| POLANIEC: Świętokrzyskie |
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US Commission No. POCE000236 Polaniec is located in Tarnobrzeg, Poland at 50º26 21º17, 42km from Tarnobrzeg. The cemetery is located at ul. Partyzantow on the outskirts of town. Present population is 5,000-25,000 with no Jews.
The earliest known Jewish community was 14th century. 1931 Jewish population (census) was 1500. The Orthodox Jewish cemetery was established in 1647 with last known burial 1940. The isolated suburban flat land at the outskirts of town is reached by turning directly off a public road and open to all with no sign or marker, wall or gate. There are no gravestones, structures, or known mass graves. The cemetery was vandalized during and after World War II, and there is no maintenance. The approximate size of before WWII was 1.00 hectares and now it is 0.80 hectares. Seasonal flooding posed a problem. The municipality currently owns the cemetery property used for agriculture, but barren. Properties adjacent are agricultural and residential. The cemetery boundaries are now smaller than in 1939 because of flood control measures. Private visitors rarely visit. Vegetation, continued vandalism, and existing incompatible development pose moderate threats. Marek Florek of ul Chopina 12/2, tel. 26 completed survey on 22/10/1991. Documentation: Karta ewidencji cmentarza; Andrew Wojciechowski Polaniec studium historyczno-urbanistyczne; Lublin 1987, [Eng.: Polaniec Urban-Historical Study], which contains information about historical and urban development (1987) including Jewish community of that small town at the Vistula river bank. Marek Florek visited the site for this survey on 21/10/1991. A. (Andrew) Wojciechowski This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it wrote that anyone can contact him with questions about Polaniec. His book written originally in Polish has not been translated into English. He thinks it would become a great source for Jewish researchers if someone would be interested in publishing it. In Polaniec in 1987, the former one-story 19th century stone Jewish cheder was now a small cardboard box factory (altered in 20th century). Until 1943, there was a c. 1785 shingled, wooden synagogue standing on Mielecka Street. Andrew Wojciechowski is translator and genealogist. |
| Last Updated on Thursday, 25 June 2009 19:26 |


