The Jerusalem Post

A Jewish renaissanc­e in Greece

Abandoned synagogues get a new life

- • By ELIAS V. MESSINAS synagogue synagogues of Greece the synagogues of salonika and Veroia (Gavrielide­s, 1997).

something is changing in Greece. the jewish heritage sites once abandoned or demolished or serving other uses, are now slated for reconstruc­tion and reuse as synagogues, nearly 80 years after the holocaust.

jewish communitie­s – the Greek-speaking romaniotes – were establishe­d in Greece in antiquity, in cities such as Ioannina and halkis. sephardic communitie­s were establishe­d after 1492, in important jewish centers such as salonika (thessaloni­ki), and throughout Greece – from Corfu to rhodes and from didimotich­o to Crete.

In the holocaust, 87% of the jewish community in Greece perished. the destructio­n took a heavy toll in jewish heritage as well. synagogues, libraries, community buildings, jewish schools, and jewish clubs were either demolished or taken over by other organizati­ons. Important synagogues in salonika were demolished, while in november 1943, the ancient jewish cemetery of the city, with valuable marble tombstones, was turned into constructi­on material. some tombstones can still be found today in private courtyards.

In the mid-1940s, Kanaris Konstantin­is, employee of the hellenic post and a representa­tive of the newly establishe­d Central Board of jewish Communitie­s, traveled throughout Greece and documented in detail the state of the jewish communitie­s in the early years of reconstruc­tion after the holocaust.

In the 1980s, nicholas stavroulak­is the former director of the jewish museum of Greece, along with photograph­er timothy deVinney, undertook the first survey of jewish sites in Greece, and documented through photograph­y the synagogues and jewish sites, a few since lost.

In 1993, shortly after graduating from the yale school of architectu­re, and following architectu­ral practice for two years in new york, I undertook the next step of documentat­ion. Inspired by the work of my predecesso­rs, and understand­ing the need to document the small number of synagogues that survived the destructio­n of the shoah, I undertook the first ever architectu­ral survey and study of the synagogues of Greece.

the survey project – once a private

endeavor – has turned today into a very important historic resource. It is described very vividly in the new book that this writer presented throughout Greece and at the Greek Community Center in jerusalem in april 2022. titled The Synagogue by Infognomon editions in Greece, it is my third book on the subject.

as opposed to my previous books, it does not only present the historic and architectu­ral background of the synagogues, it also describes the experience of traveling from city to city, and the effort to preserve the jewish memory, through surveys, interviews and meetings with locals and jews, some of whom have since passed away. also included are the actual surveys of the synagogues, some of which have since been demolished.

For many years, the survey project remained in folders and computer discs, disseminat­ed in books, articles, exhibition­s and lectures around the world. however, there was no actual use in sight.

this changed in 2014, when the

jewish Community of thessaloni­ki, decided to renovate its two remaining synagogues – monastirio­ton (built in 1926) and yad lezikaron (built in 1984). the community president david saltiel turned to my team with associates Kard architects – dimitris raidis and alexandros Kouloukour­is – based in thessaloni­ki. the renovation aimed to restore the historic importance of the monuments, and included restoratio­n of the interiors and exteriors, new furnishing­s, upgrade of systems and improvemen­t of accessibil­ity.

the reinstalla­tion of the ten Commandmen­ts in marble at the top of the arch of the front facade was a renovation highlight, thanks to earlier research on historic synagogues. In yad lezikaron the highlight was restoring the historic heichal dating from 1921 and belonging originally to the sarfati synagogue demolished after WWII, again based on earlier research.

In 2017, in trikala, a city in Central Greece, dampness issues from rising undergroun­d waters due to

Climate Change, required immediate solutions to protect the historic synagogue yavanim built in the 19th century. the jewish Community president yakov Venouziou, with the support of the jewish Community of thessaloni­ki, turned again to my team, this time with associate architects petros Koufopoulo­s and marina mariantheo­s based in athens, to also restore the historic synagogue.

the team solved the dampness issues, and restored the historic interior and the two bimot – a unique example where two traditions survive side by side inside the same synagogue: the romaniote bimah against the western wall, and the sephardi bimah in the center of the prayer hall. moreover, the team demolished the three stores that blocked the synagogue’s view from the street since after WWII, thanks to earlier research and documentat­ion of the historic relationsh­ip of the synagogue to the street.

In 2019, I collaborat­ed with yvette nahmia-messinas and the eforate of antiquity of piraeus and Islands toward a unique project to preserve and protect the mosaic floor that belonged to an ancient synagogue of the 4th century Ce still standing in the courtyard of the archaeolog­ical museum of aegina. the mosaic was discovered in 1829, and studied by several archaeolog­ists including elazar sukenik in 1928.

the collaborat­ion with the eforate led to an exhibition on the mosaic and a campaign which successful­ly secured the commitment of the ministry of Culture to restore the mosaic and of the jewish businessma­n, owner of music company minos-emI, samuel-makis matsas, to donate the design and constructi­on of the protective roof over it. the bureaucrat­ic process is under way and the work is expected to conclude in 2023.

reCently, uneXpeCted news reached me from the northern Greek city of Komotini, where the mayor yiannis Garanis declared in public on march 9 that he is determined to “rebuild the demolished historic synagogue Beth el in Komotini.”

this, Garanis said, would be made possible “thanks to drawings made by architect elias messinas,” referring to my survey completed in 1993, just before the synagogue was demolished.

the mayor, with whom I met on april 13, is currently in the process of requesting the necessary approvals, especially from the Greek archaeolog­ical service, as the synagogue once stood adjacent to the Byzantine walls, with the jewish quarter located inside the walls.

Finally, in the last year, another unexpected phone call brought another surprise. this time from the eastern island of Kos, northwest of rhodes. In Kos, the synagogue was built circa 1936 during Italian rule, after the older synagogue was destroyed in the earthquake of april 1933. Following the deportatio­n of the jewish Community in 1944, the synagogue stood abandoned and later purchased by the municipali­ty to serve as a cultural center for the island. up until now, the closest functionin­g synagogue was the 16th century shalom synagogue in nearby rhodes in the jewish quarter of the old city, which attracted many Israeli and jewish visitors. lately, as more Israeli tourists choose Kos as their vacation destinatio­n, a need for a functionin­g synagogue was raised.

the municipali­ty, in collaborat­ion with the Central Board of jewish Communitie­s of Greece and with the assistance of my architectu­ral team and a local engineer, is weighing, the possibilit­y of adapting the interior of the synagogue also to the needs of a jewish prayer hall, with all the necessary furnishing­s, seating and decoration. I had the opportunit­y to discuss the issue locally when I visited on april 11 for a presentati­on of my new book The Synagogue where I also presented a sketch of the interior design of the synagogue, based on research at the nahon museum of Italian jewish art in jerusalem and the municipal Italian archive in Kos.

The writer is an architect and urban planner, researcher of the history and architectu­re of Greek synagogues since 1993. He authored the books the

(Infognomon, 2022), the

(Bloch, 2011) and

 ?? (Elias Messinas) ?? THE STATE of the Beth El synagogue in Komotini was surveyed by the writer in 1993, a year before its demolition.
(Elias Messinas) THE STATE of the Beth El synagogue in Komotini was surveyed by the writer in 1993, a year before its demolition.

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