Jonathan Ornstein Wins 2014 Cohon Award!

Jonathan Ornstein Cohon Award

As we mentioned in November, Jonathan Ornstein, Executive Director of JCC Krakow was named one of two winners of The Rabbi Samuel S. and A. Irma Cohon Foundation 2014 Cohon Award in the field of unity. Jonathan will be accepting the award in person in Tucson, AZ later this evening.

Earlier this week, Jonathan recorded a radio segment on "Too Jewish" with Rabbi Sam Cohon. To listen to the segment, please click here or the button below.

Welcoming new JDC Fellow Jessica to JCC Krakow!

Q&A with Jessica Rosenberg

Jonathan Ornstein, Executive Director of JCC Krakow welcomes Jessica Rosenberg, JDC Entwine Global Jewish Service Corps Fellow to Krakow

Jonathan Ornstein, Executive Director of JCC Krakow welcomes Jessica Rosenberg, JDC Entwine Global Jewish Service Corps Fellow to Krakow

New JDC Entwine Global Jewish Service Corps Fellow, Jessica Rosenberg arrived at JCC Krakow at the beginning of 2015. Jessica is our second fellow from the JDC, Justin Kadis started with us in fall 2013. We sat down with Jessica to discuss how and why she ended up here. 

JCC Krakow: How did you end up working in Jewish service?

Jessica Rosenberg: After working in communications for several years, I was looking for a more meaningful career – preferably working directly in a community.  This is when I came across the JDC Entwine Global Jewish Service Corps Fellowship.  The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) is a nonprofit with a 100-year history of working with Jewish communities in Israel, Eastern Europe, and around the world.  A few years ago, the JDC created a program called Entwine to engage young Jewry in service projects around the world.  The Global Jewish Service Corps places fellows in Jewish communities and communities in need to work directly with the community helping in any way they can.   
    
JCC: Why did you decide to come to Krakow?

JR: In my first round of interviews for the JDC Entwine Fellowship, a staff member asked me how I felt about Krakow.  I wasn’t sure what to say, I had no particular feelings on the city and had never been.  I didn’t know much about Poland beyond its obvious history and that’s when my education began.  I learned of the small but growing Jewish community anchored by JCC Krakow and bolstered by JDC’s 7@Nite and the Jewish Culture Festival in Krakow, of the old Jewish quarter, Kazimierz’s revitalization, and of how incredibly tolerant and open the overall community is.  When I met with Jonathan [Ornstein] and Justin in New York to speak about a possible placement in Krakow, I was extremely excited and interested to see the JCC and its community firsthand.  As an American Jew with Eastern European roots, I couldn’t imagine a more perfect fellowship placement.

JCC: What will you be doing here?

JR: I have a background in marketing and communications, so I expect to work with Jonathan, Sebastian, Agnieszka and the rest of the team on fundraising, grants, partnerships, publicity, social media, digital and print communications, and in any other way I can pitch in.  I’m extremely excited to help organize (and participate in!) the Second Annual Ride for the Living and working to support Friends of JCC Krakow.  I’m the most excited to work with all of the amazing community members here in Krakow as well as meet with any visitors to the JCC to help them understand the incredible community that exists here. 

JCC: What is your favorite Polish food thus far?

JR: Pierogi z kapustą i grzybami

Death and Life in Poland Today by Dr. Hugh Pollack

Dr. Hugh Pollack and his wife, Martha visited JCC Krakow in October 2014. They had come to Poland expecting to find death and stories of despair. They left Poland inspired and energized by the unexpected life they found here!

Dr. Pollack, recently spoke about his trip to Poland at Town & Village Synagogue in NYC, where over the last 30 years he has assumed every leadership position - President for 4 years, Chairman of the Board for 16 years, Rabbi and Cantor Search Committee Chair, Ritual Chair, High Holiday Chair, Adult Ed Chair, Moss Concert Chair, Nominating Committee Chair, Dinner Dance Chair  as well as serving as Chief Gabbai throughout the years and assuming the role of Chazzan sheini for the High Holidays for the past 20 years. His role at Town and Village Synagogue was recognized by the Wexner Foundation in electing him to the first class of Wexner Fellows from the New York region 22 years ago and by his receiving the prestigious Rothschild Award in 2011. Please find the transcript from his amazing speech below.

