Tempel Synagogue
Postcard, circa 1917
Religion
AffiliationJudaism
Location
LocationLviv, now Ukraine
Architecture
StyleBaroque style
Completed1840–1846[1]
Destroyed1941
MaterialsStone and brick

Tempel Synagogue was a synagogue at the Old Market Square 14 (the historic Fish Market) in Lviv, now Ukraine. Lviv was one of the first Galician cities to have a modernized synagogue. The Synagogue was destroyed by Nazi Germany in 1941, following Operation Barbarossa.[2]

History

The Synagogue was built for the first time in the 17th century. The new one underwent construction from 1844 to 1845 based on design by Iwan Lewicki. The synagogue was a classical building with a large dome, inspired by the Viennese Main Synagogue located at Seitenstattgasse 4.[2] The interior sanctuary was round, with seating facing forward and the Bimah placed at the front of the seating area, near the Torah Ark in a moderately reformed style, again like in Vienna. Also in the modernized style was the elevated pulpit with an architectural canopy from which the rabbi preached the sermon in the vernacular (i.e., not in Yiddish.) A double tier of women's balconies ran around the perimeter of the room, old photographs reveal an elaborately decorated classical space reminiscent of the great opera houses of the era.

The first Rabbi, Abraham Kohn, was considered a staunch traditionalist in his native Bohemia. He refused to participate at the third Reform conference in Breslau, held in 1846, and argued that only a wall-to-wall rabbinical consensus would have sufficed to enact even moderate alterations in religious conduct. However, in the backward eastern province where Yiddish was still the Jewish vernacular and secular studies for rabbis were unheard of, Kohn immediately found himself at the position of an ultra-progressive. He was poisoned in 1848, under unknown circumstances. The strictly Orthodox Jews of Lemberg, who opposed even his modestly progressive attitude, were suspect but none was found guilty.

The longest serving Chairman was Ozjasz Wasser who served for over twenty years until 1939.[3] Wasser was a Polish lawyer and prominent member and leader of the Jewish community in Lviv between World Wars I and II.[4]

Commemoration

The Synagogue was destroyed by the Nazis in 1941. There is a memorial stone and placard at the location of the synagogue that reads: "This is the site of the synagogue of the progressive Jews called "The Temple" which served Lviv's Intelligentsia. It was built during 1844-1845 and was destroyed by German soldiers on entering to Lviv in July 1941."[2][5]

Notes and references

  1. "Ukraine synagogues part 2 – Jewish postcards".
  2. 1 2 3 "Synagoga Tempel we Lwowie" Virtual Shtetl
  3. "Pl. Staryi Rynok – former Tempel synagogue". Lviv Interactive. Retrieved 2023-10-29.
  4. "Polona". polona.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-11-25.
  5. Józef Helston - Synagogi Lwowa Architektura Lwowa.

49°50′47″N 24°01′47″E / 49.84639°N 24.02972°E / 49.84639; 24.02972

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