By Ruth Ellen Gruber
Thanks to David Kraus, here is some extraordinary footage from Bratislava in 1966, showing the beginning of the destruction of parts of the Old Town, including the historic Jewish quarter, to make way for the construction of the New Bridge. There are some remarkable shots of the twin-towered, Moorish style synagogue before its demolition in the path of the construction.
Monday, March 19, 2012
Jewish Cemetery in Poland Vandalized
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
Police are investigating a vandal attack on the Jewish cemetery in Wysokie Mazowieckie, Poland, which took place the night of March 18.
Unknown persons spray-painted swastikas and anti-semitic images and slogans, including a favorite slogan of neo-Nazi groups, "Here is Poland -- not Israel.".
The incident is the latest in a series of vandal attacks against Jewish heritage sites in that part of Poland.
Monika Krawczyk, the CEO of FODZ, the Foundation for the Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland, notes that FODZ renovated the cemetery in 2006 and regularly maintains it, and the cemetery is enclosed by a fence. But this did not deter the vandals.
You can see a gallery of pictures of the damage provided by Monica on the web site www.jewish-heritage-europe.eu
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Off Geographical Topic -- historic synagogues being razed in US
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
Every so often I like (or actually dislike) to post news demonstrating how some of the issues regarding what to do with deteriorating or dilapidated synagogues also affect buildings in the United States. Of course, the history is different: the buildings in the US did not lose their congregations because of the Holocaust (or communist pressure) but by normal demographic shifts. Still, there are parallels about preservation versus urban development; funding, memory, and the significance of built heritage.
Two cases in the U.S. are current: the planned demolition of the historic Anshe Kenesseth Israel synagogue building in Chicago, and the threatened demolition of the former Ahavath Sholom synagogue, in Buffalo, NY.
In Chicago, architectural blogger Lee Bey reports that
There is a lengthy article, with pictures, about the Buffalo synagogue on the FixBuffalo blog. Built in 1903, too became a church, Greater New Hope Church of God in Christ, in the 1960s and has stood empty for a decade. The demolition order was issued in December, despite the fact that the building has been designated a local landmark.
Samuel D. Gruber discusses the case of the Buffalo synagogue on his blog.
There is a Flickr feed of photos of the synagogue HERE.
Every so often I like (or actually dislike) to post news demonstrating how some of the issues regarding what to do with deteriorating or dilapidated synagogues also affect buildings in the United States. Of course, the history is different: the buildings in the US did not lose their congregations because of the Holocaust (or communist pressure) but by normal demographic shifts. Still, there are parallels about preservation versus urban development; funding, memory, and the significance of built heritage.
Two cases in the U.S. are current: the planned demolition of the historic Anshe Kenesseth Israel synagogue building in Chicago, and the threatened demolition of the former Ahavath Sholom synagogue, in Buffalo, NY.
In Chicago, architectural blogger Lee Bey reports that
The old Anshe Kenesseth Israel temple, 3411 W. Douglas Blvd, will come down by force of an emergency demolition order issued by a judge last December. Preservationists, neighborhood residents and the building's owners, Abundant Life World Outreach ministry, had been working to delay demolition and develop a fundraising and reuse plan for the building, As recently as last Sunday, they cleaned up the building's exterior in hopes of convincing the city not to raze the structure.The owners changed their mind, he reports, and demolition was expected to begin very soon. The once-grand synagogue was built in 1913, when the neighborhood was largely Jewish. Later, as the neighborhood changed, it became an African-American Baptist church, where Martin Luther King spoke in the 1960s. It closed about a decade ago and has since stood empty. Lee Bey provides vivid photographic documentation that shows its dual history.
There is a lengthy article, with pictures, about the Buffalo synagogue on the FixBuffalo blog. Built in 1903, too became a church, Greater New Hope Church of God in Christ, in the 1960s and has stood empty for a decade. The demolition order was issued in December, despite the fact that the building has been designated a local landmark.
In December, Housing Court Judge Patrick Carney issued an order to demolish the City's oldest synagogue, one of the last remaining vestiges of Jewish life on the City's East Side. The familiar onion domed landmark on Jefferson Avenue was designed by A. E. Minks and Sons and built in 1903. With the cooperation of Rev. Jerome Ferrell and his congregation, the Greater New Hope Church of God in Christ, this historic structure was designated a local landmark by the City's Preservation Board in 1997.