 

 

We came to Poland expecting to find death.

And death we found - in the death camps of Majdanek disturbingly situated with prewar homes and parks all around it as if it was just any business, in full visibility of the town’s population which could never claim innocence of not knowing what was going on, a camp which could easily in days be up running again churning out its acrid smoke from burned bodies. The monument associated with the camp covered a mountain of ashes from burned bodies.
 
We found death in touching the few pieces of the remaining wall of the Warsaw ghetto, where thousands suffered while spending their last days, if surviving only to face going to the Umschlagplatz the station at which trains arrived to take them to their eventual death at Treblinka. At the remnant of this station stands a memorial with only the first names of the tens of thousands who passed through there in order to bring home the point that these were real people with real names and real lives.
 
We came to Poland expecting to find death.
And death we found - in the death camps of Auschwitz and Birkenau, a camp as large as the eyes could see with hundreds of barracks, several gas chambers and crematoria, much of which was in ruin as they were destroyed by the Nazis when the camps were being liberated so as not to leave evidence of their unspeakable crimes against humanity.  
 
We found death in the displays of tens of thousands of shoes left behind before their owner entered the showers, each with its own story to tell.  
 
And we surely found death in the depths of the haunting children's forests, mass graves of thousands of children shot, some of whom were buried alive, covered over with lime. Small Israeli flags surround the borders of these mass graves; small dolls, toys, balloons and kites tied to the perimeter in an attempt to comfort those young souls who perished there; however in reality only slightly comforting us who desperately needed comfort upon witnessing such a horrific scene. Besides saying Kaddish we sang hamalach hagoel, the song sung to children before going to sleep, assuring these innocents of protection by god’s angels, protection which they hopefully had in death since they surely did not have such protection in life. And we finally recited the blessing for children that we use to bless our own children Friday nights at the beginning of Shabbat.
 
Every week I bless Deborah and David over the phone late Friday afternoon as I cannot do it in person since they’ve left home. Since Poland, every week when I bless them I can't help but think back to that moment in the children's forest. I can't tell you how long that feeling will remain as time drifts on but I sense that the memory will remain with me forever and inexorably tied to my own blessings each week for the rest of my life.
 
We came to Poland to find stories of death and despair.
We found such a story in the town of Tarnow, once a town with a thriving Jewish population of over 25,000 of which none remain today. One of the members of our group had heard stories about this town her entire life from her father who as a young child witnessed the events and atrocities that took place there. Because his father could fix machines like typewriters, the Nazis allowed her grandfather to keep his store – the only Jew allowed such privilege. Her father could not bear to come with us on this trip to return to this site; however we found her grandparents’ home with the outline of the mezuzah, the site of her grandfather’s store where there is now a bank, the site of her aunt’s cosmetic store and the cemetery where much of her family is buried. We found the largest building in town which had been a huge mikvah - now a gym and spa.
 
There were several shuls within a few blocks radius before the war. But the only remnant was four charred posts from a bima still standing in an open square. Before leaving for this trip, the father of this member of our group told her that he remembered watching this shul burn. However, the eastern wall remained standing regardless of how hard the Nazis tried to knock it down. As a 10 year old he remembered one Nazi soldier commenting to his comrade: This place is surely haunted by the devil!
 
And we found such a story in the work camp of Plashau, outside of Krakow, where Martha's second cousins were imprisoned after the Jewish ghetto in Krakow was liquidated. One cousin found herself on Schindler's list for his factory, which we also had the opportunity to visit, but she chose to stay with her younger sister who was bound for Auschwitz. So in the middle of the night, she snuck into another barracks, changed uniforms with someone else headed to Auschwitz who took her place on Schindler's list while she went to Auschwitz in order not to leave her sister alone. Miraculously, both escaped from the death march at Auschwitz, one eventually settling in Palestine and the other in New York.  These were stories that we had always heard and even listened to when she was interviewed by Steven Spielberg for the archives he sponsors.  But frankly it hadn’t seemed real for us. The story came alive in front of us when we witnessed these places ourselves.
 
More than 90 percent of Polish Jewry — some 3 million souls — died during the Holocaust, most of them murdered between September and December 1942 in Nazi death camps. Four months was all it took to wipe out an entire civilization. That world is forever gone.
 
