The Old Synagogue is the oldest monument of Jewish sacral

Similar documents
II WORLD WAR AND HOLOCAUST

2017 Poland Personally Seminar

Tour to Eastern Europe

The rest of the evening is yours to discover all the vibrant capital of Poland has to offer.

MISSION TO POLAND & ISRAEL

THE EUROPE TRIP 1 3, M a y 3. TOLL FREE Search on arzaworld.com for more details

FIDF ǀ FROM HOLOCAUST TO INDEPENDENCE ǀ 2018 ITINERARY

2014 YOUNG ADULT MARCH OF THE LIVING ITINERARY (subject to change)

Jewish Renewal in Poland

FIDF ǀ FROM HOLOCAUST TO INDEPENDENCE ǀ 2019 ITINERARY

GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF LITHUANIA

Poland: A Jewish Matter

Advanced - Curatorial Education Programme. October 15 19, 2017 Venice // Italy

Poland- WARSAW Ghetto Archives (Emanuel Ringelblum Archives) - Witness to the Holocaust -

NIGELLA LAWSON & ALAN YENTOB OPEN THE NEWLY TRANSFORMED JEWISH MUSEUM LONDON

P O L A N D MARCH 24 MARCH 31, 2019 LIVING WITNESS TOUR

UN UIET PLACES. A second look at Jewish Poland today. by ERICA LEHRER. photographs by SOLIMAN LAWRENCE

Private Hire at the Jewish Museum London

P O L A N D MARCH 24 MARCH 31, 2019 LIVING WITNESS TOUR

FASPE Seminary 2017 Schedule and Syllabus June 19-June 30

NEWSLETTER ! CVHEN HOLOCAUST LIBRARY AND RESOURCE CENTER HOURS: Spring 2017

KMS Poland Trip - Summer Pricing, Itinerary & Other Information

FORUM FOR DIALOGUE AMONG NATIONS. School of Dialogue. Gąbin Spring Restoring a Jewish presence

FROM MEMORIALS TO INVALUABLE HISTORICAL DOCUMENTATION: USING YIZKOR BOOKS AS RESOURCES FOR STUDYING A VANISHED WORLD. Michlean J.

University of Haifa Weiss-Livnat International MA Program in Holocaust Studies

EUROPEAN DAYS OF JEWISH CULTURE 2018: STORYTELLING Sunday, 2 September. Saturday, 1 September 2018

Front of House Managers (Part Time)

Everyone needs to be rescued

Project Restoration of Ludza Great Synagogue and Revival of Jews Spiritual Heritage has completed

Special Events at The Frick Collection

A French representation of the Holocaust, as illustrated by the Mémorial de la Shoah, Paris

Jewish Community in the Czech Republic after 1989

Special Events at The Frick Collection

Bank PEKAO S.A. O/Tarnów SWIFT CODE: PKO PPLPW

Introduction to the Holocaust

harbor Jews during the Holocaust? 1. What I already know and don't know about my topic.

Birthplace of Judaism in Europe. SchUM Cities. Speyer, Worms and Mainz. round trip. 3 cities in 3 days

LEARNING PROGRAMME FOR PRIMARY SCHOOLS

The Jewish Cemetery in Fibichova Street

Beit Tshuvah and the Torah

Address by Irina Bokova, Director-General of UNESCO on the occasion of of the inauguration of the exhibition

TRAVEL. Poland, Past and Present: Art, Culture, and Living History. May 4 13, 2015

THE FACE OF THE GHETTO. Open Hearts Closed TEACHER S GUIDE. Pictures Taken by Jewish Photographers in the Litzmannstadt Ghetto

Great Synagogue Memorial in Vilnius

Ladies and gentlemen,

Luke 7: After Jesus had finished all his sayings in the hearing of the people, he entered

TEACHING THE HOLOCAUST THROUGH THE ART OF MIRIAM BRYSK

THE ITALY TRIP. a y. TOLL FREE Search on arzaworld.com for more details

Jewish Stories Of Prague: Jewish Prague In History And Legend By V. V. Tomek READ ONLINE

