Great Synagogue (Grodno)

Great Synagogue (Grodno)

Infobox religious building
building_name= Great Synagogue (Grodno)


caption=
location=flagicon|Belarus Bolshaya Troitskaya Street 59a, Grodno, Belarus
geo=
religious_affiliation=Orthodox Judaism
district=
functional_status=active
leadership=
website=
architecture_style=Gothic style
facade_direction=
year_completed=1902
construction_cost=
architect= Iya Frunkin
specifications=no
capacity=
length=
width=
width_nave=
height_max=
materials=
The Great Synagogue of Grodno, ( _ru. "Большая Хоральная синагога, Гродно"; Belarusian:"Харальная сінагога, Горадні") located in Grodno, Belarus, dates from the XVI century and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

History

The Great Synagogue of Grodno was built from 1576 to 1580 by Santi Gucci, who designed a wooden synagogue at Rabbi Mordechai Yaffe's invitation. In 1887, the Grodno Jews owned 88% of the commercial enterprises, 76% of the factories and workshops, and over 65% of the real estate in the city. Their property was estimated at 842,000 roubles at a time when the total sum of the city's properties was 1,202,000 roubles. In 1898, one of the first savings and loan cooperatives in Russia was founded in Grodno.

The synagogue burned down in 1902. Under the supervision of Iya Frunkin, the Jewish community built another synagogue in the eclectic and moorish style from 1902 to 1905. By 1907, the city boasted a state Jewish school, a girls' school, a craft shelter, a Talmud-Yeshiva, 107 Jewish primary schools, and 5 elementary schools for girls. This was unique in Russia.

There were also two Jewish libraries and several Jewish charitable organizations working in the city.

Jews played a very significant role in city life as industrialists, merchants, craftsmen, owners of printing houses, doctors, and teachers. There was said to be a special "Grodno Aura," created by its cultured and intelligent population. For this reason Grodno was considered to be one of the Jewish intellectual capitals of Europe.

The Jews of Grodno became known around the world including such luminaries as:

artist Léon Bakst
sculptor Ilya Gintsburg
the founder of Esperanto L. L. Zamenhof
the Hebrew translator Avram-Shalom Friedberg ("Авроом-Шолом Фридберг").

The interior of the synagogue has been vandalized in 1941 by Nazis. Soviet authorities closed the synagogue in 1944. It has been returned to the Jewish community in 1991, however it remains in very bad condition.

ee also

*Synagogue on Socialist Street ("синагога на ул. Социалистической")
*Synagogue on Antonova Street, (formerly Jerusalem Street, Grodno) ("синагоги на ул. Антонова, бывшей Иерусалимской")

External links

* [http://www.lechaim.ru/ARHIV/180/region.htm Great Synagogue (Grodno)]

Gallery


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