Synagogue of Neuilly explained

Synagogue of Neuilly
Native Name:French: Synagogue de Neuilly
Image Upright:1.4
Religious Affiliation:Orthodox Judaism
Festivals:-->
Organisational Status:Synagogue
Organizational Status:-->
Leadership:Rabbi Michael Azoulay
Functional Status:Active
Location:12 rue Ancelle, Neuilly-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine
Country:France
Map Type:France Paris
Map Size:250
Map Relief:1
Architect:1878: 1937
Architecture Type:Synagogue architecture
Architecture Style:Byzantine Revival
Established:1869
Year Completed:1878
Date Destroyed:-->
Elevation Ft:-->
Module:
Embed:yes
Designation1:France
Designation1 Offname:Synagogue
Designation1 Criteria:Patrimoine architectural
Designation1 Date:April 22, 1993
Designation1 Number:IA00079692
Footnotes:[1]

The Synagogue of Neuilly (French: Synagogue de Neuilly) is an Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 12 rue Ancelle, in Neuilly-sur-Seine, in the Hauts-de-Seine department, west of Paris, France. The synagogue was built in 1878. The congregation used to worship in the Ashkenazi rite; however is now Sephardi.

The building was listed as a monument historique on April 22, 1993.

History

The first significant evidence of a Jewish presence in Neuilly is the "house of refuge for Jewish children", a home created in 1866 by Coralie Cahen[2] the house also hosted prostitutes and their children. Initially located at Romainville then Neuilly Boulevard Eugene (now Boulevard Victor Hugo),[3] it moved in 1883 to 19, Boulevard de la Saussaye where it stayed until the 1980s. Better known by the abbreviated name of "Refuge," it housed many young Jews isolated, without family, after the Second World War and after the independence of Algeria, and the subsequent massmigration of Jews to France.

By 1869, there was a community located in an apartment at 15 rue Louis-Philippe. Chairman, Godchaux Oulry, a native of Lorraine, succeeded in raising the funds necessary to build a synagogue. Designed by Emile Uhlmann in the Byzantine Revival style, the opening of the synagogue took place in 1878.

The first rabbi of Neuilly in 1888, was Simon Debré, father of Professor Robert Debré and the grandfather of the General de Gaulle's Prime-Minister Michel Debré.

The community grew until World War II and the synagogue expanded in 1937 under the eye of architects Germain Debré and Hirsch.

As it was for all Jewish communities, the war brought desolation. Rabbi Robert Meyers and his wife Suzanne (née Bauer) were deported to Auschwitz in 1943. A plaque outside the synagogue commemorates the deportation of all Jewish inhabitants of Neuilly and others, and the actions of the Righteous Among the Nations in Neuilly. On Rue Edouard Nortier, another plaque commemorates the names of 17 children aged 3 to 11 years, who were housed in a former clinic run by the Nuns, they were on July 25, 1944, rounded up, deported and murdered by the Nazis.[4]

The rebirth after the war was difficult. Rabbi David Feuerwerker created a study circle and a circle of young people. His successor, Rabbi Edouard Gourevitch, saw the arrival in 1962 of huge number of Jews from Algeria who brought a new vitality to the community. In 1975, the Grand Rabbi Jerome Cahen and his wife revived the community, turning resolutely towards youth. The number of believers increased dramatically. In 1978, the centenary of the synagogue was celebrated in the presence of the authorities and former Prime Minister Debré. In 2009, Rabbi Michael Azoulay, a member of the National Consultative Ethics Committee since 2008, succeeded Rabbi Alexis Blum.

Clergy

The following individuals have served as rabbi of the congregation:

Ordinal Officeholder Term started Term ended Time in office Notes
1888 1939
Robert Meyers 1928 1943 years Served concurrently with Rabbi Debré; perished in Auschwitz
Henry Soil 1945 1946 years [5]
1946 1948 years
René Kapel 1948 1949 years [6] [7]
Edouard Gourevitch 1949 1975 years [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13]
Jerome Cahen 1975 1986 years Died in office
Alexis Blum 1988 2009 years [14]
Michael Azoulay 2009 incumbent years [15]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Synagogue in Neuilly . Historic synagogues of Europe . . n.d. . 16 June 2024 .
  2. Web site: Coralie Cahen, born Levy . AFMEG . 23 November 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091128225600/http://www.afmeg.info/squelettes/dicofemmesjuives/pages/notice/cahen.htm . 28 November 2009 .
  3. Web site: Reports of the International Jury of the World Expo 1900 . November 24, 2008 . Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers . fr .
  4. Book: Christians and Jews under Vichy, 1940-1944 . Rescue and civil disobedience . 526 . Yagil, Limor . Éditions du Cerf . 2-204-07585-X . 2005.
  5. Book: Soil, Henry . Don Isaac Abravanel (1437-1508): His life, his works . Foundation Sefer . 1937.
  6. Web site: René Samuel KAPEL (1907-1994) . Zenouda, Sylvia . Judaism of Alsace and Lorraine.
  7. Web site: Search: René Kapel . Hopes of Resistance-->. Fineltin, Marc . MemoResist.org.
  8. Book: The Haggadah of Passover rites Sephardic and Ashkenazi . International Berg . 1982.
  9. Book: ben Judah the Hasid, Shmuel . A Guide Hasidim . Éditions du Cerf . 1988 . 978-2-204-02827-1.
  10. Book: Loew ben Bezalel, Judah . Judah Loew ben Bezalel . The Well of exile . Berg International . May 1991 . 2-900269-21-0.
  11. Book: Loew ben Bezalel, Judah . Judah Loew ben Bezalel . The deeds of the LORD . Éditions du Cerf . 1994 . 978-2-204-04585-8.
  12. Book: Malki, David . The Talmud and its masters . Albin Michel International . January 2000 . 2-226-01671-6.
  13. Book: Schaefer, Peter . Judeophobia: Attitudes toward Jews in the ancient world . Éditions du Cerf . March 2003 . 978-2-204-06923-6.
  14. Web site: Biographie and bibliography of Rabbi Alexis Blum . July 27, 2010 . Melamed.
  15. Web site: Les Neuf Mondes . Biography of Michael Azoulay . Ccne-ethique.fr . 2010-11-17.