Prague, Czech Republic: Jewish Quarter
More info about travel to Prague: Prague, Czech Republic, is home to Europe's most interesting Jewish quarter. The few surviving historic buildings are thought-provoking and open to visitors.
At you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
Old Jewish Cemetery Prague and All Jewish Synagogues Prague Czech Republic
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Old Jewish Cemetery Prague CZ
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The Old Jewish Cemetry and Ghetto in Prague
Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague, Czech Republic
Due to limited space allowed to the Jews, graves are piled on each other 12 layers deep.
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Prague – Old Jewish Cemetery
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22/07/2019 – Prague – Old Jewish Cemetery
PT// Visita ao Cemitério Judeu mais antigo de Praga.
EN// Visit to the oldest Jewish Cemetery in Prague.
Music Instrumental
NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT IS INTENDED by this video it is ONLY for entertainment purposes.
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Old Jewish cemetery (Jewish Museum in Prague)
Jewish museum in Prague - Židovské muzeum v Praze 2015
First Snow at Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague
To be updated later
Centuries old Jewish tombstones found in Vienna
1. Various of recently unearthed gravestones
2. Close of Hebrew inscription on gravestone
3. Wide of gravestones
4. Wide of Raimund Fastenbauer, Secretary General of the Austrian Israelite Community
5. Mid of Hebrew tapestry, Fastenbauer in foreground
6. SOUNDBITE (German) Raimund Fastenbauer, Secretary General of the Austrian Israelite Community:
These are very important because they enable us to completely restore a Jewish cemetery with gravestones that are hundreds of years old. It is totally comparable to the significance of the Jewish cemetery in Prague.
7. Various of broken gravestone
8. Wide of cemetery
9. SOUNDBITE (German) Raimund Fastenbauer, Secretary General of the Austrian Israelite Community:
The community had been wiped out twice even before the Nazis. In 1670 the Jews were expelled from Vienna for the second time. And the cemetery dates from that time.
10. Various of gravestone
11. Various of Hebrew inscriptions on gravestone
12. Wide of gravestone lying on ground
STORYLINE:
Seventy years ago, Vienna's Nazi overlords gave the order to destroy the city's oldest Jewish cemetery.
They demanded that it be levelled and the tombstones attesting to centuries of Jewish existence there be destroyed.
Desperate to save their heritage, the city's shrinking Jewish community decided to act.
Defying the possibility of prison, deportation or execution, they buried the gravestones and kept them from Nazi hands.
Jewish leaders in the Austrian capital now say the long-lost stones have been rediscovered.
It's a find they say could transform a small obscure graveyard into one that rivals the significance of Prague's Jewish cemetery, the oldest known burial ground of its kind.
The cemetery has no name and is hard to find, with the only entrance through a city home for the elderly in Vienna's 9th district.
Weathered but restored gravestones poke through weedy, uncut grass, with faded Hebrew inscriptions.
But beneath the ground, Jewish leaders say, are other tombstones piled layer upon layer.
The cemetery dates back to the 16th century and had about 900 tombstones until 1938, when the Nazis came to power and gave vandals free reign to deface and destroy them.
Vienna's Jewish leaders say it's unclear exactly how many were buried by the small group of Viennese Jews determined to save their heritage from Nazi bulldozers.
They also say they have few further details of the act, with none of the participants surviving the Holocaust and their location unclear - until now.
After workers scored the ground with radar as part of restoration work, they say they are sure there are hundreds beneath the grass.
The 20 unearthed in the past few weeks have convinced officials they have a historically significant find, they said.
Raimund Fastenbauer, a senior official with Vienna's Austrian Israelite Community, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he believes many of the up to 600 missing stones are still below ground and partially or fully recoverable.
If so, he said, the find, is totally comparable to the significance of the Jewish cemetery in Prague, once the stones are restored and set up again.
While finding and restoring them is expected to last for years, more will likely be dug up in the next few weeks.
More than 185-thousand Jews lived in Vienna before Hitler's Germany annexed Austria in 1938.
Of the more than 65-thousand deported to Nazi death camps, only about two-thousand survived.
Most of the rest emigrated, with only about 25-thousand remaining by 1946, most of whom then left the country.
Today, there are an estimated 15-thousand Jews living in Austria, largely in Vienna.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
THE OLD JEWISH CEMETERY PRAGUE
Hay que reseñar, además, que es uno de los cementerios judíos más antiguos de Europa y su primera lapida, entre las 12.000 que te podrás encontrar, data del año 1439. Muchos de los fallecidos eran apilados sobre otros, por la falta de espacio, y así han continuado hasta el año 1787, en que cesó su actividad.
Jewish cemetery, Prague, Czech republic
Jewish cemetery, Prague, Czech republic
The Old Jewish Cemetery (Czech: Starý židovský hřbitov, German: Alter Jüdischer Friedhof) lies in the Josefov, the Jewish Quarter of Prague in the Czech Republic. It was in use from the early 15th century (the oldest preserved tombstone, the one of Avigdor Kara, dates back to 1439) until 1787.
Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague
Music: Bloch, Schelomo, Rhapsodie, Hebraique, Anne Gastinel
Old Jewish Cemetery - Prague, Czech Republic
Early 15th century gravestones
Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague
Video of the Old Jewish Cemetery in Prague (Czech Republic), at least 600 years old, with some 12,000 grave stones visible over a dozen subterranean layers of tombs. While the Nazis usually destroyed and desecrated Jewish cemeteries, they preserved this site, expecting to convert it into a museum exhibit of an extinct race after all Jews had been exterminated.
Prague Jewish Cemetery
A visit to a Jewish cemetery in Prague's old city, 21 Feb 2017.
Pinkas Synagogue and Old Jewish Cemetery , Prague January 27, 2015 Holocaust Remembrance Day
Next vidéo : February 4 ,2015 Prochain vidéo : 4 Février 2015
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Pinkas Synagogue and Old Jewish Cemetery , Prague
January 27 , 2015 .International Holocaust Remembrance Day
27 January 2015 marks the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the German Nazi concentration and extermination camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau, a UNESCO World Heritage site. Over 1.1 million people were killed in Auschwitz, including nearly 1 million Jews and tens of thousands of Poles, Roma and Sinti, Soviet prisonners of war and political opponents from all over Europe.
27 Janvier 2015 marque le 70e anniversaire de la libération de la concentration et d'extermination nazie camp allemand d'Auschwitz-Birkenau, un site du patrimoine mondial de l'UNESCO. Plus de 1,1 millions de personnes ont été tuées à Auschwitz, dont près de 1 million de Juifs et des dizaines de milliers de Polonais, Roms et des Sintis, prisonniers de guerre soviétiques et des opposants politiques de toute l'Europe.
Pinkas Synagogue and Old Jewish Cemetery , Prague
Pinkas Synagogue is dedicated to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust from Bohemia and Moravia; their names are inscribed on the walls of the main nave and adjoining areas. The interior of the synagogue comprises Memorial 77,297, which was designed and executed by the painters Václav Boštík and Jiří John (1923-1972) between 1954 and 1959. The memorial was closed in 1968, however, since the building was in an increasingly poor state of repair. After remaining closed for a long time, the building was eventually reconstructed and, following the collapse of the Communist regime, a project was launched to renovate the memorial, which reopened in 1996.
The text of the inscriptions was compiled from card indexes, which were drawn up shortly after the war on the basis of extant transport papers, registration lists and survivor's accounts. The names of Holocaust victims, together with their dates of birth and death, are inscribed on all the interior walls.
Pinkas Synagogue et Cimetière juif de Prague
Pinkas Synagogue est dédié aux victimes juives de l'Holocauste de la Bohême et de la Moravie; leurs noms sont inscrits sur les murs des principales zones nef et adjacentes. L'intérieur de la synagogue comprend Memorial 77297, qui a été conçu et exécuté par les peintres Václav Bostik et Jiří John (1923-1972) entre 1954 et 1959. Le mémorial a été fermé en 1968, cependant, puisque le bâtiment était dans un état de plus en plus pauvres de la réparation. Après être resté fermé pendant une longue période, le bâtiment a finalement été reconstruit et, suite à l'effondrement du régime communiste, un projet a été lancé pour rénover le monument, qui a rouvert en 1996.
Le texte des inscriptions a été compilé à partir des indices de cartes, qui ont été établis peu après la guerre sur la base des documents de transport existant, des listes d'inscription et les comptes de survivant. Les noms des victimes de l'Holocauste, ainsi que leurs dates de naissance et de mort, sont inscrits sur tous les murs intérieurs.
The mysterious Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague
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The Old Jewish Cemetery In Prague
Located in Prague, The Old Jewish Cemetery is an odd burial ground. Since Jewish tradition says the dead cannot be exhumed, many graves are stacked on top of each other. The headstones are of varying ages and it shows. This is a somber location that is important to the heritage of the Jewish population of the Czech Republic. Save yourself the trip to CZ and the entry fee by enjoying the walkthrough I have made for you. Thanks for watching and enjoy.
Old Jewish Cemetery in Prague (Starý židovský hřbitov)
Old Jewish Cemetery was founded in the 15th century. There are about 12,000 tombstones in the cemetery. ????
During the more than three centuries in which it was in active use, the cemetery continually struggled with the lack of space. For this reason, there are places where as many as 12 layers now exist!
That’s why the surface of the cemetery is raised several meters higher than the surrounding streets; retaining walls are necessary to hold the soil and the graves in place.
Have you visit it? ????
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???? Address: Starý židovský hřbitov, Široká, 110 00 Staré Město.
???? Tickets: Old Jewish Cemetery is included in the tour of the Jewish Museum and Prague Jewish Town. Admission free - from 330 czk/adult.
Tickets are valid for 7 days.
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Mysterious Jewish cemetery in Prague, Czech republic
Winter mood in the Prague's Jewish quarter and the old Jewish cemetery.