Great Choral Synagogue (Riga) Explained

Great Choral Synagogue
Native Name:
Image Upright:1.4
Festivals:-->
Organizational Status:-->
Functional Status:Destroyed
Location:Gogoļa iela (Gogol Street), Riga
Country:Latvia
Map Type:Latvia Riga
Map Size:250
Map Relief:1
Architect:Paul von Hardenack
Architecture Style:Renaissance Revival
Groundbreaking:1868
Year Completed:1871
Date Destroyed:4 July 1941
Date Destroyed:-->
Materials:Brick
Elevation Ft:-->
Footnotes:[1]

The Great Choral Synagogue (;) was a Jewish congregation and synagogue, that was located on (Gogol Street), in the Latgale neighborhood of Riga, Latvia. Designed by Paul von Hardenack in predominately Renaissance Revival style, the synagogue was completed in 1871. It was the largest synagogue in Riga, until it was burned down on 4 July 1941 during the German occupation of Latvia.

History

The synagogue was designed in 1868 by architect Paul von Hardenack and the building was completed in 1871.[2] The architecture consisted of several different styles, however, Renaissance Revival was the dominant style. The synagogue was famous throughout the city for its cantors and its choir.

Destruction

See main article: Burning of the Riga synagogues. The synagogue was burned down on 4 July 1941 after the German Nazi occupation of Riga. There are reports that 20 Jews were locked in the basement. Historian Bernhard Press states that some of the victims were Lithuanian Jews who had taken refuge there.[3] Gertrude Schneider identifies the victims as mostly women and children.[4] Frida Michelson, a Latvian Jew who had been working near Jelgava in a forced labor detail when the synagogue was burned, reported that she was told by a friend (who had heard it from someone else) that the halls and the backyard of the Choral Synagogue were filled with refugees from Lithuania. Perkonkrusts and "other Latvian hangers-on" surrounded the building, trapped the people inside, and set it on fire.[5] Andrew Ezergailis does not find it credible that Jews were locked in the Great Choral Synagogue before it was set on fire. Ezergailis does acknowledge that there could have been 300 Lithuanian refugees in the synagogue before the fire was set. He postulates however that they would have been killed before the synagogue was set on fire.

The destruction of the synagogue was filmed by the Germans and later became part of a Wehrmacht newsreel, with the following narration: "The synagogue in Riga, which had been spared by the GPU commissars in their work of destruction, went up in flames a few hours later."[3]

Demolition and memorial

After the war, the remains of the burnt-out synagogue were demolished by Soviet authorities and the area was turned into a public square, with the first commemorative stone marking a Star of David being placed at the location only in 1988. After the restoration of Latvia's independence, a memorial designed by Latvian architect Sergejs Rižs in the shape of the synagogue walls with built-in archaeological remains of the original building found at the site, was erected on the grounds in 1993.[6] In 2007 a memorial to Jānis Lipke and others who had saved Jews from the Holocaust was unveiled next to the 1993 memorial. The memorial commemorates all those who helped save more than 400 Jews from certain death.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Great Choral Synagogue (ruins) in Riga . Historic Synagogues of Europe . . n.d. . 19 August 2024 .
  2. Web site: Sinagogu Celtniecība Latvijā . 12 . Līva Dreimane . . Latvian . 2013 .
  3. Press, The Murder of the Jews in Latvia, at page 46
  4. Schneider, Journey into Terror, at page 2
  5. Michelson, Frida, I Survived Rumbuli, page 61.
  6. Web site: Riga, 25 Gogola Street : Holocaust Memorial Places in Latvia. memorialplaces.lu.lv. 2019-01-23.
  7. Web site: Di greij hor šul - Lielā horālā sinagoga . citariga.lv . latvian . 24 December 2016.