<p>The Jewish residents of Ustilug lived in peace for many generations raising their children to continue their forefathers' traditions.&nbsp;Igor Stravinsky the famed composer of The Firebird and&nbsp;The Rite of Spring maintained a country estate for many years in Ustilug where he worked on a number of his compositions.&nbsp;Stravinsky himself described Ustilug in his book Expositions and Developments as a <em>mistyechko</em> a little place out of Isaac Babel or Chagall the coziest and most affectionate community imaginable.</p><p>World War I however and the aftereffects of the war were terribly destructive to the Jewish community of Ustilug whose fortunes plummeted.&nbsp;As a result many were forced to move away.&nbsp;But over time the situation improved and the town thrived until by 1935 Ustilug's mostly Jewish population had reached approximately 4000.&nbsp;There were two libraries one for Hebrew and one for Yiddish a number of wood mills several craftsman cattle dealers an orphanage an expanded Jewish school and 12 shuls one for each of the Tribes of Israel.</p><p>And then on the morning of June 22 1941 everything changed.&nbsp;On that day the Germans bombarded Ustilug heavily as war broke out between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany.&nbsp;By October of that same year 900 residents had been killed and by September 1942 all of the Jews of Ustilug were gone.</p><p>This book is a memorial to the people and the town of Ustilug written by former residents who either escaped or left before the war began.&nbsp;Originally compiled and published in Israel in 1961 in Yiddish and in Hebrew.&nbsp;Edited by Aryeh Avinadav.&nbsp;</p>
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