topics
tools
Expatica countries
Index Last Var.(%)
BEL 20 2247.59 -1.01
DAX 6723.62 -0.96
IBEX 30 8820.8 -0.91
CAC 40 3392.62 -0.94
FTSE 100 5866 -0.50
AEX 321.9 -0.99
DJIA 12890.46 0.05
Nasdaq 2927.23 0.39
FTSE MIB 16559.53 -0.57
TSX Composite 12497.94 -0.18
ASX 4322.6 -0.79
Hang seng 20783.86 -1.08
Straits Times 2957.52 -0.79
ISEQ 20 501.11 -0.52
You are here: Home News European News Polish prisoners to renovate Jewish cemeteries
Enlarge font Decrease font Text size


03/07/2009Polish prisoners to renovate Jewish cemeteries

The Polish prison service has signed an agreement with the national Polish-Jewish heritage foundation that enables prisoners to volunteer for conservation work.

Warsaw -- Polish prisoners are to do conservation work in disused Jewish cemeteries, Poland's penitentiary service said Thursday.

Prisons spokesman Ireneusz Mucha said the service had signed an agreement with the national Polish-Jewish heritage foundation enabling prisoners to volunteer.

The foundation estimates that about 1,000 cemeteries countrywide need work. The occupying Nazi Germans destroyed many Jewish graveyards during World War II.

"The voluntary, unpaid work will be run with local authorities or Jewish communities. The advantages will go both ways, because the foundation will also provide courses in history and tolerance for the prisoners," Mucha told AFP.

The plan involves more than a dozen penitentiaries across Poland.

Two initial projects will see the building of a memorial in a cemetery in Radom, south of Warsaw, and the renovation of a graveyard in Zwierzyniec in the southeast.

Jews first emigrated to Poland from western Europe to escape 11th century pogroms.

On the eve of World War II, Poland was home to around 3.5 million Jews, representing around 10 percent of the country's population and Europe's largest Jewish community.

Half of the six million Jews killed by Nazi Germany were Polish. Most perished in camps set up in occupied Poland such as the infamous Auschwitz-Birkenau.

In 1945, Poland's surviving Jewish population numbered just 280,000.

Many emigrated to the United States or Israel immediately after the war or during waves of anti-Semitism under the communist regime in the 1950s and 1960s.

According to various estimates, there are about 3,500-15,000 people who identify themselves as Jewish in Poland today, out of a total population of 38 million people, more than 90 percent of whom are Catholic.

AFP/Expatica


0 reactions to this article

0 reactions to this article

Discussion Forums

Community Noticeboard Switzerland

IFAs / FSIs / Country Managers / Confidential Introducers

Community Noticeboard Switzerland

Republicans Abroad Europe

Discuss Swiss Culture

Win prizes by filling out Expatica Survey 2011!

Community Noticeboard Switzerland

Win prizes by filling out Expatica Survey 2011!

Finding your way in Switzerland

great bouvier in Switzerland. Forum, contacts, etc

participate in the forums

Inside Expatica
Residence and work permits in Switzerland

Residence and work permits in Switzerland

How to apply for a residency or work permit in Switzerland for you and your family.

How to rent and buy a house in Switzerland

How to rent and buy a house in Switzerland

Information about renting property and obtaining a mortgage in Switzerland.

Switzerland's healthcare system

Switzerland's healthcare system

Information about the Swiss healthcare system, health insurance, pharmacies and emergency numbers.

Banking in Switzerland

Banking in Switzerland

Explaining Swiss currency, banknotes, credit cards and bureaux de change.