Samuel D. Gruber discusses the case of the Buffalo synagogue on his blog.
The structure is now empty and in disrepair. The building is one of the last standing synagogue of the "facade-dome" type that was popular at the end of the 19th century.
Architecturally, the building is most readily notable for its single 'onion' style dome set over the central entrance bay of the facade. Variations of this type of arrangement are known in synagogue architecture beginning in Europe in the mid-19th century. One example is the destroyed synagogue of Jelgava, Latvia. The style was especially common in Moorish style buildings such as Ahavath Sholom. Major American examples include Temple Sinai in Chicago (Dankmar Adler, arch.) and Temple Beth El in New York (Brunner & Tryon, archs.) which were demolished decades ago. Tiny Gemiluth Chassed in Port Gibson, Mississippi survives. Time may not be long for Buffalo's Ahavath Sholom, but local efforts to save the building may stave off the wrecking ball. [...]
You can read more about the synagogue in this article by Chana Kotzin from the February 10, 2012 issue of the Buffalo Jewish Review. Kotzin runs the Buffalo Jewish archives and has been collecting history about the building, its congregation and the old East Side Jewish neighborhood.
There is a Flickr feed of photos of the synagogue HERE.
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Czech Republic -- Memorial plaque on former Kutna Hora synagogue
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| Kutna Hora former synagogue. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber |
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
A memorial plaque to Holocaust victims has been placed on the former synagogue in Kutna Hora, a charming town an hour's drive east of Prague that is famous for its silver mines and St. Barbara church.
"The plaque was the idea of Mr Marek Lauermann, a young person who is a descendant of a Jewish family that was one of the few from Kutná Hora who partially survived the Holocaust. Marek has long been active in this area, he has released several publications, and he had this memorial plaque designed with our cooperation," Mayor Ivo Šanc said.[...] The Culture to the Town (Kultura do města) association in Kutná Hora has long been involved in preserving the history of the small Jewish community there, which has almost vanished from the memory of its residents. The association organized events as part of the Year of Jewish Culture and published the book "Jews in the Kutná Hora Area - Forgotten Neighbors" (Židé na Kutnohorsku - Zapomenutí sousedé).Read full story
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| Kutna Hora former synagogue. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber |
Jews were barred from living in this mining town from 1568-1848. The surviving synagogue, at ul. Smiskova 619, was built in 1902 in Art Nouveau style. During World War II the Nazis derported the town's Jews to Terezin; few survived. During the war the synagogue was used as a factory making pipe organs. Since 1947 it has been used by the Hussite Church. Most of the decorative elements have been removed.
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Saturday, March 10, 2012
Jewish Culture, etc., Festivals in 2012
| Festival of the Jewish Book, Ferrara, Italy, 2011. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber |
As usual, I am trying to put together a list of as many as possible of the numerous Jewish festivals -- culture, film, dance, etc -- that take place each year around Europe. I've already missed a few that have taken place this winter -- Please help me by sending me information!
The big culture festivals and other smaller events make good destinations around which to center a trip. Some, like the annual Festival of Jewish Culture in Krakow, are huge events lasting a week or more, which draw thousands of people and offer scores or sometimes hundreds of performances, lectures, concerts, exhibits and the like. Other festivals are much less ambitious. Some are primarily workshops but also feature concerts. Many of the same artists perform at more than one festival.
The list will be growing and growing -- and again, I ask my readers to please send me information and links to upcoming events. Thanks!
ALL OVER EUROPE
Sept. 2, 2012 -- 13th European Day of Jewish Culture. This year's theme is Jewish Humor
AUSTRIA
April 19-May 23 -- Vienna -- Weanhean: Das Wienerliedfestival (Jewish music and performers are featured this year)
CROATIA
August 28-Sept. 6 -- Pula -- Bejahad: the Jewish Cultural Scene
CZECH REPUBLIC
July 5-8 -- Boskovice -- UniJazz2012: 19th Festival for the Jewish Quarter
July 30-August 4 -- Trebic -- Trebic Jewish Festival held in one of the most extensive and best-preserved old Jewish quarters in Europe, part of the town's UNESCO-listed historic center.
