• Jewish cemetery in the Polish city of Kielce - now a closed cemetery. It was founded in 1868, it has an area of 3, 12 ha.
  • The Kielce Jewish Cemetery (also known as the Pakosz Cemetery) is located in the Pakosz District of Kielce, Poland, at the intersections of Pakosz Dolny and...
  • Jewish Cemetery Kielce #4. This cemetery contains the graves of many Holocaust victims. Do you have more information about this location?
  • The Jewish cemetery in the Polish city of Kielce is now a closed cemetery. It was founded in 1868 and has an area of 3, 12 hectares.
  • ...corpses of a few Jews murdered in the ghetto of Kielce, originally buried in a couple of spots in the city, were exhumed and transferred to the Jewish cemetery.
  • <nowiki>凱爾採猶太人公墓; 凯尔采犹太人公墓; Nghĩa trang Do Thái, Kielce; Jewish Cemetery, Kielce; Cmentarz żydowski w Kielcach; 凯尔采犹太公墓...
  • Toldot Kehilat Kielce. Miyom Hivsuduh V'ad Churbanah (Tel Aviv, 1957). JOWBR burial list: Jewish Cemetery.
  • Ponadto w skład Komitetu weszli: Dr Michael Schudrich, Naczelny Rabin Polski, Wojciech Lubawski, Prezydent Miasta Kielce, Prof.
  • ..."Jewish Historic Monuments in Poland") Meir Balaban wrote that the Kielce Jews: "(they) bought land for a cemetery a long way from the city and to this day...
  • All of the world’s sights on one map. The Kielce Jewish Cemetery (also known as the Pakosz Cemetery) is located in the Pakosz District of Kielce, Poland...
  • On 4th July 1946, the day of the Kielce pogrom, Częstochowers David Yosef Gruszka and Shmuel Rembak z”l boarded the train at the railway station in Kielce with...
  • ...was advanced in September 2012 by Bogdan Białek, president of the Jan Karski Society, an NGO that (among other things) manages the Kielce Jewish cemetery.
  • Kielce: Jewish cemetery in Kielce (Pakosz Dolny Street). In the second half of the nineteenth century, due to the rapid development of Jewish settlement in...
  • In 1668, Jews were granted the privilege to restore the cemetery, so it must have existed by then. It served not only the Jews of Chęciny, but also Kielce.