Yeshiva, Heder, Hebrew lyceum

Yeshiva, Heder, Hebrew lyceum

Yeshiva - the old Talmudic school is situated between the Borderland Center building and the White Synagogue. Currently, the Public Library of Sejny occupies the first storey. Ground storey was used as Borderland’s Old-Shoe Factory gallery, art and music ateliers until 2007, when the Sejny Jazz Collective club was opened.

Sejny County had uncommon luck with respect to the religious and spiritual leaders in the Jewish community. Almost all of the rabbis in the 19th century in Sejny were prominent religious scholars, beginning with Rabbi Yehuda Baruch, who died in 1846, and ending with Rabbi Moses Becalel Lurii – the initiators of the construction of the 1885 synagogue, which still stands. Without doubt, the most prominent was Rabbi Moses Icchak Awigdor, who took over the office in 1846.

Soon after his arrival in Sejny, this known organizer and religious philosopher opened a Yeshiva (higher Talmudic school) which had a folk-revolutionary character and became hugely famous amongst the Maskilis (advocates of the enlightenment of Jewish populace), attracting many students from the distant terrains of Russia and Poland. Thanks to the school, Sejny (granted though not for long) became the center of haskali (enlightenment) for the whole of Lithuania. It was here that the most prominent Lithuanian rabbis held their conferences. Soon, the tsarist regime, fearing the spread of Awigdor’s teachings on Polish territory and deep into Russia, closed the Yeshiva in Sejny and banished Awigdor. It was not only Awigdor’s Yeshiva that was renowned during this period for the quality of its Jewish education; in the mid-19th century, a Hebrew high school was established by the writer Tuwie Pinkas Szapiro in Sejny. It was one of the first Jewish schools of a secular character, where in addition to religion students were taught geography, mathematics, Russian and other subjects not usually encountered in the Jewish curriculae of the day. Some of the most enlightened minds in the Lithuanian Jewry were recruited from among the alumni of this high school.