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Hurva Synagogue

The Hurva Synagogue (Hebrew: בית הכנסת החורבה, translit: Beit ha-Knesset ha-Hurva, lit. "The Ruin Synagogue"), also known as Hurvat Rabbi Yehudah he-Hasid (Hebrew: חורבת רבי יהודה החסיד, "Ruin of Rabbi Judah the Pious"), is a synagogue located in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, Israel.

Hurva Synagogue
The Hurva Synagogue, 2010
Religion
AffiliationOrthodox Judaism
RiteNusach Ashkenaz
Location
Location89 ha-Yehudim Street
Old City of Jerusalem, Israel
[1]
Geographic coordinates31°46′30″N 35°13′53″E / 31.77510°N 35.23135°E / 31.77510; 35.23135
Architecture
Architect(s)Assad Effendi, official architect of the Sultan (1864); for the reconstruction: Nahum Meltzer of N. Meltzer – G. Igra – A.Cohen Architects (2010)
TypeSynagogue
StyleNeo-Byzantine
CompletedRebuilt in 1864 (and again in 2010)
Construction cost1m piasters (1864)[2]
$7.3m (NIS 28m) (2009)[3]
Specifications
Capacity450 (1864)[4]
250 (2009)[3]
Height (max)24 m (79 ft)

It was originally founded in the early 18th century by followers of Judah HeHasid on the ruins of a 15th century synagogue and adjacent to the 14th century Sidna Omar mosque, but was destroyed a few years later in 1721 by Ottoman authorities, for failure of its proprietors to pay back a debt to local Muslims.[5][6] The plot became known as "The Ruin", or Hurva, where it lay desolate for 116 years until it was resettled in 1837 by members of the Ashkenazi Jewish community, known as the Perushim.[5] In 1864, the Perushim rebuilt the synagogue, and although officially named the Beis Yaakov Synagogue, it retained its name as the Hurva. It became Jerusalem's main Ashkenazi synagogue, until it too was destroyed by the Arab Legion[7] during the fighting in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.[8]

After Israel captured East Jerusalem from Jordan in 1967, a number of plans were submitted for the design of a new building. After years of deliberation and indecision, a commemorative arch was erected instead at the site in 1977, itself becoming a prominent landmark of the Jewish Quarter.[3] The plan to rebuild the synagogue in its 19th-century style received approval by the Israeli Government in 2000, and the newly rebuilt synagogue was dedicated on March 15, 2010.[9]

History edit

Early history edit

 
The Hurva, adjacent to the 14th century Sidna Omar mosque

The Hurva Synagogue today stands off a plaza in the centre of Jerusalem's Jewish Quarter, adjacent to the 14th century Sidna Omar mosque. Excavations carried out at the site in July and August 2003 revealed evidence from four main settlement periods: First Temple (800–600 BCE), Second Temple (100 CE), Byzantine and Ottoman.[10] Three bedrock-hewn mikvehs (ritual baths) were uncovered there dating from the 1st century.[11] The earliest tradition regarding the site is of a synagogue existing there at the time of the second-century sage Judah the Prince.[12]

Judah heHasid and aftermath: 1700s edit

In the winter of 1700, a group of around 500 Ashkenazim led by Judah HeHasid arrived from Poland.[13][8] They were mystics who were intent on advancing the arrival of the Messianic Era by settling in Jerusalem and leading ascetic lives.[14] A few days after their arrival in the city, heHasid died, and without a leader, their messianic hopes dissipated and the community began to disintegrate.[8] Those who remained managed to build forty dwellings and a small synagogue in the Ashkenazic Compound.[8] Soon after, they endeavoured to construct a larger synagogue, but the task proved expensive.[14] They found themselves having to bribe the Ottoman authorities in order to enable them to proceed with their building project.[14] Unexpected costs relating to the construction, financial hardships and the burden of various other taxes drained their funds. They became impoverished and were forced to take loans from local Arabs, eventually falling into severe debt.[8] Pressure and threats from the creditors led to a meshulach (rabbinical emissary) being sent abroad to solicit funds for repayment of the loans.[15] In late 1720, with the debts still outstanding,[16] the Arab lenders lost patience and set the synagogue and its contents alight. The leaders of the community were imprisoned and shortly after, not only this group but all other Ashkenazim were banished from the city, an interdiction which remained until statute of limitations on the synagogue loans expired roughly a century later.[13][17] Over the course of time, shops were built in the courtyard and the synagogue was left desolate, in a pile of rubble. It thus became known as the "Ruin of Rabbi Judah heHasid".[14]

Efforts of the Perushim: 1812–1837 edit

Between 1808 and 1812 another group of ascetic Jews, known as Perushim, immigrated to Palestine from Lithuania. They were disciples of the Vilna Gaon and had settled in the city of Safed to the north. Some had wished to settle in Jerusalem and reclaim the Ashkenazic Compound. They were worried, however, that descendants of the Arab creditors still held the old promissory notes relating to the century-old debts incurred by he-Hasid's followers and that a new group of Ashkenazic immigrants would possibly inherit responsibility for repayment. The descendants of a group of Hasidim who made aliyah in 1777 also presented a problem. They apparently objected to any effort by the Perushim to take control of the synagogue ruin, claiming it had never belonged to the Perushim or their ancestors. The Hasidim claimed they had closer ties with the original owners and that their rights to the parcel of land were greater.[18]

Nevertheless, in late 1815, leader of the Safed Perushim, Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Shklov, arrived in Jerusalem with a group of followers. They directed their main efforts to rebuilding he-Hasid's synagogue, which had symbolised the expulsion of the Ashkenazim from Jerusalem. By this, they intended to demonstrate the re-establishment of Ashkenazic presence in the city. Rebuilding one of Jerusalem's ruins would also have symbolic kabbalistic significance. The "repairing" of an earlier destruction would represent the first step of rebuilding the entire city, a prerequisite for the arrival of the Messiah.[18]

In 1816 they "pleaded with the powers in the city of Constantinople to obtain a royal decree that the Arabs residing in Jerusalem would not be permitted to enforce the debts of the Ashkenazim", but nothing came of it. A year later, several leaders of the group, including Avraham Shlomo Zalman Zoref, a Lithuanian-born silversmith, and Soloman Pach, travelled to Constantinople endeavouring to obtain such a firman (imperial decree). Two years later, in 1819, their efforts were realised and the century-old debts were cancelled.[19] The group acquired a legal document delineating the entire site acquired by he-Hasid in 1700. The area now included dilapidated dwellings and shops built by the creditors' heirs on part of the site. Next, they had to secure another firman that would permit construction at the site, including the building of a large synagogue. Two successive missions in 1820 and 1821 to obtain the firman from the sultan's court failed.[19]

Still awaiting imperial permission to build in the courtyard, the Perushim wished to rely on an old firman given to the Jews in 1623, which stated that there could be no objection to them building in their own quarters. Having received a supporting document issued by the Qadi of Jerusalem in March 1824, it was possible for them begin rebuilding the dwellings in the courtyard. In practice, however, construction never materialised as they were unable to exercise their authority over the plot of land. This was apparently due to confrontation with the Arab squatters and the local government's disregard of the documents proving their ownership of the courtyard.[20]

In 1825, following the disruption the group were experiencing, Shapira travelled to Europe once again. He hoped to secure the necessary firman, which would place the courtyard firmly in the Perushim's possession, and also to raise funds to cover the costs incurred trying to redeem the courtyard. His mission, however, was unsuccessful, as was a later mission attempted in 1829 by Zoref.[20]

Egypt gives ambiguous consent edit

With the annexation of Jerusalem by Egypt in 1831, a new opportunity arose for the Perushim. They petitioned Muhammad Ali regarding the rebuilding of the synagogue, but concerns about deviating from longstanding Muslim tradition and the Pact of Umar (which restricted the repair or construction of non-Muslim houses of worship) meant permission was not forthcoming. However, five months after the earthquake of May 1834, the prohibition was relaxed and the Sephardim were allowed to carry out repair works to their existing synagogues. This consent gave rise to further efforts by the Ashkenazim to receive authorisation to rebuild theirs.[21]

On June 23, 1836, after traveling to Egypt, Zoref, together with the backing of the Austrian and Russian consuls in Alexandria, obtained the long-awaited firman. It seems he was successful in gaining support of the Austrian consul and Muhammad Ali by invoking the name of Baron Salomon Mayer von Rothschild of Vienna. Muhammad Ali was hopeful that by giving his permission to rebuild the Ruin, Rothschild would be inclined to forge financial and political ties with him, which would in turn secure political support of Austria and France. In fact, Rothschild's involvement was a ruse. As soon as Zoref received the firman, he contacted Zvi Hirsch Lehren of the Clerks' Organisation in Amsterdam, requesting that funds his brother had pledged towards the building of synagogues in Palestine be applied to the Ruin.[22] But Lehren had doubts as to what exactly the firman permitted. Explicit authorisation for construction of a large synagogue was absent. (A letter from the leaders of the Amsterdam community to Moses Montefiore in 1849 confirms that permission for a synagogue in the Ashkenasic Compound had not been sanctioned; they had only been allowed to build dwellings in the area.)[23]

Menachem Zion Synagogue edit

In spite of the doubts highlighted in relation to the construction of a synagogue, the Perushim, confidently in possession of the ambiguous firman, began clearing away the rubble from the Ruin courtyard in September 1836. As the foundations of he-Hasid's original synagogue were revealed, they discovered a few old documents dating from 1579, signed by Israel ben Moses Najara.[24] After much debate, they decided not to rebuild the Ruin, but initially erect a small structure on the edge of the Ashkenasic compound.[24] The Arab creditors, however, still refused to relinquish the claims they had on the Jews and continued to interfere with the works.[23] Zoref, claiming that the Ashkenazim currently in Jerusalem were not related in any way to those who had borrowed the money at the turn of the 18th century, was forced to appear in court requesting a further ruling cancelling the debts. He mentioned that an injunction had already been passed that absolved the Ashkenazim from repaying the debt[25] and maintained that the Turkish Statute of Limitations cancelled out the debts of Judah heHasid's followers.[26] Although the court ruled in the Ashkenazim's favour,[25] Zoref nevertheless had to appease the Arab instigators with annual bribes in order to allow building to continue. At some point this arrangement ceased and in 1851, he was struck on the head with a sword and died of his wounds three months later.[26][27] By January 1837 however, the Perushim had dedicated the modest Menachem Zion Synagogue in the northwestern corner of the courtyard.[25] In 1854, a second smaller synagogue was built within the compound.[28] The actual plot upon which he-Hasid's synagogue had stood 130 years earlier, however, remained in ruins.