Schoen Consulting US Canada Holocaust Survey Comparison October 2018 General Awareness - Open Ended Questions

DRAFT ITINERARY SUBJECT TO CHANGE

Ukrainian Center for Holocaust Studies UCHS

Schindler's List - A must see classical movie about the terrible Jewish Holocaust during World War II

Discovering Jewish Civilization Around the Globe Jewish Life in Poland: Reflecting the Ebb and flow of Jewish History June 28 to July 7, 2016

MAZU CULTURAL FESTIVAL AND CITY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN TAICHUNG

12 days / 11 nights. The Jewish Heritage of Portugal. Discover the rich Sephardic heritage dating back to the 12 th century

JEWISH COMMUNITY RESOURCE GUIDE

The Foundation for the Preservation of Jewish Heritage in Poland says most of the cemeteries are in an advanced state of neglect

Life in Plauen What can we learn from the history of one city?

CURRICULUM VITAE. Personal Information: Education Certificates and Degrees. Academic Teaching Positions: Publications: Dr.

Towards a Common Trauma? Asymmetric Memories towards Jewish Life and Death in Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe

Join the Riverboat Project. Rivers of Europe: A PATHWAY FOR THE GOSPEL

THE LIBRARY HISTORY. either actual manuscripts of the Chabad Rebbes, or copied by Chasidim for their own study and inspiration.

WATFORD SYNAGOGUE TO WELCOME STUDENTS FOR HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL DAY

The Jews of Poland May 3 15, 2018

Ma. Yohana R. Frias Museum Researcher Ethnology Division National Museum of the Philippines

TEMPLE DE HIRSCH SINAI ISRAEL 2.0 CUISINE, CULTURE AND POLITICS LED BY RABBI DANIEL AND CINDY WEINER and an optional pre-trip to Krakow, Poland

ASIAN CIVILISATIONS MUSEUM LAUNCHES MILESTONE EXHIBITION ON ANCIENT TREASURES FROM MYANMAR

FASPE Seminary 2018 Schedule and Syllabus June 16 June 29

The Art of Amsterdam With the Jewish Museum. June 8 14, 2019

Silicon Valley's Connection To Warsaw's Stunning New Museum Of Polish-Jewish History: Philanthropist Extraordinaire Tad Taube

RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR VISITING EXHIBITIONS AT THE JEWISH HISTORICAL INSTITUTE. General provisions

Integral Leadership. Central European Summer School Kalwaria Zebrzydowska Kraków

Newsletter No. 6 April So far we have 65 members, six life members, six website page sponsorships, and 197 recipients of the newsletter.

Boston University British Programmes British Tourism Knowing Britain Inside Out SHA HF 365 (Core course) Spring 2011

Programs for High Schools

Boulevard du Parc Grand Hotels District Downtown Beirut Lebanon P.O.Box T F

Chiune Sugihara: The Japanese Schindler. Troy Kawahara Individual Website Senior Division

Oskar Schindler. Activity. Stop and Think. Read the paragraphs. Stop and think as you read.

PLACES OF WORSHIP: THE CHALLENGE OF CONTINUING USE

English I Honors. 5. Summarize the story Moshe the Beadle tells on his return from being deported. Why does he say he has returned to Sighet?

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg Behörde für Wissenschaft und Forschung. Zweite Bürgermeisterin

PRE-WAR JEWISH LIFE INTRODUCTION TO THE HOLOCAUST INTRODUCTION CONTENT & USAGE

NEWSLETTER 2000/3. New exhibition in the winter prayer hall of the Spanish synanogue

ACT ON CHURCHES AND RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES ("Official Gazette of the Republic of Serbia", no. 36/06)

Meetings/activities are in the synagogue unless otherwise stated. For further details: Raymond Hart or

The historical monument Birth of Mary Church -Gîrboviţa

Rome, Jewish Community Centre Il Pitigliani, December 15, 2014

TEMPORARY EXHIBITION

Welcome to Moscow! The Gift of Human Guiding

Important Judaica At Sotheby s New York

Holocaust and Genocide Studies Courses Updated 11/15/2012

Islamic Declaration on Safeguarding Cultural Heritage in the Islamic World

This is Rishon LeTzion

Rabat Museums Walk. Guide Location: Morocco» Rabat # of Attractions: 7 Tour Duration: 2 hour(s) Travel Distance: 5.2 km.