If we came to find answers, we did not find any. Witnessing all of this evil first hand allows us to serve as living witnesses to these horrors. But it left many more questions than answers, questions which seem so incomprehensible, they can and will never be answered.
 
The only response we could muster were token moments of defiance to the perpetrators.
 
We held the Israeli flag in front of our entire group under the famous sign at the front of Auschwitz “arbeicht Macht frei”. Martha and I similarly held an Israeli flag standing on the train tracks at the entrance to Auschwitz.  One sees Israeli flags all over these camps, many wearing it over their shoulders covering their back. For me personally, under my warm wool hat, my kippah that day had the engraved official Israeli national emblem - the kippah I received from the Israeli ambassador Ron Dermer when he was here on Yom Kippur.
 
Although not heroic by any means, these token acts did provide a very small feeling of satisfaction - by saying that the goal of this place - the annihilation of our people - did not succeed.  Not only are we still here but with a state of our own, stronger than ever.
It was like a stone at the children’s forest, upon which we found writing left by an Israeli student visiting the site. It said: “Tanuch bshalom Yesh lanu medinah - Rest in peace. We have a state”
The significance and critical need for a strong Israel certainly becomes more than just words when walking through these camps. It becomes an existential necessity.
 
We came to Poland expecting to find death and no life. And there were places which certainly confirmed that expectation.  Much of Poland is like a Jewish museum, beautifully reconstructed synagogues and yeshivot from another time - when Jews thrived in Poland - the yeshiva where Rabbi Meir Shapiro started the daf yomi, the shul in which we found listed the ancestors and namesakes of Abraham Joshua Heschel, the shul and grave of Rabbi Moshe Isserles, known as the Ramah who wrote the Mappah, the ashkenazic equivalent to Joseph Caro's Shulchan Aruch. Towns which were half or two third Jewish in 1939 have no Jews today. Poland sometimes felt like a haunted empty museum where we could only imagine the vibrant voices and activity within the walls we stood. We davened in some of these exquisite places but the davening felt empty and hollow.
 
And we saw what could only be described as a Jewish Disneyland - restaurants in Lublin and Kracow that were called Jewish Kosher style restaurants with menus listing items of iconic Jewish holiday significance like latkes or matzoh brei and other foods identified with Jews like gefilte fish and cholent. There were English and Hebrew stylized lettering on the signs outside looking as if it was from a Hebrew scroll, with either Klezmer style music playing or tunes from Fiddler on the roof inside. The waiters wore costumes as if they lived in a shtetl in the 1800s but the owners and workers were all non-Jewish. They were trying to capture the flavor of a by gone era, an era that for all purposes appeared dead today.
 
And so, yes, we found much of what we expected and what we came for.
 
But we found a lot that we did not expect!
 
There were so many preconceived notions and conventional wisdoms which I brought with me - that there was no Jewish life in Poland today, that the Poles were the worst of the anti-Semites.

But what I saw, what I heard, challenged many of those beliefs. Suddenly Poland and the Jewish issues involved were not as black and white as I had previously believed.
 
The history we learned challenged my understanding of Jewish Poland - how Jews for centuries from the Middle Ages until the 1800s were protected by the kings of Poland. They were actively welcomed and so Jewish life thrived, and grew. It was no coincidence that Poland for so long was THE center of world Jewry both in terms of the largest numbers, the high levels of Jewish literacy and knowledge and the intensity and vibrancy of Jewish life. Sounds a lot like American Jewry of the past 50 years.
 
Jews had been part of Polish society since the 10th century, and their presence had contributed significantly to the country’s economic and cultural development. Although a minority, They were an ever-present and public part of society. Before 1939, Poland was the most multicultural, multi-religious country in Europe.
 
The new $100 million dollar museum which just opened in Warsaw the week we were there hosted many dignitaries from The US and Israel at the gala opening including the JTS Chancellor. This is not a Holocaust museum but one which celebrates Jewish life and the contributions made by Jews in Poland through many centuries. Its name is the Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
 
Poland was 10% Jewish in 1939 and if we think New York has a strong Jewish identity, Warsaw was one third Jewish as was one quarter of Krakow’s population  And it became apparent that Poland was not one large shtetl like Anatevka in Fiddler on the Roof.  Going through the cemeteries and reading about the Jews in Warsaw made it clear that those Polish Jews were not unlike the Jews in New York today, ranging from the secular through more liberal to the more orthodox.  They were highly educated - professionals and leaders in the general society, very much integrated into Polish society.  Jews, were prominent citizens in Poland.  Half the physicians in Poland were Jewish, and two Jewish political parties sat in the Polish Parliament in the 1930s.  Certainly there were shtetls, and Hassidim — plenty of both. But the legacy of Polish Jewry is much richer and more variegated than the stereotype would have it.
 
