The Jewish Community of Zamosc
Early
History / Jewish Personalities of Zamosc
/
Between the Two World Wars /
The Holocaust / After WW2
/ The Dawna Synagogue in Zamosc /
Bibliography / Links
Early History
The town of Zamosc (also known as Zamostie, Zamotch,
Zamoshtch), located in the Lublin province of eastern Poland, was established
at the end of the 16th century on the grounds of a former village by Jan
Zamoyski (1542-1605), a Polish statesman, general, and grand crown chancellor
of Poland during the reign of Stephen Bathory (1576-1587). Jan Zamoyski,
who was educated in Italy, was instrumental in introducing into Poland humanist
ideas reflected in his policies at both the national and the local level.
Zamosc, sometimes labeled "Padua of the East", was designed by the Italian
architect Bernardo Morando (1540-1600), a native of Padua, according to
the principles of "Citta ideale" ("Ideal city") and it represents the only
complete Renaissance urban complex in Poland. In accordance with his enlightened
policies and his tolerant attitude, Jan Zamoyski invited new settlers to
his town that included in addition to Poles, people from other nationalities
and non-Catholic denominations: Armenians, Greeks, Italians, Hungarians,
Scots, and Jews. This policy helped in strengthening the economic and cultural
life of Zamosc and creating an island of tolerance at an epoch when other
Catholic countries in Europe persecuted the Jews and the Protestants.
The first Jews settled in Zamosc in 1588, eight years
after the founding of the town. They were Sephardim (Spanish Jews) coming
from the Ottoman Empire and Venice and, consequently established the northernmost
Sephardi community in Eastern Europe. They were granted equal rights that
included tax exemption for 25 years and the right to establish their own
community on condition they accept into their community only Jews of Spanish
and Portuguese descent. The extensive privileges accorded to Jews included
the right to own houses, to build a brick synagogue and a Mikveh (ritual
bath), and to establish a cemetery. On the occupational level, they were
free to engage in most activities, with the exception of shoemaking, furriery,
and pottery. The Jewish quarter was located around Rynak Solny (The Salt
Market), Ulica Zydowska (The Jewish Street) (now Ulica Zamenhofa), and Ulica
Pereca, in the northeastern section of the town center. A newer Jewish district
evolved in the early 19th century in the area stretching from Stara Brama
Lwowska towards Nowa Osada. The original Sephardi community ceased to exist
in the 1620's following an economic crisis generated by the accumulation
of bad debts by Polish debtors. Having been attracted by the commercial
importance of the town, Ashkenazi Jews also began settling in Zamosc at
the beginning of the 17th century. The influx of Ashkenazi Jews increased
in the 1640's, especially by refugees fleeing the anti-Jewish massacres
perpetrated by the troops of B. Chmelniecki during the Ukrainian revolt
against Polish rule. Although Zamosc resisted the siege, many Jews died
because of famine and diseases. The Jews were requested to pay taxes according
to a system introduced in the second half of the 16th century by the resolutions
of the Sejm, a system that largely remained valid until the beginning of
the 19th century. There were taxes for the local landlord, the town authorities,
and a regular Jewish poll tax for the benefit of the state. The many wars
fought by Poland in the 17th century brought about a massive increase in
the amount of the poll tax, which by the end of the 17th century was almost
ten times higher than one hundred years earlier. At the same time, the legal
status of the Jews deteriorated with new restrictions imposed on their residential
rights in Zamosc. The prohibition of buying houses within the walls of the
town created a situation of fictitious ownership of realty, with some Jews
trying to conceal their properties. In 1765, however, the Jewish population
of Zamosc and its surrounding communities numbered 1,905 individuals.
