Jewish cemetery (Cmentarz zydowski w Kielcach) description and photos - Poland: Kielce. Detailed information about the attraction. Description, photographs and a map showing the nearest significant objects. Title in English - Cmentarz zydowski w Kielcach. Photo and descriptionThe Jewish cemetery in the Polish city of Kielce is now a closed cemetery. It was founded in 1868 and has an area of 3.12 hectares. There are more than 330 tombstones on the territory of the cemetery. In the second half of the nineteenth century, with the rapid development of Jewish settlements in Kielce, local religious communities faced the need to organize a new burial site. Earlier, a few Jewish burials were performed in a neighboring settlement. For these purposes, a plot of land was purchased located outside the urban area. People were buried in the new cemetery, many of whom played a significant role in the life of the city. During World War II, the Nazis carried out numerous executions of the Jewish population in the cemetery. In May 1943, the Germans killed 45 children aged 15 months to 15 years. After the end of World War II, the largest pogrom against the Jewish population in Poland took place in Kielce, during which 47 Jews were killed. In June 1946, the burial ceremony of the victims of the pogrom took place. The coffins with the bodies were laid in a mass grave. The mourning ceremony was attended by several thousand people, including representatives of national and foreign Jewish organizations and political parties. After the pogrom, the Jews began to gradually leave the city. Devastated during the occupation, the cemetery began to look abandoned. Many gravestones were broken, graves were desecrated. In 1956, the city authorities decided to officially close the cemetery. In 2010, on the initiative of Jan Karski, with the support of private individuals, a new monument to the victims of the pogrom in Kielce was built. The author of the project is Professor Marek Cekula. The monument is made of sandstone and engraved with the names of all the victims who died on July 4, 1946. We also recommend reading The Amuri museum quarter description and photos - Finland: Tampere Topic: Jewish cemetery (Cmentarz zydowski w Kielcach) description and photos - Poland: Kielce. |