
KOJETIN (Czech Kojetín; Ger. Kojetein; Heb. גויט״ן ,גוט״ן), town in central Moravia, Czech Republic. Jews apparently lived in Kojetin from the 13th century, but their first documented mention dates from 1566, when 52 families lived in the Judengasse. The consecration of a cemetery is recorded in 1574. The synagogue, then seating 300, was renovated in 1614 (and restored again in 1718). In 1657 only 16 houses were owned by Jews, but the community absorbed many refugees from the Chmielnicki massacres (1648) and some of those expelled from Vienna (1670). The Minhag Polin, the Polish prayer rite, was introduced in Kojetin in 1648. When the Jews were segregated in a special sector of the town in 1727, 500 of them lived in 40 houses. Kojetin was then in the possession of the Prague archbishop, who treated the Jewish community fairly. There was a scandal in Kojetin, echoed in rabbinical literature of the period, when a Frankist was accused of making the sign of the cross when blessing the community. The Familiants Law allotted 76 Jewish families to Kojetin in 1798. In 1829 there were 443 Jews in the town, living in 45 houses. The community flourished in the 19th century but began to decline after 1860 when many of its members were attracted to the larger cities. It numbered 162 in 1869.
Only 72 Jews (1.1% of the total population), 30 of them of declared Jewish nationality, were left in the town in 1930. The remnant of the community was deported to Nazi extermination camps in 1942 and the synagogue equipment transferred to the Central Jewish Museum in Prague. A small congregation, affiliated with Olomouc, was established after World War II. The burial hall in the cemetery was still standing in 1970.
Among the rabbis who officiated in Kojetin were Eleazer Fleckeles (1779–83), Jacob Bruell (1843–89), and Richard Feder (1903–06). Several Jewish families – Goitein, Guttein, Kojeteiner, etc. – took their names from the town. The scholar David Kaufmann was a native of Kojetin.
Record books for Kojetin
- Fond 1073
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 803 N 1844-1879 (i) (births)
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 804 O 1844-1869 (i) (marriages)
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 805 O 1847-1874 (marriages)
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 806 Z 1844-1846 (i) (deaths)
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 807 Z 1846-1874 (deaths)
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 808 N 1784-1844 (i) O 1785-1842 Z 1784-1844 (births, marriages, deaths)
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 809 N 1874-1894 (i), 1918-1940, 1942-1944 O 1875-1894 (i 1876-1888), 1918-1940, 1942-1944 Z 1875-1894 (i 1876-1888), 1918-1944 (births, marriages, deaths)
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 810 NOZ 1846 (index)
- HBMa Fond 1073 Inv. 811 NOZ 1846-1934 (index)
- Fond 241
- HBM Fond 241 Inv. 961 N 1846 - 1874 (births)
History of the Jews in Kojetin
In 1829 the following persons held Familianten status in Kojetin:
- Jakob Arely
- Jelinek Singer
- Isak Gramisch
- Israel Grünhut
- Jakob Haas
- Isak Sonnenschein
- Markus Schmeidler
- Zacharias Polak
- Philipp Liebmann
- Michael Deutsch
- Hermann Seidl
- Isak Seidl
- Hermann Steiner
- Bernhard Gutmann
- Salomon König
- Jakob Fuchs
- Jakob Gramisch
- Bernard Kaufmann
- Pinkas Kirschner
- Bernard Kurz
- Isak Zimlich
- Samuel Kaufmann
- Jakob Löwenthal
- Jakob Reichsfeld
- Jakob Turadt
- Abraham Liebmann
- Aron Löwenthal
- Lazar Pollak
- Jakob Seidl
- Isak Blum
- Philipp Langer
- Markus Weiskopf
- Jakob Zimlich
- Markus Schiller
- Wolf Löwenthal
- Lazar Gottlieb
- Moses Stern
- Jakob Löwenthal
- Samuel Kurz
- Joseph König
- Lazar Weiskopf
- Ludwig Hochberg
- Michel Sonne
- Isak Kaufmann
- Isak Eisler
- Markus Kaufmann
- Israel Bick
- Jakob Klopfer
- Jakob Hausner
- Löbl Langer
- Moses Krasny
- Jakob Sonne
- Jakob Blum
- Bernard Schmeidler
- Isak Stern
- Jakob Brunner
- Jakob Hausner
- Markus Steiner
- Jonas Schiller
- Markus Krasny
- Samuel Hochberg
- Simon Löwy
- Joachim Sauerbrunn
- Abraham Zimlich
- Joachim Pollak
- Jakob Glückselig
- Abraham Schiller
- Joseph Vogl
- Moses Brunner
- Abraham Gramisch
- Jakob Seidl
- Aron Kirschner
- Markus Eisler
- Joachim Langer
- Jakob Pfefferkorn
- Löbl Schein
Photos from Kojetin Cemetery can be found at JOWBR