"Kamień" means stone in Polish, "Kamin" fireplace in German, the suffix "-ski" means of or from, "Koszyr"' is an ancient prominent Polish family name, or "Kashyr" aka "Kasher" means kosher or 49 in Hebrew
People/Ethnicity
The area has been historically a mix of Polish, Russian, Ukrainian and Jewish people for more than a millennium. The region has been subject to a great many wars, pogroms, rulers and empires for centuries, including Habsburg, Polish Lithuania, Prussia, Poland, Russia, and German. It is now part of Ukraine. Major religions practiced include: Catholic, Russian Orthodox, Ukrainian Orthodox, and Judaism. As of the turn of the century 1900, the area was reported populated by villages of Christian farmers and a few Jewish villages engaged in trade, artisans, and professionals.
History
Great Soviet Russian Encyclopedia says “Kamen-Kashirskiy is on the river Zyr, a tributary of the River Pripet : the town was known already at the beginning of the 12th. Century. Situated in Wolyn.” The Encyclopaedia Judaica comments: "Kamen-Kashirskiy, a small town in Poland, the county of Polesia. In 1847 there were 862 Jews living there; in 1897 there were 1189 Jews ; in 1921 – 716 Jews." It was part of Second Polish Republic between 1918 and 1939 was a powiat center in Polesie Voivodeship. Just prior to the outbreak of World War II on September I, 1939, it is estimated that more than 2000 Jews lived in the town. On August 1, 1941, a squadron of the 2nd Cavalry Regiment arrived in the town from Ratno. One day later, they arrested and shot 8 male Jews. On August 22, 1941, a detachment of the Security Police subordinated to Einsatzgruppe C arrested all Jewish males aged between 16 and 60. The next day, they shot 80 male Jews in a forest 5 kilometers west of the town. In the fall of 1941, the Jews were ordered to inhabit an “open ghetto” but in March 1942, this ghetto, by the order of the Gebietskommissar, became an “enclosed ghetto”. Altogether, 2 300 Jews resided in the ghetto area. The first mass action was perpetrated on August 10, 1942, by the German Security Police from Brzesc with the assistance of the local German Gendarmerie and the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police. Some 50 families were shot in the Jewish cemetery as well as 130 Gypsies. On November 2, 1942, 400 Jews escaped from the ghetto. Most of the Jews soon died of starvation or disease in the forest.