We learned how the genius of the Nazis was demonstrated by the fact that when they first invaded Poland they imprisoned or killed all of Poland's enlightened leadership - clergy, academics, politicians, professionals, intelligentsia leaving Poland virtually leaderless thus enabling the more unenlightened parts of its society to rule without any guidance. 
 
We heard stories of the many righteous Gentiles who risked their lives and their families lives to help, hide and rescue Jews. We met with a woman in her 80s who described how her father built underground bunkers outside the city and brought Jews out there to live and hide out while bringing them food and medication regularly. What kind of response but awe and appreciation for the heroism, generosity and humanity of others can one have upon hearing such heroic stories like this?
 
Our guide at Auschwitz was a young Polish woman who like her husband is a regular guide there. There are 200 guides – all non-Jewish. She admitted that she still finds the reality overwhelming and cannot lead groups for too many days in a row before requiring a break.   She and her husband feel passionately about confronting the reality of their past in hopes for a very different future, one in which such atrocities could never happen again. 
 
I was amazed to see in Auschwitz a huge number of tour buses, a few groups like us and several Israeli high school groups who travel there as a ritual of their education.  But in that one day alone, I was stunned to see so many Polish groups - many school groups as well as some adult groups. This viewing of holocaust education first hand by the Polish population could only be seen as an extremely encouraging sign
 
We also witnessed individual non Jewish families and school groups in the huge Jewish cemetery in Warsaw who have taken it upon themselves to regularly clean and straighten up areas that they have in effect adopted 
 
Young non-Jewish Poles are fascinated with their country’s vanished Jewish world, curious to find out more, and determined to preserve its past.
 
There are other countries, notably Germany, where non-Jews play a role in preserving Jewish culture. But nowhere else are they so integral to the process, for in few other places is the Jewish absence as total, while the Jewish history is as rich and as entwined with that of the nation as a whole.
 
Even though we had come to Poland expecting to find death, what I was truly unprepared for was the Jewish life we found.
 
One morning we davened at the main Warsaw synagogue where I had the privilege of taking the kohen Aliyah. It was remarkably active with daily minyanim and learning taking place, seeming to consist of primarily younger daveners. Some who we met are observant but did not know they were Jews just a few years ago. The chief rabbi of Poland joined us that morning, Michael Shudrich, ironically a JTS grad from Long Island who worked at Ramah many years ago. He spoke with us about the phenomenon of Jews discovering their roots every day. 90% of the three million Jews in Poland in 1939 were exterminated in the Shoah. But 300,00 remained. When the Communists came in, a sizable number left but many also remained and went underground, not unlike the Marranos of Spain and Portugal  500 years earlier

It was best and safer not to tell their children about their Jewish roots or heritage 
 
But in the past few years, with the communists gone and a more open society developed, as these parents and grandparents are now quite old, a common phenomenon is that on their deathbeds  they are telling their children and grandchildren: By the way we never told you but you're Jewish, or you mother or father is Jewish or your grandparents on one side were Jewish. Every day the chief rabbi receives calls from such Poles with such stories as well as from others who say things like: My grandmother always made this odd food every year In the spring. Does it mean anything? Or when my grandmother was losing when playing cards with me as a child, she would shout Oy Vey! Does this mean anything? And the answer he gives is yes it does mean something.
 
Suddenly all of these young Poles are finding out about their own heritage and are searching out their roots and figuring out what being a Jew means for them today. The reactions range across the spectrum. Some are just learning and exploring, some who are halachicly non Jewish are converting and others have become fully observant.  
 
When asked how many Jews there are in Poland today, the chief rabbis response was first of all it depends on your definition - whether it is a halachic definition or some other parameter. But regardless of the measure used, his answer to the question of how many Jews there are in Poland today is simply: More than yesterday
 
In Krakow we visited the JCC, a beautiful facility in the heart of the old Jewish historic district, Kazimierz where seven pre-war synagogues still stand. Along with the gorgeous sukkah still standing outside, it was one of the more beautiful JCCs I had ever seen with exquisite artistic posters for the JCC reflecting themes concerning each holiday (you should check out the website).
 
