Szczurowa massacre
| Szczurowa massacre | |
|---|---|
| Part of Romani Holocaust | |
| Location | 50°06′59″N 20°38′14″E / 50.11639°N 20.63722°E Szczurowa, Poland |
| Date | 3 August 1943 |
| Target | Romani people |
Attack type | Extermination, mass murder |
| Weapons | Guns |
| Deaths | 93 Romani |
| Perpetrators | German Nazi occupiers |
| Part of a series on |
| Romani people |
|---|
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Romani people by sub-group |
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Romani diaspora by country
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The massacre in Szczurowa was the murder of 93 Romani people, including children, women and the elderly, by German Nazi occupiers in the Polish village of Szczurowa on 3 July 1943. Between ten and twenty families of settled Romani had lived in Szczurowa for generations, alongside ethnic Poles with whom they had friendly and neighborly relations. They were integrated enough into the general community that several mixed marriages existed.