Moshe Verbin:

Wooden Synagogues of Poland in the 17th and 18th Century

David Dawidowicz: Synagogues in Poland and their Destruction

The models were based on the thorough and comprehensive research of the famous architects and researchers: Maria and Kazimierz Piechotka, Warszawa, Poland. 

GRODNO

 

GRODNO

A town in White Russia.

Jews were living in Grodno already in the 14th c. and were engaged in trade, craft and agriculture. In the 17th c. the town became a famous Jewish center of learning.

The synagogue was built in 1750 and was burnt by the Germans during the Second World War.

Its dimensions: 19 x 28.5 m height: 12.5 m.

The women's sections were at the northern and southern parts of the ground floor and in the gallery in the west.

The square men's synagogue was covered with an octagonal dome supported by four pillars.

The eastern wall as well as the lower part of the dome were decorated with paintings interspersed by written passages of biblical verses and prayers. The Almemer (Bimah) and the Ark of the Law were beautifully carved.

 
A Drawing by Herman Shtruk


The Bima

 
Cross Section

 
Old Photograph of the Grodno Synagogue


 Treblinka: The End

Genealogy

Sources

Belarus Web Site

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Last Updated February 27th, 2003