Price from 590,00 per person The price of transfer and guide can be cheaper depending on number of persons.

Issue 21 : October-December 2017 NEWSLETTER

Yad Vashem The Holocaust Martyrs and Heroes Remembrance Authority Evidence Collection Department. Testimony Title Page (Translated from Hebrew)

Light Inc. Documentary movie Photographic report, debates Socio-anthropological perspectives

Transcription:

Krakow as a tourist centre is usually associated with important historic monuments, connected with the history of the city and Poland. Wawel, the Barbican and St. Florian s Gate, the Main Market Square with St. Mary s Church and the Cloth Hall, as well as Collegium Maius of the Jagiellonian University, are the main tourist attractions. Krakow also features numerous museums with rich, often little-known collections. Tourists, both those who have already visited Krakow before and those who haven t, are also invited to get to know the museum collections. Many collections may suit the tastes of visitors with special interests, be attractive to hobbyists or people interested in the history of a particular age. In the present publication we would like to invite you to visit the museums whose collections present the history of Krakow Jews. Kazimierz, until the Second World War a mainly Jewish district, has been very popular among tourists in recent years. It is yet another reason to get to know Jewish art and material culture. Jewish culture route Historical Museum of the City of Kraków Old Synagogue 24 Szeroka St. Opening hours April October: Monday: 10:00 a.m. 2:00 p.m. (free admission) Tuesday Sunday: 9:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m. November March: Monday: 10:00 a.m. 2:00 p.m. (free admission) Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday: 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. Friday: 10:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m. Tuesday: closed www.mhk.pl The Old Synagogue is the oldest monument of Jewish sacral architecture preserved in Poland. It was erected in the 15 th c. as a two-nave hall with a cross-rib vault supported by two pillars, covered with a gable roof. The type of its architecture resembles the Gothic synagogues in Worms, Regensburg and Prague. In 1570, it was converted by a builder from Florence, Matteo Gucci. Its walls were crowned with an attic, used for the first time in the architecture of synagogues in Poland. Between 1550 and 1650, it was extended, one by one, with a porch, two prayer rooms for women and a house for the community council, known as kahal. Together with the kahal house, Jewish culture route Historical Museum of the City of Kraków Old Synagogue 3 Pharmacy Under the Eagle 8 Oskar Schindler s Factory 9 The National Museum in Krakow The Main Building 10 The Seweryn Udziela Museum of Ethnography in Krakow 13 Galicia Jewish Museum 16 Museum of Pharmacy of the Jagiellonian University 21 2 3

the synagogue formed a religious and administrative centre of the Jewish community in Kazimierz. Before World War I and after its end, the Old Synagogue underwent a multi-stage restoration, designed in 1904, 1913 and 1923 by Zygmunt Hendl. During World War II, it was used by the Germans as a warehouse, and its furnishings were either destroyed or dispersed. In late 1944, its vault collapsed, maybe destroyed deliberately. In 1956-59, it was restored, and at the same time adapted to function as a museum. Based on an agreement concluded on October 30, 1959, between the Jewish religious community in Krakow and the Historical Museum of the City of Krakow, the Museum s Branch of the History and Culture of Jews in Krakow was established in the synagogue. 4 5

The permanent exhibition in the Old Synagogue presents the most precious objects of the museum s Judaica collection, related to the synagogue, Jewish holidays and annual celebrations, as well as the private life and family life of Jews. 6 7