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The market place in Zamosc
Drawing by Joseph Cempla, 1950’s
From: Holy Stones - Remnants of Synagogues in Poland,
Dvir Publishing Co. 1959
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Samuel Levin, Israel
While the Sephardi Jews were active in the finance, some
of the later Jewish inhabitants of Zamosc established small commercial enterprises
that dealt in timber, grain, and cattle. Others were artisans; mainly tailors,
locksmiths, tinsmiths, and carpenters. In addition, there were Jews who
rented out plots of land. A special permit granted by the landlord Michal
Zdzislaw Zamoyski in 1726, confirmed earlier privileges of engaging in the
production and selling of alcoholic beverages enacted on special conditions
already in 1631. The Jews were granted the right to slaughter cattle and
sell kosher and non-kosher meat from a separate place in public booths without
any hindrance by the butchers' guild. During the last years of the independent
Kingdom of Poland at the end of the 18th century, eighteen Jewish families
left Zamosc, because of the efforts of the Polish authorities that encouraged
Jews to be active in agriculture, and moved to villages in its vicinity.
The beginning of the industry in the early 19th century, brought about a
number of small plants, established by Jews, who employed other Jews. In
1846-7 these included a winery, three brickworks, three flourmills, a soap
factory and a few sawmills.
Following the divisions of Poland during the late 18th
century, Zamosc was occupied by the Austrians from 1772 to 1809, when it
was included into the newly set Grand Duchy of Warsaw following the military
campaigns of the Napoleonic wars that caused severe destructions to Zamosc.
In the wake of the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Zamosc and its surrounding
area was occupied by the Russians and as part of the Kingdom of Congress
Poland remained under Russian rule until WW1. The Russian regime was less
favorable towards the Jews. The governor of Zamosc, in 1830, even considered
expelling the entire Jewish community from the town as a punishment for
their refusal to conduct a census of the local Jews. Jews were prohibited
from entering the town for a number of years during the 1830's. In 1845,
new taxes were introduced for the right of wearing traditional Jewish garbs.
During the Polish insurgencies of 1830 and 1863, many Jews of Zamosc sided
with the Poles. In 1870, eight local Jews were accused of robbing the local
Russian military camp; they were released from a possible death penalty
only after the intervention of foreign Jewish personalities and the
Alliance Israélite Universelle of France. The Jewish
population of Zamosc grew from 2,490 in 1856 to 7,034 in 1897, and to 9,000
in 1909, representing about 50% and 63% of the total population of the town,
respectively.
The first wooden synagogue in Zamosc was built at the
end of the 16th century when also a Jewish cemetery was opened. The impressive
Renaissance style synagogue was built in the 1610’s. The Jewish community
of Zamosc extended its authority over a number of small communities in the
surrounding countryside: Laszczow, Bilgoraj, Frampol, Krasnobrod, Zolkiewka,
Wysokie, and Modliborzyce. In 1677, the Jews of Zamosc belonged to the Chelm-Belz
area of the Council of the Four Lands, but only three years later the Jewish
community of Zamosc and the surrounding area became a separate entity, to
be recognized officially in 1730. At times, it has still been referred as
belonging to the district of Chelm-Belz.
During the 17th and 18th century Zamosc became known
for its scholars, starting with R. Shlomo, the first rabbi in the town.
He was followed by a long series of sages, among them R. Aryeh Leib (17th
century), author of Sheagat Aryeh who later moved to Tykocin and then traveled
as an emissary to the Ottoman Empire to meet the false messiah Shabbetai
Zvi; R. Jacob Isaac Hochgelertner (1710-1771), founder of the Yeshivat Hahmei
Zamosc, headed after him by his son R. Joseph Hochgelertner (1740-1807),
author of Hiddushei Mahari and Mishnat Hahamim, and his grandson, R. Jacob
Isaac Hochgelertner (1771-1825), author of Zikhron Yitzhak.