The story behind how the building came to be completed just a few years ago is remarkable.  Prince Charles traveled through Krakow several years ago. Looking to take on a philanthropic venture, he met with some older Jewish Polish women who had lived through the war. Imagining that this was all that was left of Polish Jewry, he asked them what they needed and they responded - a place to meet together and have a meal together. So he committed to building a meeting place and kitchen for the elderly Jews left in Krakow.
 
But as the situation began to change in terms of young Polish Jews coming out of the closet - well talk about chutzpah, - a few leaders of the community had the audacity to go to London to meet with the Prince and put forward a new bolder vision for a full service JCC. And to everyone's surprise, he agreed and funded the construction of this new JCC.
 
We met with its founder and director Jonathan Ornstein, a young guy from queens who made Aliyah and then found himself in Poland. They don't ask questions about ones Jewish roots - whether one is halachically Jewish or not - everyone is accepted. He has created a thriving and vibrant JCC with children's programs, Hebrew classes, conversion classes, weekly Friday night dinners which draw well over a hundred participants.  They sent 60 members two weeks ago to the Polish Limmud conference in Warsaw. Their weekly email - you should join their email list - has a video download - What's the Parsha Pani Zosia?- where one of their members - discusses the parsha and gives a dvar Torah in Polish but with English subtitles.
 
We were so impressed by the vibrant Jewish life developing there that Martha and I joined as Overseas Members once we got home.
They have a fundraising annual 55 mile bike ride we hope to return to do. The publicity around the ride declares that it is not just to remember Jewish history, but to celebrate and support the miraculous rebirth of Jewish life in Poland today. It sounds surreal but the route goes from Auschwitz to the JCC. It is quite a journey not just in distance or time but a journey through different Jewish eras and realities, a journey in the transformation of Polish Jewish life - from the unbearable Jewish past to an inspired Jewish future.
 
They do not lock their front door and since opening have never had one incident of graffiti, of vandalism or verbal assault even more astounding is they have 50 non Jewish volunteers! Just think about that.
 
On a typical Friday night, Shabbat services are held at the JCC, as well as across the street in an Orthodox synagogue and, often, next door at the Temple Synagogue, the city’s historically Reform synagogue  Groups amble between the three buildings, and the singing can be heard from the street.
 
We wore Kippot publicly and felt fully comfortable. Try doing that in France or England today!

Jonathan proudly says that with public displays of anti-Semitism more and more common throughout Europe, Poland is a great place to be Jewish. How bizarre is the fact that Jews from Paris are moving to Warsaw to live in a safer environment. Jonathan points out that “This is the only place in Europe where it’s easier and safer and better every day to be Jewish, and all of this is happening an hour’s drive from Auschwitz”.
“It’s counterintuitive. The one bright Jewish spot in Europe is Poland. It’s a story that needs to be told”.
On hearing and seeing this story unfolding, I felt like I was in one of those Star Trek parallel universes where everything is reversed - the bad guys are the good guys and vice versa.  
 
Both of these men - the chief rabbi Michael Shudrich and the JCC Director Jonathan Ornstein are in Poland because they believe that what they are doing is a mission of kedusha - recovering lost Jews.  For them, their work would be analogous to being able to go back to Spain and Portugal in the late 1500s and recovering the tens of thousands of lost Marrano Jews only one or two generations after 1492. The millions murdered in Poland can never be brought back. They are lost forever. But there is still hope for the estimated tens of thousands of Polish Jews who are yet to be identified, who are still lost to us and lost to themselves. They can be brought back and are being brought back thanks to the commitment and vision of leaders like Michael Shudrich and Jonathan Ornstein.
 
I began today by saying that we went to Poland to find death - and found it. Those haunting memories will always be with us – how could they not?
 
But what stays with me every day since then is the unexpected life that we found. That is what leaves me inspired and energized.
 
I have always had difficulty during davening with the line in the Amidah Machete Hamitic – the belief and prayer for God resurrecting the dead during the Messianic era. I always appreciated Yitz Greenberg’s observations on it – commenting that the Orthodox embrace it, the Reform have removed it from their liturgy and the Conservatives don’t translate it so no one really knows what they’re saying.
 
