






Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland and the national umbrella organization of Progressive Jews in Poland, Beit Polska, are proud to publish the Polish translation of an engaging exposition of Judaism today: Rabbi Walter Rothschild’s The Honey and the Sting: Study Guide for Conversion to Judaism (Miod i Zadlo). The translated text is now in the final stages of copy editing.
In Poland, we are blessed with a steady stream of people seeking trustworthy knowledge about Judaism. The Honey and The Sting presents an overview of all the movements, and a Progressive approach to living a Jewish life.

A generous donation in Judith Jacobson’s memory helped to sponsor the spring 2020 renovation of the Tarczyn cemetery. Judith passed almost a year after her husband, Marcus Jacobson. The family fund was the result of the careful planning of Marcus Jacobson.
Donated by the Jacobson Family trust by daughter Mitzi Schwarz of Los Angeles and son, Barry Jacobson of Israel.

Securely Donate Online or by Mail
Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland /Beit PolskaP.O. Box 5438 Beverly Hills, CA 90209
Email us your donation story and photos if you'd like it featured on our Tapestry of Donations page.Email: PolandJewishRenewal@gmail.com
Tapestry of Donations page.
The Pomeranz family donated in support of
Beit Trojmiasto.
Progressive Judaism in Poland
The Kader family donated in support of
Beit Trojmiasto.
Progressive Judaism in Poland
Freighted Legacies
The Culture and History of Jewish Interactions in Poland
“[w]e learn history not in order to know how to behave or how to succeed, but to know who we are” (Leszek Kolakowski)
MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THE FREIGHTED LEGACIES SERIES
CONVERSATIONS
Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland and Beit Polska are proud to initiate a series of popular conversations in Polish, Hebrew and English, “Freighted Legacies.” Using the multi-channel opportunities of zoom we will present experts in the fields of history, religious thought, drama, and music on the legacy of Polish Jewish heritage. Much of that Polish Jewish legacy is alive in current Jewish communities in Diaspora freighted with complex issues of memory, anger, confusion, nostalgia and uncertainty.
WHO IS OUR AUDIENCE?
Jewish communities in Israel, the United Kingdom, South American, Australia and Poland itself are seeking their roots in Polish lands. With the passing of time and especially the generation that grew up in Poland, the intensity of interest in the Holocaust has expanded to include a searching for understanding the rich diverse cultures that Poland’s Jews cultivated.
Individuals who inherited these “freighted legacies” through their families are often seeking a more solid historical footing to understand who they are. Relying on sparse factual information and some incoherence is no longer enough. Expressions of grief often obscured the rich legacy of Polish Jewry’s profound cultures. Our hope is that this series will also find viewers from all walks of life seeking to inform themselves of the “1000 year old” civilization created by Jews in Poland.
WHY NOW?
We will foster learning and connection to the incredible research of scholars from Poland, Israel and North America and other countries. It is important to note much of this work among scholars is now done cooperatively and internationally. Yet, we are commencing our efforts in a time of extreme Polish nationalism that is attempting to re-write the pluralistic and liberal restorative efforts from the immediate past – Communist era. Increasingly, a state “historical policy” is being funded, fostered and insinuated into the memory narratives of Poland. The Polish government’s policy cannot be allowed to stand without a forthright rebuttal in our forums.
Because these programs will be in Polish as well as English and Hebrew we anticipate that the mutual encounter will foster not only our Progressive Jewish community in Poland but new audiences of learners. We believe many Catholic Poles and secular Poles will find these programs compelling. We will intentionally feature scholars from Poland – Jews and non-Jews – on this platform who will address fact based history. We believe that this will benefit all our viewers. We recognize this as an example of fostering forums for the discourse that is being suppressed in many quarters in Poland. It is also the case that there is a surprising active collection of writers, researchers, and thinkers in Poland and out that are reflecting on Jewish life in Poland as part of their academic and private lives. We anticipate these individuals having a broader audience that will at minimum create a more diverse set of themes. More about the themes and participants below.
Serious and on-going contention exists around important events in history especially the Holocaust but no exclusively. Initially, we will focus attention on the many controversies and their complexities. The aid extended to Jews in Holocaust by Catholic Poles is indeed remarkable given the larger context of Poland occupied by Germany war-time society. The largest group of The Righteous Among the Nations comes from Poland. In the hands of the current Polish government a “history policy” seeks to substitute history for indoctrination and an “end of the pedagogy of shame.” The heroic Catholic Poles are employed to obscure from Poles and others, a larger and darker narrative.
FEATURING IMPORTANT EDUCATIONAL TOOLS