Among the adepts of the Kabbalah in Zamosc, a special
mention should be made of R. Baal Shem Harishon, son-in-law of R. Uri and
grandson of R. Joel Baal Shem of Zamosc as well as R. Avraham bar David,
R. David Hakohen, and R. Yehuda Leib Edel (d.1805), author of Afikei Yehuda.
The dispute between R. Jonathan Eybeschutz (1690/4-1764) and R. Jakob Emden
(1697-1776) in the middle years of the 18th century had not passed over
Zamosc where the local rabbi, R. Avraham Hakohen, supported Jakob Emden
in spite of the general preference in favor of Jonathan Eybeschutz as indicated
by the Council of the Four Lands. The messianic ideas of Sabbateanism and
later those of the Frankists had received little response in Zamosc.
The Hassidic movement had a bigger success in the smaller
rural communities around Zamosc. Only towards the middle of the 19th century
did the number of Hassidim become important with the majority split between
followers of the rabbis of Belz and Gur. The religious life of the community
in the 19th century and early 20th was greatly influenced by a series of
town rabbis, among them R. Moshe Jehoshua Heshel Wahl (d.1873), author of
Beth Moshe and uncle of I. L. Peretz, and R. Josef Shlomo Shabbtai Halevi
Horowitz (1861-1943), a descendant of the of Jacob Isaac Ha-Hozeh Mi-Lublin
(1745-1815), who served as rabbi in Zamosc from 1889-1928, and R. Mordechai
Halevi Horowitz-Sternfeld (murdered in September 1939 by Polish anti-Semites),
the rabbi of the new district of the town.
Austrian rule at the end of the 18th century facilitated
the introduction of the enlightenment movement to Zamosc. The new ideas
were welcomed by numerous Jews, among them Joseph Zederbaum (the father
of Alexander Zederbaum, editor of the Hebrew newspaper Ha-Melitz), and the
scholar and educator Jacob Eichenbaum (1796-1861) both of whom became leaders
of the local Haskalah. The Austrian influence brought about the establishment
of Jewish-German schools. In the 19th century the Jews of Zamosc organized
large efforts for the advancement of the local education. Jewish children
continued to attend the traditional heder and the Talmud Torah, with some
continuing to yeshiva. In 1886, the local intelligentsia set up a Jewish
school for boys whose curriculum included such subjects as Russian and Mathematics.
Other Jewish children were sent to the State Gymnasium (high school) as
well as to a private secondary school. Towards the end of the 19th century,
there was an increase in the number of Jewish students in institutions of
higher learning. Other activities of the Jewish community were directed
to the assistance of the needy. The health care services received an impetus
with the opening of Bikur Holim in the second half of the 19th century;
and in 1911 of Linat Zedek, a small clinic that eventually evolved into
a hospital with 24 beds. The community also operated a kosher canteen for
Jewish soldiers of the local Russian army garrison, a senior citizen home,
and mutual help fund that extended interest-free loans to Jewish merchants
and artisans. A second synagogue was built in the Nowa Osada district in
1872 and extended from 1909 to 1913.
The increasingly political repression of the Czarist
regime during the last decades of the 19th century and in the early 20th
century had a double effect: there was in increase, on one hand, in the
number of Jews who emigrated, mainly to the USA, and it brought about, on
the other hand, a considerable growth in the political involvement of the
Jews of Zamosc with many joining the Bund - the Jewish Socialist party whose
local branch opened in 1903, and the Zionist Socialist party Poalei Zion.
The Russian revolution of 1905 was welcome by Jewish workers in Zamosc who
demanded an improvement of their working conditions. The repression that
followed included many arrests and even deportations to Siberia. At the
start of WW1 Zamosc was occupied for a short period of time by the Austro-Hungarian
army in September 1914. When the Russian army recaptured Zamosc, the local
Jews of were accused of siding with the Austrians and consequently the Russians
executed 11 Jews. The Austro-Hungarian army reentered in 1915 and held Zamosc
under its occupation until the end of WW1. Numerous inhabitants left the
town because of the fighting, others died in a typhus epidemics that erupted
in 1916.