Rebuilding he-Hasid's Ruin: 1857–1864 edit

In the early 1850s, the Perushim felt ready to attempt the building a larger synagogue on he-Hasid's original site. An outcome of the Crimean War was the British government's willingness to use its increased influence at Constantinople to intervene on behalf of its Jewish subjects who resided in Jerusalem. On July 13, 1854, James Finn of the British consulate in Jerusalem wrote to the British ambassador in Constantinople describing the wishes of the 2,000 strong Ashkenazic community to build a new synagogue. He noted that funds for construction had been collected by Moses Montefiore twelve years earlier. He also enclosed a 150-year-old firman, which authorised the Ashkenazic Jews to rebuild their ruined synagogue.[29] As the title to the plot of land was held by the Amzalag family, who were British subjects, they designated London-born Rabbi Hirschell, son of Chief Rabbi of Great Britain Solomon Hirschell, to negotiate the transfer. The British consulate agreed to lend its sanction to the contract in order to avoid possible intrusion by the Turks.[30] At issue was the question of whether the building of a synagogue at the site constituted the repair of an old house of non-Muslim worship or the establishment of a new synagogue. The Turks would have to grant a special license for the latter.[30] This was received through the efforts of Francis Napier and Stratford Canning, 1st Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe, British ambassadors to the Sublime Porte, who secured the necessary firman in 1854.[14][31] In July 1855, while in Constantinople, Montefiore was handed the firman,[32] which he hand-delivered during his fourth visit to Jerusalem in 1857.[33]

With permission granted, the groundbreaking ceremony took place on the last day of Hanukkah of 1855.[33] On April 22, 1856, the cornerstone was laid in the presence of Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem, Shmuel Salant.[33] Salant had been instrumental in raising the necessary funding, making a trip to Europe in 1860 and obtaining large donations, especially from Montefiore.[33] Some of the stones used in construction of the building was purchased from the Industrial Plantation, where poor Jews assisted in quarrying and shaping the blocks.[34] On May 7, 1856 Consul Finn inspected the site after receiving complaints from Muslims who suspected the opening of windows towards a mosque.[35]

Although originally in possession of a lump sum they hoped would pay for the planned edifice, expenses increased. Construction work progressed slowly for lack of funds and the impoverished community soon found themselves having to arrange collections throughout the diaspora. One notable emissary, Jacob Saphir, set off for Egypt in 1857 and returned in 1863 having visited Yemen, Aden, India, Java, Australia, New Zealand and Ceylon.[36] The largest single gift came from Ezekiel Reuben, a wealthy Sephardi Jew from Baghdad, who gave 100,000 of the million piasters needed. His sons, Menashe and Sasson, later supplemented his donation. The combined donations from the Reuben family eventually covered more than half the cost. It marked an important step in the unity of the Sephardic and Ashkenazic communities of the city.[2] Another contributor was Frederick William IV of Prussia, whose name was inscribed above the entrance together with those of other benefactors.[37] He also gave permission for funds to be collected from his Jewish subjects. Throughout Western Europe, emissaries sought donations with the slogan "Merit Eternal Life with one stone".[2]

With new funds arriving, work could progress. In 1862 the domed ceiling was completed and Rabbi Yeshaya Bardaki, head of the Ashkenazic community, was honored with placing the final stone of the dome.[38] Two years later in 1864, the new synagogue was dedicated. Present was Baron Alphonse James de Rothschild, who 8 years earlier had been given the honour of laying the first stone.[33] The edifice was officially named Beis Yaakov – "House of Jacob" – in memory of James Mayer de Rothschild, whose son Edmond James de Rothschild had dedicated much of his life supporting the Jews of Palestine. The locals, however, continued to refer to the building as the Hurva.[8] As a token of gratitude to the British government for their involvement, the British Consul James Finn, was invited to the dedication ceremony, which included a thanksgiving service. He described the "beautiful chants and anthems in Hebrew", the subsequent refreshments provided and the playing of Russian and Austrian music.[12]

Structure edit

 
Northern facade, c. 1930
 
Eastern facade, c. 1930

The Hurva Synagogue was designed and constructed under the supervision of Assad Effendi, the sultan's official architect.[2][39] Built in Byzantine Revival style,[40] it was supported by four massive pilasters at each corner over which soared a large dome. The construction of only one of these towers was completed. The other three were missing the upper level and the small dome that capped it.[41] The facade was covered in finely hewn stone and incorporated 12.5 m (41 ft) high window arches. The height of the synagogue to the bottom of its dome was around 16 m (52 ft) and to the top of the dome it was 24 m (79 ft).[41] Twelve windows were placed around the base of the dome, which was surrounded by a veranda, which offered a fine view of large parts of the Old City and the area around Jerusalem.[41] Being one of the tallest structures in the Old City, it was visible for miles.

Interior edit

The synagogue prayer hall was reached via an entrance with three iron gates. The length was around 15.5 m (51 ft) and the width was around 14 m (46 ft). The women's section was in the galleries, along the three sides of the chapel, except the eastern side. Access to the galleries was through towers situated at the corners of the building.[41]

The Torah ark had the capacity to house 50 Torah scrolls and was built on two levels. It was flanked by four Corinthian columns surrounded by baroque woodcuts depicting flowers and birds.[2] The Ark, together with its ornamental gates, were taken from the Nikolayevsky Synagogue in Kherson, Russia, which had been used by Russian Jewish conscripts forced to spend twenty-five years in the Imperial Russian Army. Directly above the Ark was a triangular window with rounded points. To the right and in front of the ark was the cantor's podium, which was designed as a miniature version of the two-level Ark.[41]

 
Former interior, c. 1935

The centre of the synagogue originally contained a high wooden bimah, but this was later replaced with a flat platform covered with expensive marble plates.

Numerous crystal chandeliers hung from the dome. The dome itself was painted sky-blue and strewn with golden stars.[42] Frescoes with religious motifs, such as stars of David, the menorah, Mount Sinai and the Ten Commandments, adorned every wall. In the four corners were drawings of four animals in accordance with the statement in Pirkei Avot: "Be strong as the leopard and swift as the eagle, fleet as the deer and brave as the lion to do the will of your Father in Heaven."[41]

One of the most generous donations came from Pinchas Rosenberg, the Imperial Court tailor of Saint Petersburg. In the diary of Rabbi Chaim ha-Levy, the emissary who had been sent from Jerusalem to collect funds for the synagogue, Rosenberg set out in details what his money was intended for. Among the items that were bought with his money were two big bronze candelabras; a silver menorah that "arrived miraculously on the 1st Tevet [1866] precisely in time to light the last eight Hanukah candles" and an iron door made under the holy ark for safe-keeping of the candlestick. He also earmarked funds towards the building of an "artistically wrought iron fence around the roof under the upper windows so that there be a veranda on which may stand all our brethren who go up in pilgrimage to behold our desolate Temple, and also a partition for the womenfolk on the Feast of Tabernacles and Simchat Torah".[2]

Golden years: 1864–1948 edit

 
The Gerer Rebbe at a prayer gathering at the synagogue, 1942

From 1864 onwards, the Hurva Synagogue was considered the most beautiful and most important synagogue in the Land of Israel.[41] It was described as "the glory of the Old City" and the "most striking edifice in all of Palestine".[43] It also housed part of the Etz Chaim Yeshiva, the largest yeshiva in Jerusalem. It was a focal point of Jewish spiritual life in the city and was the site of the installation of the Ashkenazic chief rabbis of both Palestine and Jerusalem.[41] On his visit to Jerusalem in 1866, Moses Montefiore went to the synagogue, placing a silver breastplate on one of the Torah scrolls. When he visited again in 1875, a crowd of 3,000 Jews turned out to greet him.[44] On February 3, 1901 a memorial service for Queen Victoria took place inside the synagogue in gratitude for the protection afforded to the Jews of Jerusalem by Britain. The service was presided over by the Ashkenazic Chief Rabbi, Shmuel Salant. According to a report in The Jewish Chronicle, the large building was "filled to its utmost capacity and policemen had to keep off the crowds, who vainly sought admission, by force".[45] In around 1919, Benjamin Lee Gordon wrote that the "synagogue presented a very pleasant and dignified appearance. It was well illuminated with artistic lamps presented by a certain Mr. Lichtenstein, of Philadelphia".[46] In 1921 Abraham Isaac Kook was appointed first Chief Rabbi of Palestine at the synagogue. The synagogue also hosted Herbert Samuel, 1st Viscount Samuel, who was honoured with reciting a portion of the Torah.[8] In 1923 Yosef Shalom Eliashiv's bar mitzvah was held at the synagogue. In the 1930s and possibly earlier, the synagogue housed the Chayei Olam Cheider, where indigent students form the Old City received their Torah education.[47]

Destruction during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War edit

 
Hurva 1948
 
Arab Legion soldier within the ruins, after the Legion blew it up.[48] Behind him, remnants of the eastern wall show a painted fresco of Mount Sinai and two arched tablets symbolising the Ten Commandments. June 1948.

On May 25, 1948, during the battle for the Old City, commander of the Jordanian Arab Legion, Major Abdullah el-Tell, wrote to Otto Lehner of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement to warn that unless the Haganah abandoned its positions in the synagogue and its adjoining courtyard, he would be forced to attack it. Moshe Russnak, commander of the Haganah in the Old City, ignored his request, knowing that if the Hurva fell, the battle for the Jewish Quarter would soon be lost.[49] On May 26, 1948, the Jordanian Arab Legion delivered an ultimatum to the Jews to surrender within 12 hours; otherwise the Hurva would be bombarded.[50]

On May 27, el-Tell, after receiving no answer to his proposition, told his men to "Get the Hurva Synagogue by noon." Fawzi el-Kutub executed the mission by placing a 200-litre barrel filled with explosives against the synagogue wall. The explosion resulted in a gaping hole and Haganah fighters spent forty-five minutes fighting in vain to prevent the Legionnaires from entering. When they finally burst through, they tried to reach the top of its dome to plant an Arab flag. Three were shot by snipers, but the fourth succeeded. The Arab flag flying over the Old City skyline signaled the Legion's triumph. Photographs show that the dome of the synagogue was badly damaged during the fighting.[51] After taking the synagogue, the Arab Legion blew up what remained.[51] A huge explosion reduced the 84-year-old synagogue, together with the Etz Chaim Yeshiva attached to it, to rubble.[49] The Jewish defenders of the Old City surrendered the following day.

Post-1967: Plans sought for a new design edit

 
The synagogue in ruins, 1967

Following the Six-Day War, plans were mooted and designs sought for a new synagogue to be built at the site, part of the overall rehabilitation of the Jewish Quarter. Many religious and political figures supported the proposal to rebuild the original synagogue "where it was, as it was" in line with the traditional religious character of the area. However, the Jewish Quarter Development Company, in charge of the restoration of the Jewish Quarter, strongly opposed it.[28] The Israeli planners and architects involved in developing the area wanted the building to reflect their modern Western identity. Additionally, although it would have been possible to rebuild it as it was, neither the architects nor the masons felt they were sufficiently qualified in traditional masonry technology to attempt it. Moreover, most of the original carved stones and surviving decorative elements had been removed, making a true "reconstruction" unrealisable. Swayed by the creativity of contemporary architecture and contrary to the 19th century design, which was meant to blend in with the Oriental landscape, they supported the modern redesign of the Hurva by a prominent architect.[28]

Kahn plans edit

Leading the campaign to rebuild the Hurva was Shlomo Zalman Tzoref's great-great-grandson, Ya'acov Salomon.[52] He consulted Ram Karmi, who in turn recommended Louis Kahn, a world-renowned architect who was also a founding member of the Jerusalem Committee. Kahn had also previously designed Philadelphia's Mikveh Israel Synagogue in 1961 which remained unbuilt.[53] Between 1968 and 1973, Kahn presented three plans for the reconstruction. The ruins were incorporated in a memorial garden, with a new structure on an adjacent lot and a promenade, the "Route of the Prophets", leading to the Western Wall.[52] Kahn proposed a structure within a structure, monumental "pylons of Jerusalem stone on each side enclosing four huge central pillars of reinforced concrete, so that the pylons function[ed] as a container and the pillars as its content".[54] Following the Beaux-Arts tradition, the elements of architecture were conceived as hollow, thus creating pocketing spaces within both structures.[55] The outer structure was composed of 16 piers covered in golden Jerusalem stone cut in blocks of the same proportions and same course finish as those of the Western Wall.[56] In the bases of the four corners of the two-story, 12 m (39 ft) high structure delineated by the piers, there would be small alcoves for meditation or individual prayer. Such alcoves would be used for daily prayer services, allowing larger crowds on Sabbath or festivals. Boston-based Israeli-Canadian architect Moshe Safdie, who had built extensively in Jerusalem and trained with Kahn in Philadelphia, was also in favour of rebuilding using contemporary design: "It's absurd to reconstruct the Hurva as if nothing had happened. If we have the desire to rebuild it, let's have the courage to have a great architect do it."[52]

