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==History==
==History==
[[Image:Israel 4 013 Cemetary in Jerusalem, Stone.jpg|thumb|Vandalized Jewish [[Headstone|tombstones]] in [[Jerusalem]]]]
[[Image:Israel 4 013 Cemetary in Jerusalem, Stone.jpg|thumb|Vandalized Jewish [[Headstone|tombstones]] in [[Jerusalem]]]]
[[File:Jewish cemetery Otwock Karczew Anielin IMGP6721.jpg|thumb|Sandstone vestige of a Jewish gravestone depicting a [[Tzedakah]] box. Jewish cemetery in [[Otwock]] (Karczew-Anielin), Poland.]]
Early Jewish cemeteries were located outside of the city. In the [[Diaspora]], it is traditional to bury the dead with the feet in the direction of [[Jerusalem]]. The [[Headstone|tombstones]] usually have inscriptions in Hebrew and the regional language. During the [[Nazi Germany]] regime, Jewish cemeteries all over Europe were destroyed and desecrated.
Early Jewish cemeteries were located outside of the city. In the [[Diaspora]], it is traditional to bury the dead with the feet in the direction of [[Jerusalem]]. The [[Headstone|tombstones]] usually have inscriptions in Hebrew and the regional language. During the [[Nazi Germany]] regime, Jewish cemeteries all over Europe were destroyed and desecrated.



Revision as of 18:27, 12 January 2012

Jewish cemetery in Hannover, Germany

A Jewish cemetery (Hebrew בית עלמין) ("beit alamin" or "beit kvarot") is a cemetery where members of the Jewish faith are buried in keeping with Jewish tradition.

Known in Hebrew as "house of eternity," the land of the cemetery is considered holy and a special consecration ceremony takes place on its inauguration. Establishing a cemetery is one of the first priorities for a new Jewish community. A Jewish cemetery is generally purchased and supported with communal funds.[1]

History

Vandalized Jewish tombstones in Jerusalem
Sandstone vestige of a Jewish gravestone depicting a Tzedakah box. Jewish cemetery in Otwock (Karczew-Anielin), Poland.

Early Jewish cemeteries were located outside of the city. In the Diaspora, it is traditional to bury the dead with the feet in the direction of Jerusalem. The tombstones usually have inscriptions in Hebrew and the regional language. During the Nazi Germany regime, Jewish cemeteries all over Europe were destroyed and desecrated.

The largest Jewish cemeteries of Europe can be found in Budapest, Łódź, Prague, Warsaw and Berlin. Other Jewish cemeteries in Europe include the Jewish Cemetery in Khotyn.

File:Jewish cemetery Bad Wildungen Germany.jpg
Jewish cemetery in Bad Wildungen, Germany

In the United States, the Coming Street Cemetery, in Charleston, South Carolina, Mikveh Israel Cemetery in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Hebrew Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia, B' Nai Israel Cemetery in Ashland, Wisconsin, and the Old Jewish Cemetery in Cincinnati, Ohio are some of the country's oldest Jewish cemeteries.

The mission of the International Jewish Cemetery Project is to document every Jewish burial site in the world. [2]

See also

References