bg Chisinau

Șvarțman House

- Strada Pușkin 23 -
The three-story building, which was constructed somewhere in the late 19th or early 20th century, was built with a residential and commercial function. It was built by the Șvarțman family and it housed the trading house of the Şehter family, and from 1901 until September 1905, the confectionery shop of Andrei Ivanovich Mankov was located in one of the commercial premises. The first nickel-plating establishment in Bessarabia was also located in the building. The doctor and prominent Jewish public figure, Jacob Bernstein-Kogan, lived in this house. He was born in 1859 in what is now Chișinău, Moldova, and then Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire. His father was an important figure in the Kishinev Jewish community.  As a Zionist activist, Bernstein-Kogan led the Kishinev correspondence bureau of the Zionist movement. During the , he and his family fled their home, which was looted. As a community organizer and activist, he raised money for relief and played an important role in spreading awareness of the pogrom around the world. Later, he left Kishinev out of fear that he would be murdered for raising awareness of the pogrom. In addition, he was a doctor by trade and specialized in cholera. Before the , he moved to Palestine but later returned to Europe, first to Romania and then to Soviet Crimea. Jacob Bernstein-Kogan died on May 12, 1929, in .
Jacob Bernstein-Kogan
In July 1917, the Herzliya Club opened its doors in the building. Meetings between veterans of the Movement and youth were held there, lectures were given on the history of the Jewish people, and the history and theory of Zionism. In the building, there was a newspaper editorial office called the Jewish Voice and the office of the Provincial Jewish Election Committee. Between the and the , the French Consulate was located in the building. During the Second World War, the building suffered significant damage, and after the war, it was completely demolished.
The building during the Second World War
The most impressive features of the Eclectic building were the huge columns that were crowned with a that was adorned with a . The roof of the building, which was embellished with an motif and supported by loads of , was topped with several balustrades, some of which are incorporated with . Between two of the windows located on the third floor, you could admire a . The broken segmental that were placed above some of the second floor windows, were decorated with a . In addition to all the beautiful ornamentation, the building also contained many , which were either secured with a stone balustrade or a wrought iron railing.
An old postcard that shows the building