When Teddy Kollek, then mayor of Jerusalem, had learned of Kahn's plans to design the Hurva at a scale comparable to the Dome of the Rock and the Kotel, the mayor was unsupportive and stated: "Should we in the Jewish Quarter have a building of major importance which 'competes' with the Mosque and the Holy Sepulcher and should we in general have any building which would compete in importance with the Western Wall of the Temple?"[57] Kollek was also concerned with the impact such a monumental temple may have in the Old City.[58] Kahn's model was displayed in the Israel Museum, but his plan was shelved when he died in 1974.[52] Kent Larson later referred to Kahn's proposal as "the greatest of the unbuilt".[59]

Commemorative arch and subsequent proposals edit

 
A reminder. The commemorative arch, built in 1977, ten years after the Six-Day War. While all proposals were rejected by the Jerusalem Committee, an arch of the original synagogue was restored as a reminder that "one day the Hurva will be built once again".[60]

As no permanent solution could be agreed upon, a temporary, symbolic solution was created. In 1977, one of the four stone arches that had originally supported the synagogue's monumental dome was recreated.[52] The height of the original building, including the dome, had been 50% greater than that of the new commemorative arch, which stood 16 m (52 ft) high. Together with the remains of the building and explanatory plaques, it was a stark reminder of what had once stood at the site.[52] In 1996, the Hurva rebuilt arch was compared with the ecclesiastical allegory known as Synagoga, a medieval personification of the "Synagogue", with attributes suggesting her ruined condition.[61]

With the ongoing disputes over the modern façade of the proposed new building, which some felt did not properly match the Jewish Quarter's aesthetic, an Englishman named Charles Clore took the initiative to fund a new design projects.[52] He commissioned Denys Lasdun, who drew up plans between 1978 and 1981 that more closely adhered to the original Hurva. His plans were still considered insufficient, as they were rejected by Prime Minister Menachem Begin[28] and the Minister of Interior, who refused to sign papers enabling construction to begin. No further progress was made and when Clore, who had wished to see the synagogue completed in his lifetime, died, his daughter provided funds to create one of the few open spaces in the Jewish Quarter adjacent to the Hurva.[52]

The Hurva featured on a NIS 3.60 Israeli postage stamp in 1993 to commemorate 45 years of Israeli independence, and its arch on a $1.20 Antiguan postage stamp in 1996.[62] However, in 1996, the supposedly temporary arch of the Hurva was almost thirty years old and, as a solution, it became nearly perpetual. Such condition was then publicly noted and interpreted:

Quite far from Kahn's "American dream", Israeli reality has provided [...] an [...] objectionable substitute — a single reconstructed arch of the Old Hurva. Such a lonely architectural sign, standing as an insipid memorial to a nineteenth-century synagogue in ruins, cannot be other than a problematic reincarnation of a ruined synagogue.[63]

This suggested that the single reconstructed arch of the Hurva could no longer be understood as a satisfactory expression of any commitment to rebuild the lost synagogue nor as an acceptable official response to its intentional destruction in 1948.

Reconstruction (2005–2010) edit

 
Nearing completion, July 2009
 
Aerial view, 2014
 
Hurva Synagogue interior during morning prayer, July 2013

The plan to rebuild the synagogue in its original 19th-century style received approval by the Israeli government in 2000. Jerusalem architect Nahum Meltzer, who proposed rebuilding the synagogue in its original Ottoman format, was given the commission. Meltzer stated that "both out of respect for the historical memory of the Jewish people and out of respect for the built-up area of the Old City, it is fitting for us to restore the lost glory and rebuild the Hurva Synagogue the way it was."[41] The state-funded Jewish Quarter Development Corporation under the leadership of Dov Kalmanovich convinced the Israeli government to allocate $6.2 million (NIS 24m), about 85% of the cost, for the reconstruction, with private donors contributing the remainder. In the end, the government only gave NIS 11m, with the remainder being donated by a Ukrainian Jewish businessman and politician, Vadim Rabinovitch.[3][64]

In 2002 the Israeli mint issued a set of medals featuring the synagogue to mark the beginning of the reconstruction project.[65] Following comprehensive historic research, the reconstruction works began in 2005 and on February 15, 2007, Simcha HaKohen Kook[66] of Rehovot was appointed as its rabbi, a move confirmed by leading rabbis, including Yosef Shalom Eliashiv.[67] On April 15, 2008 a celebration marked the placing of the keystone in the synagogue's dome.[16]

Contention arose over what kind of institution the Hurva would be. Secularist and nationalist-religious activists opposed the notion of another synagogue in the Old City and wanted the site to become a museum presenting the historical saga of the Jewish Quarter and displaying archaeological finds unearthed there. They viewed the appointment of Kook as the rabbi while the structure was still a shell as a move aimed at preventing a Modern Orthodox rabbi, who would have been more amenable to a broader utilisation of the site, from getting the position. Rabbi of the Jewish Quarter, Avigdor Nebenzahl, has been clear that he wants the building to serve as a synagogue and a house of study.[9]

Rededication and response edit

The reconstructed Hurva was officially opened on March 15, 2010 in the presence of Israeli politicians and chief rabbis.[68] A day earlier, hundreds of people had accompanied a new Torah scroll into the synagogue.[69] Several Palestinian leaders claimed that the rededication signaled Israel's intent to destroy the Muslim holy places on the Temple Mount and replace it with the Third Temple. Fatah official Khatem Abd el-Khader called the renovation of the Hurva a "provocation", warned Israel that it was "playing with fire" and called on Palestinians to "converge on Al-Aksa to save it".[70] Khaled Mashal of Hamas described the synagogue's opening as "a declaration of war" and called it a "falsification of history and Jerusalem's religious and historic monuments".[71] Fearing riots by Arab protestors, over 3,000 policemen were deployed ahead of the dedication ceremony.[70] The Organisation of the Islamic Conference said that the reopening risked "dragging the region into a religious war" and claimed the building was historically on a waqf (Islamic trust) land.[72] The Jordanian government also condemned the move stating that it "categorically rejects the rededication of Hurva synagogue and all other unilateral Israeli measures in occupied East Jerusalem because they run counter to international legitimacy".[73] Iran's Foreign Ministry urged the international community to respond to the reopening calling the move a "catastrophe that has distressed the Islamic world".[74] Israeli officials countered that Arab fears of a takeover of the Temple Mount were based on rumors and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu extended a message of coexistence.[75] The U.S. State Department criticised Palestinians for stoking tensions at the rededication of the historic synagogue.[76] The day after, Arabs clashed with Israeli police in East Jerusalem after Palestinian groups called for a "day of rage" over the reopening.[77]

In September 2010, Hamas released a propaganda video showing various Israeli landmarks, including the Hurva synagogue, ablaze after coming under missile attack.[78] The images were the result of special effects, as no such attacks had taken place.

