Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Polish students clean local Jewish cemetery, learn to read Hebrew gravestones

As part of a restoration project, they washed the gravestones, removed all dirt and trimmed the greenery.

The Jewish cemetery in the Polish town of Zalewo. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
The Jewish cemetery in the Polish town of Zalewo. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

Students from a school in the Polish town of Zalewo cleaned up a local Jewish cemetery and learned to read the Hebrew inscriptions on the gravestones.

Local activists, who take care of the cemetery, invited an employee of the Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews, Krzysztof Bielawski, to lead a class this month teaching students how to read Hebrew inscriptions on the gravestones.

The children began cleaning the cemetery last week and were accompanied by school deputy director Elzbieta Miedzinska and local priest Michal Bika. They washed the gravestones, removed all dirt and trimmed the greenery.

The task was co-financed by the Polish-American Freedom Foundation.

Before World War II, the town of Zalewo was located in Germany, and was home to around a dozen Jewish families. During the war, the town was almost completely destroyed, though a Jewish cemetery with some tombstones remained.

Rabbi Shlomo Litvin of the Chabad of the Bluegrass told JNS that expanding the legislation to include any qualifying religious group, not just Chabad, makes it more functional and adaptable.
Moscow and Beijing “sided with a regime that seeks to intimidate the Gulf into submission, even as it brutalizes its own people,” the U.S. envoy to the United Nations stated.
The protest denounces the newly approved legislation that expands the use of the death penalty for convicted terrorists and alleges mistreatment of Palestinian prisoners.
“Individuals vote with their feet,” Jamie Dimon wrote in a letter to shareholders.
The U.S. president told the New York Post that “he calls me all the time. I don’t respond to his calls. I don’t deal with him. I like dealing with smart people, not fools.”
The New York City Police Department told JNS that 15 people were arrested after having “refused multiple lawful orders to disperse.”