Buffalo, I've noticed, is also a city of death. I see so much around me that was once beautiful and grand being subject to endless decay and destruction. I thought I had seen it all until I saw Beth Jacob cemetery, an abandoned Jewish cemetery in eastern Buffalo that is pretty much as destroyed and desecrated as a place in Buffalo can be. Until I had seen Beth Jacob, I've had been able to somehow stomach much of the blight in the city, but seeing blight on this level was the ultimate outrage.
In spite of my feelings that this situation with the Beth Jacob cememtery has got to change, the one thing that sets this place apart from all of the other decaying places in this city is that it's the only place where I have found decay and growth, death and life, in equillibrium. The area has so devolved that nature has taken over, and the decaying headstones are covered over with vines and surrounded by tall green grass. It's awful, yet quite eerily beautful at the same time; when I went about two weeks ago (with (e:inscrutable)) we saw deer in resting out in the open, as if to stake nature's own claim on the area.
"The Gates of Repentance are always Open"

The Deer we saw

The rest


















Thanks for sharing the photographs. I love cemetaries. I especially love run down neglected ones. I often stop by to read headstones and feel at peace with those who have passed on.
(e:museumchick), what if everyone who was related has now passed away too? It's the inexorable cycle of life. In a way, it's poetic justice - graveyards sinking down into the earth along with those who erected them.
it's so sad to see those graves like that. I wonder why people let it become that way.
It is a nice post. It doesn't look that bad. I mean it looks like it could be fixed up easily enough. Love the deer shot.
beautiful post.
"...decay and growth, death and life, in equilibrium." powerful!
Wow, this must have been an overwhelming experience in person.
great post.