Cultural depictions edit

  • The Hurva Synagogue, as an emblem of Jerusalem and its Jewish heritage, has been portrayed over the years in numerous paintings, and referred to in literature and culture. The synagogue was portrayed, for example, in works by artists Yossef Gaiger,[79] Jonathan Kis-Lev,[80] and in the works of Holocaust survivor, artist Motke Blum.[81] For decades, the synagogue's arch has been the emblem of the Jewish quarter in the works of artists portraying the old city.[82]
  • Computer graphic reconstructions of Louis Kahn's unbuilt project were made by Kent Larson (MIT, early 1990s),[83] and further developed in terms of animation by Francesco Cerbella & Federico Caponi (University of Florence, November 2013).[84]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ No nation named by UNESCO. See Positions on Jerusalem
  2. ^ a b c d e f Gilbert (1985), p. 97.
  3. ^ a b c d Lefkovits (2008).
  4. ^ , Emporis.com. Accessed March 11, 2010.
  5. ^ a b Brinker (1947), p. 91
  6. ^ "THE HURVA SYNAGOGUE 1700-2010". Jewish Action. August 11, 2010.
  7. ^ In the Holy Land, a Rebuilding for the Generations, The Wall Street Journal Online, March 10, 2010
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Horovitz (2000), pp. 168–74.
  9. ^ a b Hasson (2009).
  10. ^ Shragai (2006).
  11. ^ Hillel Geva, Oren Gutfeld. "Jerusalem, the Old City – the Jewish Quarter, the Hurva Synagogue" September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel, Israel Antiquities Authority Journal 117, (April 14, 2005)
  12. ^ a b Finn (1878), p. 462.
  13. ^ a b David B. Green, 'This Day in Jewish History / Hurva Synagogue Reduced to Rubble,' Haaretz 27 May 2013.
  14. ^ a b c d e Millgram (1990), pp. 109–14.
  15. ^ Rossoff (1997).
  16. ^ a b Lis (2008).
  17. ^ Rossoff (1998), p. 119.
  18. ^ a b Morgenstern (2006), p. 99.
  19. ^ a b Morgenstern (2006), pp. 114–15.
  20. ^ a b Morgenstern (2006), p. 117.
  21. ^ Morgenstern (2006), p. 118.
  22. ^ Morgenstern (2006), p. 119.
  23. ^ a b Morgenstern (2006), p. 120.
  24. ^ a b Rossoff (1998), pp. 185–86.
  25. ^ a b c Morgenstern (2006), p. 121.
  26. ^ a b Shragai (2008).
  27. ^ Benveniśtî (2007), p. 113.
  28. ^ a b c d Ricca (2007), pp. 104–10.
  29. ^ Gilbert (1985), pp. 79–80.
  30. ^ a b Blumberg (1981), pp. 62–63.
  31. ^ Blumberg (1981), p. 215.
  32. ^ Gilbert (1985), p. 84. Differing dates are given for delivery of this firman. Blumberg (1981), pp. 62–63, claims it was given in 1856 and Millgram (1990), p. 112, 1857.
  33. ^ a b c d e Rossoff (1998), p. 239.
  34. ^ Finn (1878), p. 463.
  35. ^ Blumberg (1981), p. 226.
  36. ^ Gilbert (1985), pp. 98–99.
  37. ^ Wasserstein (2001), p. 51.
  38. ^ Rossoff (1998), p. 240.
  39. ^ Maoz (1975), p. 155.
  40. ^ Kroyanker (1994), p. 85.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i Shragai (2005).
  42. ^ Rigler (2005).
  43. ^ Vale & Campanella (2005), p. 200.
  44. ^ Ben-Arieh (1985), p. 305.
  45. ^ Gilbert (1996), p. 2.
  46. ^ Gordon (1919), p. 123.
  47. ^ Recollections of Rabbi Boruch Schechter in Nitzotzot, Adar-Nissan 5773 Edition p. 82
  48. ^ Benny Morris (October 1, 2008). 1948: A History of the First Arab-Israeli War. Yale University Press. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-300-14524-3. Retrieved July 14, 2013. On 26–27 May, the Legionnaires took the Hurvat Israel (or "Hurva") Synagogue, the quarter's largest and most sacred building, and then, without reason, blew it up. "This affair will rankle for generations in the heart of world Jewry," predicted one Foreign Office official. The destruction of the synagogue shook Jewish morale.
  49. ^ a b Collins (1973), pp. 492–494.
  50. ^ Rabinovich & Reinharz (2008), p. 82.
  51. ^ a b Simone Ricca (2007). Reinventing Jerusalem : Israel's Reconstruction of the Jewish Quarter after 1967. I. B. Taurus. p. 105.
  52. ^ a b c d e f g h Green (2004).
  53. ^ Susan Solomon, Louis I. Kahn's Jewish Architecture, Series: Brandeis Series in American Jewish History, Culture, and Life, Hardcover: 236 pages, Publisher: Brandeis (August 31, 2009), Language: English, ISBN 978-1584657880
  54. ^ Luis Mariano Akerman, "The Evocative Character of Louis I. Kahn's Hurva Synagogue Project, 1967–1974" (1996), in: The Real and Ideal Jerusalem in Jewish, Christian and Islamic Art, ed. B. Kühnel, CFJA, 1997–98, p. 247.
  55. ^ Akerman, "Evocative Character" (1996), p. 251, n. 27. According to Steven K. Peterson, the phenomenon of pocketing spaces within masonry or structure is known as architectural poche (Ideas en Arte y Tecnología 2/3, Buenos Aires, 1984).
  56. ^ Tsevi Lavi, "A Form of a Crown for the Hurva Synagogue", Maariv, July 29, 1968.
  57. ^ Tony Kollek, Letter to Kahn, August 29, 1968, in "Hurva Synagogue All Correspondence", Kahn Collection, file 030.II.A.39.1.
  58. ^ The Jerusalem Committee in particular was concerned that such a building would compete in importance with Al-Aqsa, Holy Sepulchre Church and even the Western Wall; the monumentality of Kahn's project was objected by the some Jewish Quarter residents, who preferred a modest building rather a "world synagogue" (the very words Kollek himself used when describing Kahn's proposal); Akerman, "Evocative Character", p. 253.
  59. ^ "A Virtual Landmark", Progressive Architecture, September 1993, pp. 80–87; Akerman, "Evocative Character" (1996), p. 253.
  60. ^ Kollek, in conversation, Jerusalem, 1996.
  61. ^ Akerman, "Evocative Character" (1996), p. 253, n. 37. In his book, Meaning in Western Architecture (1974), Christian Norberg-Schulz includes two images relating to the notion of synagogue: one of them is a photograph of Kahn's Hurva Synagogue model (first proposal, 1967–68); the other is a thirteenth-century statue from Strasbourg Cathedral, known as "The Synagogue"—Synagoga.
  62. ^ Eisenberg, Ronald L. The Jewish World in Stamps: 4000 Years of Jewish Civilization in Postal Stamps, Schreiber Pub., 2002, p. 213. ISBN 1-887563-76-8.
  63. ^ Akerman, Evocative Character (1996), p. 253, n. 37.
  64. ^ Green, David (February 29, 2004). "From the ruins; A master architect's attempt to rebuild on sacred ground". The Boston Globe. Retrieved November 2, 2014.
  65. ^ Hurva Synagogue – Gold Medal, Israel Coins & Medals Corp., Accessed March 11, 2010.
  66. ^ Fendel, Hillel (March 21, 2010) "First Sabbath at the Hurva: Then and Now", Arutz Sheva
  67. ^ Zohar, Gil (March 9, 2010) "From Ruin to Reconstruction, the Hurva Synagogue is Completed – Again", Jewish Journal
  68. ^ Hurva Synagogue rededicated March 23, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, March 15, 2010.
  69. ^ Grossman, Shmulik (March 14, 2010). "Old City synagogue opened amid heightened tensions", Ynetnews.
  70. ^ a b Selig, Abe. Old City’s Hurva shul reopens, The Jerusalem Post, March 14, 2010
  71. ^ Awarekeh, Hanan. "Hamas: 'Hurva' Synagogue a Declaration of War; Israel Playing With Fire"[permanent dead link], Al-Manar, March 16, 2010.
  72. ^ "Islamic Conference slams rebuilt Jerusalem synagogue", March 16, 2010
  73. ^ "Jordanians protest rededication of synagogue near al-Aqsa mosque", Earth Times, March 16, 2010
  74. ^ "Iran raps Israel over synagogue reopening", Tehran Times, March 17, 2010.
  75. ^ "Synagogue opens in Jerusale", Al Jazeera, March 16, 2010
  76. ^ Selig, Abe. Hurva is again a house of prayer, The Jerusalem Post, March 15, 2010.
  77. ^ "Violence flares in East Jerusalem", Al Jazeera, March 17, 2010
  78. ^ "Hamas marks peace talks with terror film", The Jewish Chronicle.
  79. ^ Efrat, Gideon (January 21, 2011). "אופקים רחבים: עבודות נבחרות (א)" [Ofakim Nerhavim: Selected Works (A)] (in Hebrew). Retrieved December 5, 2011.
  80. ^ Thrope, Samuel (March 21, 2011). "The Metamorphosis: Jonathan Kis-Lev's Jerusalems". Zeek, a Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture. Retrieved December 5, 2011.
  81. ^ See Osharov, Eli (June 22, 2011). "Motke Blum Fights Against Closing Hutzot Hayotzer" (in Hebrew). NRG. Retrieved December 5, 2011.
  82. ^ Gafni, Reuven (April 8, 2011). "Will This House Be Great? (גדול יהיה כבוד הבית הזה?)". Makor Rishon (in Hebrew). Retrieved December 5, 2011.
  83. ^ "A Virtual Landmark", Progressive Architecture, September 1993, pp. 80–87; Louis I. Kahn: Unbuilt Masterworks, Monacelli Press, 2000.
  84. ^ Hurva Synagogue; Cerbella and Caponi, abstract to "Contemporary Architecture and Ancient Suggestions – The Louis Kahn's Hurva Synagogue Project", 2014 (accessed May 20, 2014).

Bibliography edit

Books edit

  • Akerman, Luis Mariano. "The Evocative Character of Louis I. Kahn's Hurva Synagogue Project, 1967–1974" (1996), in: The Real and Ideal Jerusalem in Jewish, Christian and Islamic Art, ed. Bianca Kühnel, CFJA, 1997–98, pp. 245–53, ilus. ISBN 9653910078
  • Ben-Arieh, Yehoshua. Jerusalem in the Nineteenth Century, The Old City, St. Martin's Press, 1985. ISBN 0-312-44187-8
  • Benveniśtî, Mêrôn. Son of the cypresses: memories, reflections, and regrets from a political life, University of California Press, 2007. ISBN 0-520-23825-7
  • Blumberg, Arnold & Finn, James and Elizabeth Anne. A View from Jerusalem, 1849–1858, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1981. ISBN 0-8386-2271-2
  • Brinker, Dov Nathan (1947 - Elul), The Jerusalem Almanac for the year 1948 (לוח ירושלים לשנת התש"ח ליצירה‎), p. 89 (in Hebrew) (OCLC 243425225)
  • Collins, Larry & Lapierre, Dominique. O Jerusalem!, Pan Books, 1973. LCCN 97-224015 ISBN 0-330-23514-1
  • Finn, James. Stirring Times, Adamant Media Corporation, 2004; [C. Kegan Paul & Co., London, 1878]. ISBN 1-4021-5089-X
  • Gilbert, Martin. Jerusalem, Rebirth of a City, Chatto & Windus, 1985. ISBN 0-7011-2892-5
  • Gilbert, Martin. Jerusalem in the Twentieth Century, Chatto & Windus, 1996. ISBN 0-7011-3070-9
  • Gordon, Benjamin Lee. New Judea: Jewish life in modern Palestine and Egypt, Ayer Publishing, 1977; [J. H. Greenstone, 1919]. ISBN 0-405-10251-8
  • Halper, Jeff. Halper, Jeff (1991). Between Redemption and Revival: The Jewish Yishuv of Jerusalem in the Nineteenth Century. ISBN 9780813378558., Westview Press, 1991. ISBN 0-8133-7855-9
  • Horovitz, Ahron. Jerusalem, Footsteps Through Time, Feldheim, 2000. ISBN 1-58330-398-7
  • Kroyanker, David. Jerusalem Architecture, Tauris Parke Books, 1994. ISBN 1-85043-873-0
  • Maoz, Moshe. Studies on Palestine during the Ottoman period, Magnes Press, 1975.
  • Millgram, Abraham Ezra. Jerusalem Curiosities, Jewish Publication Society, 1990. ISBN 0-8276-0358-4
  • Morgenstern, Arie. Hastening Redemption, Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 0-19-530578-7
  • Rabinovich, Itamar & Reinharz, Jehuda. Israel in the Middle East, UPNE, 2008. ISBN 0-87451-962-4
  • Ricca, Simone. Reinventing Jerusalem, I.B. Tauris, 2007. ISBN 184511387X
  • Rossoff, Dovid. Where Heaven Touches Earth, Guardian Press, 1998. ISBN 0-87306-879-3
  • Safdie, Moshe. Jerusalem: The Future of the Past, Houghton Mifflin, 1989. ISBN 0-395-35375-0
  • Shulman, Yaakov Dovid. Pathway to Jerusalem: The Travel Letters of Rabbi Ovadiah of Bartenura, CIS Publishers, 1992. ISBN 1-56062-130-3
  • Shteiner, Pu'ah. Forever My Jerusalem Feldheim, 1997. ISBN 0873063945
  • Wasserstein, Bernard. Divided Jerusalem, Yale University Press, 2008. ISBN 030013763X
  • Vale, Lawrence J. & Campanella, Thomas J. The resilient city: how modern cities recover from disaster, Oxford University Press US, 2005. ISBN 0-19-517583-2

Newspapers, magazines, and the media edit

  • Akerman, Luis Mariano. "La Sinagoga Hurva en el proyecto de Louis Kahn" (1996), Ideas en Arquitectura, ed. Alfonso Corona Martínez, Vol. 1, No. 1, Buenos Aires: Fundación Universidad de Begrano, March 1997, pp. 6–9, ilus.
  • Balint, Benjamin. "In the Holy Land: A Rebuilding for the Generations", The Wall Street Journal, March 10, 2010. Accessed May 21, 2014
  • Green, David. "Rising from the Ruin?", The Jerusalem Report, December 12, 1996, pp. 40–41.
  • Green, David. "From the ruins: A master architect's attempt to rebuild on sacred ground", The Boston Globe, February 29, 2004. Accessed July 25, 2007
  • Hasson, Nir. "If the Vilna Gaon was right, the 3rd Temple is on its way", Haaretz, November 30, 2009. Accessed March 10, 2010
  • , Chadrei Charedim, February 20, 2007. Accessed March 11, 2010.
  • Kempinski, Yoni. "First Visit to the Rebuilt Hurva Synagogue", Arutz Sheva, August 3, 2010. Accessed May 21, 2014
  • Lefkovits, Etgar. ""Hurva Synagogue restoration nears completion"". Archived from the original on April 3, 2008. Retrieved November 15, 2021., Jerusalem Post, March 28, 2008. Accessed October 25, 2008
  • Lis, Jonathan. "Ruined synagogue to get new arch", Haaretz, April 15, 2008. Accessed October 25, 2008
  • Rigler, Sara Yoheved. "Destroying Synagogues Again", Aish.com, September 13, 2005. Accessed November 2, 2008
  • Rosenfeld, Gavriel. "A New Ruin Rising: The Hurva Synagogue's Latest Incarnation", The Forward, November 9, 2007, p. B1. Accessed May 21, 2014
  • Rossoff, Dovid. "The Churva Synagogue", Jewish Magazine, December 1997. Accessed October 25, 2008
  • Shragai, Nadav. "Out of the ruins", Haaretz, December 20, 2005. Accessed January 8, 2007
  • Shragai, Nadav. "Byzantine arch found at site of renovated Jerusalem synagogue", Haaretz, November 28, 2006. Accessed July 25, 2007
  • Shragai, Nadav. "The first official victim of terror", Haaretz, May 5, 2008. Accessed August 11, 2008

