The First Talmud Torah
Konstantinovskaya 37
Talmud Torah schools were created as a form of public primary school for boys of modest backgrounds, where they were given an elementary education in Hebrew, the Scriptures (especially the Pentateuch), and the Talmud (and Halakhah). This was meant to prepare them for Yeshiva or, particularly in the movement's modern form, for Jewish education at a high school level. The Talmud Torah was modelled after the Cheder, a traditional form of schooling whose essential elements it incorporated, with changes appropriate to its public form rather than the heder's "private" financing through less formal or institutionalized mechanisms, including tuition fees and donations.
- House where Natan Rakhlin lived
- Former Jewish chapels
- Former Barishpolsky synagogue
- Central Synagogue
- House where Moshe Beregovski lived
- Podil Synagogue
- Kurenevskoe Cemetery
- House where Janusz Korczak lived
- Jewish Cemetery in Babi Yar
- House where Jewish writers lived
- House where Ilya Ehrenburg lived
- Former art school
- Jewish Charitable Fund “Care Hesed Avot”
- Galician synagogue
- Museum of historical treasures of Ukraine
- House where Isaak Babel lived
- Ginzburg guest house
- Babi Yar Memorial to Jewish Holocaust victims
- House, where Sholem Aleichem lived
- Former merchant synagogue