Mikvah

Mikvah - Guilford Crescent and Empire Pool

3.15 Miles

LOCATION: Empire Pool (now demolished)

Mikvah

A Mikvah It is a free-flowing body of water in which ritually impure persons - mainly but not exclusively post menstrual women - immerse themselves to be cleansed of these impurities. It is used solely for this religious purpose and not as a public bath.

1920s  The first mikvah in Cardiff

The first mikvah in Cardiff was to be found in the Municipal Baths, erected at the end of the 19th Century, in Guilford Crescent. The site is now occupied by a hotel.
 
Guildford Crescent Baths drawing by Mary Traynor
Drawing of Guildford Crescent Baths. Image credit Mary Traynor.
Reproduced with the kind permission of Glamorgan Archives.
 
With a growing Jewish community in Cardiff in the 19th century, the Guildford Crescent mikvah was well used. By the 1920s it was open from 8am till 4pm, six days a week.
 
Photo of Empire pool by Media Wales
The Empire Pool.
Image credit Media Wales.
 

1958 - 1998  

In 1958 Cardiff was due to host the British and Empire Commonwealth Games and the Council realised that an Olympic size pool would be needed. A site on the banks of the River Taff was chosen and the County Surveyor approached Rabbi Rogoznitzky of the Cardiff United Synagogue, suggesting a mikvah be incorporated into the new Wales Empire Pool.
 
Photo of The Mikvah courtesy of the Jewish Chronicle
Mikvah at the Wales Empire Pool, 1959.
Image credit Cajex: Magazine of the Association of Jewish Ex-service Men and Women (Cardiff), September 1959, p. 82.
 
The cost was initially to be borne by the Corporation but with rising expenditure the community were eventually asked to contribute; Councillor Leo Abse playing a prominent part in the fund raising. When the mikvah was finally opened, in April 1958, a plaque commemorating the event was unveiled including the names of the main contributors: Victor Freed, Harry & Abe Sherman and S.F. & W Stern.
 
However, despite this success the actual practice of this religious cleansing was rapidly beginning to wane. When a new synagogue was built in Penylan, in 1955, the building did not contain a mikvah. In 1998, the year before the Empire Pool was demolished to make way for the Millennium Stadium, the mivkah there had only been used on fifty-four occasions, with those being mostly by visitors and not the local community.
 
Yet it raised a problem for the remaining religious Jews of the Cardiff community, particularly as married Rabbis were less inclined to move to the city without access to a mikvah. Rabbi Ives eventually agreed to take the post provided a mikvah was installed within 2-3 years. As this eventually seemed unlikely one was created from the Ladies cloakroom.

2003  Cyncoed community moved to a new purpose-built synagogue

In 2003, the Cyncoed community moved to a new purpose-built synagogue, which also had its own self-contained mikvah. The practice of ritual cleansing, even though much-diminished, thus continues in Cardiff to this day.
 
 

 

Sources (8) click to show

CONTINUE THE TRAIL

Trail