External links edit

  • – Company for the Reconstruction and Development of the Jewish Quarter
  • The Hurva Synagogue – Survey of the building's interior – Israel Antiquities Authority
  • Hurva Synagogue data from the Philadelphia Architects and Buildings (PAB) project of the Athenaeum of Philadelphia, including design and site documentation drawings by Louis Kahn
  • Computerized graphic reconstruction of Kahn's first proposal (1967–68), by Cerbella & Caponi, Florence, 2013

hurva, synagogue, hebrew, בית, הכנסת, החורבה, translit, beit, knesset, hurva, ruin, synagogue, also, known, hurvat, rabbi, yehudah, hasid, hebrew, חורבת, רבי, יהודה, החסיד, ruin, rabbi, judah, pious, synagogue, located, jewish, quarter, city, jerusalem, israel. The Hurva Synagogue Hebrew בית הכנסת החורבה translit Beit ha Knesset ha Hurva lit The Ruin Synagogue also known as Hurvat Rabbi Yehudah he Hasid Hebrew חורבת רבי יהודה החסיד Ruin of Rabbi Judah the Pious is a synagogue located in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem Israel Hurva SynagogueThe Hurva Synagogue 2010ReligionAffiliationOrthodox JudaismRiteNusach AshkenazLocationLocation89 ha Yehudim StreetOld City of Jerusalem Israel 1 Geographic coordinates31 46 30 N 35 13 53 E 31 77510 N 35 23135 E 31 77510 35 23135ArchitectureArchitect s Assad Effendi official architect of the Sultan 1864 for the reconstruction Nahum Meltzer of N Meltzer G Igra A Cohen Architects 2010 TypeSynagogueStyleNeo ByzantineCompletedRebuilt in 1864 and again in 2010 Construction cost1m piasters 1864 2 7 3m NIS 28m 2009 3 SpecificationsCapacity450 1864 4 250 2009 3 Height max 24 m 79 ft It was originally founded in the early 18th century by followers of Judah HeHasid on the ruins of a 15th century synagogue and adjacent to the 14th century Sidna Omar mosque but was destroyed a few years later in 1721 by Ottoman authorities for failure of its proprietors to pay back a debt to local Muslims 5 6 The plot became known as The Ruin or Hurva where it lay desolate for 116 years until it was resettled in 1837 by members of the Ashkenazi Jewish community known as the Perushim 5 In 1864 the Perushim rebuilt the synagogue and although officially named the Beis Yaakov Synagogue it retained its name as the Hurva It became Jerusalem s main Ashkenazi synagogue until it too was destroyed by the Arab Legion 7 during the fighting in the 1948 Arab Israeli War 8 After Israel captured East Jerusalem from Jordan in 1967 a number of plans were submitted for the design of a new building After years of deliberation and indecision a commemorative arch was erected instead at the site in 1977 itself becoming a prominent landmark of the Jewish Quarter 3 The plan to rebuild the synagogue in its 19th century style received approval by the Israeli Government in 2000 and the newly rebuilt synagogue was dedicated on March 15 2010 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Judah heHasid and aftermath 1700s 1 3 Efforts of the Perushim 1812 1837 1 3 1 Egypt gives ambiguous consent 1 3 2 Menachem Zion Synagogue 1 4 Rebuilding he Hasid s Ruin 1857 1864 1 4 1 Structure 1 4 2 Interior 1 5 Golden years 1864 1948 1 6 Destruction during the 1948 Arab Israeli War 1 7 Post 1967 Plans sought for a new design 1 7 1 Kahn plans 1 8 Commemorative arch and subsequent proposals 1 9 Reconstruction 2005 2010 2 Rededication and response 3 Cultural depictions 4 Gallery 5 References 6 Bibliography 6 1 Books 6 2 Newspapers magazines and the media 7 External linksHistory editEarly history edit nbsp The Hurva adjacent to the 14th century Sidna Omar mosque The Hurva Synagogue today stands off a plaza in the centre of Jerusalem s Jewish Quarter adjacent to the 14th century Sidna Omar mosque Excavations carried out at the site in July and August 2003 revealed evidence from four main settlement periods First Temple 800 600 BCE Second Temple 100 CE Byzantine and Ottoman 10 Three bedrock hewn mikvehs ritual baths were uncovered there dating from the 1st century 11 The earliest tradition regarding the site is of a synagogue existing there at the time of the second century sage Judah the Prince 12 Judah heHasid and aftermath 1700s edit In the winter of 1700 a group of around 500 Ashkenazim led by Judah HeHasid arrived from Poland 13 8 They were mystics who were intent on advancing the arrival of the Messianic Era by settling in Jerusalem and leading ascetic lives 14 A few days after their arrival in the city heHasid died and without a leader their messianic hopes dissipated and the community began to disintegrate 8 Those who remained managed to build forty dwellings and a small synagogue in the Ashkenazic Compound 8 Soon after they endeavoured to construct a larger synagogue but the task proved expensive 14 They found themselves having to bribe the Ottoman authorities in order to enable them to proceed with their building project 14 Unexpected costs relating to the construction financial hardships and the burden of various other taxes drained their funds They became impoverished and were forced to take loans from local Arabs eventually falling into severe debt 8 Pressure and threats from the creditors led to a meshulach rabbinical emissary being sent abroad to solicit funds for repayment of the loans 15 In late 1720 with the debts still outstanding 16 the Arab lenders lost patience and set the synagogue and its contents alight The leaders of the community were imprisoned and shortly after not only this group but all other Ashkenazim were banished from the city an interdiction which remained until statute of limitations on the synagogue loans expired roughly a century later 13 17 Over the course of time shops were built in the courtyard and the synagogue was left desolate in a pile of rubble It thus became known as the Ruin of Rabbi Judah heHasid 14 Efforts of the Perushim 1812 1837 edit Between 1808 and 1812 another group of ascetic Jews known as Perushim immigrated to Palestine from Lithuania They were disciples of the Vilna Gaon and had settled in the city of Safed to the north Some had wished to settle in Jerusalem and reclaim the Ashkenazic Compound They were worried however that descendants of the Arab creditors still held the old promissory notes relating to the century old debts incurred by he Hasid s followers and that a new group of Ashkenazic immigrants would possibly inherit responsibility for repayment The descendants of a group of Hasidim who made aliyah in 1777 also presented a problem They apparently objected to any effort by the Perushim to take control of the synagogue ruin claiming it had never belonged to the Perushim or their ancestors The Hasidim claimed they had closer ties with the original owners and that their rights to the parcel of land were greater 18 Nevertheless in late 1815 leader of the Safed Perushim Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Shklov arrived in Jerusalem with a group of followers They directed their main efforts to rebuilding he Hasid s synagogue which had symbolised the expulsion of the Ashkenazim from Jerusalem By this they intended to demonstrate the re establishment of Ashkenazic presence in the city Rebuilding one of Jerusalem s ruins would also have symbolic kabbalistic significance The repairing of an earlier destruction would represent the first step of rebuilding the entire city a prerequisite for the arrival of the Messiah 18 In 1816 they pleaded with the powers in the city of Constantinople to obtain a royal decree that the Arabs residing in Jerusalem would not be permitted to enforce the debts of the Ashkenazim but nothing came of it A year later several leaders of the group including Avraham Shlomo Zalman Zoref a Lithuanian born silversmith and Soloman Pach travelled to Constantinople endeavouring to obtain such a firman imperial decree Two years later in 1819 their efforts were realised and the century old debts were cancelled 19 The group acquired a legal document delineating the entire site acquired by he Hasid in 1700 The area now included dilapidated dwellings and shops built by the creditors heirs on part of the site Next they had to secure another firman that would permit construction at the site including the building of a large synagogue Two successive missions in 1820 and 1821 to obtain the firman from the sultan s court failed 19 Still awaiting imperial permission to build in the courtyard the Perushim wished to rely on an old firman given to the Jews in 1623 which stated that there could be no objection to them building in their own quarters Having received a supporting document issued by the Qadi of Jerusalem in March 1824 it was possible for them begin rebuilding the dwellings in the courtyard In practice however construction never materialised as they were unable to exercise their authority over the plot of land This was apparently due to confrontation with the Arab squatters and the local government s disregard of the documents proving their ownership of the courtyard 20 In 1825 following the disruption the group were experiencing Shapira travelled to Europe once again He hoped to secure the necessary firman which would place the courtyard firmly in the Perushim s possession and also to raise funds to cover the costs incurred trying to redeem the courtyard His mission however was unsuccessful as was a later mission attempted in 1829 by Zoref 20 Egypt gives ambiguous consent edit With the annexation of Jerusalem by Egypt in 1831 a new opportunity arose for the Perushim They petitioned Muhammad Ali regarding the rebuilding of the synagogue but concerns about deviating from longstanding Muslim tradition and the Pact of Umar which restricted the repair or construction of non Muslim houses of worship meant permission was not forthcoming However five months after the earthquake of May 1834 the prohibition was relaxed and the Sephardim were allowed to carry out repair works to their existing synagogues This consent gave rise to further efforts by the Ashkenazim to receive authorisation to rebuild theirs 21 On June 23 1836 after traveling to Egypt Zoref together with the backing of the Austrian and Russian consuls in Alexandria obtained the long awaited firman It seems he was successful in gaining support of the Austrian consul and Muhammad Ali by invoking the name of Baron Salomon Mayer von Rothschild of Vienna Muhammad Ali was hopeful that by giving his permission to rebuild the Ruin Rothschild would be inclined to forge financial and political ties with him which would in turn secure political support of Austria and France In fact Rothschild s involvement was a ruse As soon as Zoref received the firman he contacted Zvi Hirsch Lehren of the Clerks Organisation in Amsterdam requesting that funds his brother had pledged towards the building of synagogues in Palestine be applied to the Ruin 22 But Lehren had doubts as to what exactly the firman permitted Explicit authorisation for construction of a large synagogue was absent A letter from the leaders of the Amsterdam community to Moses Montefiore in 1849 confirms that permission for a synagogue in the Ashkenasic Compound had not been sanctioned they had only been allowed to build dwellings in the area 23 Menachem Zion Synagogue edit In spite of the doubts highlighted in relation to the construction of a synagogue the Perushim confidently in possession of the ambiguous firman began clearing away the rubble from the Ruin courtyard in September 1836 As the foundations of he Hasid s original synagogue were revealed they discovered a few old documents dating from 1579 signed by Israel ben Moses Najara 24 After much debate they decided not to rebuild the Ruin but initially erect a small structure on the edge of the Ashkenasic compound 24 The Arab creditors however still refused to relinquish the claims they had on the Jews and continued to interfere with the works 23 Zoref claiming that the Ashkenazim currently in Jerusalem were not related in any way to those who had borrowed the money at the turn of