Auschwitz treasure discovered in a destroyed synagogue in Poland


The town where Auschwitz was located has yielded a trove of Judaica.
During an excavation last month of the site of the destroyed Great Synagogue in Oswiecim, the town in southern Poland where Auschwitz was built, archeologists working from a Holocaust survivor's memory unearthed a unique trove of Jewish ritual objects.
The objects, which had been buried since the Holocaust, include three bronze candelabras, a bronze menorah, 10 chandeliers and a ner tamid, or eternal lamp, that once hung before the synagogue ark. Tiles, marble plaques, charred wood and other material from the synagogue, which was burned to the ground in 1939 by invading Nazi forces, also were uncovered.
"We didn't include a miracle in our operating budget, but now we have to deal with one," said Tomasz Kuncewicz, director of the Auschwitz Jewish Center, a prayer and study complex near the site of the notorious death camp.
The find represents the complete interior moveable furnishings of the synagogue.
"It's amazing to have found something so complete," Kuncewicz said. "It seems as if such a discovery never happened before."
Before World War II, Oswiecim was a bustling town of 12,000 people, more than half of them Jews. Most local Jews were killed in the Holocaust, and only one of the town's synagogues survived the war.
Long used as a warehouse, it was restituted to Polish Jews in 1998 and then refurbished and reconsecrated as part of the Auschwitz Jewish Center complex, which opened in 2000. The center tells the story of prewar Jewish life here and elsewhere in Poland.
Funded by Polish and Israeli sources and filmed for Israeli television, the four-week excavation got under way at the end of May.
The only clue where to dig had been the account of an elderly Holocaust survivor who recalled seeing the synagogue caretaker bury two large boxes near the synagogue shortly after the Nazi invasion in September 1939.
Archeologists from the University of Torun first dug at two sites based on the recollection of the survivor, Yishayahu Yarot.
Yarot was born in Oswiecim and moved to Israel after the war, where he became a shopkeeper in Ramat Hasharon. In 1998, when he was 90, Yarot had a chance encounter with a customer, Yariv Nornberg, a young Israeli just out of the army who was about to tour death camps in Poland. That led Yarot to recount his memory of synagogue officials burying two metal boxes.
He drew Nornberg a map showing where he thought the boxes were buried.
"He thought Torahs were buried, but no Torahs were found," Kuncewicz said.
After archeologists found nothing at the original digging places, they began a general excavation of the synagogue foundations.
"They excavated several trenches," Kuncewicz said. "The objects were found in the last place they were digging, just a few days before the end of the four-week excavation."
He said the recovered objects appear to have been hidden under the floor of the synagogue, below a staircase.
"When you find remnants of Jewish life so close to where the Nazis committed their horrors, it's extremely moving," Israeli filmmaker Yahaly Gat, who filmed the search, told Ma'ariv newspaper.
The uncovered objects appear to be generally in good condition, though covered with green corrosion.
Kuncewicz said they must go through a year-long restoration process that will cost about $100,000. They then will be displayed in the Jewish center.
"We feel a great responsibility to rescue and save this treasure and make it available to people who come to visit," Kuncewicz said. "These objects will definitely be evidence about the diversity and richness of Jewish life in Poland and in this town, which before the war was a thriving Jewish community."
The site where the Great Synagogue stood long had been an empty lot, with no indication that a building that could seat 2,000 people, constructed around 1800, had stood there.
In a related development, the Jewish center is developing a project to turn the house of Oswiecim's last Jewish resident, a Holocaust survivor who died four years ago, into a museum that will show typical Jewish family life in Poland.
The house stands next to the Jewish center complex.
The Auschwitz Jewish Center's exhibitions and activities, Kuncewicz said, serve to "give a broader context of the place. Here in this site, which symbolizes the destruction of the Jewish people, it shows that before this there was a thriving Jewish community, which lived here for over 500 years. This center is about this life, which was so tragically destroyed."---www.ujc.org