The Ghetto in Antonovka (Krichev District) (summer 1941 - December 1941) was a Nazi Jewish ghetto, a place of forced resettlement of Jews from the village of Antonovka in the Molyatichi village council of the Krychaw District of the Mogilev region and nearby settlements, during the persecution and destruction of Jews during the Nazi German occupation of the territory of Belarus in World War II.
After the occupation, the Germans, implementing the Nazi program of extermination of Jews, organized a ghetto in the town.
[4] Jews were forbidden from leaving without wearing six-pointed stars sewn onto their outer clothing, under threat of death.
[4] The ghetto in Antonovka was destroyed as a result of several "actions" (a euphemism the Nazis used for the organized mass killings they carried out).
In Antonovka, five people were honored with the title of "Righteous Among the Nations" by the Israeli memorial institute Yad Vashem "in profound gratitude for the assistance rendered to the Jewish people during the Holocaust": Viktor Larin, Liliya Vasina (Larina), Maria Pisareva, Raisa Pisareva and Fekla Veselina-Tkacheva - who rescued Elena Feygina (Vertlib) and Mira Neznanskaya.