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כופר נפש אתרא קדישא עריו"כ ,ח"י דאלער

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נשלח ב-21/9/2004 20:01 לינק ישיר 
כופר נפש אתרא קדישא עריו"כ ,ח"י דאלער


Groups restore Jewish cemeteries
By DESIREE GRAND
THE JOURNAL NEWS
(Original publication: September 20, 2004)

Jewish custom holds cemeteries in the highest regard, as sacred as a synagogue. The belief is that mankind, formed of the earth, should return to the ground, making it a link to the past.

But the mass slaughter that removed Jews from their native lands also destroyed hundreds of their cemeteries in Europe, including the former Soviet Union. So vicious was the destruction that Jews in every corner of the globe are, in some cases, just beginning to restore some of the sites and stop further destruction.

In Europe and elsewhere, the destruction came at the hands of others; in the United States, it has been mainly through neglect, as happened in Yonkers, where for years the cemetery of the Congregation People of Righteousness, an Orthodox Jewish community that disbanded in 1969, was the target of vandals.

During the summer, Attorney General Eliot Spitzer said the removal of the graves to make way for a shopping center might have violated a court-ordered agreement overseeing the process. His office questioned whether the graves of as many as 130 children were handled properly. It is a charge those responsible for the relocation dispute, and the matter is before a justice in state Supreme Court.

The worldwide movement to protect Jewish graves could not save the Yonkers cemetery, now a parking lot. But the uncertainty over the fate of some buried there resonates with many Jews, particularly those who have witnessed cemeteries destroyed.

"A Jewish cemetery is eternity in the eyes of Jews," said Dr. Sam Gruber, research director for the U.S. Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad. "Traditional Jewish law states that graves of the dead need to be respected and cannot be violated. There is not a more sacred place. It cannot be tampered."

The commission, created in 1985, works to maintain and protect cemeteries and historic sites in Europe. Its work has led to the discovery of thousands of abandoned graves, yet Gruber said it is unknown just how many there are because few countries have conducted a systematic inventory.

The commission helps countries develop legal means to protect and preserve the sites, and it does so by making individual agreements. The group's work is set apart from other groups whose primary goal is to document names and dates of those buried.

In Belarus, in the former Soviet Union, there is no agreement, and experts say it is one of the most troublesome areas. As recently as March, construction was taking place on the largest Jewish cemetery in the country, and some believed human remains were being mixed in the soil and eventually used to fill holes in the city's streets. The expansion of a soccer stadium in the city of Grodno attracted so much attention that 12 U.S senators, including Hillary Rodham Clinton, signed a letter beseeching the president of Belarus to halt construction.

Jewish activists say the expansion project has destroyed and unearthed remains in the 300-year-old cemetery. A May posting from the Belarus Embassy said the construction work now is being done under supervision. The commission continues to work on restoration projects and form agreements with such relatively new countries as Albania, Latvia, Estonia and Bosnia.

In the United States, the Jewish Genealogical Society Inc. of New York started to document the names and cemetery locations of all Jewish burial societies in the metropolitan New York area in the early 1990s. The JewishGen On-Line Worldwide Burial Registry is part of the International Jewish Cemetery Project run by the International Association of the Jewish Genealogical Society.

Joyce Field, vice president of data acquisition for JewishGen, said three years of collecting records paid off when the registry went online last year. The organization relies on volunteers who visit cemeteries, take photographs and document names on tombstones to be entered into a master database. There are about 10,000 images that need to be added to the database. Although the volunteers are not involved in the physical restoration, their work is keeping alive the history of the cemeteries.

"They are dealing with an ancestral emotional connection," Field said. "These are people who do not want their ancestors to be obliterated from history. There is a sense of duty. A commitment to memorialize those who died. It was something that really needed to be done. So we did it."

The Conference of Academicians for the Protection of Jewish Cemeteries works mainly out of Europe but advocates for a national registry in all states with active cemeteries. In the United States, people often lose contact with the cemetery, said Dr. Bernard Fryshman, a member of the steering committee.

During the late 19th and 20th centuries, Jews who had immigrated to America would form landsmanshaftn, societies made up of those from the same town or region of Eastern Europe. The groups provided newcomers emotional and financial support. The societies also would purchase burial plots so family and friends could be buried together. Chevra kadisha, burial societies, maintained the grave sites.

But a combination of changing demographics, lack of education in Jewish customs and intermarriage led to the downturn of many cemeteries. Gruber emphasizes that it is not intentional neglect.

In the United States, there are far fewer cases of abandoned cemeteries, yet organizations have been formed to protect the few that remain.

One such effort is being launched in Queens, where the 150-year-old Bayside Cemetery has struggled against vandalism and the ravages of nature. Now, families of those buried there and Jewish leaders are trying to restore the area.

Rabbi Lazar Stern, U.S. chairman of the Athra Kadisha Society, lauds the movement but argues the work is not being done fast enough.

"Whole cemeteries that we don't know of will disappear," Stern said.

Yet Gruber sees great promise in his work.

"We are really quite proud of what has been done. Some places take a long time to get sites protected, and there are more than I can do in my lifetime," he said.


Reach Desiree Grand at [email protected] or 914-966-4052. Reach Desiree Grand at [email protected] or 914-966-4052.

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נשלח ב-21/9/2004 20:29 לינק ישיר 

Jewish headstone desecrated in New Zealand

Incident comes a month after 16 graves were desecrated in what appears to be result of Jerusalem-Wellington tension in aftermath of Mossad affair.
Maariv News Service

A Jewish headstone at cemetery in New Zealand was desecrated overnight in yet another anti-Semitic incident in the Oceanic nation, one month after 16 graves were desecrated at a Jewish cemetery in Wellington, the New Zealand Herald has reported.