Jewish culture route Historical Museum of the City of Kraków Pharmacy Under the Eagle Plac Bohaterów Getta 18 Opening hours: April October: Monday: 10:00 a.m. 2:00 p.m. (free admission) Tuesday Sunday: 9:30 a.m. 5:00 p.m. November March: Monday: 10:00 a.m. 2.00 p.m. (free admission) Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday: 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. Friday: 10:00 a.m. 5:00 p.m. Closed on the first Tuesday of every month www.mhk.pl Since July 2004, the museum has housed a permanent exhibition, Pharmacy in the Krakow Ghetto. The new exhibition was prepared based on a scenario developed by the staff of the Historical Museum of the City of Krakow and under an artistic arrangement by Paweł Górecki. The whole financing was provided by generous support from Roman Polański, who had donated for this purpose the prize awarded to him by the Polish Culture Foundation. The exhibition is to a large extent devoted to the extermination of Jews in Krakow in 1939 1945, and presents museum exhibits, archival documents, photographs and films. This is a place of deep spiritual significance, where the visitor ponders the fate of thousands of innocently killed victims citizens of Krakow. It is also an important stage in the historical education of the young generation, and our message to the future generations. This historical place holds a special tribute to the memory of Tadeusz Pankiewicz, the owner of the old pharmacy Under the Eagle, who worked there for the whole period of the Ghetto s existence (1941 1943) and often came to the aid of his neighbours in the face of threatening death. Jewish culture route Historical Museum of the City of Kraków Oskar Schindler s Factory 4 Lipowa St. temporary exhibitions Opening hours Daily: 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. www.mhk.pl 8 9

Jewish culture route The National Museum in Krakow The Main Building al. 3 Maja 1 Opening hours Tuesday Saturday: 10.00 a.m. 6.00 p.m. Sunday: 10.00 a.m. 4.00 p.m. Monday: closed Free admission to permanent exhibitions on Sundays. www.muzeum.krakow.pl The Main Building houses three permanent galleries of the Museum: the Gallery of 20 th Century Polish Art, the Gallery of Arms and Armour, and the Gallery of Decorative Art, supplemented by an impressive collection of Judaica. A collection of Judaica was acquired by the National Museum in Krakow already before World War II, in 1935-1939. Already at that time, interest in Jewish culture, coexisting with the Polish one in the Polish lands, could be observed the people perceived its intriguing, different character. At present, this is the most interesting collection of Judaica in Poland. It contains valuable and rare silver artefacts dating from the 17 th and 18 th centuries, objects related to the synagogue and home liturgy, used during religious holidays and home celebrations. a real rarity is a wooden altar cupboard, richly carved and covered with polychrome, known as Aaron-hakodesh and used for storing the Torah scrolls. Another noteworthy item is an 18 th century lavabo known as a kijor, used for the ritual of pouring water on the hands. 10 11

Jewish culture route The Seweryn Udziela Museum of Ethnography in Krakow Main Building City Hall, 1 Wolnica Square Esterka building, 46 Krakowska St. Opening hours Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday: 11.00 a.m. 7.00 p.m. Thursday: 11.00 a.m. 9.00 p.m. Sunday: 11.00 a.m. 3.00 p.m. Monday: closed www.etnomuzeum.eu It is not only the collection of Judaica but also the museum s educational offer which helps popularize the knowledge of that culture. It includes regular lectures and workshops for children and youth, through which the participants find out about Jewish holidays, liturgy and everyday life. The museum is located in the former town hall of the city of Kazimierz, erected in the 15 th c. in the Gothic style, and expanded in the Renaissance style in later centuries. The Town Hall houses an exhibition of Polish folk culture, while the second building, the so-called Esterka, is used for temporary exhibitions, which are organised in its beautifully vaulted cellars, dating from the 16 th century. The museum was established in 1911, on the initiative of Seweryn Udziela, a teacher, amateur ethnographer and collector, who wanted to preserve the memory of the vanishing folk culture. 12 13