That morning in the synagogue in Warsaw while davening Shacharit, I came to this line and suddenly it took on different meaning. Had I not seen with my own eyes what to me was a miraculous coming to life, an unimaginable rebirth of Polish Jewry.  Just as I had witnessed the death, I had also witnessed the life emanating from this seemingly dead corpse of a country. This I could finally comprehend as mechayeh meytim, a true resurrection if only metaphorically.  So that morning when I recited the Amidah, I could actually recite that line with a full heart.

And every time I daven since them, I say in full voice Bruch Utah Adonai Mechayeh Hameytim – grateful to God who surprises us sometimes in truly bringing life from death. 

Katja's Challah Recipe

Our top chef in the JCC Krakow kosher kitchen, Kasia Leonardi, was recently in NYC and had the opportunity to bake challah (for nearly 7 hours!) with Katja Goldman, author of Empire Kosher Chicken Cookbook: 225 Easy and Elegant Recipes for Poultry and Great Side Dishes. Katja not only has one of the more beautiful kitchen's in NYC, but she also has one of the top challah recipes and was kind enough to share her recipe here with us!

From New York to Krakow

 
 

Interview with Ellen Germain, US Consul General in Krakow
By Justin Kadis

US Consul General, Ellen Germain with JCC members and staff during an event celebrating the 40th anniversary of the US Consulate in Krakow.

US Consul General, Ellen Germain with JCC members and staff during an event celebrating the 40th anniversary of the US Consulate in Krakow.

Justin Kadis: Will you tell me a little bit about your role as US Consul General here in Krakow?

Ellen Germain: Sure. I’m the head of the US Consul General here in Krakow and our job here is – 60% of our time is spent on consular affairs, which means visas for Poles who want to study or visit or do business in the US and of course services to American citizens – taking care of US citizens who live in the southern part of Poland. So that’s a little bit more than half of our work. The other half is public diplomacy – outreach to the Polish community in southern Poland and we try to strengthen the ties between the United States and Poland and we’re especially interested in reaching out to the younger generation of Poles to make sure that they know what America is like and that we’re strong allies and we care about Poland, are interested in promoting economic ties with Poland, political ties, social and cultural ties. We do all sorts of cultural exchanges as well as trade promotion and things like that.

What are some other places you’ve worked on behalf of the US government?

My first posting was actually Tel Aviv. There I did a year of consular work and a year as staff assistant to the ambassador. Which was great. And then I served in London, in Moscow, in Washington, in the office of Israel-Palestinian affairs, and in the office of Maghreb affairs, which is North Africa, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco. And I also spent three months in Tripoli, Libya where I opened up our liaison office there in April 2004, which eventually became the embassy. This is while Qaddafi was still in power and we reestablished diplomatic relations with Libya. I was also in the office of Russian affairs. And then I went to Baghdad for a year. I was in New York at the US mission to the United Nations, which was great because I’m from New York. So it was wonderful to be home for a few years and the work at the UN was just fascinating; very intense, very fast paced, but really interesting. And then I studied Polish for a year before coming to Krakow. 

And how long have you been here now?

2 years

As a foodie, I must ask – what’s your favorite restaurant here in Krakow?

Well, as a diplomat probably I shouldn’t be answering this, but I’ll give at least one answer. I love Pizza Garden, which is just over the Debniki Bridge. It’s run by a gentleman who spent 15 years in New York – in New York City – in Brooklyn – working at one of the most famous pizza places there. So it’s great pizza. So I love that. 

If you don’t mind, we can move on to a couple of questions about the Jewish community.

Sure.

What were your expectations of Jewish Krakow before arriving here?

I’m not sure that I really had expectations about Jewish Krakow. I knew that Krakow before the war had been one of the huge centers of Jewish life in Poland. When I got here about two years ago I arrived about a month before the high holidays. One of the first things I wanted to do was find out what kind of Jewish community there was and what the options were for going to synagogue and so I was really thrilled when I found out that there’s this really active, really diverse, and dynamic Jewish community in Krakow. Not only a traditional Jewish community, which is really important, but also the Jewish Community Centre, which is just doing an incredible job of reaching out to all parts of Krakow society. So I was thrilled when I came here and everyone was very welcoming – the rabbis, the community members, the community leaders. I was thrilled. It really helped to make me feel at home here in Poland.