Educational tools created by Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland and Beit Polska have published or fostered the publication of educational materials in Polish directed primarily to the Progressive Polish Jewish community but of interest to the Polish reading public. These publications will be featured. Many of these books, articles and weekly sermon reflections appear also in English. These zoom seminars will focus significance of a modern Polish translation of the Shabbat, Weekday, and Holiday prayerbook, Siddur Beit Polin: Modlitewnik Na Dni powszednie Szabaty I Swieta or the Polish translation of the Honey and the Sting.
HOW DID POLAND BECOME A CRADLE OF JEWISH LIFE?
Over 75 years have passed since the Holocaust, but little in current Jewish understanding or that matter Polish school curriculum acknowledges the on-going influence of this important Diaspora community. Internally, for the Jewish community, it is hard to imagine an aspect of contemporary Jewish life that does not have its analog in Poland. From religious perspectives of Hassidisms, Neo-Hassidisms, and Mussar to Progressive Judaism. Poland was the birth place of Zionisms and Socialisms that were inflected in Yiddish and Hebrew as well as Polish. Every cultural expression in music, theater, and literature in Yiddish or Hebrew and even in Polish finds its echoes in our contemporary Jewish expression.
An important historical focus will note the period of loss of Polish independence in 1795 under the influence of the three imperial powers of Russia, the Austro-Hungarian and Germany to the end of World War I (1918) and the remarkable re-emergence of an independent Poland.
Celebrating literary achievements in Yiddish, Hebrew and Polish from the writing of detective mysteries with a Jewish sub-plot to historical novels that continue invoke a multicultural Poland. Despite attempts to rewrite history, serious imaginative literature continues [A Grain of Truth (Polish State Prosecutor Szacki Investigates) Zygmunt Miloszewski to The Books of Jacob (Olga Tikarczuk) to Yiddish writers Isaac Bashevis Singer’s Satan in Goray and Sholem Asch’s Kiddush HaShem.
WHO WILL BE OUR GUIDES?
Who will be our guides? will feature emerging Polish born talent Please join us in formulating the initial proposals for a series of zoom discussions that are being planned. involve Rabbi Haim Beliak along with Marek Jezowski and Dominika Zakrzewska as moderators.
Marek Jezowski is the chair of Beit Polska. His professional work is in translation from Polish to English and English to Polish. He hold a Ph.d. from
Dominika Zakrzewska is the coordinator of Beit Polska and assistant professor at Warsaw Pedagogic with expertise in educating for tolerance.
Dr. Menachem Mirski Polish speaking rabbinic student at Ziegler Rabbinic School (fourth year). Completed doctorate in philosophy as well as a master of various musical genres including Flamingo guitar and Klezmer.
Miriam Klimowa a third year Rabbinic student at Hebrew Union College in Jerusalem. Klimowa entered HUC with extensive training in Hebrew language and Cantorial skills gained in Poland and Ukraine.
Rabbi Mati Kirschenbaum is the rabbi of Bromley Reform Synagogue in London as well as serving as the adjudicator for Beit Polska’s Step by Step class and editor of the forthcoming Polish translation of the High Holiday Machzor.
Cantor Anna Silverman a recent graduate of Jewish Theological Seminary’s Cantorial Program Polish-Jewish scholars and Polish scholars of note
Yosef Holy is a Hebrew language instructor specializing in teaching Poles modern spoken Hebrew. He is from Zakopane but now lives in Israel.
Dr. Joanna Auron is a scholar and translator. Dr. Auron’s “Describing Who?: Poland in Photographs by Jewish Artists”
A world of Polish speaking academic experts on Jewish matters include many Jews and non-Jews that we plan to call upon to educate us.
THEMES AND TOPICS
- Cultural developments in Polish, Yiddish, and Hebrew language
- Music and cross-fertilization
- Religious communities: Hassidism, Progressive, Neo-Hassidism
- Nationalisms – Poland in the age of nationalisms and empires: Polish, Jewish, Ukrainian, German, and Russian
- Holocaust and Post-Holocaust
- Personal Remembrances
- The Legacy of Polish Life in Contemporary Jewish Life
- Sociologists and Philosophers – Zygmunt Bauman
- Polish Jewish Mathematicians in Exile
- Polish Jewish Authors in Yiddish, Hebrew, German and Polish
- Jews in Polish literature
HOW WILL THE PROJECT GROW?
Where possible we will endeavor to provide excerpted readings from informed sources as well as more extensive bibliographies. Where possible we provide suggestions for reading that will enrich each program. This will allow greater engagement for individuals or groups to pursue the various themes.
The recorded programs will be archived on our website in English and Polish. We will build an archive that will be available to diverse communities most especially high school students, educators, and travelers.
We hope that our many friends will make suggestions and expand our list. All the topics need further framing and development. Many topics will lend themselves to expanding as a conversational mini-series.
As news and controversies, develop there will be topics that are of greater moment in people’s work and we invite your suggestions as to the urgency of certain topics. We recognize many more scholars and cultural mavens could be included and we welcome their participation. At the same time, we recognize we are presenting only a small corner of the scholarly work. We hope to eventually cover more ground.
Funding for this project is a challenge and if you have suggestions or wish to make donations we welcome your interest.
We solicit your individual and collective wisdom.
CONTACT US FOR MORE INFO:
RabbiBeliak@JewishRenewalinPoland.org
Donor appreciation list coming soon…
2020 Tarczyn Cemetery Renovation






























