the 18th century was forced to appear in court requesting a further ruling cancelling the debts He mentioned that an injunction had already been passed that absolved the Ashkenazim from repaying the debt 25 and maintained that the Turkish Statute of Limitations cancelled out the debts of Judah heHasid s followers 26 Although the court ruled in the Ashkenazim s favour 25 Zoref nevertheless had to appease the Arab instigators with annual bribes in order to allow building to continue At some point this arrangement ceased and in 1851 he was struck on the head with a sword and died of his wounds three months later 26 27 By January 1837 however the Perushim had dedicated the modest Menachem Zion Synagogue in the northwestern corner of the courtyard 25 In 1854 a second smaller synagogue was built within the compound 28 The actual plot upon which he Hasid s synagogue had stood 130 years earlier however remained in ruins Rebuilding he Hasid s Ruin 1857 1864 edit In the early 1850s the Perushim felt ready to attempt the building a larger synagogue on he Hasid s original site An outcome of the Crimean War was the British government s willingness to use its increased influence at Constantinople to intervene on behalf of its Jewish subjects who resided in Jerusalem On July 13 1854 James Finn of the British consulate in Jerusalem wrote to the British ambassador in Constantinople describing the wishes of the 2 000 strong Ashkenazic community to build a new synagogue He noted that funds for construction had been collected by Moses Montefiore twelve years earlier He also enclosed a 150 year old firman which authorised the Ashkenazic Jews to rebuild their ruined synagogue 29 As the title to the plot of land was held by the Amzalag family who were British subjects they designated London born Rabbi Hirschell son of Chief Rabbi of Great Britain Solomon Hirschell to negotiate the transfer The British consulate agreed to lend its sanction to the contract in order to avoid possible intrusion by the Turks 30 At issue was the question of whether the building of a synagogue at the site constituted the repair of an old house of non Muslim worship or the establishment of a new synagogue The Turks would have to grant a special license for the latter 30 This was received through the efforts of Francis Napier and Stratford Canning 1st Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe British ambassadors to the Sublime Porte who secured the necessary firman in 1854 14 31 In July 1855 while in Constantinople Montefiore was handed the firman 32 which he hand delivered during his fourth visit to Jerusalem in 1857 33 With permission granted the groundbreaking ceremony took place on the last day of Hanukkah of 1855 33 On April 22 1856 the cornerstone was laid in the presence of Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem Shmuel Salant 33 Salant had been instrumental in raising the necessary funding making a trip to Europe in 1860 and obtaining large donations especially from Montefiore 33 Some of the stones used in construction of the building was purchased from the Industrial Plantation where poor Jews assisted in quarrying and shaping the blocks 34 On May 7 1856 Consul Finn inspected the site after receiving complaints from Muslims who suspected the opening of windows towards a mosque 35 Although originally in possession of a lump sum they hoped would pay for the planned edifice expenses increased Construction work progressed slowly for lack of funds and the impoverished community soon found themselves having to arrange collections throughout the diaspora One notable emissary Jacob Saphir set off for Egypt in 1857 and returned in 1863 having visited Yemen Aden India Java Australia New Zealand and Ceylon 36 The largest single gift came from Ezekiel Reuben a wealthy Sephardi Jew from Baghdad who gave 100 000 of the million piasters needed His sons Menashe and Sasson later supplemented his donation The combined donations from the Reuben family eventually covered more than half the cost It marked an important step in the unity of the Sephardic and Ashkenazic communities of the city 2 Another contributor was Frederick William IV of Prussia whose name was inscribed above the entrance together with those of other benefactors 37 He also gave permission for funds to be collected from his Jewish subjects Throughout Western Europe emissaries sought donations with the slogan Merit Eternal Life with one stone 2 With new funds arriving work could progress In 1862 the domed ceiling was completed and Rabbi Yeshaya Bardaki head of the Ashkenazic community was honored with placing the final stone of the dome 38 Two years later in 1864 the new synagogue was dedicated Present was Baron Alphonse James de Rothschild who 8 years earlier had been given the honour of laying the first stone 33 The edifice was officially named Beis Yaakov House of Jacob in memory of James Mayer de Rothschild whose son Edmond James de Rothschild had dedicated much of his life supporting the Jews of Palestine The locals however continued to refer to the building as the Hurva 8 As a token of gratitude to the British government for their involvement the British Consul James Finn was invited to the dedication ceremony which included a thanksgiving service He described the beautiful chants and anthems in Hebrew the subsequent refreshments provided and the playing of Russian and Austrian music 12 Structure edit nbsp Northern facade c 1930 nbsp Eastern facade c 1930 The Hurva Synagogue was designed and constructed under the supervision of Assad Effendi the sultan s official architect 2 39 Built in Byzantine Revival style 40 it was supported by four massive pilasters at each corner over which soared a large dome The construction of only one of these towers was completed The other three were missing the upper level and the small dome that capped it 41 The facade was covered in finely hewn stone and incorporated 12 5 m 41 ft high window arches The height of the synagogue to the bottom of its dome was around 16 m 52 ft and to the top of the dome it was 24 m 79 ft 41 Twelve windows were placed around the base of the dome which was surrounded by a veranda which offered a fine view of large parts of the Old City and the area around Jerusalem 41 Being one of the tallest structures in the Old City it was visible for miles Interior edit The synagogue prayer hall was reached via an entrance with three iron gates The length was around 15 5 m 51 ft and the width was around 14 m 46 ft The women s section was in the galleries along the three sides of the chapel except the eastern side Access to the galleries was through towers situated at the corners of the building 41 The Torah ark had the capacity to house 50 Torah scrolls and was built on two levels It was flanked by four Corinthian columns surrounded by baroque woodcuts depicting flowers and birds 2 The Ark together with its ornamental gates were taken from the Nikolayevsky Synagogue in Kherson Russia which had been used by Russian Jewish conscripts forced to spend twenty five years in the Imperial Russian Army Directly above the Ark was a triangular window with rounded points To the right and in front of the ark was the cantor s podium which was designed as a miniature version of the two level Ark 41 nbsp Former interior c 1935 The centre of the synagogue originally contained a high wooden bimah but this was later replaced with a flat platform covered with expensive marble plates Numerous crystal chandeliers hung from the dome The dome itself was painted sky blue and strewn with golden stars 42 Frescoes with religious motifs such as stars of David the menorah Mount Sinai and the Ten Commandments adorned every wall In the four corners were drawings of four animals in accordance with the statement in Pirkei Avot Be strong as the leopard and swift as the eagle fleet as the deer and brave as the lion to do the will of your Father in Heaven 41 One of the most generous donations came from Pinchas Rosenberg the Imperial Court tailor of Saint Petersburg In the diary of Rabbi Chaim ha Levy the emissary who had been sent from Jerusalem to collect funds for the synagogue Rosenberg set out in details what his money was intended for Among the items that were bought with his money were two big bronze candelabras a silver menorah that arrived miraculously on the 1st Tevet 1866 precisely in time to light the last eight Hanukah candles and an iron door made under the holy ark for safe keeping of the candlestick He also earmarked funds towards the building of an artistically wrought iron fence around the roof under the upper windows so that there be a veranda on which may stand all our brethren who go up in pilgrimage to behold our desolate Temple and also a partition for the womenfolk on the Feast of Tabernacles and Simchat Torah 2 Golden years 1864 1948 edit nbsp The Gerer Rebbe at a prayer gathering at the synagogue 1942 From 1864 onwards the Hurva Synagogue was considered the most beautiful and most important synagogue in the Land of Israel 41 It was described as the glory of the Old City and the most striking edifice in all of Palestine 43 It also housed part of the Etz Chaim Yeshiva the largest yeshiva in Jerusalem It was a focal point of Jewish spiritual life in the city and was the site of the installation of the Ashkenazic chief rabbis of both Palestine and Jerusalem 41 On his visit to Jerusalem in 1866 Moses Montefiore went to the synagogue placing a silver breastplate on one of the Torah scrolls When he visited again in 1875 a crowd of 3 000 Jews turned out to greet him 44 On February 3 1901 a memorial service for Queen Victoria took place inside the synagogue in gratitude for the protection afforded to the Jews of Jerusalem by Britain The service was presided over by the Ashkenazic Chief Rabbi Shmuel Salant According to a report in The Jewish Chronicle the large building was filled to its utmost capacity and policemen had to keep off the crowds who vainly sought admission by force 45 In around 1919 Benjamin Lee Gordon wrote that the synagogue presented a very pleasant and dignified appearance It was well illuminated with artistic lamps presented by a certain Mr Lichtenstein of Philadelphia 46 In 1921 Abraham Isaac Kook was appointed first Chief Rabbi of Palestine at the synagogue The synagogue also hosted Herbert Samuel 1st Viscount Samuel who was honoured with reciting a portion of the Torah 8 In 1923 Yosef Shalom Eliashiv s bar mitzvah was held at the synagogue In the 1930s and possibly earlier the synagogue housed the Chayei Olam Cheider where indigent students form the Old City received their Torah education 47 Destruction during the 1948 Arab Israeli War edit nbsp Hurva 1948 nbsp Arab Legion soldier within the ruins after the Legion blew it up 48 Behind him remnants of the eastern wall show a painted fresco of Mount Sinai and two arched tablets symbolising the Ten Commandments June 1948 On May 25 1948 during the battle for the Old City commander of the Jordanian Arab Legion Major Abdullah el Tell wrote to Otto Lehner of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement to warn that unless the Haganah abandoned its positions in the synagogue and its adjoining courtyard he would be forced to attack it Moshe Russnak commander of the Haganah in the Old City ignored his request knowing that if the Hurva fell the battle for the Jewish Quarter would soon be lost 49 On May 26 1948 the Jordanian Arab Legion delivered an ultimatum to the Jews to surrender within 12 hours otherwise the Hurva would be bombarded 50 On May 27 el Tell after receiving no answer to his proposition told his men to Get the Hurva Synagogue by noon Fawzi el Kutub executed the mission by placing a 200 litre barrel filled with explosives against the synagogue wall The explosion resulted in a gaping hole and Haganah fighters spent forty five minutes fighting in vain to prevent the Legionnaires from entering When they finally burst through they tried to