Banie Jewish Cemetery

Cemetery Information

Country
Poland
Region
West Pomeranian Voivodeship
District
Gryfino
Settlement
Banie
Site address
Ogrodowa Street, 150 meters North from the intersection with Brzozowa Street, on the West side of the road, about 50 meters into the fields.
GPS coordinates
53.106091, 14.657319
Perimeter length
159 meters
Is the cemetery demolished
no
Type and height of existing fence
No
Preservation condition
Unfenced Jewish cemetery
General site condition
The cemetery is overgrown by high grass.
Number of existing gravestones
2 tombstones and 5 fragments.
Date of oldest tombstone
According to the information board, the earliest tombstone is from 1741
Date of newest tombstone
1915
Urgency of erecting a fence
High
Land ownership
Municipality
Preserved construction on site
No
Drone surveys
No

Historical overview

A stone protrudes from the grass (matzevot base) that covers the graves. Once the cemetery was surrounded with a granite wall that today is hidden in dense thicket. According to local (German) residents of Bani (formerly Bahn/Pommern), the cemetery was devastated by the Nazis in the 1930s. After the war, with no one was left to care for the site, local authorities finished devastating the cemetery by taking the gravestones to use for other purposes. In the 1960s, a dozen matzevot remained. Recently, the cemetery was very overgrown, but its location protected it. In September 2007, the new municipal authorities decided to clean the cemetery area and prevent further devastation. Clearing trees and shrubs came first. Jesionowa avenue leading to the cemetery was cleaned and paved. Exposed gravestones fragments, and above all, the oldest granite matzevot from 1741 with an inscription in Hebrew was preserved in its entirety and dated by the Provincial Conservator of Monuments. From the second day of cleaning the Jewish cemetery, two beautifully preserved matzevot with Hebrew inscription were found. Additionally, besides the two a concrete gravestone with a German inscription was found in its entirety as were the remains of several sandstone matzevot. A sign in Polish, English and German sayst: "Kirkut. Banska Jewish Cemetery was founded in year 1741, destroyed in the days of the Nazi regime in World War II, forgotten by God and man  ... Here the deceased's dream for many centuries past series[?] fathers may return to the altars, may return to the family the edges[?] Land legally protected." Funds are needed to rebuild the stone wall surrounding cemetery. The authorities of the municipalities have committed themselves to continuing care for the cemetery, are also hoping for full respect for the resting place of residents of Bani.
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery
Banie Jewish Cemetery