Parysów

Parysów Public Junior High School

“Shalom Parysów” was the title of the multimedia presentation prepared by students of the public junior high school in Parysów, who participated in School of Dialogue workshop in 2011. The presentation was the culmination of a bigger project on which the students worked vigorously during the workshops with the Forum educators. The teenagers did not know much about Jews in Parysów – they just had a vague idea that Jews used to live in this town. It was only during the sessions with Forum’s educators that they learned that in the first half of the 19th century Jews comprised 29% of the village’s population, while during the interwar period – as much as 56%.

Therefore, the junior high schoolers asked many questions. How did the Jews live? How were they different? What did they eat? How did they pray? Tzaddik Jehoszua Rabinowicz from Żelechów is buried in the Parysów cemetery – who was he? Who are the Hasidim? The young people became very interested in the subject and decided to act.

They asked their family members about the Jewish community, trying to glean as much as possible from those who still remembered the old Parysów. They leafed through photo albums, looked for clues and information in the local library. Their enthusiasm raised the curiosity of teachers, parents, city authorities, the local priest and other inhabitants. Everyone got involved and tried to help – and thus every day the teenagers would uncover new facts about the town where Jews and Poles had lived together.

They found the synagogue which had been built in the 19th century. Even though the Germans destroyed the building during the war, it was later reconstructed and rendered habitable. They learned that there used to be a mikveh next to the synagogue. There also were two prayer houses. A Jewish cemetery was founded in 1862 near Starowola village.



The graveyard’s current state prompted the teenagers to reflect: there was not much left of it, because most of the matzevot were stolen and used for the construction of farm buildings in Parysów or neighboring Garwolin.

The students also traced the borders of the ghetto, which was established close to the town square in 1940. As much as 3500 people were moved there, including Jews from Warsaw or Garwolin. The liquidation of the ghetto took place in 1942 and most of its inhabitants were taken to the Treblinka death camp.

As a final project of School of Dialogue workshops, the students organized a walking tour through Jewish Parysów. It included a presentation about the synagogue, cemetery and Shabbat traditions.

They invited other students, teachers and elderly inhabitants of the town, who talked about their Jewish neighbors. One of the Righteous Among the Nations, Irena Landau-Jankiewicz, lived in Parysów. Also a certain Mr Rogowski had hidden a Jewish woman during the war.

All the posters created by the junior high schoolers were later displayed at the local cultural center, located in the building of the former synagogue.

School of Dialogue workshops were just the beginning. Soon afterwards, School of Dialogue alumni hosted a tour for guests froms Forum For Dialogue Among Nations. They gave them a guided tour of the town and showed them their research materials for the previously organized tour, “Shalom Parysów”.

Parysów

School:
Parysów Public Junior High School
Students:
students from different years
Teacher:
Agnieszka Witak
Educators:
Agata Jujeczka, Małgorzata Nowicka

Contributors

School of Dialogue program in Parysów was made possible by the support from:

Stanisław Trzciński, Tomasz Kapliński, Magdalena Żakowska, Kazimiera Szczuka, Jan Dworak, Rafał Kos, Rafał Szymczak, Tomasz Pańczyk, Piotr Lewicki

In appreciation to Friends of the Forum for supporting the School of Dialogue educational program.

FOF właściwe