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The Jewish Cemetery - Zabytek.pl

Address
Chojnice, Kilińskiego

Location
voivodeship pomorskie, county chojnicki, commune Chojnice (gm. miejska)

Jews began to appear in Chojnice (German: Konitz, Conitz) in the mid-17th century, but it was not until the end of the 18th century that the settlement process became permanent. Until 1767, Jews were forbidden to settle within the city limits. They only appeared on an ad hoc basis during fairs.

The first family settled there around 1775. Soon a Jewish community (corporation) began to take shape. Initially, meetings and prayers took place in the warehouse building of the merchant Schwarz in Hintergaße. After purchasing a plot of land at Mönchsanger, a wooden synagogue was built in 1828. From the 1820s, there was a private Jewish school (Elementarschule). The new brick synagogue building was completed in 1869. Until the 1930s, the Jewish community included, apart from Chojnice, the surrounding villages: Pawłowo, Ogorzeliny, Swornigacie.

In the early 1880s, there were anti-Jewish riots during which the synagogue building was set on fire. Further riots broke out in the spring and summer of 1900 over an alleged ritual murder. Butcher Adolph Levi was accused of killing 18-year-old high school student Ernst Winter. The army put down the riots in Chojnice; nevertheless, anti-Jewish incidents broke out in other towns of West Prussia.

By the mid-1880s, the Jewish community was gaining members, but in the following decades demographic regression became more and more noticeable. In 1815, there were between 45 and 80 Jews living in Chojnice, in 1821 - 74 (they constituted 2.9% of the total population), in 1831 - 194 (6.9%), in 1848 - 341 (7.7%), in 1855 - 429 (8.5%), in 1861 - 371, in 1871 - 497 (6.9%), in 1885 - 563 (11.2%), in 1895 - 430, in 1900 - 364 (3.4%), in 1910 - 257 (2.1%), in 1921 - 111/ 34, in 1931 - 58 (21 families), in 1938 - 69.

During the Second Polish Republic, local German Jews partly left the town for Germany. The community was reluctant to accept newcomers from the depths of the Polish lands. In 1923, only four families came from Małopolska, out of 115 people belonging to the Jewish community. Outside Chojnice, single people lived in the municipality; e.g. in 1931, two in Ogorzeliny and Swornigacie, three in Pawłowo.

The situation changed fundamentally in 1932, when the network of Jewish communities in the Pomeranian and Poznań provinces was reorganised. The boundaries of the Jewish community in Chojnice were extended by the abolished Jewish communities from the Chojnice and Tuchola districts, i.e. in Czersk (single people lived in Czersk, Brusy, Karsin, Lug and Lubnia) and Tuchola (Tuchola - 51 and 20 people in Wysoka Wieś, Rosochatka, Śliwice, Cekcynie, Kęsowo). Thus, the size of the Jewish community in Chojnice increased slightly to 151 people in 1934. In the following years, demographic regression reappeared. In 1937, 131 Jews lived in the community, and 1938 - 69.

As the community's territory expanded in the 1930s, so did its assets. In 1938, she had movable property worth 2,526 zlotys and 64,400 zlotys in real estate, with debts amounting to 2,000 zlotys. In Chojnice, these were two cemeteries (only the new one was estimated), a synagogue, a building, ½ morgens of land; in Czersk - a synagogue, a cemetery and a morgue; in Tuchola - a synagogue with a garden, a cemetery, a ritual bath, a house for the watchman, a gravedigger's outbuilding, two morgens of land.

During World War II, Jews who did not leave Chojnice before the German army entered in 1939 became one of the first victims of the Holocaust; one of the families was executed. The destruction of traces of material heritage, mainly synagogues and cemeteries, soon followed.

The Description

The new Jewish cemetery in Chojnice was established around 1900, on the slope of a small hill near the old cemetery, on a plan of an elongated polygon similar to an unextended trapezium, at the junction of today's Derdowskiego, Wysoka and Kilińskiego Streets. On the map in 1936, the area was called the Jewish Hill ("Jüdischer Berg"). The area of the necropolis was 0.4 ha. The cemetery was destroyed in the early stages of World War II. Only one of the buildings survived - the funeral home in Wysoka Street (Polish: ul. Wysoka), which was turned into a carpenter's workshop after the war, then adapted for a kindergarten and the Pentecostal Church in Chojnice. It was demolished in 2013 due to the construction of a roundabout. Apart from the destruction of the former funeral home building, about 1/3 of the cemetery area in its western and southern parts was incorporated into the Kilińskiego Street (Polish: ul. Kilińskiego) right of way. This part of the historical boundaries of the necropolis has been obliterated. The remainder, the northern part (fence) and the eastern part (Widokowa Street (Polish: ul. Widokowa) and fence) are legible. It is a green, disused area, overgrown with sparse old trees, including a line of chestnut trees (along the eastern border of the fence). On the eastern side (Widokowa Street) and partly on the northern side (at a length of about 10 metres), a brick wall built in 1937 has survived. (the funds came from the sale of the synagogue building in Czersk in 1934); the remaining part - from the north - is surrounded by a contemporary mesh fence. A modern concrete fence has been erected along the current (contemporarily demarcated) southern boundary of the cemetery.

Reference

  • Z. Karpus, Gmina Wyznaniowa Żydowska w Chojnicach w latach 1920-1939, [in:] Gminy Wyznaniowe Żydowskie w województwie pomorskim w okresie międzywojennym, Toruń 1995, pp. 157–165.
  • T. Kawski, Inwentarze gmin żydowskich z Pomorza i Wielkopolski wschodniej w okresie międzywojennym (1918/20–1939), „Kwartalnik Historii Kultury Materialnej” 2006, no. 1, table 1, p. 75.
  • Magdzińska, Chojnice 1900 r. – zajścia antyżydowskie czy pogrom?, [in:] Pogromy Żydów na ziemiach polskich w XIX i XX wieku, vol. 2, Warszawa 2019, pp. 157–178.
  • M. Pielka, Chojnice 1900 – przypadek oskarżenia o mord rytualny w świetle polskiej prasy, „Zeszyty Naukowe Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego. Prace Historyczne”, 2016, no. 143, notebook. 1, pp. 89–106;
  • G. Salinger, Zur Erinnerung und zum Gedenken. Die einstigen jüdischen Gemeinden Westpreußens, New York 2009, Bd. 2;
  • Śladami żydowskimi po Kaszubach. Przewodnik, ed. M. Borzyszkowska-Szewczyk, Ch. Pletzing, Gdansk - Lübeck - München 2010, p. 198;
  • M. Wołos, Cmentarze żydowskie w województwie pomorskim w latach 1920-1939, [in:] Gminy Wyznaniowe Żydowskie w województwie pomorskim w okresie międzywojennym, Toruń 1995, pp. 220–221.

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

Category: Jewish cemetery

Protection: Monuments records

Inspire id: PL.1.9.ZIPOZ.NID_E_22_CM.95064