old synagogue Mad Hungary - Mád zsinagóga
It is an old hungarian synagogue. It was built in the18.th century . In this area lived many jewish families. Nowadays it is a museum.
locality: MAD, Hungary
music: Bob Cohen Szól a Kakas már
directed by : Ildiko Vajda
Old Synagogue Mad Hungary - Mád Zsinagóga
It is an old hungarian synagogue. It was built in the18.th century . In this area lived many jewish families. Nowadays it is a museum.
locality: MAD, Hungary
music: Bob Cohen Szól a Kakas már
directed by : Ildiko Vajda
בודפשט עם יאנוש | סיור להכרת העיר בודפשט
אתר הסיורים:
קצת עליי
טיולים וסיורים בודפשט עם יאנוש, המדריך עם הקילומאטרז' הגדול ביותר בבודפשט, מעל ל-3,000 סיורים בעיר והדרכה של למעלה מ-100,000 מטיילים ישראלים.
סיור להכרת העיר בודפשט
בסיור שלנו להכרת העיר בודפשט, נצא לסיור מקיף באתרים המרכזיים של הבירה ההונגרית בודפשט, הסיור, משלב נסיעה באוטובוס והליכה רגלית קלה ברוב האתרים המרכזיים.
נחלוף בשדרת אנדרשי היפה והאלגנטית, נעבור על פני בית האופרה, נסייר בכיכר הגיבורים הסמוכה לפארק העיר, נחצה את נהר הדנובה לביקור בחלק הצפוני לגבעת המצודה שם נראה את מצודת הדייגים וכנסיית מתיאש (במידה האפשר ינתן זמן חופשי בקונדיטוריה המפורסמת).
נבקר באנדרטת הנעליים מנציחה את זכרונם של היהודים ההונגרים שנורו והושלכו לנהר הדנובה הקפוא, על ידי צבא מפלגת החץ – חברי המפלגה הפרו-גרמנית, אנטישמית, נשיונל-סוציאליסטית של הונגריה בשנים 1944-1945. זהו סיור של 4-5 שעות המשלב נסיעה באוטובוס/מיניבוס פרטי והליכה רגלית קלה באתר החובה של העיר בודפשט.
איסוף מהמלון לסיור.
הצטרפו היום לסיורי הבוטיק שלנו, אנחנו מבטיחים לכם חוויה מהנה ומלמדת, כל הסודות של העיר המיוחדת עם המדריך המוסמך והמעוטר ביותר בהונגריה.
אשמח לעמוד לרשותכם!
למה להזמין סיורים בבודפשט עם יאנוש?
☑ מדריך מוסמך (בין הבודדים בתחום).
☑ ניסיון של מעל 3,000 סיורים בעיר בודפשט והסביבה.
☑ הדרכה של מעל 100,000 מטיילים ישראלים.
☑ נחשב למדריך הפופולרי בבודפשט.
☑ מאות המלצות עם השנים.
☑ נבחר למדריך רשמי של בית הכנסת הגדול ברובע היהודי
הצטרפו לקבוצת ההמלצות והטיפים שלי בפייסבוק:
A Mádi Zsinagóga - The synagogue of Mád, Hungary
Ebben a spontánul elmondott és rögzített videoban Fehér Barnabás, a mádi zsinagóga önkéntes gondozója mondja el néhány élményét, melyeket a zsinagóga körüli munkája során mostanában szerzett.
In this spontaneously told and recorded video Mr. Barnabas Fehér is telling his experiences received lately after spending fifty years with taking care of the synagogue of Mad as a service to the memory of his childhood friends and neighbors.
Why Is the Pope and the UN Mad At Hungary
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Mád (MeneTrend IttHon)
Magyarország észak-keleti részén, Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén megyében, a Zemplén hegység és a Szerencsi dombság között terül el. A település igen régi, már a 13. században létezett, és már akkor is szőlőműveléssel foglalkoztak az itteni emberek. Mád egy igen kedves kis település, ha erre járnak, akkor valahogy majd nem is akarnak elmenni innen. A finom borok és a vendégszerető mádiak marasztalják a látogatót. Természetesen a bor a legfőbb vonzereje Mádnak, de ha már itt járunk, akkor érdemes felfedezni a települést, és környékét is. A község zsinagógája olyan híres, hogy a világ minden tájáról, még New Yorkból és Mexikóból is a csodájára jártak.
