Charedim flock to Polish schoolyard where they say a cemetery used to stand
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Charedim flock to Polish schoolyard where they say a cemetery used to stand

Charedi followers of the Modzitz Chasidic dynasty travel to the eastern Polish town of Kazimierz Dolny, where they say their movement's founder is buried in what is now a schoolyard

Kazimierz Dolny's old synagogue
Kazimierz Dolny's old synagogue

 A schoolyard in Poland which was built on what is believed to be the grave of a prominent 19-century rabbi has become the site of an unofficial pilgrimage, the Israel Broadcasting Corp. reported.

Charedi followers of the Modzitz Chasidic dynasty, which is based in Israel, discovered in 2013 that the movement’s founder, Rabbi Yehezkel of Kuzhmir, was buried in what is now a public school in Kazimierz Dolny in eastern Poland, according to the report Sunday.

The rabbi was buried in a cemetery that was destroyed during the Holocaust. The school was built on the former ground of the cemetery.

The pilgrims arrive regularly in small groups to pray in the middle of what is now a football field inside the school. They bribe security guards to enter. But they are sometimes turned away. Shlomo Hirsch Taub, a prominent rabbi in the Modzitz, told the Israeli television crew that locals “deliberately try to prevent worship.

The Modzitz rabbis have appealed the J-nerations group, which specialises in the rescue of Jewish burial places in Poland, to negotiate with local authorities to regulate worship at what the worshippers say is Rabbi Yehezkel’s grave.

One local who lives near the school said that floods result in floods from the school downhills, carrying bones. The local, who was identified only as Sonia, said she regularly buried the bones that she finds after heavy rains.

“The city says the Nazis are responsible for this crime,” Taub said. “Let’s suppose that’s true. But do they want to perpetuate it?”

The Modzitz yeashiva are demanding the grave be made into a protected place of worship and declared a sacred site.

Across Eastern Europe, hundred of Jewish cemeteries were destroyed by the Nazis and built over by communist authorities. Currently in Lithuania, some members of the Jewish community are trying to prevent the construction of a conference hall on what used to be the Snipiskes Cemetery in Vilnius, the capital.

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