This is the grave of a Rosh Yeshiva whose grandson is the Joseph Salevechik, the founder of modern Orthodoxy.
This is a grave of a member of the Bund party.
And this is the first Jew to write prose in Yiddish. Before the only writing done in Jewish life was on Torah.
Later in the week we visited a shul in Tykochin, a small village that was once half Jewish before the Shoah. The shul was beautifully restored and there also exists a destroyed Jewish cemetery. The shul looks like this and here is a tomb stone in the cemetery.
We also visited three death camps, but I don't want to put pictures of them up. I visited Auschwitz, Auschwitz-Birkenau, Majdonek, and Treblinka. I'm not going to talk about much because everyone reading this blog should see those place and pass their own judgments.
So I spent much of the week seeing old Jewish life, learning, and seeing the destruction of the Nazis.
Two of the last things we did were listen to the testimony of a 'righteous gentile' and go to a newly discovered shul in some really small town. A righteous gentile is someone who helped save a life of a Jewish person during the Shoah. We listened to a woman's account of how her family housed a woman.
The next morning we went to this small shul in the basement of some Polish family. The local government is awaiting money to restore it, but this is what we saw.
We came back to Israel after taking a 10:30 flight out of Poland. We landed at around 4 and went straight to the Western Wall. We showed up right before sunrise to do shacarit, the morning services. It was amazing to be back in Israel and the sky was beautiful. There was no better way to appreciate Israel than the Western Wall.
1 comment:
What a way to end the March of the Living Tour? Great photographs of Jerusalem in the morning.
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