Vul. Zolota – the New Jewish cemetery
The cemetery was opened in 1855 owing to the closing of the old Jewish cemetery. It was destroyed during the German occupation. In the postwar period, the remains of the Jews from the destroyed old burial places and of those executed in 1942-1943 were reburied there, and an obelisk was set up. The cemetery deserves special attention as some remains of the early twentieth century gravestones, which are in fact unstudied monuments of art, have been preserved there. The cemetery has been attached to Yanivsky cemetery since 1962.
Architecture
Originally, the area of the cemetery was lesser than it is today. The territory was enlarged repeatedly, for example, in 1890 when the Jewish community purchased for this purpose a plot owned by count Stanisław Skarbek. As a description show, the cemetery area was 25 morgens in 1931-1932. The main lane passed through the central part, smaller lanes branching off and graves being situated on both sides. The New Cemetery Synagogue was built there at the cost of Jewish merchant Efraim Wiksel in 1856.
A stone fence in the Neo-Romanesque style from the side of Pylykhivska (now Zolota) street was constructed in the early 1890s. The project was drawn up by Alfred Kamienobrodzki, a known Lviv architect, in 1890. A fragment of this fence has been preserved till now. An administration building was built under architect Solomon Kroch’s project to the left of the main entrance to the cemetery. In 1912 the construction of a preburial house (Beth Tahara) in the Art Nouveau style was started under Roman Feliński’s and Jerzy Grodyński’s project. The construction works were managed by Michał Ulam, a known architect. In 1934 architect Norbert Glatstein drew up a project of a fence around the cemetery.
During the Second World War the Germans destroyed all the buildings and graves in the new Jewish cemetery; particularly, in the spring of 1943 the preburial house (Beth Tahara) was blown up. In the Soviet times the cemetery on the Pylykhivski hills was taken care of by the Jewish community of Lviv. In the first postwar years an obelisk was set up at the cost of the community on the common grave near the entrance from the contemporary Yeroshenka street where the remains of the Jews executed in 1942-1943 and those from the destroyed old burial places were reburied.
Related Places
Personalities
Alfred
Kamienobrodzki –
an architect.
Berkman
– a professor of
Lviv Polytechnic.
Ezekiel
Karo – a rebbe
from Olesk.
Emanuel
Blumenfeld – a
doctor, one of the founders of the reform synagogue.
Emil
Byk – a known
public and political figure of Galicia, lawyer,
Efraim
Wiksel – a Jewish
merchant.
Jerzy
Grodyński –
an architect.
Jona
Grinberg – a
professor, doctor of chemistry.
Michał
Ulam – an
architect, a construction firm owner.
Norbert
Glatstein – an
architect.
Roman
Feliński – an
architect.
Sałomon
Kroch – an
architect.
Stanisław
Marcin Skarbek –
a known landowner and maecenas, count.
Sources
2. DALO 2/4/1276.
3. Central State Historic Archive of Ukraine in Lviv (CDIAL) 701/1/1215.
4. CDIAL 701/3/1215.
5. CDIAL 701/3/1330.
6. CDIAL701/3/1330.
7. CDIAL 701/3/994.
8. J. Schall, Historia Żydów w Polsce, na Litwie i na Rusi (Lwów, 1935).
Written
by Khrystyna Kharchuk
Edited
by Olha Zarechnyuk and Yulia Pavlyshyn