lishments for boys and girls. On the east wall of the Town Hall there is a relief commemorating the Admission of Jews to Poland in the Middle Ages, executed in 1907 by the sculptor and painter Henryk (Herschel) Hochman (1881 1943). The relief, discovered in the Warsaw National Museum, was fixed to the wall by the authorities of the city of Krakow in 1996, in place of a similar relief executed by the same artist, funded in 1910 by the Krakow Jewish community and destroyed by the Germans during World War II. The museum collection, which expanded from Seweryn Udziela s own collection, at present numbers over 80 thousand exhibits, with a large part of them dating from the late 19 th c. and early 20 th c. a majority of the exhibits come from Poland, but a significant part of them originate from other European countries, mainly Slavic ones, as well as countries beyond Europe; many of the latter have been donated to the museum by Polish travellers and researchers. The museum also possesses a rich archive, containing thousands of photographs, glass photographic plates, manuscripts and drawings, and a specialist library, where among 30 thousand volumes one can find also unique works. It is also worthwhile to visit the main building of the museum, where the permanent exhibition shows the culture of Polish peasants. Jews were present in that culture as innkeepers, shopkeepers, travelling salesmen, or artisans, and played the role of intermediaries between the countryside and the external world, bringing the peasants not only the necessary goods but also news from faraway places. Through both its buildings the Town Hall and the Esterka tenement house, located in the former market square of the city of Kazimierz the Ethnographic Museum is linked to the traditions of that district, which in the past was inhabited largely by Jews. According to a legend, the Esterka tenement house used to be the home of a Jewess called Esterka, who was a mistress of King Casimir the Great. In turn, at the time of the Krakow Republic, the Town Hall housed a folk school supported by the Jewish community, opened in 1830, and in 1837 transformed into an industry and trade school, with separate estab- 14 15

Jewish culture route Galicia Jewish Museum 18 Dajwór St. Opening hours open daily 10.00 a.m. 6.00 p.m. except 25 th December and Yom Kippur www.galiciajewishmuseum.org The mission of the Galicia Jewish Museum is to commemorate not only victims of the Holocaust, but also the Jewish culture which existed in the past and still exists in the area of Polish Galicia. Through education, the museum tries to fight stereotypes and erroneous beliefs concerning the common Polish-Jewish history, and inspire at the same time discussions about the future. The museum is located in Kazimierz the former Jewish district in the building of a former furniture factory, whose renovated interiors give the place a unique ambience. In the almost 1000 sq.m. of its area, one can find four exhibition halls, a café, a bookshop, an education hall with a Multimedia Resource Centre, and offices. Thanks to this, besides exhibitions, the museum can also house concerts, performances, lectures, seminars, and other cultural museums. Chris Schwarz and Professor Jonathan Webber (UNESCO Chair of Jewish and Interfaith Studies, University of Birmingham, UK) travelled around the villages and little towns of south Poland, documenting the still surviving remnants of Jewish life and culture. The results of those trips is the exhibition of photographs, which brings up the subject of Jewish heritage in Poland in a way both accessible and provocative, as well as giving food for thought. Besides the permanent exhibition, over the last few years the museum has prepared and hosted a dozen or so other, temporary exhibitions, including Hitler s List, Polish Heroes: Those Who Saved Jews, Fight for Dignity: the Jewish Resistance Movement in Krakow, March 1968 in Krakow Press, Letters to Sala. The Life of a Young Woman in Nazi Labour Camps, and others. The Education and Research Department of the Galicia Jewish Museum runs one of the most extensive education programmes on the Jewish subject in the whole of Poland, addressed both to foreign visitors and groups of schoolage youth from Poland. The experienced employees of the Department develop and implement programmes for groups of visitors. Educational programmes include visiting exhibitions, question and answer sessions, museum lessons, workshops or lectures on subjects related to Jewish culture and the Holocaust, meetings with survivors of The heart of the museum contains a permanent exhibition of photographs: Traces of Memory. For 12 years, the British photographer 16 17

