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EN
The article concerns the construction of a brick shrine, called the Great Synagogue, in Ostroleka in the mid-19th century; an earlier wooden shrine was destroyed in a battle fought within the November 1830 Uprising. The decision to build the place of worship was made in 1846. Initially, financial problems faced by the Jewish community made it impossible to complete the undertaking within a short period of time. A detailed inventory of the materials and workmanship required, made in 1858, as well as the cost estimate, pointed to the shortfall of the accumulated funds. However, the gradual growth of prosperity and determination of Ostroleka's Jewry made is possible to complete the job. The Great Synagogue only survived until 1915, when it was destroyed during fighting between the German and the Russian forces.
EN
ork refers to the post-war fate of the Jews from the district Ostroleka, as well as to the property abandoned by them when ordered by the Nazi authorities forced evacuation in October 1939. Efforts were made to investigate both cases the individual returns of the 1944/1945 year. Survivors of the Holocaust, as well as answer to the question: What happened to the buildings of the Jews in the district of Ostroleka, especially where before the war there were circles - apart from Ostroleka, also in Goworowo and Myszyniec. Particularly interesting case involved Ostrołęka Street synagogue Sowia, which, as it turned out, survived and even for a certain period stood abandoned after the war, until it was demolished.
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