This ghetto served as a place of forced resettlement for Jews from Davyd-Haradok and nearby settlements during the Nazi occupation of Belarus.
On August 10, 1941, approximately 3,000 Jewish men from Davyd-Haradok were taken to the Khinnovsk farm and the village of Olshany and executed based on a false report that they were preparing an armed uprising.
In 2005, a memorial plaque was installed on the library building in Davyd-Haradok, with inscriptions in Russian, English, and Hebrew, commemorating the Jewish community members who were exterminated during the Holocaust.
The complex consists of six hexagonal architectural elements with memorial plaques, a green lawn at the site of the mass graves, and a decorative fence with a menorah image.
Seven white concrete candles bear inscriptions in Russian and Hebrew, honoring the memory of the 7,000 Jews from Davyd-Haradok and its surroundings who were killed during the Nazi occupation.