The first evidence showing Jews living in Svisloch was back in 1717, when documents showed that the Jews of the town paid taxes to the government. By 1766, about 100 Jews lived in the town. By 1897, the town reached its maximum Jewish population, with 1,120 Jews accounting for 62% of the population. In 1923, there were 831 Jews, and in 1926, there were 742 Jews, 41% of the town's population.
The Holocaust In 1941, the village fell under Nazi control during
Operation Barbarossa, and the Jews were ordered to wear the
yellow Jude patch, but the town did not have a ghetto for Jews at the time. In the summer, the Germans took a dozen Jews outside of the town's borders, and murdered them in the
Berezina riverbank. On October 8, a group of Jews from Svislach and neighboring Yalizava
be] were taken to the Virkau forest between the villages of and , and were murdered in a
killing pit. On October 14, the remaining Jews in the town were rounded up and were brought to the same forest, and also murdered in the killing pit. The total number of victims among the Jews of Svisloch is unknown, but about 200 are accounted for in various records. In 2018, the diary of a gentile resident of the town was found from WWII, in which it was stated that over 1,000 Jews were murdered, but this figure contradicts evidence about the size of the Jewish community at the time. A few Jews from the community managed to survive the Holocaust in different ways, and some returned to the village following the end of WWII, but did not maintain a Jewish community. After the war, a monument was erected in the city of Bobruisk in memory of the massacred Jews. == Modern times ==