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Stop 2 of 17

Remah Cemetery

Look for a pale stone wall and dark iron gate beside a low synagogue building, with the cemetery’s compact enclosure tucked closely behind them.

Stand here for a moment, and Kazimierz begins not with a square or a market, but with a boundary: wall, gate, names, and the patient weight of stone. This is the Old Jewish Cemetery, better known as the Remah Cemetery, laid out between the fifteen thirties and fifteen fifties, one of the oldest surviving Jewish burial grounds in Poland. Places like this keep a different sort of record. Official history likes neat summaries; graves preserve human scale, one life, one family, one inscription at a time.

The man at the heart of this place is Rabbi Moses Isserles, known as the Remah. He was one of the great Jewish scholars of Kraków, but here he is also something more intimate: a mourner. He founded the synagogue next door in memory of his first wife, so this whole corner became not only a public religious site, but a private landscape of grief turned outward into communal memory. If you glance at the image on your screen, you can see his grave, the one that drew generations of visitors.

And visitors truly came. Before the Second World War, thousands arrived here every year, especially on Lag Ba’omer and around the anniversary of Remah’s death, turning this cemetery into a place of active devotion rather than hushed abandonment. His tombstone carried the famous line, “From Moses to Moses there was none like Moses,” placing him in the company of Maimonides and making this grave a destination for pilgrimage.

Now, let me put a question to you. Who earns remembrance most deeply: the celebrated scholar, the person misjudged in life, or the descendants who keep returning to speak a name aloud?

Locals would point you toward the back of the cemetery for the answer. Legend says Yossele the Holy Miser was buried there in disgrace because his neighbours thought him mean and cold. Only after his death did they discover that he had quietly given charity to the poor, and the rabbi added HaTzadik, meaning “the righteous one,” to his stone. Nearby lies Rabbi Yom-Tov Lipmann Heller, another learned figure whose life also carried hardship and survival after imprisonment in Vienna.

What you see today is a rescue as much as a relic. The Nazis tore down walls, ripped up tombstones, and reused many as building material elsewhere or sold them off. After the war, workers recovered fragments, and in nineteen fifty-nine a major clearing and reconstruction effort helped reassemble this ground. The dense restored stones in the cemetery images are not just old; many are survivors.

From one rabbi’s grave, an entire district begins to unfold: prayer, scholarship, legend, loss, and the stubborn habit of return. When you’re ready, continue to the Izaak Synagogue, about a two-minute walk from here. If you plan to come back, the cemetery generally opens from nine, closes on Saturdays, stays open until six from Tuesday to Thursday, and closes earlier on Monday, Friday, and Sunday.

The cemetery wrapped around the Remah Synagogue, illustrating the intimate layout of one of Poland’s oldest surviving Jewish burial grounds.
The cemetery wrapped around the Remah Synagogue, illustrating the intimate layout of one of Poland’s oldest surviving Jewish burial grounds.Photo: Falk2, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A close cemetery view that shows the crowded matzevot restored after wartime damage, when many tombstones were recovered from being reused as paving stones.
A close cemetery view that shows the crowded matzevot restored after wartime damage, when many tombstones were recovered from being reused as paving stones.Photo: Zala, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
Inside the cemetery among the old gravestones, reflecting the dense memorial landscape of scholars, rabbis, and legendary figures like Yossele the Holy Miser.
Inside the cemetery among the old gravestones, reflecting the dense memorial landscape of scholars, rabbis, and legendary figures like Yossele the Holy Miser.Photo: Zala, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
Another interior angle on the historic burial ground, evoking the layered centuries of graves from the 16th century onward.
Another interior angle on the historic burial ground, evoking the layered centuries of graves from the 16th century onward.Photo: Zala, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A detailed view of the old stones and enclosure, fitting the story of postwar reconstruction when the cemetery was reassembled from fragments.
A detailed view of the old stones and enclosure, fitting the story of postwar reconstruction when the cemetery was reassembled from fragments.Photo: Zala, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A close look at the weathered gravestones, representative of the cemetery’s rare preserved burials from the 1500s through 1850.
A close look at the weathered gravestones, representative of the cemetery’s rare preserved burials from the 1500s through 1850.Photo: Zala, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
The restored tombstones highlight how the cemetery was rebuilt after Nazi destruction and later cleared in a major 1959 recovery effort.
The restored tombstones highlight how the cemetery was rebuilt after Nazi destruction and later cleared in a major 1959 recovery effort.Photo: Zala, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A detail of the graveyard’s surviving matzevot, linking this site to notable rabbis such as Yom-Tov Lipmann Heller and Nathan Nata Spira.
A detail of the graveyard’s surviving matzevot, linking this site to notable rabbis such as Yom-Tov Lipmann Heller and Nathan Nata Spira.Photo: Zala, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A contemporary record of the cemetery’s restored condition, after postwar work returned many original tombstones that had been found reused in the city.
A contemporary record of the cemetery’s restored condition, after postwar work returned many original tombstones that had been found reused in the city.Photo: Kritzolina, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
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