Poznaj lokalne zabytki


Wyraź zgodę na lokalizację i oglądaj zabytki w najbliższej okolicy

Zmień ustawienia przeglądarki aby zezwolić na pobranie lokalizacji
This website is using cookies. Learn more.

The Jewish Cemetery - Zabytek.pl

The Jewish Cemetery


Jewish cemetery Kraśnik

Address
Kraśnik

Location
voivodeship lubelskie, county kraśnicki, commune Kraśnik (gm. miejska)

The first mention of Jews in Kraśnik dates back to 1530, although until 1584 the de non tolerandis Judaeis privilege was in force here. The city was located on the trade route from Silesia to Kievan Rus', and the main occupations of the inhabitants were trade and crafts.

At the end of the 16th century, the local Jewish community experienced rapid demographic development. Jews lived in Kraśnik mainly near the market square, as well as on Żydowska and Lubelska streets and by the town walls, where mainly butchers had their houses. The community had a synagogue, a rabbi's house, a cantor's house, a hospital, a mikvah, private baths and a Jewish cemetery located at today's Podwalna street. There was a ritual slaughterhouse in operation from at least 1605. In the mid-17th century, Jews became the only suppliers of meat for the population of Kraśnik, and they also imported colonial items.

The commune survived the difficult period of the Khmelnytsky Uprising (1648–1654), although there were pogroms and robberies at that time. In 1740, Jews received a privilege allowing them to settle and run a business in the city without restrictions. In 1787, 2,430 Jews lived in Kraśnik and they owned almost all the brick houses in the city center, as well as most of the breweries and distilleries.

In the 19th century the town became an important center of Hasidism. Rabbi Abraham Eiger, son of tzadik Yehuda Lejb Eiger, founded his court here; after his father's death, however, he moved to Lublin, where he took over the leadership of all Lublin Hasidim.

In 1883, Kraśnik had a population of over 4,000 Jews. At the end of the 19th century, they included industrial plants, including: water mill, windmill and brickyard. At the beginning of the 20th century, railway transport and maintaining the local garrison became an important source of income. During World War I, Russian soldiers killed both local rabbis.

In the interwar period, the local municipality was one of the largest in the Lublin region. Jews in Kraśnik had, among others, The Great and Small Synagogues, three houses of prayer, a mikvah, an orphanage, cheders, private houses of prayer and a cemetery. Aid organisations and cultural and educational institutions functioned.

After the outbreak of World War II, Kraśnik came under German occupation. The first repressions in 1939 took the form of intimidation; the Germans burned the books and scrolls collected in the synagogue. On their orders, a Judenrat was established, and soon a ghetto was established, which in 1940 encompassed Bóżniczna, Szkolna and Ogrodowa streets. Apart from the locals, Jews from Lublin, Kraków, and Warsaw were imprisoned there.

The ghetto was liquidated in 1942. The Germans then shot several hundred people in the cemetery at Szewska; others were transported to labor camps and the ghetto in Zaklików, from where they were later sent to the German Nazi extermination camp in Bełżec. After 1945, several Jews lived in Kraśnik for few years.

The Description

There were three cemeteries under the management of the Jewish community in Kraśnik, which were devastated during World War II by the Germans. The oldest of these was located at Podwalna street. It was founded in the 16th century. It probably occupied the current plots no. 175 and 172 (one municipal, the other private), although there are no available historical maps with the cemetery markings. Its area was 0.16 ha. The last known burial there probably took place before the end of the 18th or beginning of the 19th century. Despite this, it existed until the Holocaust. In 1940, the Germans devastated the necropolis, and Wesoła street was paved with matzevas (they have not survived). In the post-war period the cemetery area was permanently transformed. Part of it was taken over by single-family buildings, and part by an orchard and vegetable garden.

Author of the note: Magda Lucima

Właściciel praw autorskich do opisu: Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich POLIN.

Category: Jewish cemetery

Protection: Monuments records

Inspire id: PL.1.9.ZIPOZ.NID_E_06_CM.8093