Jewish Personalities of Zamosc
Dr. Philip Lubelski (1778-1879), physician.
He was an army surgeon in the Polish legion of General Jan Henryk
Dombrowski (1755-1818) in France and later in the French army during
the Napoleonic campaigns, he was made on Officer of the
Légion d'Honneur. Lubelski was chief physician
of the military hospital in Zamosc until 1826, when he moved to
Warsaw.
Arieh Loeb Kinderfreund (1798-1873), scholar,
born in Zamosc. He lived much of his life in Galicia, in deep poverty.
He is the author of Shirim Shonim (1834), a collection of
poems, and of various other works, including a Latin essay about
the priority of the Hebrew language and a separate apologetic treatise
in defense of Judaism.
Yaakov ben Seeb (Wolf) Kranz (1741-1804),
preacher (Maggid), known as the Maggid of Dubno.
More
Alexander Zederbaum (pseudonym Erez,
the Hebrew for Ceder = Zederbaum) (1816-1893), pioneer of Jewish
journalism, born in Zamosc, he settled in Odessa in 1840 where he
published Ha-Melitz, the first Hebrew weekly in Russia (1860),
later moved to St. Petersburg, an enthusiastic supporter of Hibbat
Zion movement.
Isaac Leibush Peretz (1852-1915), Yiddish
author, born in Zamosc, he is widely acclaimed as one of the three
major writers of the modern Yiddish literature.
Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919), revolutionary.
More
Mordechai Strigler (1921-1998), Yiddish
writer and editor of the Forward (1987-1998). Born in Zamosc,
and ordained a rabbi in 1937, he turned into a writer after WW2
and published a six-volume series Oysgebrente Likht (Extinguished
Candles) about the Holocaust, and Arm in Arm with the Wind
(1955), a historical novel about Jewish life in Poland during the
17th and 18th centuries. Strigler was awarded
the Itzik Manger Prize in Yiddish Literature (1978)
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Between the Two World Wars
Since the end of 1918, Zamosc has been part of the Polish
Republic. In the period between the two World Wars, and even with a continuing
emigration that was strong particularly among the young, there had been
a significant increase of the Jewish population from 9,383 in 1921 to about
12,000 at the beginning of WW2, which represented about 45% of the total
population.
Both WW1 and the war between Poland and Soviet Russia
had grave consequences on the Jews of Zamosc. The economic activity could
be reorganized only in the early 1920's. The standards of living again,
however, started to decline because of the Great Depression that hit hard
the Polish economy and of the anti-Jewish policies of the Polish government.
Many local Jews received assistance from the community through the Provident
Fund which itself was subsidized by the Joint Jewish Appeal. Most of the
local Jews were employed in small business and a promising industry that
provided for the needs of the Polish countryside. There were Jewish trade
unions that defended the rights of Jewish bakers, salesmen, transport and
timber workers, as well as a merchants' association and a union of religious
artisans founded in the early 1930's.
Zionist activity in Zamosc intensified during the Austrian
occupation of Zamosc in WW1 when a branch of Mizrachi opened in 1916, followed
next year by a Zionist conference attended by delegates from other towns
in the region. Zionism strengthened during the 1920's with almost all the
main Zionist parties attracting supporters from amongst the Jews of Zamosc.
Zionist youth movements included Tze'irei Mizrachi (1918), Hashomer
Hatzair (1919), Freiheit (= Dror, 1929), Beitar
(1929), Hanoar Hazioni (19129), and Gordonia (1931). The agricultural
training of aspirating emigrants to Eretz Israel was undertaken at Avigdoria,
a farm belonging to the Hechalutz movement established on the land
belonging to the local Zionist activist Avigdor Ilander. Brith Hahayal
and Brith Yeshuron attracted members of the Revisionist and the Religious
Revisionist Zionist movements, respectively. A number of Jews from Zamosc
emigrated to Eretz Israel during the interwar period. The Zionist movement
encouraged and sponsored Jewish sports clubs in Zamosc: Maccabi (from
1912), Nordiya (1932), and Hapoel.