Have you seen things changes at all over the two years you’ve been here?

I would say that generally in Poland I’ve been surprised by the level of interest in Jewish life – because I travel a lot. The consulate is responsible for the six southern provinces in Poland and it feels like in every city or town that I’ve visited there’s a restored Jewish cemetery or synagogue or it’s in the process of being restored. There are people in the local community and local governments who are interested in recovering and retaining the Jewish history, the Jewish presence and I’ve really only seen that increase in the two years I’ve been here. Krakow’s Jewish community itself – I’ve only seen it become more dynamic, more diverse. The impression I have is that the Jewish community here is growing.

You’ve done a fair amount of traveling – what would you say is unique to the Jewish community here compared to some of the places you’ve been?

Here in Poland, in Krakow – so many people are discovering their Jewish roots that they’ve gone, maybe for a generation or two without really knowing that they had a connection to Judaism and today there really seems to be an upsurge in interest among young Poles in rediscovering their connection – a Jewish grandparent, a great grandparent and I think that’s great. I think the Jewish institutions in Krakow, especially the JCC, are doing a really good job of reaching out to those people because it seems important to help foster that interest – encouraging diversity and understanding of the different groups that have traditionally made up Poland is a great thing.

With these people discovering their roots – a lot of people who don’t know about Jewish Poland would think that there’s not much of a future here, would you say that there is?

Certainly from what I’ve observed there seems to be. They seem to be participating in Jewish life and taking a real interest and a real active participation in trying to promote and build Jewish life and it’s very interesting for me to see because my grandmother was born in Poland – although in the northeast, Podlaskie region. She emigrated when she was a very little girl with her parents, my great grandparents. So, my family left here more than one hundred years ago to go America. It’s fascinating to me to see here that there is now this upsurge in Jewish life here.

You’ve mentioned the JCC a couple of times, we’ve spent high holidays there together, what does the center mean to you?

To me, the JCC is a welcoming, very warm place where I’ve met a lot of wonderful people, made a lot of friends, and it’s certainly one of the centers of Jewish life in Krakow. It was a special joy and surprise to discover that the head of the JCC, Jonathan and I went to the same high school in New York City. So who would have thought that we would end up in Krakow together?

This interviewed was conducted in English, but originally published in Polish in the June/July/August 2014 issue of JCC Krakow's magazine, Jesteśmy.

The first such game in 70 years. ZKS vs. Makabi

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Click the photo for more photos

Click the photo for more photos

 

On a hot, Sunday afternoon ZKS Krakow (Jewish Sports Club Krakow) hosted Makabi Warszawa. Even though it was an amateur match, the emotions were high.

In such games, the outcome recedes into the background, inventive moves and missed shots are not as important because something different is at stake. "It’s a declaration of support for the environment, which until now didn’t have representation in many aspects of social life" said Jakub Czuprynski, initiator of ZKS Krakow, before the game.

Here played Makkabi / Krakow

The location of the game - a stadium, Nadwiślan at 20 Koletek Street, wasn’t accidental. Before World War II, on this same field, Makkabi Krakow held its games. "Jewish sport before the war was a very important part of Jewish life in general” said Rabbi Michael Schudrich, Chief Rabbi of Poland. "Not only will the game be played on a symbolic field, it will also be the first meeting between two Jewish teams in Krakow for over 70 years. The winner will be the best Jewish team in the world” added a smiling Schudrich before the game.

Makkabi Warszawa proved to be the better team. In the third period, the tide turned in their favor (they were losing 0-2 and again 2-3) as they came back to win 5-3. The teams consisted of amateurs - staff, members, and volunteers of Jewish institutions. They were supported by fans from the local Krakow and Warsaw communities. Cheers supporting both teams were mixed with conversations in Polish, English, and Yiddish.

If there’s sport, there’s life

Schudrich, "This game is for me a great event. If we have a chance to renew Jewish sport traditions here under Wawel castle and Krakow is playing against Warsaw, then this is amazing. This is a true sign of the revival of Jewish life in Poland."

The organizer of the game spoke in a similar tone: "If there’s sport, there’s life" emphasized Czuprynski.