New Jewish Cemetery Teplice / Nový židovský hřbitov v Teplicích
The New Jewish Cemetery was founded in 1862 in the northwest of the town of Teplice as part of the town cemetery. A brick enclosure separates both parts of the burial grounds. The new cemetery has about 3,500 graves. It was destroyed during the Nazi period and reconstructed in 2001/2002. The Tahara and other buildings were thoroughly restored in 2008.
Jewish cemetery Jemgum
The cemetery of the municipality of Jemgum was acquired in 1848 and first occupied in 1854. It is located at the Sieltif. Previously, the Jews of Jemgum used the cemeteries of the surrounding Jewish communities. The cemetery is 1100 square meters. Today there are still 13 gravestones.
Lublin - New Jewish Cemetery
The new Jewish cemetery was established in 1829 on land outside the then Lublin city limits. Around 1839 the cemetery was surrounded by a wall. In the following years the area was enlarged by the purchase of land. In 1918, a plot of land was added to the north, where a military cemetery was established.
Jewish cemetery Kettwig in front of the bridge
Old Jewish cemetery - Lohestraße - Wroclaw
Mrągowo Jewish Cemetery (Sensburg)
The Jewish cemetery in Mrągowo (Sensburg) was established in 1859 at today's Brzozowa Street 2. The necropolis was located at the end of the Catholic cemetery, on the land that Justyna Timnik, the mayor's widow, had donated to the Jewish community. Until the cemetery was established, the Jews from Mrągowo (Sensburg) buried their dead in Ryn (Rhine) or Młynów (Upper Mühlenthal). Even before the "Kristallnacht" the cemetery was vandalized.
Jewish cemetery of Toruń (Thorn)
The Jüdish cemetery of Toruń (Thorn) is located in the suburb of Jacob, between ul. Antczaka, ul. Pułaskiego and ul. Konopackich. The exact date of its creation is not known. Most likely, it existed already since 1723.
After the Überfall of the fascist German Wehrmacht on Poland, the Nazis intended to destroy the Jüdische necropolis. These plans were not realized. A realization of the destruction took place only in the period of the People's Republic of Poland under the leadership of the communist Polish United Workers' Party in 1975.
Jewish cemetery Mikołajki/Nikolaiken
New Jewish Cemetery Łódź-Bałuty
Tombstones at the Jüd cemetery at ul. Bracka and Zmienna