The Jewish cemetery in d. Radun is a wonderful example of a preserved burial within the framework of Jewish culture, as if frozen at the level of the 1930s. Despite the fact that it has not been in operation since the Second World War, it is regularly cared for.
The fact is that the famous rabbi, Halakhist and moralist Yisroel Meer (Israel Leibovich) Pupko was buried in this cemetery in 1933. Jews revere Hafetz Chaim as a saint, and his grave, located in the local cemetery, is a place of pilgrimage. Grave grave has now been specially erected with a wooden building both for prayers and for additional preservation of the grave.
A depressing impression is made by the monument and a small seventy-meter hill at the site of the mass shooting of the Jews of Raduni, located on the south side of the cemetery. One can imagine how just over 80 years ago, more than one thousand hundred people were shot and buried here.