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Budapest reopens oldest synagogue amid concerns of extremism

Thu, Sep 09 2010 10:45 CET 2488 Views 3 Comments
Budapest reopens oldest synagogue amid concerns of extremism

Devotees attend a ceremony at one of Budapest's oldest synagogue after it was rededicated after 50 years, September 5 2010. The synagogue was inaugurated in 1821 but was converted into a textile museum in the 1960s before it was used as a studio for Hungary's state television later.

Photo: Reuters

Budapest reopens oldest synagogue amid concerns of extremism

Israel's Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger, centre, carries the Torah scroll in one of Budapest's oldest synagogue after it was rededicated after 50 years, September 5 2010.

Photo: Reuters

After more than half a century, the oldest synagogue in Hungary's capital Budapest reopened Wednesday for the public, just in time for the Jewish New Year.  The synagogue was forced to close its doors following the Holocaust, when Hungary became a Communist nation.

Israel has described the event as proof of a Jewish revival in the country, despite concerns about anti-semitism. 

Dedication Ceremony Signifies Jewish Renewal

A huge crowd, including Holocaust survivors, celebrated as a scroll of the Torah, the Jewish scriptures, was carefully carried into the 190-year old Obuda Synagogue.  The dedication ceremony came ahead of Wednesday's Jewish New Year prayers here.

Israel's Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger, who had come to Budapest for the events, said the synagogue's re-opening marks a new beginning for Hungary's Jewish community.

"Because of the Holocaust, a lot of people didn't come back to their places in this synagogue," said Metzger.  "And after some years, the Communists took it and changed it into a textile museum and than into a studio for the television.  So to come here after 50 years shows us that the renaissance in Hungary is real truth."

Metzger adds, however, that many Hungarian Jewish people remain afraid to openly attend religious services.  "Because of the trauma of the Holocaust, there are here people who don't think it's necessary to say that they are Jews, because they are afraid that the Holocaust will happen again. Who knows?"

Holocaust Survivors Are Wary, Yet Grateful

Yet several Holocaust survivors still come to listen to rabbis in the same synagogue some of them had attended when they were young.

Among other survivors is 73-year old Andras Szasz, who said it is a miracle that he can be at the re-opening of the synagogue.  He explained that he has a document that he was to go on a train for Jewish children to Switzerland.  His mother made a mistake with the departure time, though, which was lucky for him as the train was bombed and everyone died.  He said a Christian family in Budapest eventually managed to hide him and his parents in their home during the war.

At least 600,000 Hungarian Jews died during the war when Hungary was a close ally of Nazi-Germany.  

The young Rabbi Slomo Koves, who leads the Obuda Synagogue, admitted he is concerned about re-emerging extremism in Hungary. The far right Movement for a Better Hungary - or Jobbik - became the third largest party in recent elections.

Answering Racism With Prayers and Community

Koves said, however, the ongoing renovation of his synagogue is the best way to answer such concerns.  "The community from its own strength renovates it and uses it again for the same purpose, for prayers.  And that is the answer to all those voices that are here [representing] the strengthening anti-Semitism and the strengthening racism.  The best answer is to build [and] to get the community together and show that we are still living and give the people the chance to go back to their own identity..."

The Israeli government agrees. In letters, Israel's Prime Minister  Benjamin Netanyahu describes the re-opened synagogue as "the symbol of a Jewish renaissance" while Israel's President Shimon Peres says "May it be a house of prayer for everyone."

Jewish officials have made clear they hope that it will also encourage authorities to re-open other former synagogues in Eastern Europe.

With some 100,000 people, Hungary hosts one of Central and Eastern Europe's largest Jewish communities, outside Russia.

source: VOANews.com

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Comments

Anonymous*******Thu, Nov 18 2010 01:04 CET

This comment has been removed by the moderator because it contained foul, abusive or discriminating language

Anonymous tozso Sat, Sep 11 2010 15:02 CET


yotze min haklal

Anonymous 1 Thu, Sep 09 2010 20:02 CET

Jewish life in Eastern Europe should be renewed, revitalized everywhere. In Bulgaria, in Budapest, across the Ukraine.

Israel has proved a dead-end, more dangerous to Jews than any refuge. Especially for Jews of conscience, Jews committed to universal justice. Impossible to build a state in someone else's country.

In Hungary, the Jobbik party (Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom) is led by a 21st century Nazi, Vona Gabor (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%A1bor_Vona ). Gabor's pronouncements against the Roma are openly racist, the Jews are very right to feel threatened.We are seeing a kind of deja [...]

Read the full comment vu 1940.
It is sad that an ancient synagogue reopens with heavy security outside. But Hungary has become a place where neo-fascism, or post-modern fascism, is very much at home. IOt has a dark vitality. In my view, this is the deep sickness of the free market and its many contradictions.

Ataka is almost mild compared to what Jobbik says about Roma, and indirectly Jews, xenophobia in its most virulent contemporary form in Europe. Jews and Roma need to stand together in Hungary, in BG, across an increasingly xenophobic Europe.

Jews are a diasporic people like the Roma, and need the right to live as they please, in security. .


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