"It was a substantial attack and even though it is a reinforced concrete structure, they've still managed to crack the monument and take several large chunks from it," said the Wanganui District Council's recreation and culture manager, Keith Hindson.


While other headstones had been damaged in the past, this was the first incident at the Jewish section, he said. "It's the worst attack I've seen."

The council had replaced several headstones with one monument several years ago, and council officers checked on it after several Jewish graves were desecrated in Wellington last month.

"After the problem in Wellington we did a routine check on the monument, as other councils were doing, and we saw what had happened." The monument would be repaired and Mr Hindson said it was likely more regular checks would be put in place.

New Zealand Jewish Council president David Zwartz, of Wellington, said he was saddened by the Wanganui vandalism. "We'll have a rededication service once it's repaired, which will hopefully involve some of the descendants of the people whose names are on the headstone."

The latest incident is believed to be the result of tension between Israel and New Zealand following the passport farad affair. Wellington claimed that two Israelis, Uri Kelman and Eli Kara, who were caught while trying to obtain a New Zealand passport, were Mossad agents. After the two were convicted of passport fraud in court, New Zealand imposed several diplomatic sanctions on Israel.



(2004-09-21 09:44:38.0)

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נשלח ב-21/9/2004 20:26 לינק ישיר 

מצורף קובץ

Hearing considers compensation for Jewish cemeteries' desecration
By Associated Press
Published September 21, 2004

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FORT LAUDERDALE - Four elderly women testified Monday about the horror of discovering problems at two Jewish cemeteries where their relatives were buried but told a judge they support a $76-million settlement with the nation's largest funeral service company.

"I couldn't believe it. This is almost like holy ground," said Joan Light, whose mother and father were not buried where they were supposed to be. "I think anybody involved with what went on should be punished - everybody."

Circuit Judge Leonard Fleet was attentive to both the emotional and financial implications of the agreement between relatives of people buried at the Menorah Gardens cemeteries and the cemeteries' owner, Houston-based Service Corp. International and its SCI Florida subsidiary.

The hearing, which is expected to continue today and perhaps Wednesday, represents the largest chunk of a total of $123-million in settlements SCI has negotiated with families and the state.

The worst complaints covered two graves that were broken open with backhoes and the bones tossed into the woods to make room for fresh burials. Other, frequent problems included misplaced burials in cemeteries with layouts that were too tight for casket liners and crooked rows where markers did not reflect what was underground.

"They sold me a pig in a poke. It's a horrible, disgraceful plot," said Gloria Zimmer, whose mother was buried in what she called "grave 41/2."

Fleet wants the settlement money to cover replacement costs for any monuments that might have been discarded and DNA testing of remains to guarantee identification of buried remains.

"I want this settlement if approved to achieve the greatest degree of peace of mind for the people affected," the judge said.

SCI attorney Barry Davidson seemed hesitant to offer DNA testing at an estimated $750 per grave but committed to working out any issues.

Court-appointed examiner Richard Baldwin estimated 557 graves in the Broward and Palm Beach county cemeteries may require disinterment to make up for mistakes and make room for burial contracts, but he thought as little as $20,000 would be needed for DNA testing.

Under the Jewish religion, the dead are not supposed to be raised above ground level after burial. An elaborate religious ritual sanctified by a rabbi must be followed for proper reburials.

Baldwin said burial vaults, caskets, clothing, hospital bands and other kinds of personal identification would be checked before DNA testing becomes a consideration. A rabbi, an engineer and Baldwin, an outsider brought in to oversee day-to-day operations at the cemeteries, are on an oversight panel supervising $11-million in efforts to correct problems and bring the cemeteries up to the requirements of state law and industry standards.

The primary objections come from Theodore Leopold, an attorney for families of 42 people buried at the Palm Beach County cemetery. He considers the total dollar figure "woefully inadequate" and wants his clients to be able to pursue trials and punitive damages above the $25-million covered by the settlement.

All four women who testified said the crucial part of the settlement to them was a change in cemetery operations.

"When you're grieving, you don't think that anybody's going to take advantage of you, and I don't think it should happen to anyone," said Shirley Eisenberg. She bought a double headstone for her cousin, a Holocaust survivor and father figure, and his wife but found out their graves were far apart. "The important thing is that the cemeteries are cleaned up."

[Last modified September 20, 2004, 23:52:11]
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נשלח ב-21/9/2004 20:22 לינק ישיר 


Judge Considers $76 Million Cemetery Settlement


FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- A hearing continues today in Fort Lauderdale to decide on settlements between the nation's largest cemetery owner and relatives upset by desecrated graves.

Four elderly women testified Monday about the horror of discovering problems at two Jewish cemeteries where their relatives were buried. But they've told a judge they support a 76 million-dollar settlement with the nation's largest funeral service company.

Circuit Judge Leonard Fleet is overseeing the settlement between relatives of the people buried at the Menorah Gardens cemeteries and their owner, Houston-based Service Corporation International. The hearing is expected to last two or three days, and represents the largest chunk of a total of 123 million dollars in settlements SCI has negotiated with families and the state.

The worst complaints cover two graves that were broken open with backhoes and the bones tossed into the woods to make room for fresh burials. Frequent problems included misplaced burials in cemeteries with layouts that were too tight for casket liners and crooked rows, where markers did not reflect what was underground. (AP)
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