Hungary's Jewish Community Celebrates New Synagogues
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i24NEWS DESK | Seventy-five years ago in Hungary, nearly 6,000 Jews were murdered in the Holocaust. Now, Hungary's small Jewish community is trying to bring itself back on its feet by opening two new synagogues.
Synagogue dedicated after holocaust massacre
1. People arriving outside synagogue (locals and visitors)
2. Man singing How beautiful your tent is, Israel
3. Audience
4. Catholic, reformed, and Greek catholic priests in pew
5. Man listening to song
6. Close-up man listening to song
7. Wide interior of synagogue
8. SOUNDBITE: (Hebrew) Rabbi Laszlo Deutsch, (whose father was Mad''s last rabbi)
May the eternal one bless and protect all of you, may He radiate his face towards you, and may He have mercy on you, and may He grant you, all of us, peace.
9. Rabbi and others praying, pan to martyrs'' plaque
10. Women in audience
11. Women watching from upstairs
12. Close-up old man listening to prayers
13. Wide of people leaving after dedication
14. Outside, same
15. SOUNDBITE: (Hungarian) Viktor Lowy, Holocaust Survivor from Mad:
They took my father from this synagogue and I stayed alive in Budapest.
16. Jewish cemetery in Mad
17. Grave stones, Viktor Lowy and granddaughters walking by
18. SOUNDBITE: (Hebrew) Ester Avital, Viktor Lowy''s Granddaughter:
It makes me stronger to see the synagogue revealed, you feel history, and it''s just - unbelievably painful.
19. Various shots, interior of synagogue
20. STILL photo of synagogue before restoration
21. SOUNDBITE: (Hungarian) Viktor Lowy, Holocaust Survivor from Mad
A question is left open: why? Why did they renovate the synagogue? And if this will just be a house of prayer and not also a house that evokes better times and, as they say in Hebrew, Shalom, or peace, then all it will be is a cold monument.
22. Close-up votive candles before martyr''s plaque (directly under the Lowy family name)
STORYLINE
The Nazi Holocaust swept away two-thirds of the nearly one (m) million Jews who lived in Hungary on the eve of World War II, and many of those who survived fled during the 1956 uprising against Soviet rule after realising the communists were just as determined to stamp out their religion.
Sixty years after the Holocaust, the Hungarian village of Mad rededicated its Baroque style synagogue on Sunday.
In ruins after years of neglect, the synagogue was once the house of worship for Mad''s Jewish population - until 90 percent of them died after they were deported to Auschwitz.
Rabbi Laszlo Deutsch blessed the synagogue and the congregation.
His father was the last rabbi in Mad before he and his congregation were killed by the Nazis.
Mad is a town 220 kilometres (130 miles) east of Budapest, and was once a centre of Jewish learning.
But now, there are no Jews left here, so its synagogue will rarely be used as a temple.
Other synagogues renovated in Hungary have been turned into cultural centres with exhibitions on Jewish life before the war, but there are a few that are used by Jewish congregations.
Viktor Lowy, who now lives in Israel, was living in Budapest in 1944 when the Nazis rounded up his family - along with most of Mad''s Jewish population - before deporting them.
He brought his granddaughters - who don''t speak Hungarian but know the country''s history from their grandfather - to see the rededication of the synagogue where his family worshiped for generations.
The Lowy family''s name can be seen on the martyrs'' wall inside the temple.
At the end of the 19th century, more than 800 Jews lived in Mad and made up nearly 30 percent of the town''s population.
They arrived in the 1700s from Galicia, a region now split between Poland and Ukraine.
Most were traders, buying and selling Mad''s wines throughout central Europe.
Built in the 1770s in Baroque style, the synagogue is unusual because it has survived complete with its yeshiva, or school.
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Frank Mariann, Mádi rabbiház
בית הכנסת עתיק בעיירה מד Mad הונגריה
בית הכנסת עתיק בעיירה מד Mad הונגריה
Synagogue in Eger, Hungary
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The name Eger may derive from the Hungarian word Égerfa (alder tree). In German, the town was known as Erlau. That name was adopted in Yiddish.
Eger was founded in the 10th century by St. Stephen (997 - 1038), the first Christian king of Hungary, who founded an episcopal congregation in Eger. The first cathedral of Eger was built on Castle Hill, within the present site of the Eger Castle. Eger grew up around its former cathedral and has remained an important Christian religious centre in Hungary since its foundation.
