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Star in the east: paradoxically, Jewish communities in Germany are now thriving and recent new synagogues, such as this one in Chemnitz, also encompass social and cultural aspects.


Who would have believed that after 1945 there would be a boom in German synagogues? East European immigrants have swelled the numbers of previously dying congregations. Chemnitz, once known as the Manchester of the East, a dour manufacturing centre where Erich Mendelsohn designed the Schocken department store, is now an economically depressed region of high unemployment. But despite this, the city's small Jewish community has grown, from 12 to 550 since 1989, and, in an act of unrivalled optimism, it has built a new religious and cultural centre.

Alfred Jacoby, director of Dessau's Institute of Architecture, has completed eight Jewish projects in recent years. More than spaces for worship, these are meeting places for the high proportion of pensioners and unemployed who find company among other Russian speakers, with rooms for youth groups and Makkabi Jewish sports association, parties, performances, language and religious classes. As potential victims of racism, their buildings also must deal with security. In Chemnitz a protective margin, patrolled by police, is created by a landscaped forecourt and pool around the synagogue which guides visitors to the entrance where they are inspected from a security office window. The architectural task is to combine ritual, representative and domestic functions. Through a foyer, fully enveloped en·vel·op  
tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops
1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" 
 in glass and acting as a transparent hub, these diverse activities intermingle in·ter·min·gle  
tr. & intr.v. in·ter·min·gled, in·ter·min·gling, in·ter·min·gles
To mix or become mixed together.


intermingle
Verb

[-gling,
. The multi-purpose hall, with its kosher catering kitchen, can form a single fluid space with the foyer by the simple removal of a partition w all. A fan-shaped library, a reference to Aalto, extends into the garden and, with a curved open stairway, leads up to a balcony lounge. This space, in turn, overlooks the foyer and connects by a bridge to the seating gallery in the drum of the synagogue. Another wing contains cellular rooms around an internal open-air courtyard for the Sukka festival. In the basement there is a Mikwe, a ritual bathing suite.

The oval synagogue sits like a jewel in a glass case. Its outward leaning walls culminate in a stained glass stained glass, in general, windows made of colored glass. To a large extent, the name is a misnomer, for staining is only one of the methods of coloring employed, and the best medieval glass made little use of it.  crown, a Keta Tora, optimizing daylight and symbolizing the embracing Talit prayer shawl. The biblically significant blue and white typographic pattern plays on the Hebrew characters for 'life'. As with all living creatures, no two characters are identical. At night, the crown and vertical stained glass window stained glass window nvidriera de colores

stained glass window stain nbuntes Glasfenster nt

stained glass window n
 glow like a beacon, publicly demonstrating a Jewish presence in a historically intolerant environment, a recurring motif in Jacoby's architecture, for instance his synagogue in Aachen (AR November 1995).

The three important elements in every synagogue (an Aron-Ha-Kodesh for the Torah rolls, an Almemor pulpit, and separate seating for women), are all present but, in keeping with contemporary liberal doctrine, are translated into modern terms. Contrary to tradition, the focal Torah cupboard is asymmetrically placed, shifting the congregation's focus to a window leading out into the world beyond. This reinforces the belief of community leader Siegmund Rotstein (a Holocaust survivor) that Jews must communicate to widen understanding with non-Jews. What is traditionally a richly decorated curtain drawn across the front of a Torah cupboard is here made part of the structure itself. An Yves Klein Yves Klein (28 April 1928 - 6 June 1962) was a French artist and is considered an important figure in post-war European art. New York critics of Klein's time classify him as neo-Dada, but other critics, such as Thomas McEvilley in an essay submitted to Artforum in 1982, have since  blue material is stretched over a frame to form a storage space with doors. The Menorah menorah

Multibranched candelabra used by Jews during the festival of Hanukkah. It holds nine candles (or has nine receptacles for oil). Eight of the candles stand for the eight days of Hanukkah—one is lit the first day, two the second, and so on.
 light is a free-standing translucent pylon pylon

(Greek: “gateway”) In modern construction, a tower that gives support, such as the steel towers between which electrical wires are strung or the piers of a bridge.
 light and the Star of David is translated into two hanging lamps constructed like Japanese lanterns of white parchment. Minimal building materials Building materials used in the construction industry to create .

These categories of materials and products are used by and construction project managers to specify the materials and methods used for .
, such as glass, steel and fair-faced concrete, form neutral backdrops for the blue accented features, and the singular luxurious material, a natural rich green Swiss stone, which is used externally and on foyer walls.

The current site was exchanged for land that housed the town's original 1899 Romanesque style (Arch.) that which grew up from the attempts of barbarous people to copy Roman architecture and apply it to their own purposes. This term is loosely applied to all the styles of Western Europe, from the fall of the Western Roman Empire to the appearance of Gothic architecture.  synagogue (destroyed by the Nazis). An agreement was negotiated with the old GDR GDR

See Global Depositary Receipt (GDR).
 government, which encouraged the Jewish community to survive post-war. With a budget of 4.5 million Euros from government and private donations, Chemnitz has finally achieved a modest but inspiring replacement synagogue.

RELATED ARTICLE: Architect

Alfred Jacoby, Frankfurt am Main

Associate architect

Monika Finger

Lighting

Serien, Jean-Marc Da Costa The surname da Costa derives from the Portuguese word for coast. It may refer to:
  • Emanuel Mendez da Costa (1717 – 1791), English botanist, naturalist, philosopher, and collector
  • Benjamin Mendes da Costa (1803-1868), English/Australian philanthropist
 and Manfred Wolf Manfred Wolf was an East German ski jumper who competed from 1971 to 1973. He finished fifth in the individual large hill event at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo.[1]

Wolf's best career finish was fourth in a normal hill event in West Germany in 1973.
 

Stained glass

Johannes Schreiter

Landscape architect

Ulrike Stockert

Photographs

Werner Huthmacher
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Author:Dawson, Layla
Publication:The Architectural Review
Geographic Code:4EUGE
Date:Mar 1, 2003
Words:685
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