Hozha (; ; ) is an agrotown in Grodno District, Grodno Region, in western Belarus.
In the interwar period, Hoà ¼a, as it was known in Polish, was administratively located in the Grodno County in the Biaà Âystok Voivodeship of Poland. According to the 1921 census, the village with the adjacent manor farm had a population of 556, entirely Polish by nationality, and 99.1% Catholic, 0.54% Orthodox and 0.36% Jewish by confession.
Following the invasion of Poland in September 1939, Hoà ¼a was first occupied by the Soviet Union until 1941, then by Nazi Germany until 1944, and then re-occupied by the Soviet Union, which eventually annexed it from Poland in 1945. A local Polish forester was murdered by the Russians in the Katyn massacre in 1940.