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Kloyz in the Jewish Almshouse in Vilnius

  • Writer: Zippy Nelson
    Zippy Nelson
  • Aug 1, 2020
  • 2 min read

Updated: Aug 3, 2020

Kloyz in the Jewish Almshouse in Vilnius, Pamėnkalnio 11



The Jewish Almshouse appeared as early as 1864 and took care of about 15 elderly people. Located on Pamėnkalnio street, designed by Mieczysław Strebeiko in 1875 - 1878, the building has been rebuilt a few times throughout history until it became a long and huge three-story shelter for 330 elderly people. In 1878, it already had a laundry room, a sauna and, of course, a house of prayer, kloyz. In 1884, Cyprian Maculewicz designed anew the southeastern part of the building, which was inaugurated in September 1886, with a solemn Saturday service in the kloyz.


The upper floor of the new building, which was finished in August 1887 and allowed to increase the number of old people cared for in the facility to 171. The plan of the Almshouse from 1897 shows the kloyz situated on the upper floor: it occupies the southeastern room and is connected to the adjacent room and to a staircase by three passages; the Torah ark is marked at the southeastern wall.


In 1897–98, the third, northwestern part of the Almshouse was erected following the design of Konstantin Koroedov. In 1898–99 the central part of the third storey was added according to Koroedov’s design; Baroness Clara von Hirsch auf Gereuth (1833–99) donated funds for this construction. In 1909, the third storey was enlarged and the street façade of the building was crowned with a magnificent Art-Nouveau pediment according to the design by D. Frenkel, implemented by Mikhail Prozorov; thus the capacity of the Almshouse reached 330 people.


A separate two-storey structure for the kloyz was built in the courtyard of the Almshouse according to the design by Konstantin Koroedov in the early 20th century: it is missing in the drawings from 1897, but appears in the general plan from 1909. Its upper floor, where the kloyz was situated, was decorated with aediculae windows. The prayer hall was oriented towards southeast, so that the wall with the Torah ark had no windows, the northeastern wall had four windows facing a lane leading to the courtyard from today’s Aleksandro Stulginskio Street; and the back, northwestern wall had five windows facing the courtyard of the Almshouse. The women’s section was situated on the same level, at the southwestern part of the wing; on the northwestern façade the separation between the prayer hall and the women’s section was accentuated by a narrow blind window. The prayer hall was devoid of interior supports; its Neo-Baroque Torah ark was flanked by twisted columns and decorative “wings” and crowned with a figured trabeation. A square bimah, fenced with metal bars, stood in its center. Two stoves were situated at the southwestern wall.


Reconstruction and maintenance of Jewish shelters and houses of worship were funded by Israeli Bunimovics and other Jewish merchants.

But sadly in 1941, the seniors living in this shelter were to became the first victims of the Nazi regime.

By 1942 the kloyz was damaged together with the Almshouse.




Currently the Almshouse building houses the Administration and Services Department of the Vilnius Vocational Education and Training Centre of Technology and Business. The former kloyz serves as a gym of the Centre.



https://lt.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaizdas:Vilniaus_Pam%C4%97nkalnio_gatv%C4%97s_sinagoga.jpg



http://cja.huji.ac.il/browser.php?mode=set&id=14298

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