Pavoloch, also known as Pavolitch in Yiddish, Pawolotsch in Polish, and Pawolocz in Ukrainian, is a Shtetl in present day Ukraine.
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It is estimated that Pavoloch was founded sometime in the Bronze Age, and because it was a Shtetl, the majority of Pavoloch's inhabitants were Jews. The Jews in Pavoloch, like in many other Shtetls, were victims of constant prejudice. When they got fed up with being harassed, the citizens build a wooden fort around their Shtetl, which gave Pavoloch's inhabitants increased protection against invaders. It was a good thing that the people of Pavoloch built their fort, because their settlement was a constant pit-stop for advancing and retreating armies. Aside from the occasional prejudice, the Jews of Pavoloch lived in harmony with one another, with no fights breaking out among themselves.
In 1736, a rebellious paramilitary group, the Haidamakas, carried out a massacre against the Jews of Pavoloch, killing 35 people. When they finished pillaging the Shtetl, the killers hastily left. Ironically, only 3 decades afterwards, Pavoloch's population began to increase, with a total population of 1,041 in 1765. In 1910, Pavoloch's population swelled to 15,454 people.
During the Russian Civil War of 1917-1923, most of the inhabitants of Pavoloch left, most likely in fear of the encroaching Bolshevik army. The brave, remaining Jews stayed in Pavoloch, throughout the war. Sadly, the population continued to decline, up to World War 2, during Operation Barbarossa, when a Nazi Einsatzgruppen (SS) squad drove into Pavoloch. The Nazis rounded up all the Jews, and killed them, either with a firing squad, or with a machine gun. To this day, there are no Jews in Pavoloch.
Today, Pavoloch remains a historic community, visited by tourists, descendants of men and women who lived in the Shtetl, and people who are interested in its history.
Pavoloch is 100 km. southwest of Kiev, in the Zhytomyrska oblast.
Pavoloch's geography is fairly flat, with forested plains. It is on the Rostovista River, also known as the Dnieper Basin.