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Photo/design:
Pawel Mazur
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| Friends of the Cracow
Jewish Culture Festival Society, Inc.
is an American, tax-exempt, non-profit
organization dedicated to supporting the
premier Jewish cultural event in Europe
today -- the annual Jewish Culture Festival
in Cracow, Poland.
Every June since 1988, the historic
Jewish quarter of Cracow, called Kazimierz,
is filled once again with a crescendo of
music, art, dance, lectures, exhibits, and
more, all celebrating the nine-hundred-year
history of Jews in Poland. Over the course
of nine days, numerous Festival events take
place in a variety of venues from morning to
late into the night, showcasing both
traditional and contemporary aspects of
Jewish culture.
The Festival draws fans from Cracow and throughout Poland, Central and Western Europe, Israel, the United States, and elsewhere to enjoy, share, and participate in this unforgettable annual event. Some of the most renowned figures in Jewish music today perform at the Festival, including:
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- Cantor Yitzhaf Meir Helfgot
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Friends of the Jewish Culture Festival Society provides year-round support, financial assistance, and personal involvement to the Festival organization. It is especially important in these times to provide the people of Poland, Central Europe, Western Europe, and beyond with a connection to the roots of Jewish culture in Eastern Europe, and exposure to its continual evolution around the world.
Friends of the Jewish Culture Festival Society, Inc. has been recognized by the Internal Revenue Service as a tax exempt charitable organization under Internal Revenue Code Section 501 (c) (3). Contributions made to the Friends of the Jewish Culture Festival Society, Inc. are deductible as charitable contributions.
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Photo/design: Ryszard Horowitz |
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| “The Klezmer music that has
been made at the Festival over
the years -- on stage, at dance
workshops, and in the free
Klezmer duo improvisations --
has grown and deepened, and
there is a very powerful
response to it. Where else in
the world is there a
contemporary audience in the
thousands for Klezmer music, for
ultimately Yiddish song?”
-- Michael Alpert,
Ethnologist
Musician |
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