Chełm-Gdańsk Cemetery: Difference between revisions

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A 1991 letter from a [[Gdańsk]] resident to the [[Jewish Historical Institute]] stated:

A 1991 letter from a [[Gdańsk]] resident to the [[Jewish Historical Institute]] stated:

{{Quote|In 1968, when the communists chased the Jews, the robbery of the cemetery began. They came for granite and marble. They were stealing everything that was and what was possible. They even dug up bodies looking for gold. The cemetery was beautiful. There was a so-called [[mykwa]] to wash the dead, which ‘went’ first. Then the monuments and the slabs. Everything is overgrown with grass and covered with rubbish, dogs are walked to the cemetery.}}


Revision as of 09:07, 17 September 2025

Jewish cemetery in Gdańsk, Poland

54°22′N 18°36′E / 54.367°N 18.600°E / 54.367; 18.600
The Gdansk-Chełm Cemetery (Polish: Cmentarz Żydowski Chełm-Gdańsk, German: Danzig-Stolzenberg) is a 2.3-hectare (5.7-acre)is one of Poland’s oldest and most important Jewish cemeteries located in Gdańsk (Danzig), serving as burial ground for the Jewish community of Danzig since the late 16th century.[1]

The cemetery survived the Holocaust times in good condition.[2]
The oldest preserved gravestone dates from 1786.[1]

It was closed in 1956 and seriously devastated in the following years.The extent of the cemetery’s post-war destruction was documented by eyewitnesses. [2]
A 1991 letter from a Gdańsk resident to the Jewish Historical Institute stated:

In 1968, when the communists chased the Jews, the robbery of the cemetery began. They came for granite and marble. They were stealing everything that was and what was possible. They even dug up bodies looking for gold. The cemetery was beautiful. There was a so-called mykwa to wash the dead, which ‘went’ first. Then the monuments and the slabs. Everything is overgrown with grass and covered with rubbish, dogs are walked to the cemetery.

It remains in dilapidated condition. The land has been reclaimed by the Jewish community, which has roots in the community going back to at least 1694. The International Jewish Cemetery Project [3]
of the International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies is tracking its restoration.

References

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