GERMANY
April 9-15 -- Weimar -- Weimar Winter Edition
June 3-16 -- Berlin & Potsdam -- 18th Jewish Film Festival
July 21-August 21 -- Weimar -- Yiddish Summer Weimar
GREAT BRITAIN
June 24-July 1 -- Leeds -- 12th International Jewish Performing Arts Festival
HUNGARY
April 6-14 -- Budapest -- Quarter6Quarter7 Spring Festival, over Passover
July 20-22 -- Bank Lake -- Bankito Festival
November 10-18 -- Szombathely -- Jewish Festival Szombathely
ITALY
April 28-May 1 -- Ferrara -- Festival of the Jewish Book
July 29-August 5 -- Straits of Messina -- Horcynus Festival This year's focus is on Israel and Jewish culture.
September 2-8 -- Puglia Region -- Lech Lecha Festival
November 3-7 -- Rome -- Pitigliani Kolno'a Jewish & Israeli Film Festival
POLAND
April 17-21 -- Radom -- 4th annual "Meeting with Jewish Culture"
April 18-22 -- Warsaw -- New Jewish Music Festival
April 25-29 -- Warsaw -- Jewish Motifs International Film Festival
May 11-13 -- Oswiecim -- Oswiecim Life Festival
May 13-16 -- Warsaw -- Jewish Book Days
June 2 -- Krakow -- 7@Nite - Night of the Synagogues
June 29-July 8 -- Krakow -- Jewish Culture Festival
August 10-12 -- Jelenia Gora -- Jewish Culture Festival
August 26-September 2 -- Warsaw -- Singer's Warsaw Festival
September 14-22 -- Lodz -- Festival of Four Cultures
October 4-7 -- Wlodawa -- Festival of Three Cultures
ROMANIA
April 27-May 3 -- Bucharest -- 2nd Bucharest Jewish Film Festival
RUSSIA
March 8, 2012 -- Moscow -- Yiddish Fest
SERBIA
June 20-24 -- Belgrade -- Ethno Fusion Fest: Many musics in the courtyard of the Belgrade Synagogue
SLOVAKIA
July 7-15 -- Kosice -- Mazal Tov -- 1st Jewish Culture Festival in Kosice
UKRAINE
Sept. 6-12 -- Drohobych -- Fifth Bruno Schulz Festival
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From New York not Europe, but relevant
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
My friend Julian Voloj, who was born in Germany, has been photographing former synagogue building in New York City for nearly a decade. He has amassed an important collection of images -- 12 of which are on display at an exhibit in Sag Harbor, NY.
My friend Julian Voloj, who was born in Germany, has been photographing former synagogue building in New York City for nearly a decade. He has amassed an important collection of images -- 12 of which are on display at an exhibit in Sag Harbor, NY.
Read full article
One would think that because American Judaism is alive and well in New York City, there would be lots of people advocating to protect some of these sites. But Voloj found himself in “a race against the clock to make sure what I was documenting would still be there. There was one place that was torn down before I could get inside.”
Of the 1200 photos that Voloj took on his expeditions around New York, he has selected 12 for his exhibition at Temple Adas Israel in Sag Harbor.
“One photo is of a now-supermarket that used to be a Jewish site, and you can see two lions and The Ten Commandments,” said Voloj. “Another is a cross nailed on a Star of David, and there’s one image from the oldest Jewish cemetery in North America, in Chinatown. There’s one gravestone that stands alone. It’s a nice link because the gravestone goes back to the roots of North American Judaism.”
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
New App -- Jewish Geography Game
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
Jono David, who has a vast library of photographs he has taken of Jewish heritage sites, has turned is pictures into an "Jewish Geography" quiz game app for I-Pad and other devices. Looks fun! I will buy it and see how I do!
Jono David, who has a vast library of photographs he has taken of Jewish heritage sites, has turned is pictures into an "Jewish Geography" quiz game app for I-Pad and other devices. Looks fun! I will buy it and see how I do!
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Jewish Travel goes Academic......
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
Scholars at the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania are analyzing Jewish travel in a fellowship program called "On the Road: Travel in Jewish History." Robert Leiter writes about the program in The Jewish Exponent. He reports that there were about 170 applications, which were whittled down to 12 scholars for the first semester and 14 for the second, now under way. (Full disclosure -- I applied for a fellowship but was not accepted.)
Scholars at the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania are analyzing Jewish travel in a fellowship program called "On the Road: Travel in Jewish History." Robert Leiter writes about the program in The Jewish Exponent. He reports that there were about 170 applications, which were whittled down to 12 scholars for the first semester and 14 for the second, now under way. (Full disclosure -- I applied for a fellowship but was not accepted.)
