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#Synagogue
brunelsblog · 5 months
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This post is so important to me. Al-Jazeera making me cry was not in my weekend bingo list but here we are. Curse you to anyone who is trying to turn this into a religious conflict when it's clearly about white supremacy. History will know you for the vile snakes that you are.
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etchedstars · 2 years
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omg im so tired of people being like “stop pushing your religion on me >:(” whenever i talk abt my religion god damn its really not about you at all im trying to tell you about something nice that happened to me and it just happened at synagogue please chill the hell out 
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nesyanast · 7 months
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Early morning light in the synagogue.
Photo: Edinburgh Hebrew Congregation stained glass windows by me
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jidysz · 11 days
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Polin museum of the History of Polish Jews, Warsaw, Poland
It's a great place, very worth seeing
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bobemajses · 3 months
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In the synagogue in Rovno, Volhynia, northwestern Ukraine (1924)
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girlactionfigure · 5 months
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This should be every Jewish organization and gathering place.
"ATTENTION: Please be aware that the members at the synagogue are armed and may use whatever force is necessary to protect its worshipers." This sign is in the window at the entrance of an Orthodox Synagogue in Dallas.
afshineemrani
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koshercosplay · 3 months
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it's time to attend jumblr shul!
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jewishtwig · 1 year
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Templo Beth Shalom - Gran Sinagoga de la Comunidad Hebrea de Cuba
Temple Beth Shalom - Great Synagogue of the Jewish Community of Cuba
Havana, Cuba
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humanoidhistory · 7 months
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The Military Officers' Academy Synagogue by Zvi Hecker and Alfred Neumann, Mitzpe Ramon, Israel, 1968.
(Phaidon)
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Ruins of the Synagogue in Zborov after the First World War, modern-day Slovakia
Slovak vintage postcard
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mim70 · 1 month
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Synagogue.
Moscow, Russia
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paletapessoal · 2 months
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Art nouveau synagogue in Subotica, Serbia, built in 1902, project by Marcell Komor and Dezső Jakab.
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nesyanast · 7 months
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The Edinburgh Hebrew Congregation Orthodox Synagogue houses six stained windows by the distinguished Scottish stained glass artist William Wilson, RSA. These richly coloured works combine Jewish religious symbols with abstract and floral motifs with one depicting the act of Creation.
Photos by me
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newyorkthegoldenage · 11 months
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D-Day services at Congregation Emunath Israel on West 23rd Street, June 6, 1944.
Photo: Howard Hollem et al. for the Office of War Information via Shorpy
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worldhistoryfacts · 1 year
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The mosaic floor and table of the Sardis Synagogue, which was the largest synagogue in the ancient world. The Jewish community of Sardis, a city in western Turkey, dated back to the third century BCE, when a local king invited Jews from all over the region to resettle there.
{WHF} {Ko-Fi} {Medium}
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gliklofhameln · 5 months
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The 'Floating Synagogue' • Jewish Chronicle Archive
The Queen Mary, the Cunard ocean liner, was the epitome of 1930s luxury and glamour. And amidst the magnificent Art Deco salons and restaurants, was the world’s first floating synagogue. It was officially known as the ‘Scroll Room’ – perhaps the word ‘synagogue’ was too explicit for the times.
Having a synagogue on board was the suggestion of the Jewish Chronicle who felt that Jewish passengers would need somewhere to pray on the four day voyage from Southampton to New York.
At first, the suggestion was politely rejected by Cunard but the Jewish Chronicle persisted and even offered to raise the funds needed to pay for it from within the Anglo-Jewish community. The architect Cecil Epstein offered his services free of charge and the Chief Rabbi and the Chairman of the Jewish Chronicle’s Board made an official approach to Cunard.
Cunard relented (and funded) the ‘Scroll Room’ – the world’s first floating synagogue.
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