Jewish religious communities from the Greater Poland and Pałuki borderland during the period of land consolidation (1932–1939) Cover Image

Żydowskie gminy wyznaniowe pogranicza Wielkopolski i Pałuk w okresie komasacji (1932–1939)
Jewish religious communities from the Greater Poland and Pałuki borderland during the period of land consolidation (1932–1939)

Author(s): Marek Szczepaniak
Subject(s): Archiving
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: Jewish religious communities; Greater Poland and Pałuki; land consolidation; religious community property; synagogues

Summary/Abstract: After Poland’s rise to independence, the process of Jewish emigration from Greater Poland, already noticeable before, increased in intensity. Jews left behind a lot of infrastructure and real estate, as well various material possessions, mostly in houses of worship. Maintaining them turned out to exceed the financial capacity of those members of the Jewish community who stayed there. In 1932, a regulation of the Ministry of Religious Affairs and Public Education was published, requiring Jewish religious communities most affected by emigration to be incorporated into larger ones, in order to enable the maintenance of the remaining property. Correspondence between the municipal authorities and the local qahal, kept in the “City of Gniezno Files” archival fond, allows to track the gradual appropriation of property from centers incorporated into the Jewish community in Gniezno. It also makes it possible to list movable and immovable property and assess its value at that time. The sources also reveal some conflicts between Jews from the dissolved communities and those from the Gniezno Jewish religious community.In 1936, new plans were developed to reorganize the network of Jewish religious communities. These involved the incorporation of the Wągrowiec province into the Gniezno community, or alternatively, incorporation of one of the provinces belonging to the Gniezno community into the Wągrowiec community (in fact, the only one that could be incorporated in this way was the Żnin province). In the end, the national administration withdrew from this idea. Two years later, in connection with a reform introducing a new administrative division in Poland, ideas for a spatial reorganization of Jewish communities appeared again. However, no such changes were made before the Second World War.

  • Issue Year: 2021
  • Issue No: 8
  • Page Range: 79-99
  • Page Count: 21
  • Language: Polish