JewishGen Logo

Present-Day Physical Remnants of the Dukla Jewish Community

The Dukla Synagogue (located on ul. [street] Cergowska)


Dukla had a brick synagogue on Cergowska Street, located several blocks east of the Rynek (town or market square). It was built in 1758, when an earlier wooden synagogue burnt down. The brick synagogue's main room had a square floor plan of 12 x 16 meters, with the bimah in the center between four brick columns. A gallery for women was on the north side.

The Dukla Synagogue Floor Plan:  The Dukla synagogue floor plan. 

A computer rendering of what the Dukla synagogue would have looked like:  A computer rendering of what the Dukla synagogue would have
        looked like:

Dukla Synagogue exterior view - 1916-1917  Dukla
        Synagogue exterior view - 1916-1917

The only presently known photograph of the exterior of the Dukla synagogue during the period when it was in use, this is one of four photographs taken in 1916-1917 of Dukla by German army soldiers during World War I. [Photograph from the website of the Museum of the Jewish People in Tel Aviv - Beit Hatfutsot (https://dbs.anumuseum.org.il/skn/he/c6/BH/Search#query=Dukla), These photographs, found in the Museum's Visual Documentation Center, are courtesy of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw.]

Dukla Synagogue interior view - 1916-1917.
  Dukla Synagogue interior view - 1916-1917

The only presently known photograph of the interior of the Dukla synagogue during the period when it was in use, also taken by German army soldiers during World War I. [Photograph also from the website of the Museum of the Jewish People in Tel Aviv - Beit Hatfutsot.]

By the end of WWII, the Dukla synagogue was left in ruins; burnt by the Germans in 1940, and further damaged by German-Soviet fighting in 1944. Today, only the deteriorating walls of the main room with its ornamental portal entrance on the west side remain. Inside, the niche for the aron ha-kodesh on the east wall, and fragments of prayer inscriptions on the south wall, can still be seen. The remains of the central bimah have now disappeared.

Photos of the Dukla synagogue ruins in the 1950's  Photos of
        the Dukla synagogue ruins in the 1950's

Photos
        of the Dukla synagogue ruins in the 1950's

Photos of the Dukla synagogue ruins in the 1950s, showing the then existing remains of the central bimah. Photos of
        the Dukla synagogue ruins in the 1950s, showing the then
        existing remains of the central bimah.

Photos
        of the Dukla synagogue ruins in the 1950s, showing the then
        existing remains of the central bimah.

Recent photos of the Dukla synagogue ruins:

Synagogue ruins - present-day Synagogue ruins - present-day

Synagogue ruins - present-day (north face) Synagogue
        ruins - present-day (north face)


Synagogue ruins - present-day (western face with portal entrance) Synagogue ruins - present-day (western face with portal
        entrance)

Synagogue ruins - present-day (interior with aron hakodesh). Synagogue
        ruins - present-day (interior with aron hakodesh)

Synagogue ruins - present-day (interior with aron hadodesh close-up) Synagogue ruins - present-day (interior with aron hadodesh
        close-up)

Synagogue ruins - present-day (interior southern wall - Hebrew inscriptions). Synagogue ruins - present-day
        (interior southern wall - Hebrew inscriptions)

The synagogue grounds are mowed and wild brush is removed annually by Jacek Koszczan of Sztetl Dukla. However, because of the deteriorating and increasingly unstable condition of the synagogue's brick walls, in recent years a fence has been erected around the synagogue site to keeps visitors away from the ruins. The portal entrance to the interior of the synagogue has also been boarded closed. However, a sign has now been placed providing visitors with information about the synagogue.

Synagogue signage  Synagogue signage

The English language portion of the sign reads:

SYNAGOGUE IN DUKLA

TOURIST INFORMATION

THE SYNAGOGUE was built in 1758 with broken stones, pebbles and brick. It is a baroque-style building, which, in times of its glory, was covered with a high, hipped roof. Rectangular women's gallery covered with a gable roof was attached to its northern elevation. There was a vestibule with a library and a pile of vestments on the axle of the western wall. Preserved up to present times, the stone portal was originally located inside the vestibule. The interior of the synagogue was vaulted. The brick construction of a nine-square vault was based on pendentives, which are still preserved in the corners of the building. In the middle there was a four-column bima of architectural type, which pendentive vault was connected with the synagogue's vault with the help of buttresses. The inside walls were freshly decorated with baroque-style polychrome [architectural elements decorated in a variety of colors]. The remains of inscriptions and painted architectural divisions are still present. The niches located in the northern and southern wall of the ground floor were once covered with the boards with the names of dead members of the Jewish community. During two centuries, thousands of Dukla's inhabitants of Moses' faith gathered in the synagogue. Among them Naftali and Gitel Rubenstein, living in Dukla up to 1871, are worth mentioning. They were the parents of the famous Helena Rubenstein. Jozef Samuel Bloch, an outstanding rabbi, the MP of the Austrian Parliament and publicist lived in Dukla. Worth mentioning is also Samuel Silbermann, who as a volunteer joined the Jozef Haller's army and took part in Polish-Bolshevik War.

