, 2013 , 1949 , 1955 , ca.1935 , 1946 •
Eliezer Adler (1866–1949), founder of the Jewish Community in Gateshead, England •
Svetlana Alexievich (born 1948), Belarusian journalist and writer, winner of the 2015 Nobel Prize for Literature •
Yuri Andrukhovych (born 1960), Ukrainian writer •
Daniel Auster (1893–1963), Mayor of Jerusalem •
Menachem Avidom (1908–1995), Israeli composer •
John Banner (1910–1973), Austrian-American actor. Star of ''
Hogan's Heroes'' •
Naftali Blumenthal (1922–2022), Israeli Member of the
Knesset •
Maxim Bugzester (1909–1978), Polish painter •
Arthur F. Burns (1904–1987), American-Jewish economist and politician •
Yaroslav Huzar (1897–1963), Ukrainian public figure, father of
Liubomyr Huzar •
Ana Casares (1930–2007), Polish-Argentine actress •
Zbigniew Cybulski (1927–1967), Polish actor •
Bolesław Wieniawa-Długoszowski (1881–1942), Polish general, politician and diplomat •
Albin Dunajewski (1817–1894), Roman Catholic cardinal •
Wiktor Eckhaus (1930–2000), Polish–Dutch mathematician •
Feliks Falk (born 1941), Polish film director •
Moshe Flimann (1905–1973), Mayor of Haifa •
Fritz Grossmann (1902–1984), art historian and Professor of Art History •
Ludwik Hass (1918–2008), Polish historian •
Moses Horowitz (1844–1910), playwright and actor of Yiddish theatre •
Alfred Johann Theophil Jansa von Tannenau (1884–1963), Austrian general •
GreenJolly (active 2004–2005), Ukrainian
rap band •
Tina Karol (born 1985), Ukrainian singer, actress, and television presenter •
Orest-Vasyl Kuziv (born 1997), Ukrainian artist •
Maria Antonina Kratochwil (1881–1942), nun beatified by Pope John Paul II who tried to save Jews during
the Holocaust •
František Kriegel (1908—1979), Czechoslovak politician and physician •
Manfred H. Lachs (1914–1993), Polish diplomat and British jurist •
Oksana Lada (born 1976), Ukrainian actress •
Chaim David Lippe (1823–1900), Austrian Jewish publisher and bibliographer •
Alfreda Markowska (1926–2021), Polish-Romani woman who during World War II saved approximately 50 Jewish and Roma children from death in the
Holocaust and the
Porajmos genocide •
Leo Aryeh Mayer (1895–1959), Israeli scholar of Islamic art and rector of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem •
Bernard Mond (1887–1957), Jewish general of the Polish Army •
Itzhak Nener (1919–2012), Israeli jurist •
Yevhen Nakonechny (1931–2006), Ukrainian historian, librarian, library scientist, and linguist •
Nadia Parfan (born 1986), Ukrainian film director and creative producer •
Daniel Passent (1938–2022), Polish journalist •
Anastasiya Petryshak (born 1994), Ukrainian violinist •
Józef Potocki (1673–1751), Polish nobleman, son of the Polish founder of the city •
Mikhail Prusak (1960–2025), Russian politician •
Bohdan Rozvadovskyi (born 2004), better known by his stage name SadSvit, Ukrainian post punk singer •
Horacy Safrin (1899–1980), Polish poet, comedian, author, and translator •
Max Schur (1897–1969), physician •
Anna Seniuk (born 1942), Polish actress •
Tryzuby Stas (1948–2007), Ukrainian singer and writer of humorous songs, bard •
Klemens Stefan Sielecki (1903–1980), Polish engineer and technical director of
Fablok •
Stanisław Sosabowski (1892–1967), Polish general, hero of Arnhem •
Jan Stopyra (1934–2023), politician and economist, mayor of
Szczecin, Poland •
Mordechai Surkis (1908–1995), Israeli politician •
Gabriel Talphir (1901–1990), Israeli poet, art critic, publisher, editor, and translator •
Vasyl Velychkovsky (1903–1973), bishop of
Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church •
Taras Voznyak (born 1957), Ukrainian political scientist, editor-in-chief and founder of Independent Cultural Journal •
Alexander Wagner (1868–1942), Polish chess theoretician •
Ksenia Zsikhotska (born 1989), Ukrainian dancer
Sport •
Yana Demyanchuk (born 1993), Ukrainian gymnast and 2009 European Champion on balance beam •
Myroslav Stupar (born 1941), Ukrainian football referee •
Vasyl Virastyuk (born 1974), Ukrainian strongman athlete 2004
World's Strongest Man ==Twin towns – sister cities==