• ...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.
  • The book includes the full tombstone inscriptions of 1,422 men buried in the cemetery of Kielce, Poland, dating from the mid-1870s until the late 1920s.
  • Kielce belonged to the estates of the bishops of krakow until 1818, and thus the prohibition on Jewish settlement remained in force.
  • The volunteer team then journeyed another 20 kilometers in order to bring the stones to a reestablished Jewish cemetery in Buzko Zdroj, where they knew the...
  • Women grieving over the coffins of those killed in the Kielce pogrom as they are transported to the burial site in the Jewish cemetery.
  • A monument was erected in the Kielce Jewish cemetery to perpetuate the memory of the victims of the Kielce pogrom.
  • During the Kielce incident, a mob of Polish soldiers, police officers, and civilians murdered at least 42 Jews and injured over 40 in the worst outburst of anti-Jewish...
  • It contained the inventory of tombstones from the Jewish cemetery in Kielce, which was written by Mosze Menechem Mendel and it also contained the information...
  • On 22 April, another 500 people were brought to Kielce, and on the following day the SS demanded that the Jewish doctors kill all patients in the ghetto hospital.