reach the top of its dome to plant an Arab flag Three were shot by snipers but the fourth succeeded The Arab flag flying over the Old City skyline signaled the Legion s triumph Photographs show that the dome of the synagogue was badly damaged during the fighting 51 After taking the synagogue the Arab Legion blew up what remained 51 A huge explosion reduced the 84 year old synagogue together with the Etz Chaim Yeshiva attached to it to rubble 49 The Jewish defenders of the Old City surrendered the following day Post 1967 Plans sought for a new design edit nbsp The synagogue in ruins 1967 Following the Six Day War plans were mooted and designs sought for a new synagogue to be built at the site part of the overall rehabilitation of the Jewish Quarter Many religious and political figures supported the proposal to rebuild the original synagogue where it was as it was in line with the traditional religious character of the area However the Jewish Quarter Development Company in charge of the restoration of the Jewish Quarter strongly opposed it 28 The Israeli planners and architects involved in developing the area wanted the building to reflect their modern Western identity Additionally although it would have been possible to rebuild it as it was neither the architects nor the masons felt they were sufficiently qualified in traditional masonry technology to attempt it Moreover most of the original carved stones and surviving decorative elements had been removed making a true reconstruction unrealisable Swayed by the creativity of contemporary architecture and contrary to the 19th century design which was meant to blend in with the Oriental landscape they supported the modern redesign of the Hurva by a prominent architect 28 Kahn plans edit Leading the campaign to rebuild the Hurva was Shlomo Zalman Tzoref s great great grandson Ya acov Salomon 52 He consulted Ram Karmi who in turn recommended Louis Kahn a world renowned architect who was also a founding member of the Jerusalem Committee Kahn had also previously designed Philadelphia s Mikveh Israel Synagogue in 1961 which remained unbuilt 53 Between 1968 and 1973 Kahn presented three plans for the reconstruction The ruins were incorporated in a memorial garden with a new structure on an adjacent lot and a promenade the Route of the Prophets leading to the Western Wall 52 Kahn proposed a structure within a structure monumental pylons of Jerusalem stone on each side enclosing four huge central pillars of reinforced concrete so that the pylons function ed as a container and the pillars as its content 54 Following the Beaux Arts tradition the elements of architecture were conceived as hollow thus creating pocketing spaces within both structures 55 The outer structure was composed of 16 piers covered in golden Jerusalem stone cut in blocks of the same proportions and same course finish as those of the Western Wall 56 In the bases of the four corners of the two story 12 m 39 ft high structure delineated by the piers there would be small alcoves for meditation or individual prayer Such alcoves would be used for daily prayer services allowing larger crowds on Sabbath or festivals Boston based Israeli Canadian architect Moshe Safdie who had built extensively in Jerusalem and trained with Kahn in Philadelphia was also in favour of rebuilding using contemporary design It s absurd to reconstruct the Hurva as if nothing had happened If we have the desire to rebuild it let s have the courage to have a great architect do it 52 When Teddy Kollek then mayor of Jerusalem had learned of Kahn s plans to design the Hurva at a scale comparable to the Dome of the Rock and the Kotel the mayor was unsupportive and stated Should we in the Jewish Quarter have a building of major importance which competes with the Mosque and the Holy Sepulcher and should we in general have any building which would compete in importance with the Western Wall of the Temple 57 Kollek was also concerned with the impact such a monumental temple may have in the Old City 58 Kahn s model was displayed in the Israel Museum but his plan was shelved when he died in 1974 52 Kent Larson later referred to Kahn s proposal as the greatest of the unbuilt 59 Commemorative arch and subsequent proposals edit nbsp A reminder The commemorative arch built in 1977 ten years after the Six Day War While all proposals were rejected by the Jerusalem Committee an arch of the original synagogue was restored as a reminder that one day the Hurva will be built once again 60 As no permanent solution could be agreed upon a temporary symbolic solution was created In 1977 one of the four stone arches that had originally supported the synagogue s monumental dome was recreated 52 The height of the original building including the dome had been 50 greater than that of the new commemorative arch which stood 16 m 52 ft high Together with the remains of the building and explanatory plaques it was a stark reminder of what had once stood at the site 52 In 1996 the Hurva rebuilt arch was compared with the ecclesiastical allegory known as Synagoga a medieval personification of the Synagogue with attributes suggesting her ruined condition 61 With the ongoing disputes over the modern facade of the proposed new building which some felt did not properly match the Jewish Quarter s aesthetic an Englishman named Charles Clore took the initiative to fund a new design projects 52 He commissioned Denys Lasdun who drew up plans between 1978 and 1981 that more closely adhered to the original Hurva His plans were still considered insufficient as they were rejected by Prime Minister Menachem Begin 28 and the Minister of Interior who refused to sign papers enabling construction to begin No further progress was made and when Clore who had wished to see the synagogue completed in his lifetime died his daughter provided funds to create one of the few open spaces in the Jewish Quarter adjacent to the Hurva 52 The Hurva featured on a NIS 3 60 Israeli postage stamp in 1993 to commemorate 45 years of Israeli independence and its arch on a 1 20 Antiguan postage stamp in 1996 62 However in 1996 the supposedly temporary arch of the Hurva was almost thirty years old and as a solution it became nearly perpetual Such condition was then publicly noted and interpreted Quite far from Kahn s American dream Israeli reality has provided an objectionable substitute a single reconstructed arch of the Old Hurva Such a lonely architectural sign standing as an insipid memorial to a nineteenth century synagogue in ruins cannot be other than a problematic reincarnation of a ruined synagogue 63 This suggested that the single reconstructed arch of the Hurva could no longer be understood as a satisfactory expression of any commitment to rebuild the lost synagogue nor as an acceptable official response to its intentional destruction in 1948 Reconstruction 2005 2010 edit nbsp Nearing completion July 2009 nbsp Aerial view 2014 nbsp Hurva Synagogue interior during morning prayer July 2013 The plan to rebuild the synagogue in its original 19th century style received approval by the Israeli government in 2000 Jerusalem architect Nahum Meltzer who proposed rebuilding the synagogue in its original Ottoman format was given the commission Meltzer stated that both out of respect for the historical memory of the Jewish people and out of respect for the built up area of the Old City it is fitting for us to restore the lost glory and rebuild the Hurva Synagogue the way it was 41 The state funded Jewish Quarter Development Corporation under the leadership of Dov Kalmanovich convinced the Israeli government to allocate 6 2 million NIS 24m about 85 of the cost for the reconstruction with private donors contributing the remainder In the end the government only gave NIS 11m with the remainder being donated by a Ukrainian Jewish businessman and politician Vadim Rabinovitch 3 64 In 2002 the Israeli mint issued a set of medals featuring the synagogue to mark the beginning of the reconstruction project 65 Following comprehensive historic research the reconstruction works began in 2005 and on February 15 2007 Simcha HaKohen Kook 66 of Rehovot was appointed as its rabbi a move confirmed by leading rabbis including Yosef Shalom Eliashiv 67 On April 15 2008 a celebration marked the placing of the keystone in the synagogue s dome 16 Contention arose over what kind of institution the Hurva would be Secularist and nationalist religious activists opposed the notion of another synagogue in the Old City and wanted the site to become a museum presenting the historical saga of the Jewish Quarter and displaying archaeological finds unearthed there They viewed the appointment of Kook as the rabbi while the structure was still a shell as a move aimed at preventing a Modern Orthodox rabbi who would have been more amenable to a broader utilisation of the site from getting the position Rabbi of the Jewish Quarter Avigdor Nebenzahl has been clear that he wants the building to serve as a synagogue and a house of study 9 Rededication and response editThe reconstructed Hurva was officially opened on March 15 2010 in the presence of Israeli politicians and chief rabbis 68 A day earlier hundreds of people had accompanied a new Torah scroll into the synagogue 69 Several Palestinian leaders claimed that the rededication signaled Israel s intent to destroy the Muslim holy places on the Temple Mount and replace it with the Third Temple Fatah official Khatem Abd el Khader called the renovation of the Hurva a provocation warned Israel that it was playing with fire and called on Palestinians to converge on Al Aksa to save it 70 Khaled Mashal of Hamas described the synagogue s opening as a declaration of war and called it a falsification of history and Jerusalem s religious and historic monuments 71 Fearing riots by Arab protestors over 3 000 policemen were deployed ahead of the dedication ceremony 70 The Organisation of the Islamic Conference said that the reopening risked dragging the region into a religious war and claimed the building was historically on a waqf Islamic trust land 72 The Jordanian government also condemned the move stating that it categorically rejects the rededication of Hurva synagogue and all other unilateral Israeli measures in occupied East Jerusalem because they run counter to international legitimacy 73 Iran s Foreign Ministry urged the international community to respond to the reopening calling the move a catastrophe that has distressed the Islamic world 74 Israeli officials countered that Arab fears of a takeover of the Temple Mount were based on rumors and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu extended a message of coexistence 75 The U S State Department criticised Palestinians for stoking tensions at the rededication of the historic synagogue 76 The day after Arabs clashed with Israeli police in East Jerusalem after Palestinian groups called for a day of rage over the reopening 77 In September 2010 Hamas released a propaganda video showing various Israeli landmarks including the Hurva synagogue ablaze after coming under missile attack 78 The images were the result of special effects as no such attacks had taken place Cultural depictions editThe Hurva Synagogue as an emblem of Jerusalem and its Jewish heritage has been portrayed over the years in numerous paintings and referred to in literature and culture The synagogue was portrayed for example in works by artists Yossef Gaiger 79 Jonathan Kis Lev 80 and in the works of Holocaust survivor artist Motke Blum 81 For decades the synagogue s arch has been the emblem of the Jewish quarter in the works of artists portraying the old city 82 Computer graphic reconstructions of Louis Kahn s unbuilt project were made by Kent Larson MIT early 1990s 83 and further developed in terms of animation by Francesco Cerbella amp Federico Caponi University of Florence November 2013 84 Gallery edit nbsp c 1898 nbsp Interior 1920 nbsp 1934 nbsp Removal of