the Shoah and with the Righteous Among the Nations. The museum also offers rides on a historical tram around Jewish Krakow, trips along the route of little Jewish towns ( shtetl ), sightseeing in Krakow and Kazimierz, and trips to the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. The museum pursues publishing and research activities as well. Besides the exhibition catalogues, the museum has published the first precise map of the Krakow Ghetto, and the first map of contemporary places related to Jewish life in Kazimierz. The museum has also prepared educational materials addressed specially at Polish schools first of all, a unique multimedia programme on a DVD on the history of Jews and the Holocaust, intended for Polish high schools. The museum team also prepares additional educational aids, including charts presenting the chronology of the Shoah. The Multimedia Resource Centre, located in the Education Hall, contains a constantly growing collection of films on the history of Jews and the Holocaust, part of which are reports collected by the USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education. The Education Hall may be hired for private use. The museum also operates as a centre caring for the local Righteous Among the Nations by organising regular meetings, compiling documentation and supporting the local organisation. Recently, the museum has contributed to establishing a healthcare fund for the Righteous who need medical care. The Galicia Museum offers an interesting programme of cultural events, and proposes special highlights for groups of visitors: Yiddish and Hebrew classes, a buffet with dishes of Jewish or Polish cuisine, film shows, Jewish dance workshops, conferences, receptions, and book promotions. The museum is becoming better and better known and valued in the world as a local centre of Jewish art, with regular musical and artistic events open to the general public. The museum has also become a forum of inter-religious and inter-cultural dialogue. Each month, it publishes an electronic newsletter with a detailed list of events related to Jewish culture throughout southern Poland, which is an exceptional source of information about contemporary Jewish life and cultural events in the Małopolska (Little Poland) region. The museum enjoys growing popularity and renown throughout the world and cooperates with a multitude of institutions and organizations: Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum, the Jewish Centre in Oświęcim, European Day 18 19

Jewish culture route Museum of Pharmacy Jagiellonian University Collegium Medicum 25 Floriańska St. Opening hours Tuesday: 12.00 a.m. 6.30 p.m. Wednesday Sunday: 10.00 a.m. 2.30 p.m. Monday: closed www.muzeumfarmacji.pl of Jewish Culture, World Day for Darfur, the Institute of Polish Jewish Studies in Oxford, the Jewish Culture Festival in Krakow, the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw, the Holocaust Centre and Aegis Trust in the UK, USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education in California, and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. The Galicia Jewish Museum maintains close cooperation with the British Embassy, the Embassy of Israel and with the Embassy and Consulate of the United States. All those institutions provide support for numerous projects carried out by the museum. The Galicia Jewish Museum is also a preferred location for Krakow ceremonies of granting the medals of the Righteous Among the Nations, organized by the Embassy of Israel. The museum has been chosen by the Ministry of National Education as one of the institutions coordinating the Polish-Israeli exchange of youth in the area of Poland. What is more, the Galicia Jewish Museum has been nominated by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute an institution responsible for promoting Polish culture abroad as the entity dealing with the presentation of the culture of Polish Jews during the Polish Year in the UK in 2009 2010. The Museum of Pharmacy of the Jagiellonian University is one of the few museums of this type in the world. The museum is a scientific and didactic unit of the Department of Pharmacy of the Jagiellonian University. It is located in a historic burgher s tenement (14 th 15 th c.) in the Royal Road, at 25 Floriańska Street. The permanent exhibition occupies five levels of the building from the 15 th century cellars up to the attic. The exhibits collected there illustrate the history of pharmacy from the Middle Ages up to contemporary times. One can find there pharmaceutical vessels, including an impressive collection of majolica from many European manufacturers, mortars in various sizes and shapes, laboratory equipment and pharmacy utensils, medicinal raw materials, mementoes of eminent pharmacists, a stamp collection depicting the history of pharmacy, as well curiosities connected with ancient medicine. What is more, the museum contains a restored interior of an 18 th century pharmacy, as well as other rooms, such as an antique pharmaceutical laboratory, a cellar with barrels and bottles for medicinal wines and an attic, used for drying and storing medicinal herbs. The museum also possesses a library, storing, among other things, antique herbaria, pharmacopoeias, antidotaria and other printed material related to the history of pharmacy, as well as the memorabilia of pharmacists. 20 21