Travel as ennobling -- an educational pursuit that broadens knowledge and sharpens perceptions -- is a 20th century concept, according to German-born scholar Martin Jacobs. [...]
Jacobs joined Ora Limor of the Open University in Jerusalem and Joshua Levinson of Jerusalem's Hebrew University, who first broached the topic, in fashioning the proposal they eventually presented to David Ruderman, the head of the center. [...]
Two scholars who consider modern-day notions of Jewish travel are Jackie Feldman, a native New Yorker who now lectures on social anthropology at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev; and Nils Roemer, a non-Jew born in Germany, who teaches Jewish subjects at the University of Texas in Dallas.
Friday, February 10, 2012
Poland -- Travel story on Lodz
| Artur Rubinstein street sculpture monument. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber |
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
The New York Jewish Week runs a lively travel story by Hilary Larson on Lodz, Poland, highlighting the city's Jewish heritage as well as its new spaces and places -- which include Manufaktura, a big shopping center in the transformed red-brick factory that was once run by Lodz's wealthiest Jewish industrialist, I.K. Poznanski...
This onetime outpost of the Russian and German Empires was among the world’s most Jewish cities before the Holocaust, with a quarter-million Jews, a good third of the city’s total. Every year, thousands of heritage travelers come to bear witness to Lodz’s wartime ghetto and the largest Jewish cemetery in Europe.
So fixed is that mournful image that it takes a mental leap to consider what Europeans already know: Lodz is suddenly the coolest place in Poland.
“It’s where all the hipsters and artists are going,” said my Polish friend Piotr. “They are in Warsaw for the jobs, in Krakow for the universities. But they come to Lodz for the scene.” [...]
This so-called “City of Four Cultures” (Polish, Jewish, German and Russian) is polyglot and full of surprises. There are 19th-century Orthodox churches, baroque Teutonic mansions, Soviet housing blocks with underground cafes. Though Jews are few today, Jewishness continues to pervade the city — a subtle but persistent overlay of nostalgia, and a belatedly appreciated cultural influence.I'm glad to see Lodz get such coverage. I have always greatly enjoyed my visits to the city and walks down ruler-straight Piotrkowski street, looking at the old mansions and the street sculpture of Rubinstein, Tuwim and others.
| Piortrkowski st. Photo (c) Ruth Ellen Gruber) |
Larson doesn't mention however, two of the key Jewish and "Jewish" sights..... the large and fascinating Jewish cemetery, with Poznanski's immense domed tomb, and the "Jewish" restaurant Anatewka, which, since I first saw it, has been one of the Platonic ideals for me of the "virtually Jewish world"..... where, the first time I visited, in 2005, the waiters were dressed as Hasids, and where guests are (or were) all given little figurines of Jews clutching coins as sort of favors.
Monday, February 6, 2012
Jewish Heritage Europe web site
By Ruth Ellen Gruber
I've been neglecting this blog for a little while, as I've been involved in getting the Jewish Heritage Europe web site that I am coordinating for the Rothschild Foundation (Hanadiv) Europe ready for launch....
I'm happy to say that JHE is now online and functioning (more or less) fully... there are still a few teething problems, as expected, and I still have a lot of information to load on the home pages of the 48 countries covered.
JHE is an expanding web portal to a wide range of news, information and resources concerning Jewish monuments and heritage sites all over Europe.JHE aims to aggregate information, shed light on Jewish heritage issues, and stimulate discussion and exchanges among professionals and the interested public.
It has a constant newsfeed -- and I will be cross posting on this blog from it (and vice versa).
The new JHE builds on, revamps and expands a previous version of the site that was launched after the major 2004 conference in Prague on the future of Jewish heritage in Europe and was coordinated by Sharman Kadish, Syd Greenberg, and Samuel D. Gruber.
The current version was conceived as a follow-up to the seminar held in Bratislava, Slovakia in March 2009 that discussed the state of Jewish heritage sites in Europe as well as strategies for their restoration, use and upkeep.
As I reported on this blog at the time, that seminar, attended by international Jewish heritage experts as well as by representatives from Jewish communities in more than a dozen countries, resulted in a statement of specific “Best Practices” about how to deal with Jewish heritage sites.
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