This site is hosted by JewishGen, Inc. and part of the KehilaLinks Project

 

Stropkov, Slovak Republic

Visit Stropkov, Sixty Years Later   

Getting There

When to visit? Spring  and fall are probably the best times,  especially if one plans to visit cemeteries—because graves  are covered with heavy vegetation in the summer and snowed-under in the winter.

Stropkov is accessible from  Budapest, Vienna, Bratislava, or Prague by air (to Kosice), train (to Kosice, Medzilaborce, or Bardejov),  private car, or bus.  While there is one small hotel in the town, visitors may prefer more modern accomodations in larger Presov, Bardejov, or Kosice.  From these nearby towns, it is possible to hire a car and driver for the day.

Perhaps a better alternative is to contact  Harry Weinberger,  a Stropkov Holocaust survivor who lives  in Kosice.  He often accompanies tourists and survivors "home", pointing out the sights in your choice of language-- German, Russian, Slovakian, Hungarian, or Yiddish. (For information on reaching  Mr. Weinberger, contact the webmaster.)

 

What to See

Stropkov today is far different from Stropkov of old. The  Jewish stores that once lined  the main street are gone, replaced by  supermarkets and row-stores. There are no Jews …the Rebbe's house near the brook,  the shul, the  beismedrish, the mikveh ...all  gone....only  the two Jewish cemeteries remain--mute memorials  to a vanished community.      

For the adventuresome, take a peek at Stropkov today (in Slovakian)  

Start your visit by requesting a Stropkov town map at the Town Hall, located at 38-2 Hlavna Ulica (Main Street)--and be sure to ask for directions to both the Tisinec and Stropkov cemeteries! Many who have gone before you have overlooked the Tisinec cemetery, to their regret! With a little luck, the city architect himself will offer to take you on a walking tour.

 

Tisinec Jewish Cemetery (c1650-1892)

In tiny Tisinec, four kilometers north of Stropkov, locate the Prusec family, caretakers and keyholders of the cemetery gate. Ask them to accompany you--and don't forget to leave a tip.

To proceed on your own: at the Tisinec crossroads, turn right, then immediately bear left.  Follow the  two-rut overgrown tractor path, crossing a small bridge, then heading out into the fields. After a while, just past the water tower,  you will notice a  large overgrown area to your left, markedly different from the flat, furrowed fields  around it.  This is the cemetery--  returning to nature.  A single building stands--a tiny mausoleum, or "tent", protecting   the grave of   Rav Chaim Yosef Gottlieb.  The grave of Rabbi Shlomo Baruch Tannenbaum  is also here.  Most of the ancient  tombstones have toppled and are illegible.

Stropkov Jewish Cemetery (1892-1942)

This  cemetery, now  enveloped by  Stropkov’s residential area, is the final resting place of some  600 Jews.   Many of its tombstones, flaked and worn with time, are illegible.  Others, though readable, show  first names, dates,  and fathers’ names—but no surnames.  A single "tent" stands, guarding the grave of the “Zborover Ruv”, Rabbi Yitzhak Hersh Amsel.

Neither  maps nor burial lists  have  been found for either  cemetery. But   death certificates.  available through  the  Stropkov and/or Presov Archives, do note burial  places.

The Stropkov Archives is located  in  the town square, adjoining the old castle and the Catholic church.  Here  you will find  birth, marriage, and death records of local residents  dating  from c1898 through the present.  (Jewish records stop abruptly in spring of 1942, of course.)  The archivists are very obliging:  they will readily carry out the impressive, heavy tomes, and help you search for your great-grandfather's birth certificate.  Look to the right of the entry: there you may see  the signature of your great-great grandfather--if it was he who reported the birth!  It is possible to photocopy the signature on the spot, and, for a nominal fee,  order official certificates.  You can also contact  the archives in Presov and Bratislava  with research requests.

 While You’re in the Neighborhood

Because a few short hours will suffice in Stropkov itself, it is recommended that the tourist  also visit other  Eastern Slovakia sights: Bardejov, the Bardejov Spa,   the  impressive wooden churches, Dukla, the Rusyn villages, the Andy Warhol Museum in Medzilaborce, the renovated synagogue in Presov, etc. Keep in mind that almost no English is spoken in this part of the world.  Brush up on your  Czech,Slovakian, Russian, and/or German--or hire a translator.   

Read the latest issue of The Slovak Spectator.

 

home

For further information

© Copyright 2017 by Melody Amsel-Arieli.
All rights reserved.
Updated 13 May 2025
rlb

 Webmaster: Melody Amsel-Ariel   
Coordinator:
Susana Leistner Bloch

   JewishGen Home Page | KehilatLinks Directory | Hungarian SIG