Jewish political parties active in Zamosc included the
General Zionists, Socialist Zionists, Poalei Zion, Mizrachi,
and the Revisionists. In addition to the Zionist group that was dominated
by the Socialists - they received an absolute majority at the last elections
held just before the outbreak of WW2, other political parties included
Agudat Israel, a religious conservative party, the Bund which
along with its youth movement Tsukunft (Future) controlled much of
the local trade unions, and a small group of Communists that activated illegally.
All political parties had representatives in the Community Council, the
leading administrative body of the local Jewish community. The community
was instrumental in assisting the poorer families, particularly during the
years of the economic crisis. The community administrated an orphanage,
the Jewish hospital, and the health organization TOZ.
Jews were elected to the Town Council of Zamosc. In 1928
half of its 24 members were Jewish, but in 1929 their number declined to
six only (a quarter of the total), and remained unchanged in 1939, when
the last elections were held. The general attitude towards the Jews worsened
during the 1930's because of the growing anti-Semitism in Poland. In Zamosc
it was expressed by boycotts of the Jewish business as well as by violent
attacks against Jews and their property.
The first modern Hebrew school in Zamosc, belonging to
the Yavneh chain, was opened by Mizrachi in 1916 and functioned till 1923.
The Jewish education extended during the interwar period with the addition
of kindergartens and elementary schools: the Hebrew school Kadimah opened
in 1918 and after 1936 was affiliated to the Tarbut network. The local Jewish
Gymnasium opened in 1927 as a state educational institution with Polish
as its language of instruction. There was also a Yiddish primary school
called after I. L. Peretz.
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Members of Kibbutz Tel Hai,
Zamosc, July 20, 1934
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Esther Hering, Israel
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A play by the Jewish High School,
Zamosc, 1923
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Samuel Levin, Israel
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The cultural life of the town was enriched by a number
of public libraries. The first was the I. L. Peretz library opened already
in 1912, with books mainly in Yiddish, that attracted readers from among
the members of the Bund. This library knew a number of vicissitudes: about
5,000 books were destroyed when the Polish police stormed the locals in
1923. Its activity was renewed in 1926 only to be closed again by the authorities
in 1931 under the accusation of sheltering Communist activities. Finally
the library opened again in 1932 and functioned until the Holocaust. The
David Frishman Hebrew library started its activity in 1922 serving as a
cultural centre for the Zionist youth of Zamosc. There were another two
public libraries in Zamosc: the Solomon Ettinger library with books in Yiddish,
Polish and Russian, and a smaller library owned by the trade unions. The
libraries served as meeting places for a number of literary circles, conferences,
amateur theater, and an orchestra. Zamoshtisher Shtime (Voice
of Zamosc), a Yiddish language periodical of Poalei Zion was published
from 1928 to 1939. Other Jewish periodicals in Zamosc included Zamoshtisher
Vort (Word of Zamosc, from 1930), published by Agudat Israel,
Habe'er (The Well, from 1923), and Unser Geist (Our
Spirit), the last two dedicated to religious issues.
The Holocaust
Period
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Jews in the street, Zamosc, May 1941
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Samuel Levin, Israel
The German army occupied Zamosc on September 14th, 1939.
