
Drone videography is becoming widespread…..seeing Jewish cemeteries from above provides a new perspective and puts them into the context of their surroundings.
We have already linked to a drone video of the Jewish cemetery in Bialystok, Poland.
Here’s a new drone video of the restored Jewish cemetery in Šeduva, Lithuania — part of the “Lost Shtetl” — a complex and developing memorial to the Holocaust and local Jewish history that opened last year.
See Jewish cemetery section of Lost Shtetl web site
3 comments on “Lithuania: Šeduva Jewish cemetery by drone”
What about cemeteries i Lviv (Lwow) and the matszevot used in pavement in the market ?
amazing, how many graves are there in this cemetery?Were any of the inscriptions still legible?
Please see the Lost Shtetl web site for all the information that is available http://lostshtetl.com/the-project/
Also follow the links on the post for more information