Damaged gravestones...
All stones have been damaged and none were standing in their original position.

The funds for the clean up were donated by the Jacobson Family trust by their daughter Mitzi Schwarz of Los Angeles and son, Barry Jacobson of Israel.
Judith Jacobson in whose blessed memory the spring 2020 renovation of the Tarzcyn cemetery was sponsored and husbanc, Marcus Jacobson.
Judith Jacobson passed almost a year after her husband, Marcus Jacobson. The family fund was the result of the careful planning of Marcus Jacobson.
A Jewish Community Cemetery in the Process of Restoration; Honoring the Past
OCTOBER 2023 Tarczyn Cemetery
Rabbi Jack Shlachter, and Beverly Shlachter, Piotr Stasiak, and Hania Gawronska-Spiewak visited the Tarczyn Cemetery during the spiritually traditional moment in the calendar for Kever Avot. (Pictures by Hania Gawronska-Spiewak, chair of Beit Polska)
Kever Avot occurs during the fall holiday at Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur.
Seeking inspiration from ancestors’ lives during the spiritually intense times of the year, family members would gather to remember their departed relatives.
In memory of...
A generous donation in Judith Jacobson’s memory helped to sponsor the spring 2020 renovation of the Tarczyn cemetery. Judith Jacobson passed almost a year after her husband, Marcus Jacobson. The family fund was the result of the careful planning of Marcus Jacobson. The funds for the clean up were donated by the Jacobson Family trust by their daughter Mitzi Schwarz of Los Angeles and son, Barry Jacobson of Israel.
Support Beit Trojmiasto



















We are a small but very energetic and enthusiastic community that represents Progressive Judaism in Northern Poland. Beit Trojmiasto is an independent congregation and part of the Union of Progressive Jewish Congregations, Beit Polska (associated with the World Union for Progressive Judaism – WUPJ).
“Beit” means “home” in Hebrew…
If you are a Jew, have Jewish roots, Jewish ancestors or just a Jewish soul, or if you are interested in Judaism in its progressive version – Beit Trojmiasto is a place for you! Contact us on Facebook or by e-mail: kontakt@beit3miasto.pl, or call us: (+48) 58 526-53-61
Program updates coming soon…
Kader Family
Pomeranz Family
Support Beit Warszawa
The Flagship Congregation of Progressive Judaism in Poland


















Seder at Beit Warszawa

Program updates coming soon…
- Purim at Beit Warszawa
- Celebrating The Holidays At Beit Warszawa
- Visitors from USA Meet Beit Warszawa Members
- Simchat Torah at Beit Warszawa
- Shabbat Gam Yachad – Beit Warszawa Shabbat School
- Shabbat Hol Hamoed Sukkot at Beit Warszawa
- Beit Warszawa and its Jews
- Beit Polska “A National Jewish Outreach Across Poland* How We’re Doing” (2014)
Donor appreciation list coming soon…
THE HONEY AND THE STING