The heavy German air raids claimed hundreds of victims from the local Jewish
population as well as from large numbers of Jewish refugees from western
regions of Poland who sought shelter in Zamosc. The occupying German forces
and local anti-Semites seized the occasion for looting Jewish property and
murdering Jewish inhabitants. In late September 1939, Zamosc was occupied
for two weeks by the Soviet army. When it retreated, an estimated 5,000
Jews left Zamosc for the Soviet Union. In October 1939, the Germans established
a Judenrat and forced the Jews to pay a "contribution" of 100,000 zlotys
and to provide daily 250 Jews for hard work, a quota that later increased
to 500 and 600 Jews. The Jewish population of Zamosc at the time was 4,984,
according to a census conducted by the Judenrat. In December 1939 the Germans
expelled 500 of Jews from Lodz, Kalo, and Wloclawek and resettled them in
Zamosc. The Judenrat housed these refugees in the homes of the Jews who
fled to the Soviet Union. The Germans killed 150 old persons and children
of this group after a short period of time. The persecutions only increased
in 1940, with the introduction of the compulsory wearing of an armband with
a yellow Star of David and many other restrictions of movement, occupations,
food supplies. The number of forced workers grew and hundreds were sent
to other locations in the Lublin region. In 1941 an estimated 1,500 to 2,000
Jews from Zamosc were sent to the newly established labor camp at the nearby
Izbica. By May 1, 1941, all Jews in Zamosc, estimated at about 7,000, were
forced to move to an open ghetto in the new district of the town around
the Hrubieszowska street. The office of the Judenrat was set in the building
of the synagogue of the new town. The situation inside the ghetto worsened
with the outbreak of a typhus epidemic during the winter of 1941-1942. The
mass deportations from Zamosc began on the eve of Passover, April 11, 1942.
The entire Jewish population was gathered in the market place and gun fired
with 89 killed on the spot and another 150 shot dead by the Germans on the
way to the train station. About 3,000 Jews were deported immediately to
the Belzec death camp. The remaining 2,000 Jews were joined on April 20th,
1942 by 2,100 Jewish deportees from Czechoslovakia and Germany. A second
deportation took place on May 27, when about 2,100 Jews were sent to Belzec
and murdered. During the summer of 1942 almost 1,000 Jews were sent to death
camps in a number of smaller deportations. The third mass deportation occurred
on October 16, 1942, when again the Jewish population was gathered in the
market place and then taken to Izbica, then to Belzec and Sobibor and murdered.
Several hundred Jews who managed to hide in prepared shelters were later
discovered and arrested with the help of local Polish firemen. After being
held for eight days without food and water, the survivors were executed
in the Jewish cemetery. By March 1943 all Jews left in the ghetto of Zamosc
were killed by the Germans and in May 1943 the last about 1,000 Jews from
Zamosc from forced labor camps around Zamosc were deported and killed in
Majdanek. During these years hundreds of Jews fled to the forests where
some joined local or Soviet partisan groups operating from the Polesie forests.
After WW2
After Zamosc was liberated by the Soviet army, the first
12 Jewish survivors returned to the town. They were joined by about 300
persons who returned from the Soviet Union. The local Polish population
met them with hostility and even violence that brought about the death in
1945 of two Jews at the hands of local anti-Semites. Most Jews departed
from Zamosc after a short period of time and in 1947 there were left only
five Jews in the town.
The Dawna synagogue damaged during WW2, was restored
after the war and again during the 1960's, and turned into a public library
since 1958. In the early 2000's there were plans to evacuate the library
and renovate the historic building. The building of the new synagogue is
located at 32 Gmina Street. It was converted into a kindergarten in 1948.
The site of the old Jewish cemetery from the 17th century is now occupied
by a house of culture. In the new cemetery in Prosta street a memorial to
the Jewish victims of the Holocaust from Zamosc was set up in 1950. It was
made of remains of matzevot (gravestones) and bears the inscription "Thou
shalt not kill".
HFG
Bibliography
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GOLDBERG, Jacob (Ed.). Jewish privileges
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(in Polish)
MORGENSZTERN, Janina. The inventory of
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SZYSZKA, Bogdan. A contribution to the
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TAMARI, Moshe (Ed.). Zamosc be-geona ubeshibra.
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Links
The Jewish community of Zamosc
“Zamosc” - English translation by Morris Gradel of the entry Zamosc from
the Encyclopedia of Jewish Communities in Poland, Volume VII: 203-212
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