The first records of Jews in Eger are on 11 April 1465, in a will written by Andrew Csetniki of Eger, he lists his valuables and that he had pawned a gem and a gold ring to Jósa, a Jew and in 1495, the Bishop of Eger, Thomas Bakócz, in his bank account statement, a Jewish name of Johanni is recorded.
In 1552, during the Turkish advance into Central Hungary, Eger became an important border fortress, successfully defended by Hungarian forces. In 1596, Eger was attacked by a bigger army of Turks who, after a brief siege, took over the Castle. Eger then came under Ottoman rule for 91 years.
Driven from Spain in 1492, Jews found refuge in the Ottoman Empire. Spanish was spoken and most of the Jews followed the Sephardic Jewish rite. Jewish communities were formed and they turned to the rabbis of Constantinople and Salonica. Jews held leases, government positions and high military posts and freely traded in commerce.
The rule of the Turks in central Hungary began to collapse after a failed Ottoman attempt to capture Vienna in 1685. The Vienna-based Habsburgs, who controlled the rest of Hungary, apart from Transylvania, steadily expelled the Turks from the country. In 1687, Eger Castle was starved into surrender. With the end of Turkish rule, Turks and Jews left Eger.
In 1695, the holder of the city, Bishop George Fenessy forbade non Catholics to dwell in Eger. It was not until 1840 that Jews received permanent residence permits although some were there earlier and theywere allowed to live in the countryside near the town.
In 1840, the Hungarian parliament allowed Jews to move into the towns.
A synagogue was consecrated in 1851 and, by 1885, numerous small Jewish communities were affiliated with the congregation. In 1878, the community split into two separate Orthodox and Status Quo Ante communities.
In 1873, the Eger Credit Institute of Commerce and Industry was established by a mixture of Jews and Christian Germans.
In 1890, the Jewish population grew to 2,396 (10.7% of the total). In 1929, 400 Jewish families lived in Eger.
The publication of the Hungarian racial laws of 1940 seriously undermined the economic position of the Jews. In 1942, Jewish males between18 and 42 years of age were drafted into the labor battalions and sent to the Russian front where most perished. The local bishop, Gyula Czapik, forbade parish priests from assisting extremist groups. Eight Jewish women were saved by working in the bishop's kitchen. On 8 June 1944, the Jews of Eger were deported to Auschwitz.
In World War II, the city suffered under the retreating German army and the arriving Soviet army, but it managed to escape major bombardment.
In November 1945, the Jewish community in Eger totaled about 150 souls, mostly the ex-forced labor unit members and some women. In April 1946, a memorial was inaugurated in the courtyard of the children's school, to memorialize the children who were deported and murdered.
In 1949, the Eger Status Quo Ante Jewish community numbered 294. The native Jews of Eger started moving elsewhere before the war and that movement from Eger continued in the post-war years. Many people moved to the capital, Budapest, and even more people left Hungary. The momentum of immigration was motivated by the 1956 Hungarian Revolution when there was an increase in anti-Semitic attacks and about 20,000 Jews emigrated from Hungary. The emigration of the more religious and the death of the elderly severely affected Eger's Jewish community life. Fewer people frequented the synagogue, even on the high holidays. In the late 1960's, the Status Quo Ante synagogue was demolished since it had not been used for prayer, and the Unicorn Hotel and Restaurant was built on the site.
In 2004, a memorial tablet was inaugurated on the wall of the Orthodox synagogue in Eger and at the railway station of Maklar. Every year, a Holocaust martyr memorial service is organized at the cemetery.
Today, Eger is a prosperous city and popular tourist destination, with a charming Baroque town center, historic sights and thermal baths. Eger has a population of over 56,000 inhabitants (2005). The postwar Jewish community in Eger numbered about 300, in 1959, but only about 20 Jews live there today (2010), mostly the very elderly.
Mád község képekben
Mád videó, képek Mád községről
A Mádi Udvarház vendégei voltunk -- Borcasting
A Gusteau Kulináris Élményműhely és a hozzá kapcsolódó Szent Tamás Pincészet vendégei voltunk Mádon.
Mad Sin - Dürer-kert, Budapest, Hungary - 2011/09/03
Mad Sin - Dürer-kert, Budapest, Hungary - 2011/09/03
Mád rövidített (feliratos)
Mad Professor in Hungary 2009 - Part 1
Mad Professor & Joe Ariwa @ Balaton Sound 2009, Hungary - Part 1