JEWISH CEMETERY
Kałuszyn
Kałuszyn קאלושין
“Where are they all, the Jews, the Hasidim and the artisans?
Where are all the bridegrooms and the brides,
the little children and the Yeshiva boys,
the schoolchildren and their instructors,
the congregants and the cantors,
the rabbis ,the learned teachers,
the judges, the beadles, the Klezmer players?
Is there a sign of the synagogue or even a single headstone in the two old cemeteries?”
—Yosef Zisholtz, Sefer Kałuszyn (1961), p. 42 (translated from the Yiddish).
Kałuszyn is a village located approximately 65 kilometers east of Warsaw. Jewish settlement of Kałuszyn is thought to have begun in the 1600s. Over the centuries, Jews contributed to the development of Kałuszyn as millers, wood and metal merchants, tailors, furriers, prayer shawl makers and manufacturers. The town was the residence of great rabbis, Hasidic masters and scholars.
On the eve of the Second World War 5,200 Jews lived in Kałuszyn, about sixty percent of the population. The village was attacked by the Nazi enemy in the very first days of World War II. Jews in Kałuszyn responded, from those early days, with kindness and warmth toward their brethren fleeing burning Warsaw and heading to the eastern Polish border, and with resistance and heroism in the struggle against the enemy. The humiliation, torture and murder of the Jews of Kałuszyn by the Nazi enemy began in those very first days of war in September 1939. The war years were years of great suffering for the Jews of Kałuszyn. The Nazis established a ghetto in the town, carried out mass executions of Jews in and near the Cemetery and ultimately deported the remaining Jews of Kałuszyn to the Treblinka death camp. Few Kałuszyn Jews survived the Holocaust.
The major Jewish landmarks in Kałuszyn did not survive the War. Little evidence of the energetic Jewish Kałuszyn was visible when the Kałuszyn project, spearheaded by one and then many more Jewish descendants of Kałuszyners, began. With the cooperation of the Foundation for Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland, those descendants established a monument on the Kałuszyn Jewish Cemetery property in 2017. Since then an Israeli non-profit organization, the Dr. Avraham Gamzu Kaluszyner Society of Israel, has encouraged and facilitated visits by tour groups to Kałuszyn, where they are led by a Polish tour guide dedicated to telling the story of the rich Jewish presence that once existed in Kałuszyn. The Society has recently published a book, Kałuszyn, in Hebrew and English, which it has distributed without charge, to educate visitors about the community and its destruction.

GALLERY
Questions about the Kałuszyn cemetery project? Please send us a message:






