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Stolen Czech villa to become Jewish hub in multi-million-pound renovation

September 25, 2025 09:35
Villa Wittal, 2025.jpg
3 min read

One of the many magnificent Czech villas commissioned by Jewish families and lost forever following Nazi occupation is to once again become a dedicated space for Jewish people.

Villa Wittal, a Modernist masterpiece whose architect died in Terezin along with the couple he built it for, has been designated a new Jewish cultural centre for the Czech second city, Brno.

The house, built on a terraced 32-acre hilltop site which once housed a vineyard, was the envy of neighbours when completed in 1932 by renowned Jewish architect Heinrich Blum. Despite the derelict exterior following years of neglect, its circular tower, spectacular spiral staircase and many other original features are intact, and a multi-million-pound renovation is underway.

“We will have a kosher cafe and offer Hebrew language courses, lectures, concerts and film screenings, as well as telling the story of the Wittal family and the city’s interwar architecture,” says Katerina Hoferova, spokesman for the Stetl organisation which documents the often tragic history of Czech Jews and promotes the renaissance of the community with cultural events.

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Topics:

Holocaust