Naraiv
Narayiv, Narajiv (Ukrainian: Нараїв; Polish: Narajów; Russian: Нараев, romanized: Narayev; Yiddish: נאראיעוו, romanized: Narayev; Hebrew: נאראיוב, romanized: Narayuv) is the largest village (of 1.799 people) in Berezhany Raion (district) of Ternopil Oblast (province) in the western part of Ukraine. It is within Eastern Galicia, former Austrian empire (until 1918). In the past it was a town. The first historical mention dates to 1445. Narayiv is situated along the small river of Narayivka, a tributary of Zolota Lypa in a picturesque natural surrounding of vast beech and hornbeam forests and fertile rolling hills (western part of Podolian Upland, ethno-geographic area of Galician Opillya).
Narayiv lies on the road between Berezhany and Peremyshlyany, right in the middle between the two cities, and consists of 2 parts - Narayiv Misto (Narayiv the town) and Narayiv Selo (Narayiv the village).
Population
Currently Narayiv has 1.799 inhabitants, mostly Galician Ukrainians.
In the year 1900, "Narayiv Town" had 2851 inhabitants. Among those were: 1451 Ukrainians/Ruthenians (Greek Catholics), 458 Poles (Roman Catholic faith), 928 Jews and 14 others. In 1939, "Narayiv Town´s" population numbered already 3910 inhabitants. Among them 1980 Ukrainians (Greek-Catholics), 520 Poles (Roman Catholic faith), 330 Roman Catholics (Ukrainians/Poles), 30 Polish colonizers newcomers and 780 Jews.
In 1900 "Narayiv Selo" had 1139 inhabitants. Among them: 856 Ukrainians, 205 Poles and 78 Jews and some decades later in 1939 it grew to 1740 inhabitants. Among them: 1160 Ukrainians, 25 Poles, 330 Roman Catholics (Ukrainians/Poles), 200 Polish colonizers newcomers and 25 Jews.
Jewish and Polish communities
Prior to the war there was a Jewish community in Narayiv of 805 Jews (in 1939), the most of whom were annihilated during the Holocaust. Some survivors immigrated in Israel. Around 1945, most of the local Poles (775) had been deported to western Poland.
The First Narayever Congregation, a Jewish synagogue in downtown Toronto, was founded in 1914 by Jewish immigrants from Narayiv in the early 20th century.
Holocaust in Narayiv
In the autumn of 1942, the day after Yom Kippur holiday, the brutal German soldiers arrived from Berezhany gathering all the Narayiv Jews who were not able to find a hideout and took them by trucks to Berezhany. From there to the Belzec Death Camp in Belzec, Poland. After about a month and a half, the Narayiv was declared "Judenfrei".[1]
Communications
There are daily bus connections between Narayiv and Berezhany, as well as between Narayiv and Lviv. Direct daily buses for Narayiv leave from the secondary bus terminal at the end of Lychakivska Street in Lviv or the daily bus route (twice a day) for Berezhany (which stops at Narayiv) from the main city terminal in Lviv.
Postal code for Narayiv is 47513.
The closest international airports to Narayiv, in the order of proximity, are:
- Lviv International Airport, in Lviv (LWO), 65,8 km away
- Ivano-Frankivsk International Airport, in Ivano-Frankivsk (IFO), 72,4 km away
- Chernivtsi International Airport, in Chernivtsi (CWC), 161,4 km away
- Rzeszów International Airport, in Rzeszow (RZE), Poland, 207,2 km. away
Nearby locations
The direct line distances between Narayiv and nearby locations. Road distances might be slightly longer.
- Rohachyn - 7,8 km.
- Kuriany - 11,3 km.
- Urman - 13,7 km.
- Berezhany - 15 km., district center
- Pomoryany - 16 km.
- Rohatyn - 17 km.
- Peremyshlyany - 21,5 km.
- Svirzh - 27 km.
- Kozova - 29 km.
- Zolochiv - 31 km.
- Ternopil - 59 km., regional center
- Lviv - 63 km., the biggest city in the entire region
- Ivano-Frankivsk - 68 km., second biggest city in the region
Places of interest in the area
- Univ Lavra (24 km) - the major Ukrainian Greek-Catholic monastery (of Studite brethren) in the area in the village of Univ near Peremyshlyany.
- Berezhany Castle (15 km) - built between the 1530s and 1540s by Mikołaj Sieniawski as the main residence of the Sieniawski magnate family.
- Svirzh Castle (27 km) - a fortified aristocratic residence in Svirzh, surrounded on all sides by moats, lakes, and marshes.
People
- Levko Riznyk, Ukrainian writer,
- Moyshe Nadir, Jewish Yiddish language writer.
External links
- Informational website about Narayiv
- Official data about the village (in Ukrainian)
- Narayev, Ukraine
- Narayiv entry in the Geographical Dictionary of the Polish Kingdom (in Polish)
- Weather in Narayiv
- Narayiv synagogue "The First Narayever Congregation" in Toronto, founded by Narayiv Jews
- History of the Jewish community in Narayiv
References
- ^ "Chana Roten (Lushk). My happenings during the Nazi occupation. The Narajow Book in "Brzezany Memorial Book", 1978". by JewishGen, Inc. Retrieved 2013-08-15.