Alternate names: Moineşti [Rom], Moynescht [Yid], Hebrew: מוינשט , Moineshti. 46°28' N, 26°29' E, 21 miles WSW of Bacău. 1900 Jewish population: 2,398. JOWBR: Jewish Cemetery.
- Pinkas HaKehilot, Romania, Vol. 1 (1969), p. 177: "Moinesti"
- JewishGen Romania SIG
Leolam Jewish Heritage Foundation is happy to announce that renovations currently at the Moinesti Jewish Cemetery are almost done with the support of the City of Moinesti and the Federation of Jewish Communities of Romania. The inauguration ceremony will take place on September 25, 2013. The time of the ceremony and the list of guests will be announced closer to the date. If you plan to attend the ceremony, a Moinesti Accomodation.pdf for information on how to get to Moinesti and accommodation options is available. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. [August 2013]
I am writing on behalf of Leolam Jewish Heritage Foundation. Leolam tries to keep the Jewish heritage alive in Moinesti.. Our main project is the renovation and mainenance of the 300-year old cemetery. Last year Leolam was able to raise money to renovate the exterior of the burial home, repair the entrance and the fence, and pay for the regular maintenance work (grass cutting, removal of fallen trees, etc.) An account of the works done last year can be found on the Leolam website and our blog . For the before and after picture, please visit here. We are currently raising money for phase 2 of the renovation project - the interior of the burial house - and for this year's maintenance. We would be grateful if you could help us raise the necessary funds. Any contribution is welcome and will make a difference. We will be happy to provide more details about our foundation and projects.to anyone interested to learn more about what we do. Thank you in advance for your time and consideration. Sincerely, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. [Apr 2014]
CEMETERY:
- photos of cemetery rehab [July 2012]
- Projects August-September 2012: donations from D.M. (France), H.G. (Bucharest), M.D. (Comanesti), I.J. (France) will accomplish: 1 - Participation to Moinesti City Days (6-8 September 2012) with "open doors" in Jewish Cemetery (Moinesti responsible Leola M. Rusu) in collaboration with City Hall of Moinesti and Moinesti Association ACTIV; 2 - Cut two dead trees that damage monuments; 3 - photograph ancient monuments in the cemetery for historical evaluation; and 4 - Analysis of management software for cemeteries, choosing one specific for Moinesti.[July 2012]
- Being in Moinesti for a short visit in April 2019, I saw enormous stones that were destroyed by the storms this year. If you recognize families, you can inform them and if desired, the Leolam Foundation in Moinesti can do some (realistic) repairs.For all stones that can be easily repaired, on Behalf of the LEOLAM Foundation, we are launching a call for funds to repair as many of them. By joining the Foundation, you can participate in these activities (you may join Leolam as members, via the atatched membership form).See some pictures here : https://www.facebook.com/258208151310931/photos/?tab=album&album_id=650420728756336. Source: Joséphine Kohlenberg - President of Leolam Foundation. [May 2019]
US Commission Report No. ROCE-0062 Map Alternate name: Lucacesti.
The cemetery is located at str. Eternitatii no. 2, Moinesti, Bacău judet, Moldavia region, 46°26' 26°32', 38 km from Bacău. Present town population is 25,000-100,000 with under 10 Jews.
- Local Authority: Mayor Ailincai Vasile, str. Vasile Alecsandri 14, Moinesti, Bacău judet. Phone: 034/365428.
- Religious Authority: The Jewish Community of Moinesti, str. Republicii 16.
- Regional Authority: The Federation of the Jewish Communities of Romania, Sf. Vineri str., no. 9-11, sector 3, Bucharest, Romania.
- Interested: "A.D. Xenopol" Institute of History, Lascar Catargi str., no. 15, 6400- Iasi (Iasi judet), Romania. Tel. 032/212614; This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Director: Alexandru Zub.
- Caretaker: Nastase Constantin, str. Eternitătii no. 12, Moinesti, Bacău judet. Phone: 363412 14. Nastase Constantin, str. Eternitătii no. 12, Moinesti, Bacău judet. Phone: 363412
- Keyholder: Kohlenberg Raphael, Moinesti; Phone: 361089 and Sfart Pincu, str. Zorelelor 7. Phone: 319370
The 1831 Census registered 49 Jewish families. The 1899 Census registered 457 Jewish inhamolinestibitants. The 1930 Census registered 1733 Jewish inhabitants. 18. In World War I, many local Jews were killed. Prominent residents include Dov ben Iehuda, Avram Arie Rosen-scholar rabbi and Dr. Smuel Grinberg (1879-1959), poet and writer. This Jewish cemetery was established in the 19th century. Noteworthy individuals buried there include Dov ben Iehuda (died 1732) and Ghidalea Westler (died 1903)-scholar rabbi. The last known Jewish burial in cemetery was in 1992 (Avram Samoil). The Conservative cemetery is unlandmarked.
The isolated urban hillside has no sign or marker. Reached by turning directly off a public road, access is entirely closed. A continuous masonry wall and no gate or a gate that locks surround. The pre- and post-WWII size is 150 m X 100 m. 500 - 5,000 gravestones are visible with none in original location. More than 75% are toppled or broken. Vegetation overgrowth is a seasonal problem, preventing access. Water drainage is good all year.
No special sections. Gravestones date from the beginning of the 19th century through the 20th century. The marble, granite, limestone, sandstone, slate, and other material gravestones are flat shaped stones, flat stones with carved relief decoration, double tombstones, and sculpted tombstones. Inscriptions are in Hebrew, German, and Romanian.
