarus Jewish community)
Slonim yeshiva. Today it is a dwelling house. (undated by Vitaly Pruss of the Belarus Jewish community)
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