28 January 2014

Iuliu Barasch's Travel Report on Jewish Life in the Kraków Area, Galicia, Bukovina, Moldavia and Walachia

...from Kraków via Lemberg, Brody, Tarnopol, Czernowitz, Jassy and Galați to Bucharest. Dr. Iuliu Barasch (June 1815 - 30.04.1863), physician, philosopher and writer published for the Allgemeine Zeitung des Judenthums in 1843-1845 a series of articles on Jewish life in Kraków, Galicia, Bukovina, Moldavia, and Walachia.

Source: http://www.compactmemory.de/
Click here for a PDF compilation of these 35 articles and/or download transcriptions of particular articles by clicking on the respective dates!



Wikipedia: Iuliu Barasch or Baraş (1815—1863) was a Galician-born Jewish physician and writer who made his career in Romania. Born in Brody into a Hasidic family as Yehuda ben Mordehai Barasch. He studied Philosophy at the University of Leipzig and took his doctorate at the University of Berlin. Barasch tried to settle in Moldavia, but the authorities refused to give him the right to practice medicine and as such he settled in Wallachia, being firstly, in 1842, a physician in Călăraşi, then in 1845, in Craiova and finally settling in Bucharest, starting teaching natural sciences at the Saint Sava Academy in 1852 and then a professor at Bucharest's School of Medicine and Pharmacy. Beside working as a doctor, became a radical and ardent Romanian patriot. A friend of C.A. Rosetti and Ion Heliade Rădulescu. He was a popularizer of medical science and of natural science in general, and the first Jewish Romanian journalist. In 1856-1859 he edited a journal Isis sau Natura (Isis or Nature), the first popular science magazine in Romania. The magazine published studies of astronomy, hypothetical articles about the plurality of worlds or about the most popular inventions of the time, such as aerostat and "submarine ships". In 1857, he started work editing Israelitul Român, a magazine that was to remain in print for almost 100 years. Barasch was also the founder of the first children's hospital in Bucharest. He is memorialized in Bucharest's historically Jewish Văcăreşti neighborhood: the Baraşeum Theater, now home to the State Jewish Theater; the adjoining Baraşeum clinic; and the street that runs in front of the theater, formerly Ionescu de la Brad, now str. Dr. Iuliu Barasch.


Letter from Iuliu Barasch to his brother Eisig, 1839

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