Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two

Cemetery Information

Country
Hungary
Region
Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg
District
Kisvárdai
Settlement
Tornyospálca
Site address
The cemetery is located at the intersection of Petőfi and Kossuth streets.
GPS coordinates
48.26743, 22.19111
Perimeter length
285 metres
Is the cemetery demolished
yes
Type and height of existing fence
No
Preservation condition
Demolished and overbuilt Jewish cemetery
General site condition
The site has been demolished. One part of the territory is now a park and another part has been overbuilt with a kindergarten.
Number of existing gravestones
No tombstones preserved.
Date of oldest tombstone
N/A
Date of newest tombstone
N/A
Urgency of erecting a fence
Fence is not needed
Land ownership
Municipality
Preserved construction on site
No
Drone surveys
Yes

Historical overview

There appears to have been two Jewish cemeteries in Tornyospálca. This cemetery was established as early as 1870, since it appears on the cadastral map of that year. It was demolished at an unknown time, and partially built over.

Jews have lived in Tornyospálca since 1750. For instance, the Absolon family, which had 8 family members, lived on the estate of the Lónyay family. The number of Jews increased and by 1848 there were 100 Jews in the village (across 21 families). At that time, Jews worked as pub owners, traders, painters, butchers, rabbis, teachers, and servants. Some of the poorer Jews were beggars. In 1880, Jews accounted for 111 people of the village’s total population of 1,538. The Jewish population peaked at 129 in 1890, after which the population decreased and by 1941 Jews merely accounted for 76 people of village’s population of 3,244. At that time, according to records, Jews were grocers, traders, craftsmen, poor peddlers, and intellectuals. The Jewish community joined the Orthodox stream in 1868 and the rabbi of the community was Rabbi Aron Adler.

The community had a synagogue, a cheder, and a Talmud-Torah as well. Prior, the Jewish children in the village attended Greek Catholic or Calvinist schools (depending on where they lived) as there was no Jewish school in the village. The synagogue was built in 1906 (currently 46 Rákóczi Street). In 2002, a white marble table (30 x 50 cm) was found in the cellar of Miklós Adler’s former house in the village (15 Rákóczi Street). The table used to be on the east wall of the synagogue and was taken to the cellar after the building was torn down. There was a yard next to the synagogue and a mikveh (ritual bath) at the end of the garden.

In 1938, paramilitary units arrived in the village (as part of actions in Upper Hungary) where they enforced anti-Jewish laws. In 1941, Jewish youth were sent to forced labour, most of whom died on the Eastern front. In April 1944, The Jews of Tornyospálca were rounded up and confined in the synagogue’s yard for two days, then taken to the Kisvárda Ghetto, from where they were deported to Auschwitz at the end of May. Only a small number of Jews from Tornyospálca survived.

Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two
Tornyospálca Jewish Cemetery Two