Thursday,
May 23, 2013
14 Sivan, 5773
News
France
UK
Germany
Western Europe
Eastern Europe
EU-Israel affairs
EU corner
Voices
Week at a glance
News from outside of Europe
Israel
US ELECTIONS 2012
The Calendar
Links
advertisement
advertisement
wagerworks software

Polish prisoners to renovate Jewish cemeteries
Updated: 05/Jul/2009 15:18
Page tools
Email to friend
Print this page
Bookmark this page
Add your view

WARSAW (AFP)---Polish prisoners are to do conservation work in disused Jewish cemeteries, Poland's penitentiary service said Thursday.   

Prisons spokesman Ireneusz Mucha said the service had signed an agreement with the national Polish-Jewish heritage foundation enabling prisoners to volunteer.   
The foundation estimates that about 1,000 cemeteries countrywide need work. Many Jewish graveyards were destroyed by the Nazis during World War II.   
"The voluntary, unpaid work will be run with local authorities or Jewish communities. The advantages will go both ways, because the foundation will also provide courses in history and tolerance for the prisoners," Mucha told AFP.   
The plan involves more than a dozen penitentiaries across Poland.   
Two initial projects will see the building of a memorial in a cemetery in Radom, south of Warsaw, and the renovation of a graveyard in Zwierzyniec in the southeast.   
Jews first emigrated to Poland from western Europe to escape 11th century pogroms.   
On the eve of World War II, Poland was home to around 3.5 million Jews, representing around 10 percent of the country's population and Europe's largest Jewish community.   
Half of the six million Jews killed by the Nazis were Polish. Most perished in camps set up in occupied Poland such as the infamous Auschwitz-Birkenau.   
In 1945, Poland's surviving Jewish population numbered just 280,000.   
Many emigrated to the United States or Israel immediately after the war or during waves of anti-Semitism under the communist regime in the 1950s and 1960s. 
According to various estimates, there are about 5,000-15,000 people who identify themselves as Jewish in Poland today, out of a total population of 38 million people, more than 90 percent of whom are Catholic.

Add Your View Email to friend Print this page Bookmark this page
Day in history

1536: 'Act of faith' in Portugal
Pope Paul III issued a Bull for an Inquisition based on the Spanish archetype.
 
Today links

Students talk Jewish in Croatian Summer University
 
Latest Articles
Moshe Kantor: ‘The EU must proscribe Hezbollah as a whole’
A distinction between the political and military wings of Hezbollah ?
German Chancellor Merkel honoured in Brussels for her support to the Jewish community
IDF chief warns Syria ‘will have to bear the consequences’ for continuing to fire on Israel
Britain wants the EU to blacklist Hezbollah’s military wing
EU leaders need to address 'staggering' findings of US State Department report on ‘global rise of anti-Semitism’
Gunfire from Syria damages Israeli army vehicle