The national Jewish community owns the property now used for Jewish cemetery purposes only. Adjacent properties are residential. Compared to 1939, the cemetery boundaries enclose the same area. Occasionally, private visitors (Jewish or non-Jewish) and local residents stop.
The never vandalized cemetery has no maintenance, but the regular caretaker, who is paid (occasionally.) The preburial house has a tahara (table), a catafalque, and wall inscriptions. Vegetation is a moderate threat. Weather erosion and pollution are slight threats.
Lucian Nastasa, Clinicilor str., no. 19, Cluj, Romania, tel. 064/190107. Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. completed the survey on July 23, 2000 using the following documentation:
- Leonida Colescu, Analiza rezultatelor recensamîntului general al populatiei Romaniei de la 1899, cu o prefată de Sabin Manuila, Bucuresti, Institutul de statistica, 1944.
- I.M. Dinescu, Fiii neamului de la 1859 la 1915. Statistica sociala pe întelesul tuturora, Iasi, Institutul de Arte Grafice N.V.Stefaniu, 1920.
- Pinkas Hakehillot, Encyclopedia of Jewish Communities Romania, I-II, Jerusalem, 1980.
- D. Ivanescu, Populatia evreiască din orasele si tîrgurile Moldovei între 1774-1832 , în "Studia et acta historiae iudaeorum Romaniae", II, Bucuresti, Edit.Hasefer, 1997, p. 59-65.
- George I. Lahovari, Marele dictionar geografic al Romaniei, 5 vol., Bucuresti, Edit.Socec, 1899.
- E. Schwarzfeld, Din istoria evreilor: împopularea, reîmpopularea si întemeierea tîrgurilor si tîrgusoarelor în Moldova, Bucuresti, 1894.
- N. Sutu, Notiti statistice asupra Moldaviei, Iasi, 1852.
He visited on July 16, 2000 and interviewed Nastase Constantin, str. Eternitatii no. 12, Moinesti, Bacău judet. Phone: 363412; and Kohlenberg Raphael, Moinesti; Phone: 361089. [June 2002]
Rafael Kohlenberg, president of the community, (Str. V. Alecsandri, Bl. A2-2, Apt. 7, 5478 Moinesti, Romania, Tel. 034/36-10-89 (home address). has a list of readable gravestones in the cemetery. Cemetery has two sections, the older of which is not recorded in Kohlenberg's list. Older cemetery is overgrown. Some stones date go back to 1740. Fixed surnames were not acquired until the 1950s. Source: "Researching Jewish Romania On Site" by Paul Pascal.
Current Jewish population: 0-100. Mr. Kohlenberg speaks French and Romanian. He made a handwritten list of tombstones that partially indexes the unlandmarked, inactive cemetery. One copy of the list exists. Cemetery hours are by arrangement. The earliest Jewish community dates from the early 1700s with tombstones dating from 1740. Jews comprised more than half of the population. Tristan Bara (writer) lived there. The town was a major early hotbed of Zionism. Jews were deported to Bacău during W.W.II. The last known Orthodox burial was 1995. The isolated urban site, at the crown of a hill, but in the center of town has a sign. The cemetery is reached by turning directly off a public road. Access is open with permission. A part-time, illiterate caretaker lives nearby and has the key. A broken masonry wall and a locking gate surround the cemetery. The current size is 400x300 meters. Men and women are buried in alternating rows. The 1,000 to 5,000 18th and nineteenth century tombstones date from 1740. 75% of the surviving stones are toppled or broken. The sandstone rough stones, flat shaped stones, finely smoothed and inscribed stones, flat stones with carved relief decoration, double tombstones, sculpted monuments, multi-stone monuments, horizontally set stones, some with Sephardic inscriptions, flat-low in-ground plaques, obelisks, or mausoleums have Hebrew and Romanian inscriptions. Some tombstones have traces of painting on their surfaces, iron decorations or lettering, bronze decorations or lettering, portraits on stones, and/or metal fences around graves. The local Jewish community owns the site used for Jewish cemetery and a caretaker garden. Adjacent properties are agricultural and residential. The cemetery is visited rarely. Current care: occasional clearing or cleaning by authorities and the regular caretaker. The caretaker is allowed to use the land to graze his cow as payment. Within the limits of the cemetery is a chapel. Weather erosion is a serious threat. Vegetation overgrowth is a constant problem, disturbing and damaging graves and stones. One of the world's very prominent Jewish communities is dying out, leaving this large cemetery without guardian or catalog. Mr. Kohlenberg is in ill-health and cannot reach all the grave sites. On 27 July 1997, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., 3514 Woodlawn Avenue, Seattle, Washington 98103, tel. 206/632-3881 completed this survey. He visited the site on that date when he interviewed Mr. Kohlenberg. He used a partial list of names compiled by Kohlenberg as documentation.
I'm the daughter of Raphael Kohlenberg, who is president of Jewish Community in Moinesti. He is very ill in this moment so, my sister and I plus 2 sons of former president, Enghelberg family, created LEOLAM. We have started a fundraising campaign and need a little more money for the most important project, preserving the cemetery and Jewish culture in Moinesti, the oldest city in Romania where Jewish pople have gone to Israel). Please find a form or e-mail me. Please find some pictures, taken 2 weeks ago, of the neglected condition of the cemetery. The synagogue needs repair also.This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Paris, France [April 2012]
Added July 2012
- Un petit film de Rosh Pina (8 Juillet 2012):
- Photos:
- Article ACUM (USA):
- Présentation de Dominique MARTIN-ROVET (membre d'honneur LEOLAM):