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If
there is one city that captures the spirit and beauty of Central
Europe, it is Prague. Here, a gothic cathedral soars above a majestic
bridge lined with stone statues. Cobbled alleys wind between pastel-colored
palaces. And, in the center of it all, is a Jewish quarter rich
in history, legend, and tragedy. Here the story goes, Rabbi Loew
created the Golem nearly half a millennium ago. Here, Franz Kafka
wrote novels that haunt us to this day. And here, in the ochre-colored
Pinkas Synagogue, the names of 77,000 Czech Jews deported during
the Holocaust now cover the walls. These names climb one by one
to the ceiling, wrap around pillars, and spread from room to room.
It is an overwhelming site, a mute testament to destruction and
murder.
The Ronald S.
Lauder Foundation's first undertaking in the Czech Republic was
to establish the Lauder Kindergarten League in 1994.
The Lauder
Prague Kindergarten
In
The Lauder Prague Kindergarten, founded in 1994, 24 pre-school
children gather daily to study basic Hebrew, sing Jewish songs and
learn about their religion and its holidays.
Because the
parents of these children were denied their own connections to Jewish
tradition during decades of Communist rule, The Ronald S. Lauder
Foundation reaches beyond the classroom to sponsor weekend retreats
for kindergarten families in a wooded resort in the Bohemian hills.
There, parents, children, and teachers sing, dance, study, and learn
how to put Jewish practice into family life. By focusing on these
youngsters, new spirit is being infused into a Jewish Community
that dates as far back as the tenth century.
The Lauder
Gur Aryeh Jewish Day School and The Lauder Ohr Chadash Jewish Community
High School
After World War II, a devastated Prague Jewish community opened
an orphanage for children whose parents had perished in the Holocaust.
When the orphanage closed its doors in the early 1950s, some said
that Prague's thousand-year Jewish history went with it.
In
September 1997, that orphanage proudly reopened its doors, but this
time as a Jewish school: The Lauder Gur Aryeh Jewish Community
Day School, named for one of Rabbi Loew's most famous religious
tracts.
A group of first
graders, escorted by their parents, entered freshly painted classrooms,
as a small but committed Jewish community took another step on the
road to the revival of Jewish life.
Today, over
174 children are enrolled in The Lauder Gur Aryeh Jewish Community
Elementary School, and The Lauder Ohr Chadash Jewish Community High
School.
In cooperation
with the Prague Jewish Community, the Foundation is supporting extensive
renovations for the former orphanage in order to provide a locale
for a complete system of Jewish education - kindergarten, elementary
and high school - all in one building!
The Educational
and Cultural Center of the Jewish Museum in Prague
The Ronald S. Lauder Foundation is proud to be among the supporters
of The Educational and Cultural Center at the Jewish Museum
in the heart of Prague's historic Jewish Quarter. The museum has
thousands of visitors each year.
The Center's
goal is to educate visitors about the Holocaust and about the rich
history and culture of the Jewish communities of Bohemia and Moravia.
The Center serves Czech students, teachers, and numerous groups
from abroad.
The Center also
organizes open lectures, workshops, and films related to Jewish
history.
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