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AROUND THE JEWISH WORLD
For Buffalo man, concern for roots
leads to cemetery project in Poland
By Ruth E. Gruber
WARSAW, Oct. 31 (JTA) - For decades, the abandoned Jewish
cemetery in
Karczew, a small town near Warsaw on the banks of the
Vistula River,
languished as an eerie and disconcerting wasteland.
Dozens of tombstones stood broken or eroded or lay toppled
haphazardly on
dunes of pale river sand, scattered with debris that
included human bones
exposed by wind and rain.
All that is changing now, thanks to cooperation between
local townspeople,
Polish Jews and a new volunteer organization aimed at
cleaning up and
restoring the hundreds of abandoned Jewish graveyards
in Poland.
A recent ceremony marked the completion of the first
stage of restoration.
"There are new walls and a metal gate," said
Norman Weinberg, executive
coordinator of the new Poland Jewish Cemetery Restoration
Project, or PJCRP.
"Dogs can no longer enter here and chew on the
bones."
The next stage will involve planting trees and shrubs
to stabilize the sand,
he said.
Weinberg, a retired research chemist who lives near
Buffalo, established the
project in June after successfully organizing the restoration
of the Jewish
cemetery in Ozarow, the small Polish town where his
parents were born.
The organization aims to restore as many as possible
of Poland's devastated
Jewish cemeteries; document the restoration process
through words, pictures
and video; translate the inscriptions on all the monuments;
and put all the
material on the Internet, Weinberg told JTA in an e-mail
interview.
"We want to build awareness and show others how
cemetery restoration can be
done," he said. "Realistically, of course,
we will do this one" cemetery "at
a time as funds become available."
There are more than 1,000 Jewish cemeteries in Poland,
most of them
abandoned, overgrown and often devastated. Many, ravaged
by the Nazis, were
confiscated under communism.
They all are expected to be given back to the Polish
Jewish community under
Poland's restitution law, as was the cemetery in Karczew.
But Poland's Jews
do not have the financial resources to restore or maintain
them.
That's where the restoration project comes in.
"The PJCRP can advise, raise some funds, gain
support from governments and
organizations," Weinberg said.
About 80 percent of North American Jews trace their
ancestry to Poland. The
PJCRP actively targets associations of Jews and their
descendants from
individual towns - known as landsmanschaften - for funding
and other
support. The project already has begun exploring cemetery
restoration
projects in more than a dozen Polish towns.
Except for the actual workers and contractors who restore
the cemeteries,
the PJCRP consists of a group of volunteers.
"We're trying to create a framework that will
enable people who want to help
to do so," said Michael Schudrich, the American-born
rabbi of Warsaw and
Lodz who is the PJCRP's executive coordinator for halachic
affairs.
Schudrich makes sure that halachic standards are observed
in carrying out
the restoration. Work supervised by the PJCRP is never
done on Shabbat or
Jewish holidays.
For Weinberg, last year's Ozarow project was a life-changing
experience. It
also provided him with a model for involving Jews, local
Poles and official
institutions that could be applied to other cemeteries.
"It started off about eight years ago with the
birth of our first
grandchild," he said. "What could I tell him
some day about his family, his
ancestors and his heritage?
"From a growing interest in family genealogy and
learning about Ozarow came
the realization that our ancestral cemetery there was
a shambles, most of
the monuments gone, the walls all but demolished, and
that 120 Jews were
rounded up after most were deported to Treblinka, forced
to dig their own
grave and then murdered by the Nazis," he said.
Weinberg retired from his business on May 1, 2001.
"On May 2, I was determined to try to restore
the Ozarow cemetery," he said.
With the help of the Israel-based Ozarower Rebbe, Rabbi
Tanchum Becker,
Weinberg and some friends began contacting associations
of Jews from Ozarow
to raise funds.
They also contacted individuals and organizations including
Schudrich, the
Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw and the Washington-based
U.S.
Commission for America's Heritage Abroad.
A non-Jewish Polish businessman, Andrzej Omasta, became
the Poland-based
project manager and met with the mayor, priest and townspeople
in Ozarow.
"The town became immediately supportive when they
realized what we wanted to
do," Weinberg recalled.
About a month after taking on the project, "We
announced that the dedication
ceremony would be barely five months away," on
Oct. 15, 2001, he said.
"Ozarowers were very responsive, and within about
two months we had raised
or had commitments for all the funds we needed.
"Ozarowers paid for the work, but thanks are due
also to the generosity of
many Poles, who gave freely of their time," he
said.
A tour bus full of Jews from Ozarow and their families
traveled to the town for the emotional dedication ceremony.
There they were greeted by over 500 townspeople dressed
in their best, including school children, the mayor,
town priest, contractors and representatives from the
American and Canadian embassies, Weinberg said.
Tears flowed freely as the priest, in Polish, and Becker,
in Hebrew, intoned Psalm 79 before the commemorative
monument at the mass grave.
In January, Weinberg said, pupils at the Ozarow High
School decided to put on an evening of Jewish heritage
and remembrance.
Two weeks later, he received a letter from the headmaster,
informing him that students would take on the responsibility
of maintaining and cleaning the cemetery.
The Weinberg family subsequently endowed an annual
scholarship for a senior student writing the winning
essay on Ozarow's Jews and Polish-Jewish relations,
with the winner chosen by high school staff.
"Restoration of the Jewish cemeteries of Poland
is about remembering and honoring the dead and the many
hundreds of thousands murdered and buried in mass graves
in many of the cemeteries and in nearby forests,"
Weinberg said.
But, he added, "It is also about life and living,
about doing mitzvot and about reconciliation of Poles
and Jews."
For more information, see the Web sites www.pjcrp.org/index.html
and www.ozarow.org.
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