the memorial arch 2006 nbsp Reconstruction 2008 nbsp Interior 2010 nbsp Gallery nbsp Ark nbsp Stained glass exterior nbsp Stained glass interior Inspired by Bunting clover leaf map of Jerusalem 1581 nbsp Windows nbsp Mural inspired by Psalm 137 By the rivers of Babylon nbsp Morning prayer service nbsp Bimah nbsp Parokhet with Psalm 137 If I forget you oh Jerusalem nbsp Urban surroundings JerusalemReferences edit No nation named by UNESCO See Positions on Jerusalem a b c d e f Gilbert 1985 p 97 a b c d Lefkovits 2008 Emporis com Old Hurva Synagogue Emporis com Accessed March 11 2010 a b Brinker 1947 p 91 THE HURVA SYNAGOGUE 1700 2010 Jewish Action August 11 2010 In the Holy Land a Rebuilding for the Generations The Wall Street Journal Online March 10 2010 a b c d e f g Horovitz 2000 pp 168 74 a b Hasson 2009 Shragai 2006 Hillel Geva Oren Gutfeld Jerusalem the Old City the Jewish Quarter the Hurva Synagogue Archived September 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel Israel Antiquities Authority Journal 117 April 14 2005 a b Finn 1878 p 462 a b David B Green This Day in Jewish History Hurva Synagogue Reduced to Rubble Haaretz 27 May 2013 a b c d e Millgram 1990 pp 109 14 Rossoff 1997 a b Lis 2008 Rossoff 1998 p 119 a b Morgenstern 2006 p 99 a b Morgenstern 2006 pp 114 15 a b Morgenstern 2006 p 117 Morgenstern 2006 p 118 Morgenstern 2006 p 119 a b Morgenstern 2006 p 120 a b Rossoff 1998 pp 185 86 a b c Morgenstern 2006 p 121 a b Shragai 2008 Benvenisti 2007 p 113 a b c d Ricca 2007 pp 104 10 Gilbert 1985 pp 79 80 a b Blumberg 1981 pp 62 63 Blumberg 1981 p 215 Gilbert 1985 p 84 Differing dates are given for delivery of this firman Blumberg 1981 pp 62 63 claims it was given in 1856 and Millgram 1990 p 112 1857 a b c d e Rossoff 1998 p 239 Finn 1878 p 463 Blumberg 1981 p 226 Gilbert 1985 pp 98 99 Wasserstein 2001 p 51 Rossoff 1998 p 240 Maoz 1975 p 155 Kroyanker 1994 p 85 a b c d e f g h i Shragai 2005 Rigler 2005 Vale amp Campanella 2005 p 200 Ben Arieh 1985 p 305 Gilbert 1996 p 2 Gordon 1919 p 123 Recollections of Rabbi Boruch Schechter in Nitzotzot Adar Nissan 5773 Edition p 82 Benny Morris October 1 2008 1948 A History of the First Arab Israeli War Yale University Press p 218 ISBN 978 0 300 14524 3 Retrieved July 14 2013 On 26 27 May the Legionnaires took the Hurvat Israel or Hurva Synagogue the quarter s largest and most sacred building and then without reason blew it up This affair will rankle for generations in the heart of world Jewry predicted one Foreign Office official The destruction of the synagogue shook Jewish morale a b Collins 1973 pp 492 494 Rabinovich amp Reinharz 2008 p 82 a b Simone Ricca 2007 Reinventing Jerusalem Israel s Reconstruction of the Jewish Quarter after 1967 I B Taurus p 105 a b c d e f g h Green 2004 Susan Solomon Louis I Kahn s Jewish Architecture Series Brandeis Series in American Jewish History Culture and Life Hardcover 236 pages Publisher Brandeis August 31 2009 Language English ISBN 978 1584657880 Luis Mariano Akerman The Evocative Character of Louis I Kahn s Hurva Synagogue Project 1967 1974 1996 in The Real and Ideal Jerusalem in Jewish Christian and Islamic Art ed B Kuhnel CFJA 1997 98 p 247 Akerman Evocative Character 1996 p 251 n 27 According to Steven K Peterson the phenomenon of pocketing spaces within masonry or structure is known as architectural poche Ideas en Arte y Tecnologia 2 3 Buenos Aires 1984 Tsevi Lavi A Form of a Crown for the Hurva Synagogue Maariv July 29 1968 Tony Kollek Letter to Kahn August 29 1968 in Hurva Synagogue All Correspondence Kahn Collection file 030 II A 39 1 The Jerusalem Committee in particular was concerned that such a building would compete in importance with Al Aqsa Holy Sepulchre Church and even the Western Wall the monumentality of Kahn s project was objected by the some Jewish Quarter residents who preferred a modest building rather a world synagogue the very words Kollek himself used when describing Kahn s proposal Akerman Evocative Character p 253 A Virtual Landmark Progressive Architecture September 1993 pp 80 87 Akerman Evocative Character 1996 p 253 Kollek in conversation Jerusalem 1996 Akerman Evocative Character 1996 p 253 n 37 In his book Meaning in Western Architecture 1974 Christian Norberg Schulz includes two images relating to the notion of synagogue one of them is a photograph of Kahn s Hurva Synagogue model first proposal 1967 68 the other is a thirteenth century statue from Strasbourg Cathedral known as The Synagogue Synagoga Eisenberg Ronald L The Jewish World in Stamps 4000 Years of Jewish Civilization in Postal Stamps Schreiber Pub 2002 p 213 ISBN 1 887563 76 8 Akerman Evocative Character 1996 p 253 n 37 Green David February 29 2004 From the ruins A master architect s attempt to rebuild on sacred ground The Boston Globe Retrieved November 2 2014 Hurva Synagogue Gold Medal Israel Coins amp Medals Corp Accessed March 11 2010 Fendel Hillel March 21 2010 First Sabbath at the Hurva Then and Now Arutz Sheva Zohar Gil March 9 2010 From Ruin to Reconstruction the Hurva Synagogue is Completed Again Jewish Journal Hurva Synagogue rededicated Archived March 23 2010 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Telegraphic Agency March 15 2010 Grossman Shmulik March 14 2010 Old City synagogue opened amid heightened tensions Ynetnews a b Selig Abe Old City s Hurva shul reopens The Jerusalem Post March 14 2010 Awarekeh Hanan Hamas Hurva Synagogue a Declaration of War Israel Playing With Fire permanent dead link Al Manar March 16 2010 Islamic Conference slams rebuilt Jerusalem synagogue March 16 2010 Jordanians protest rededication of synagogue near al Aqsa mosque Earth Times March 16 2010 Iran raps Israel over synagogue reopening Tehran Times March 17 2010 Synagogue opens in Jerusale Al Jazeera March 16 2010 Selig Abe Hurva is again a house of prayer The Jerusalem Post March 15 2010 Violence flares in East Jerusalem Al Jazeera March 17 2010 Hamas marks peace talks with terror film The Jewish Chronicle Efrat Gideon January 21 2011 אופקים רחבים עבודות נבחרות א Ofakim Nerhavim Selected Works A in Hebrew Retrieved December 5 2011 Thrope Samuel March 21 2011 The Metamorphosis Jonathan Kis Lev s Jerusalems Zeek a Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture Retrieved December 5 2011 See Osharov Eli June 22 2011 Motke Blum Fights Against Closing Hutzot Hayotzer in Hebrew NRG Retrieved December 5 2011 Gafni Reuven April 8 2011 Will This House Be Great גדול יהיה כבוד הבית הזה Makor Rishon in Hebrew Retrieved December 5 2011 A Virtual Landmark Progressive Architecture September 1993 pp 80 87 Louis I Kahn Unbuilt Masterworks Monacelli Press 2000 Hurva Synagogue Cerbella and Caponi abstract to Contemporary Architecture and Ancient Suggestions The Louis Kahn s Hurva Synagogue Project 2014 accessed May 20 2014 Bibliography editBooks edit Akerman Luis Mariano The Evocative Character of Louis I Kahn s Hurva Synagogue Project 1967 1974 1996 in The Real and Ideal Jerusalem in Jewish Christian and Islamic Art ed Bianca Kuhnel CFJA 1997 98 pp 245 53 ilus ISBN 9653910078 Ben Arieh Yehoshua Jerusalem in the Nineteenth Century The Old City St Martin s Press 1985 ISBN 0 312 44187 8 Benvenisti Meron Son of the cypresses memories reflections and regrets from a political life University of California Press 2007 ISBN 0 520 23825 7 Blumberg Arnold amp Finn James and Elizabeth Anne A View from Jerusalem 1849 1858 Fairleigh Dickinson University Press 1981 ISBN 0 8386 2271 2 Brinker Dov Nathan 1947 Elul The Jerusalem Almanac for the year 1948 לוח ירושלים לשנת התש ח ליצירה p 89 in Hebrew OCLC 243425225 Collins Larry amp Lapierre Dominique O Jerusalem Pan Books 1973 LCCN 97 224015 ISBN 0 330 23514 1 Finn James Stirring Times Adamant Media Corporation 2004 C Kegan Paul amp Co London 1878 ISBN 1 4021 5089 X Gilbert Martin Jerusalem Rebirth of a City Chatto amp Windus 1985 ISBN 0 7011 2892 5 Gilbert Martin Jerusalem in the Twentieth Century Chatto amp Windus 1996 ISBN 0 7011 3070 9 Gordon Benjamin Lee New Judea Jewish life in modern Palestine and Egypt Ayer Publishing 1977 J H Greenstone 1919 ISBN 0 405 10251 8 Halper Jeff Halper Jeff 1991 Between Redemption and Revival The Jewish Yishuv of Jerusalem in the Nineteenth Century ISBN 9780813378558 Westview Press 1991 ISBN 0 8133 7855 9 Horovitz Ahron Jerusalem Footsteps Through Time Feldheim 2000 ISBN 1 58330 398 7 Kroyanker David Jerusalem Architecture Tauris Parke Books 1994 ISBN 1 85043 873 0 Maoz Moshe Studies on Palestine during the Ottoman period Magnes Press 1975 Millgram Abraham Ezra Jerusalem Curiosities Jewish Publication Society 1990 ISBN 0 8276 0358 4 Morgenstern Arie Hastening Redemption Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0 19 530578 7 Rabinovich Itamar amp Reinharz Jehuda Israel in the Middle East UPNE 2008 ISBN 0 87451 962 4 Ricca Simone Reinventing Jerusalem I B Tauris 2007 ISBN 184511387X Rossoff Dovid Where Heaven Touches Earth Guardian Press 1998 ISBN 0 87306 879 3 Safdie Moshe Jerusalem The Future of the Past Houghton Mifflin 1989 ISBN 0 395 35375 0 Shulman Yaakov Dovid Pathway to Jerusalem The Travel Letters of Rabbi Ovadiah of Bartenura CIS Publishers 1992 ISBN 1 56062 130 3 Shteiner Pu ah Forever My Jerusalem Feldheim 1997 ISBN 0873063945 Wasserstein Bernard Divided Jerusalem Yale University Press 2008 ISBN 030013763X Vale Lawrence J amp Campanella Thomas J The resilient city how modern cities recover from disaster Oxford University Press US 2005 ISBN 0 19 517583 2 Newspapers magazines and the media edit Akerman Luis Mariano La Sinagoga Hurva en el proyecto de Louis Kahn 1996 Ideas en Arquitectura ed Alfonso Corona Martinez Vol 1 No 1 Buenos Aires Fundacion Universidad de Begrano March 1997 pp 6 9 ilus Balint Benjamin In the Holy Land A Rebuilding for the Generations The Wall Street Journal March 10 2010 Accessed May 21 2014 Green David Rising from the Ruin The Jerusalem Report December 12 1996 pp 40 41 Green David From the ruins A master architect s attempt to rebuild on sacred ground The Boston Globe February 29 2004 Accessed July 25 2007 Hasson Nir If the Vilna Gaon was right the 3rd Temple is on its way Haaretz November 30 2009 Accessed March 10 2010 The Hurva returns to life Chadrei Charedim February 20 2007 Accessed March 11 2010 Kempinski Yoni First Visit to the Rebuilt Hurva Synagogue Arutz Sheva August 3 2010 Accessed May 21 2014 Lefkovits Etgar Hurva Synagogue restoration nears completion Archived from the original on April 3 2008 Retrieved November 15 2021 Jerusalem Post March 28 2008 Accessed October 25 2008 Lis Jonathan Ruined synagogue to get new arch Haaretz April 15 2008 Accessed October 25 2008 Rigler Sara Yoheved Destroying Synagogues Again Aish com September 13 2005 Accessed November 2 2008 Rosenfeld Gavriel A New Ruin Rising The Hurva Synagogue s Latest Incarnation The Forward November 9 2007 p B1 Accessed May 21 2014 Rossoff Dovid The Churva Synagogue Jewish Magazine December 1997 Accessed October 25 2008 Shragai Nadav Out of the ruins Haaretz December 20 2005 Accessed January 8 2007 Shragai Nadav Byzantine arch found at site of renovated Jerusalem synagogue Haaretz November 28 2006 Accessed July 25 2007 Shragai Nadav The first official victim of terror Haaretz May 5 2008 Accessed August 11 2008External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hurva Synagogue The Hurva Synagogue Company for the Reconstruction and Development of the Jewish Quarter The Hurva Synagogue Survey of the building s interior Israel Antiquities Authority Hurva Synagogue data from the Philadelphia Architects and Buildings PAB project of the Athenaeum of Philadelphia including design and site documentation drawings by Louis Kahn Computerized graphic reconstruction of Kahn s first proposal 1967 68 by Cerbella amp Caponi Florence 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hurva Synagogue amp oldid 1215172798, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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