 So continuing with our journey through Cork City, we're now standing in Fitzgerald's Park, one of Cork's lovely public communities, delightful park here located in the west of the city just next to the huge Mardike Sports Complex. I'm here with my wife and we're coming here today to check out the Cork Public Museum and specifically the permanent exhibition regarding the Cork Jewish community that basically came to the city roughly in the late 19th century. A lot of the founding members came from Lithuania and this museum here is a permanent exhibit tells the story of the community including my late grandfather, Fred Rosel Alava Shalom. I think my Bar Mitzvah Skolka Pyamika features in the exhibit and nowadays the Cork synagogue closed its doors a few years ago, was formally deconsecrated and there's now a church there on South Terrace but when the Jewish community was at its peak around the 1940s, 50s, there was several hundred families and then of course in 1948 was the establishment of the State of Israel, a lot of the Jewish community moved to places where there was richer Jewish life, the US, Israel, the UK, etc. I left Cork, I grew up in Cork, came to the city when I was about 11, had my Bar Mitzvah in the synagogue, the former synagogue in Cork City and left myself in 2015 to move to Israel, I currently live in Jerusalem so I'm just back visiting here. So this exhibit plays a very important role in preserving the memory of the Cork Jewish congregation, there are still some Jews in Cork and the surrounding county, they formed a new breakaway community but in terms of the former synagogue, the fixed synagogue that was here, kosher food that really isn't a whole lot of Jewish life in the city. The exhibit here plays an important role in preserving the history of that former congregation. So we're here now in the part of the Cork Public Museum dedicated to preserving the history of Cork's Jewish population. The permanent exhibition is called the Tsar, the Rosels and the Music Shop, the Tsar is in reference to the Russian Tsar and when he instituted or decreed conscription that prompted a lot of the Jews living in Lithuania, old Russia and Russia itself to look for new places to live and some of them came to Cork. Some people say it's an apocryphal story, I'm not sure anyone knows that when some of these Jews were travelling west looking for the US when they heard Cork Cork they thought it was New York because they didn't speak English and that's how, according to whether it's legend or true to no one seems to really sure, some of the Jewish population arrived here. So in this exhibit that's the Tsar, the Rosels refers to my grandfather Fred Rosel who preserved, kept the Jewish community going for a number of years as well as his father Harry Rosel. There's included here a lot of exhibits from the former Cork synagogue on South Terrace which as I mentioned closed its doors a few years ago. You can see the eternal lights here, the menorah that used to be in our house, a tourist girl from the synagogue and other artefacts are on exhibit here to teach people a little bit about the customs and traditions of the Jewish population.