Široká, 110 00 Praha +420 222 749 211 Cemeteries | synagogue.cz
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Široká, 110 00 Praha +420 222 749 211 Cemeteries | synagogue.cz
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Zidovska nabozenska obec Kozia 18, 814 47 Bratislava +421-2-5441 6949
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Paprét, 9400 Sopron
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Temetö utca 33 9025 Györ Tel : +36 70 384 82 17 Institutions of the Jewish community in Győr
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Kozma u. 8-10, 1108 Budapest +36 1 433 7300
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Aleja Hermanna Bollea 27, 10000, Zagreb +385 1 4696 700
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Via delle Vigne, 44100 Ferrara
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The catacombs can only be visited with a guide. You can order your visit on http://www.viator.com
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Calle Comandante Fontanes, 7, 28019 Madrid +34 917 14 64 22 The British Cemetery in Madrid – Fundación Cementerios Británicos en España (britishcemeteriesspain.org)
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Rue de la Fontenette, 1227 Carouge +41 (0) 79 202 33 70 Communauté Israélite de Genève – La communauté juive en mouvement (comisra.ch)
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Willy-Brandt-Ring, 67547 Worms +062418537306
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Mombacherstrasse 8, 55001 Mainz
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Herbert-Baumstrasse 31, Weissensee +49 (0) 30 9253330 http://www.jg-berlin.org/en/judaism/cemeteries/weissensee.html
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Schönhauser Allee 22, 10435 Berlin +49 (0) 30 441 98 24 http://www.jg-berlin.org/en/judaism/cemeteries/schoenhauser-allee.html
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Begraafplaats, Scheveningseweg 21a, 2117 KS, the Hague
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Avenue du 14 avril, 64100 Bayonne https://communautejuiveaquitaine.fr/annuaire/synagogue-de-bayonne/
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Avenue Antoine de la Salle, 13210 Saint-Rémy-de-Provence +33 (0) 4 90 92 05 22 Ville de Saint-Rémy-de-Provence – Site officiel de la ville de Saint-Rémy-de-Provence (mairie-saintremydeprovence.com)
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On the left just after leaving the village by the D12 bis road Tel +33 3 88 14 46 50 http://judaisme.sdv.fr/synagog/hautrhin/g-p/hegenh/cimet2.htm
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3, Route d’Oberhausbergen, 67200 Rosenwiller +33 (0)3 88 60 90 90 Le Cimetière Israélite – Rosenwiller Site officiel
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Established in 1775, the Jewish community of Stockholm numbers 5200 members. Its is situated near Raoul Wallenberg Square. The square was named after the Swedish diplomat who, after saving a number of Hungarian Jews, was arrested and then most likely assassinated by the Soviets. A sculpture by Willy Gordon representing a Jew fleeing with a Sepher Torah stands in front of the building. The ...
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, a fortress island opposite Helsinki, was the site of the first Jewish place of worship. According to legal developments, a decree from 1869 and the letter from the Senate from 1876, demobilised soldiers were allowed to work in the civilian sector. The city of Helsinki decided to donate a plot of land to the Jewish community in 1900 in order to build a synagogue. It is located on Malminkatu ...
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The terrifying war against Ukraine changes, of course, the function of these pages devoted to the Jewish cultural heritage of that country. Many of the places mentioned were razed to the ground by bombs. While these pages are not intended in the present time for tourism, they may be useful to researchers and students as historical references. References to so many painful histories during the ...
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The terrifying war against Ukraine changes, of course, the function of these pages devoted to the Jewish cultural heritage of that country. Many of the places mentioned were razed to the ground by bombs. While these pages are not intended in the present time for tourism, they may be useful to researchers and students as historical references. References to so many painful histories during the ...
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The terrifying war against Ukraine changes, of course, the function of these pages devoted to the Jewish cultural heritage of that country. Many of the places mentioned were razed to the ground by bombs. While these pages are not intended in the present time for tourism, they may be useful to researchers and students as historical references. References to so many painful histories during the ...
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The terrifying war against Ukraine changes, of course, the function of these pages devoted to the Jewish cultural heritage of that country. Many of the places mentioned were razed to the ground by bombs. While these pages are not intended in the present time for tourism, they may be useful to researchers and students as historical references. References to so many painful histories during the ...
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Despite the prohibition against Jews living in Russia, beyond a clearly defined zone, there were a few remarkable exceptions in the eighteenth century, particularly in the capital, Saint Petersburg, where the Russian-Jewish intelligentsia was concentrated. In 1900, Jews in Saint Petersburg already numbered 20385, or 1,4% of the population. This figure would climb to 50000 by 1917 (2%), 95000 ...
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The number of active Jewish communities in Latvia is much smaller since the Shoah. All information concerning them is likely to quickly prove obsolete, since demographic trends in the communities leave little doubt about their dying out in the near future. The aliyah toward Israel is likewise becoming increasingly significant. Inquiries can be made at the offices of the . Despite present ...
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In 1897, 20385 Jews lived in Gomel (54,8% of the population), as compared with 37475 (43,7%) in 1926. Today, little remains of their life here. The Jewish quarter was located on the right bank of the river. A beautiful with colonnades once occupied the slight bend that forms on the main road (Lenin Street). In its place stands the Mir Cinema, whose columns -those of the former synagogue- ...
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Grodno, seat of a Catholic bishopric, was once a major city within the Polish-Lithuanian Union, as evidenced by Farny, the beautiful Baroque Jesuit church that towers over Sovietskaya Square. Jews began settling here in the fourteenth century: they were permitted to live in the town by Grand Duke Witold in 1389. In the nineteenth century, over 60% of the population was Jewish; at 42% in 1931. ...
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In the nineteenth century, more than 70% of Slonim’s population was Jewish. The ratio was 53% before the war. The ghetto was burned down between 29 June and 15 July 1942. At the city’s edge, at the site of the former cemetery, a monument commemorates the city’s 35000 Jews exterminated during the war. In the city center, set back in the relation to the marketplace, the ruins ...
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