Jewish Cemetery, Štip

The Jewish Cemetery is the cemetery of the Jewish community in Štip, 5 km away from the town, i.e. in the outskirts of the suburb of Novo Selo, in North Macedonia. The cemetery is registered as a Cultural Heritage of North Macedonia.[1][2]

Jewish Cemetery
Еврејски гробишта
Evrejski grobišta
Map
Details
Location
CountryNorth Macedonia
Coordinates41°43′45.332″N 22°10′42.795″E / 41.72925889°N 22.17855417°E / 41.72925889; 22.17855417
TypeJewish
Owned byŠtip Museum

History

edit

Background

edit

The Jewish cemetery of Štip date back to before the arrival of the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish refugees. It can not be determined with certainty that the cemetery of the Jews from Štip has always been in the same place. The Romaniote Jewish community in Štip has existed since the beginning of the AD. The first written documents about the Jews in Štip date back to the 15th century, with the settlement of Spanish and Portuguese Jews who were persecuted from the Iberian Peninsula by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, refusing to accept Christianity.[3]

It is believed that when Sultan Mehmed II conquered Constantinople in 1453 and moved his capital there, he began to inhabit that city. At that time, most of the Jewish population from Štip was moved to Constantinople. With the arrival of refugees from Spain and Portugal, the Jews in Štip strengthened their ranks. According to the jargon of the Jews of Štip, it could be said that most of the newcomers were from Portugal.[3]

17 century-Interwar period

edit

According to the archeological excavations, the oldest tombs in the Jewish cemetery in Štip date from the 17th century, and from then until the 1940s they buried the dead in the same place. Access to them was very difficult, especially for people who carried the dead on a stretcher under Jewish law. There were no Jewish stonemasons in the town between the interwar period, so the teacher Menachem Mercado Zion drew the text of the tombstones in large and clear letters, and the stonemason Christians took over the inscriptions.[3]

World War II

edit

During World War II, with the deportation of the Macedonian Jews to the Treblinka extermination camp, the Jewish cemetery in Štip became devastated and demolished. The Bulgarian soldiers in that period collected all the stone memorial plaques and took them to the spa near the village Kežovica, about two kilometers away from the town of Štip, and from them then built the base of the pool itself. According to the lists in German and Bulgarian, 551 Jews from Štip were killed in Treblinka.[3]

21st Century

edit

In September 2009, the Štip Museum started with the renovation of the Jewish Cemetery. According to Zoran Čitkušev, the then director of the museum in Štip, it was planned to renovate and conserve the graves. At the same time, it was planned to arrange the cemetery itself, build an access road and install a fence wall. The renovation was carried out with funds from the Central Government, the Ministry of Culture and the Office for Protection of Cultural Heritage.[4] On April 1, 2015, a memorandum for cooperation was signed between the Štip Municipality and the Ministry of Culture, with which in 2016 the protective wall of the cemetery was built and completed. Today, there are 120 Jewish tombstones in the cemetery, placed horizontally, according to the Jewish burial method.[3]

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Национален регистар на објекти кои се заштитно културно наследство" [National register of buildings that are protected cultural heritage] (in Macedonian). Ministry of Culture. 2012. Archived from the original on August 9, 2021. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  2. ^ "Еврејски гробишта во Штип" [Jewich cemetery in Štip] (in Macedonian). zkn.mk. Archived from the original on January 27, 2022. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Еврејски гробишта во Штип" [Jewish community in Štip] (in Macedonian). Jewish Community in Republic of Macedonia. Archived from the original on February 16, 2021. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  4. ^ "Реконструкција на Еврејските гробишта" [Reconstruction of the Jewich cemetery]. Večer. Večer Press. September 1, 2009. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
edit