Direct tax-deductible payments may be addressed to Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland, P.O. Box 5438, Beverly Hills, CA 90209.
The translated text is now in the final stages of copy editing! Support this groundbreaking project.
The Polish translation of Rabbi Walter Rothschild’s “The Honey and The Sting” will serve as a key educational tool for generations of people seeking authoritative and clear messages about Judaism. This book will be used in our Step by Step Jewish educational program in Poland. And in fact, its potential audience is much larger. We have inquiries from high school teachers and others throughout the Serbo-Croatian language communities for contemporary presentations of Judaism.
The title comes from a song by the Israeli composer and singer Naomi Shemer who refers to the fact that so many subjects have both a sweet and a bitter side. And yet she prays, “al kol eyle,” it all belongs together. Both the honey and the sting come from the same creature. Both the sweeter and the bitter parts of Jewish experience come from the same Creator. The intention – which has been borne out by those who have read the English and the German versions – is that a person who reads and learns from this book in Polish will also acquire this more balanced perspective, not naively optimistic, not depressively pessimistic, but with a touch of both.
Rabbi Walter Rothschild’s book, “The Honey and The Sting” addresses Judaism from a European Progressive-Jewish perspective. He presents information on practical Jewish life, history, holidays and culture in an engaging and straightforward manner. In addition, he seeks to explore issues that other books may not comment on such as, “What do the life-cycle rituals mean for us today? How does the liturgy work and where/why/how/by whom has it been changed? How do congregations really work? How should we relate to other monotheistic and diverse religions?”
This project is estimated to cost $36,000. Please support Friends of Jewish Renewal in Poland/Beit Polska towards this innovative project to spread Jewish perspectives to a section of the world that strongly desires a strengthening of Jewish knowledge.
Donor appreciation list coming soon…
Jewish music
Music is at the heart and soul of our outreach and it is a key component to the prayer experience. Poles regard music, both performance and participatory, as indispensible to communal life. Our “Shir Aviv” choir performs a unique and compelling combination of pre-World War II synagogue music and contemporary Israeli songs.
Program information coming soon…
Donor appreciation list coming soon…
Seeking Judaism / STEP-BY-Step
In Poland, because there has always been great incentive for Jews to assimilate or leave, people have only the sketchiest sense of Jewishness, Judaism and being Jewish. Many people are tentative about their connection to Jews and Judaism.
Beit Polska and Beit Warszawa offer an open and welcoming spirit to all who seek to connect to Judaism and the Jewish People. We are working enthusiastically to re-build a revived Jewish community in Poland.
We embrace people with many different motivations who come to our services and activities. Every person who comes with an open heart and mind is welcome to our congregation.
Our goal is to build an accepting community that recognizes that, for many people, the challenges of Jewishness and Judaism are complex. Some individuals who participate believe they have “Jewish roots”. Some are seeking to understand Judaism as a faith community but believe that being Jewish is a matter of “blood.” Both blood (a Jewish soul inherited from an ancestor) and belief (without dogmas) are roots of the Jewish Tree of Life.
Others are simply curious about Jewish customs and beliefs, and seek to fill their minds with the teachings of Jewish wisdom. Yet others, feel a bond with the music, culture and traditions of Judaism and want to understand their friends who are re-discovering their Jewish identities.
For some of those who are serious, this search may lead to formally joining the Jewish People. For others it may lead to a greater appreciation and respect for the nobility of Jewish hopes and ideals.
Carefully trained professionals and numerous experienced volunteers are available to meet and counsel each individual . We offer the opportunity to talk with a Progressive Rabbi or a peer who has some experience connecting with the Jewish community.
Many Poles have Jewish souls, writes Rabbi Allen S. Maller, who taught at Beit Warszawa for two months in 2010.
I am always surprised and moved by the courage and conviction displayed by Polish people who seek a connection to Judaism. There is something that draws people — call it curiosity; devotion; sympathy; guilt; a search for roots; reincarnated souls, — but it is “something” powerful.

Some people are just curious about Jews and Judaism which is both vividly present and sometimes, appallingly absent in Poland. People — the vast majority of whom are regular Poles — enjoy the tourist Judaism of Krakow’s Klezmer music concerts. Tens of thousand of people attend these festivals.Others feel drawn to study and formally convert to Judaism. There is no one story of the path of people to (re)-join the Jewish people.
Program information coming soon…
Donor appreciation list coming soon…
Cantorial Soloist Seminars
Beit Polska Prayer Leader Mati Kirschenbaum Ordained as Rabbi
We are training a new generation of lay Jewish prayer leaders. The talented graduates are already bringing prayer, music, and a sense of Shabbat and holiday celebrations to Poland’s newly forming Jewish communities.
The prayer leaders’ training is a two-year program with nine study weekends each year.
A special grant from the Dutch Jewish Humanitarian Fund has made a new round of learning opportunities available to all our lay cantors. Our lay cantors are able to focus on music that accompanies “life cycle” events, the Passover Seder melodies, Hallel, and some key High Holiday music.
The second year of the program includes visiting synagogues in Berlin. Of that trip to Berlin, prayer leader Anna Jagielska-Riveiro wrote: “That trip was really exceptional to me. Never before did I have the opportunity to take part in services in so different synagogues and hear so many traditions of leading the prayer, which is important to me in the perspective of my future prayer leading and cantor studies.”
“That stay,” she continued, “enriched my knowledge of Judaism thanks to meeting different traditions in the synagogues as well as thanks to the lectures. I am especially grateful for having given me the opportunity of experiencing so beautiful High Holidays, which will always stay in my memory.”

Program information coming soon…
Donor appreciation list coming soon…