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Lublin and Krakow remain bright enclaves of Yiddish song and culture

Despite the dark shadows history cast over these Polish cities, Jewish landmarks, arts and cuisine hold fast

September 30, 2024 16:06
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Wawel Cathedral, Krakow Poland. (Photo: Getty Images)
5 min read

Two-thirds of Lublin’s Jews were exterminated in a single month of the Second World War. The remainder of the 40,000-strong community, who had lived peaceably with their gentile neighbours for centuries, were dispatched to their deaths soon after, but their souls live on in a beautiful city that has preserved their memory with loving care.

The Chachmei Yeshiva, so famous pre-war that it won the town the nickname Jerusalem of the North, is enjoying new life as the Ilan Hotel, thanks to one of today’s handful of modern Lubliners, as the city’s Jews have always called themselves.

Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva. (Photo: Anthea Gerrie.)[Missing Credit]

The No Name Theatre, joint top attraction for Jewish visitors, preserves an archive of every home demolished in the liquidated ghetto and exhibits haunting pictures of the inhabitants, which are also displayed in many locations around the town.

Even Lubliner cuisine lives on, thanks to a non-Jewish cook who has made it her mission to research and serve authentic dishes once enjoyed on Shabbat and holidays, in a popular restaurant (of which more later). Naturally, there is a a Memorial Trail, its first stop the Grodzka Gate, which separated the Jewish and Christian communities in the 15th century and became the heart of the predominant pre-war Jewish neighbourhood. Here, the NN Theatre tells the story of Lublin’s Jews in pictures and stories over several floors.