Jewish Heritage Europe

Germany: A 24-year (!) project to document, in extreme detail, selected Jewish cemeteries in Germany is underway

Information board at the Grosse Hamburgerstrasse Jewish cemetery, Berlin

A (very) longterm research project to document Jewish cemeteries in Germany is getting underway.  Over the course of the coming two decades and more, researchers from North Rhine-Westphalia and Bavaria will be documenting 35 selected Jewish cemeteries in great detail, … continue reading →

Germany: Mazel tov to the international artists chosen as the 2024 ShUM Cities Artists in Residence — three very diverse projects dealing with history, heritage, symbolism, and art

Mazel tov to the international artists chosen as the 2024 ShUM Cities Artists in Residence! Three very diverse projects dealing with history, heritage, symbolism, and art. They are the the visual artist Bence Illyes from Hungary (working with Judit Borsi), … continue reading →

JHE Photo Essay: Shavuot 2024 — Images of the 10 Commandments to Mark the Holiday

10 commandments in the synagogue, Goteborg (Gothenburg) Sweden

(JHE) — The festival of Shavuot, which begins Tuesday night, marks the reception of the Torah — and Ten Commandments — at Mt. Sinai. Jews traditionally go to synagogue on Shavuot to hear the Ten Commandments read out: 1. I am … continue reading →

JHE Newsletter — Spring edition. Catch up with what you might have missed

Spring flowers in the Jewish cemetery in Velká Bukovina, CZ

Our monthly Newsletter – Spring edition — is out today. Catch up with what you might have missed. News, views, and insights from Poland, Romania the UK, Lithuania, Germany, Austria, Italy, Hungary, Czech Republic, and more… plus our first 2024 … continue reading →

Germany: Archaeologists begin excavating the site of the destroyed synagogue in Fulda, as part of plans to create a permanent memorial

Archaeological work begins at the site of the Fulda synagogue. Photo © City of Fulda

Archaeologists are exploring the site of the synagogue in Fulda, in central Germany, which was torched  on Kristallnacht, November 1938, and razed a few months later.  The work is taking place within the context of plans to redesign and upgrade … continue reading →