Part of the permanent exhibition of the Krakow Museum of Pharmacy is devoted to Tadeusz Pankiewicz (1908-1993), who during the German occupation of Poland was running an Aryan pharmacy in the area of the Jewish Ghetto in Krakow, the only one in Poland. In March 1941, the pharmacy Under the Eagle run by Pankiewicz was included in the Ghetto area. Tadeusz Pankiewicz and the Polish staff working in the pharmacy supplied the Jews trapped in the Ghetto with medicines, food, counterfeit documents, money and correspondence. The pharmacy was a site of underground activity, and in many cases also a shelter and the only hope for salvation. The mementoes of Tadeusz Pankiewicz include a copy of the diploma Righteous Among the Nations, granted to him in 1983 by the Israeli Yad Vashem Institute, the eagle emblem from the pharmacy Under the Eagle, as well as Polish and foreign language editions of his book entitled Pharmacy in the Krakow Ghetto. City Information Network (note that the opening hours of inquiry desks might be changed) Town Hall Tower at the Main Market Square (Rynek Główny 1) tel. +48 12 433 73 10, open daily: V-IX 9.00 a.m.-7.00 p.m.; X-IV 9.00 a.m.-5.00 p.m. Wyspiański Pavillion (adjusted for disabled persons) 2 Wszystkich Świętych Square tel. +48 12 616 18 86, open daily: V-IX 9.00 a.m.-7.00 p.m.; X-IV 9.00 a.m.-5.00 p.m. 2 św. Jana St. tel. +48 12 421 77 87, open daily: 9.00 a.m.-6.00 p.m. 25 Szpitalna St. tel. +48 12 432 01 10, open daily: V-IX 9.00 a.m.-7.00 p.m.; X-IV 9.00 a.m.-5.00 p.m. 7 Józefa St. (Kazimierz) tel. +48 12 422 04 71, open daily: 10.00 a.m. 5.00 p.m. os. Słoneczne 16 (Nowa Huta) tel. +48 12 643 03 03, open: Tue Sat 10.00 a.m. 2.00 p.m. John Paul II International Airport in Krakow-Balice (passenger terminal) tel. +48 12 285 53 41, open daily: V-IX 9.00 a.m.-7.00 p.m.; X-IV 9.30 a.m.-5.30 p.m. Tourist Information Call Centre tel. +48 12 432 00 60, open daily: 9.00 a.m. 7.00 p.m. Common e-mail address of the city inquiry desks: it@infokrakow.pl Information for disabled tourists: www.niepelnosprawni.pl/ledge/x/2782 (pol) Emergency numbers Safety phone for foreign tourists (during the summer season only): 0 800 200 300 (free of charge, from a fixed-line telephone) +48 608 599 999 (from any telephone) Emergency service 112 Police 997 Ambulance service 999 Fire Brigade 998 City Guard 986 Roadside Assistance 981 Krakow Tourist Card Free of charge: Museums City Public Transport (MPK) Discounts: Tours around the city Restaurants Shops, Galleries Outlets Tourist Information Centres: 2 św. Jana St. 25 Szpitalna St. 7 Józefa St. Main Market Square 1 (Town Hall Tower) Balice Airport Card Publisher: Symposium Cracoviense Tel.: +48 12 422 76 00, 12 431 05 97, fax: +48 12 421 38 57 e-mail: info@krakowcard.com, www.krakowcard.com Illustrations are taken from museums archives. Editing: J. Lenczowski. Graphic design: P. Bytnar. 22 23