The synagogue was burnt by the Germans in 1940, during the Second World War. The bima was still existing in the 50s of the 20th century. In 1989, the building of the former synagogue was enrolled to the register of monuments of Podkarpackie Volvodship [Subcarpathia Province] as a permanent ruin.

In late October 2021, ownership of the synagogue grounds was transferred from the State of Poland to the municipality of Dukla. With the synagogue property now under local control, it is hoped that additional attention and funds will be directed to the synagogue's appearance.

The Dukla Torah from the Synagogue: Click here

The Hasidic Klojz (located at ul. Cergowska 8)

Dukla's Hasidic community also had a klojz (a small prayer house) or Beit Hamidrash (house of study) located next to the brick synagogue. Built in 1884, after another fire in the town had burnt down the previous prayer/study house, the building still stands. It is now a store, after having also been used as a warehouse for many years following World War II.

Building that housed the Hasidic Klotz Building that
        housed the Hasidic Klotz

The Rabbi's House (located at ul. Rynek 25)

On the Southern side of Dukla's Rynek (town or market square) is a building that was the former rabbi's house. It is, currently a tourist house run by PTTK (Polish Tourist and Sightseeing Society).

The Rabbi's House
The
        Rabbi's House


The Jewish School Building (located at ul. Kosciuszki 11)


The Baron Hirsch School, founded by philanthropist Baron Maurycy Hirsch, was a Jewish primary school for boys, which also provided technical training for its older students. The Baron Hirsch School opened in Dukla in 1895 and was composed of four forms or grades. When it first opened, the school met bitter opposition from Dukla's Hasidic Jews who viewed any secular addition to cheder instruction as a danger to Orthodoxy. Only 32 students registered the first year. However, the enrollment kept growing with time, and by 1908 the school had 140 students. (Baron de Hirsch was a German Jewish philanthropist who, through a charitable foundation he set up, established Jewish schools throughout Galicia in order to promote Jewish education.)

After World War I, a Jewish orphanage school was opened in Dukla, and was located in the same building that had previously housed the Baron Hirsch School. The orphanage was run by Mordechai (Marcus) Dawid Rosenthal and his wife Chana.

Today, the building that formerly housed the Baron Hirsh and Jewish Orphanage schools is still used as a schoolhouse, and is the present location of the Dukla municipal kindergarten.

The Jewish School Building
The Jewish
        School Building


The Dukla Jewish Cemeteries (located next to ul. Trakt Wegierski 62 ["The Hungarian Route"]; the pathway leading from the road to the cemeteries is named ul. dr. Jozefa Samuela Blocha in honor of Dr. Joseph Bloch, Viennese Rabbi, and one of Dukla's most prominent Jews.)
In the southern part of town, by the Hungarian Route, lies Dukla's two Jewish cemeteries - the so-called "Old Cemetery", which contains about 100 gravestones, most moss-covered and broken (some mere fragments); and immediately behind it the so-called "New Cemetery", established around 1870, which has approximately 200 preserved gravestones. The Old Cemetery is open and unfenced; while the New Cemetery is mostly surrounded by a low stonewall with a damaged iron entrance gate. During WWII, the Nazis used some of the cemetery gravestones to reinforce the embankments of the nearby Smereczna stream and for other building works. The Dukla Jewish cemeteries are now maintained by The Foundation for the Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland (FODZ), with general cleanup (mowing and removal of dead tree limbs) done annually by Jacek Koszczan of Sztetl Dukla and others.


Information about available gravestone lists from the Dukla cemeteries can be found under Dukla Genealogical Information. Click Here

Signage at the entrance to the Old Cemetery Signage at
        the entrance to the Old Cemetery

The Old Cemetery The Old Cemetery

The Old Cemetery The Old Cemetery

Entrance gate to the New Cemetery Entrance gate to the New Cemetery

The New Cemetery The New Cemetery

The New Cemetery The New Cemetery

In August 2021, 24 gravestones, and 3 partial stones, which had previously been taken from the Dukla Jewish cemeteries and used by the Germans during World War II to line the Smereczna stream as well as a latrine ditch for a German outpost located at the stream, were excavated for return to the Dukla Jewish cemeteries.

The following pictures taken during the reclamation effort.
Matzevah
        1

Matzevah
        Picture 2

Matzevah
        Picture 3

Matzevah
        Picture 4

Matzevah
        Picture 5


Return to Table of Contents Click Here

Copyright (2022) Jeffrey Alexander and Philip Ross. All rights reserved.