The Fasanenstrasse Synagogue, Berlin,
Germany
The growth of the Jewish population in what was known around
1900’s as the "New West" districts of Berlin, chiefly in the affluent district
of Charlottenburg, from less than 5,000 inhabitants in 1885 to over 23,000 by
1910, brought about the need to erect a large synagogue. The land for the new
synagogue was purchased in October 1905 for 600,000 Marks. Located at 79-80
Fasananenstrasse, between the fashionable Kurfurstendamm Avenue and the then
newly extended rapid transit city train (S-bahn), the Fasanenstrasse synagogue
was the first monumental Jewish prayer house to be opened outside the city
center of Berlin. The cost of construction came to a total of 1,100,000 gold
Marks, an enormous amount of money at the time.
The plans of the synagogue were drawn by the architect
Ehrenfried Hessel who was selected by the Jewish community in a public
competition in 1907. The construction work started two years later and continued
for another three. The official opening of the new synagogue took place on
August 26, 1912.
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The Boys Choir of the Fasanenstrasse Synagogue,
Berlin, 1926
Rabbi Dr. Naftali Hartwig Carlebach (center, standing), conductor Janos Roskin
(right), and Chief Cantor Julius Schwartz (left).
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Eliezer and Margalit Paldi, Israel
The architecture of the Fasanenestrasse synagogue is
representative of the prevalent ethos of the Jews of Germany at the turn of the
20th century. The introduction of a design inspired from German medieval
architectural tradition was intended to emphasize the new status and the
supposedly successful integration of the Jews into the German society. The
strong nationalist currents that emerged in Germany in the years following the
achievement of its political unity and the economic impetus that by 1900 turned
Germany into the most powerful nation in Europe could not have marked large
sections of the Jewish community. Many Jews took pride in being Germans and
their desire to show their integration into the German society repeatedly found
expression in the architecture designs of a large number of monumental
synagogues built all over Germany after the middle years of the 19th century.
With their imposing exteriors, the new synagogues boasted a local and
nationalistic style that many times incorporated elements from the tradition of
the German medieval architecture.
The monumental building of the Fasanenstrasse synagogue was
designed in a predominantly Romanesque style to which were integrated some
elements of Byzantine inspiration, most notably the roof that featured a row of
three cupolas. It was a massive structure with a total capacity of 1,700 seats.
At the opening time the new synagogue was praised by both professional
architects and the Berlin popular press. The western façade had three stone
portals; the central one was decorated with columns on top of which there were
statues of lions and other decorative elements. In the interior a spacious room
preceded the main prayer hall. The east end of the prayer hall ended with an
apse sheltering the Holy Ark. In front of it stood an elevated bimah crowned by
a medieval style portal that could be accessed from two symmetric stairs. Large
menorahs lighted this section of the building. The east end gallery was located
at both sides over the Holy Ark and had 35 places reserved for the choir. The
organ, too, was located at the east end of the prayer hall. The women's section
occupied the additional galleries built around the other three walls of the
prayer hall. Solid pillars sustained the three large cupolas. The cupolas, the
interior walls, and the capitals were decorated with geometric motifs in a
dominantly blue and gold pallet.
A separate smaller building adjacent to the north wall of the
synagogue served as a prayer house; it also sheltered residential rooms for the
clerks of the synagogue. The basement contained a large hall that was used
mainly for weddings and other private or community ceremonies.
The Fasanenstrasse synagogue functioned for only twenty four
years. It served the liberal Jewish community of the western districts of
Berlin. Rabbi Leo Baeck (1873-1956), leader of the progressive Judaism,
officiated at the Fasanenstrasse synagogue after settling in Berlin in 1912,
Magnus Davidsohn was the main cantor for many years, and Richard Altmann, who
was blind, was the organist. The ascent to power of the Nazis in 1933 changed
drastically the status of the Jews in Germany. The Nazi persecutions and the
ensuing massive emigration of the Jewish inhabitants of the neighborhood brought
led to the closure of the synagogue in 1936. Two years later the Fasanenstrasse
synagogue was burned in the state sponsored anti-Jewish attacks of November 9th,
1938, also known as the Kristallnacht. Total destruction followed a few years
later during World War II, when the remains of the synagogue were destroyed
during an Allied air raid on Berlin.
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Entrance portal to the Fasanenstrasse
Synagogue - detail of decorative elements
Berlin, 1980’s
Photo: S. Rhode and C. Richter, Germany
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of S. Rhode and C. Richter, Germany
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The Jewish Community Center, Berlin,
featuring the Entrance to the former building of the Fasanenstrasse Synagogue.
Berlin, 1980’s
Photo: S. Rhode and C. Richter, Germany
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of S. Rhode and C. Richter, Germany
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After the Holocaust only a handful of Jews returned to
Berlin, most of them immigrants from Eastern Europe. During the late 1940's they
started organizing a new Jewish community in the city. The grounds of the former
Fasanenstrasse synagogue were chosen for the building of a new Community Center
of Berlin. The corner stone of the new building was laid in a ceremony attended
by the Mayor of Berlin, Willy Brandt (1913-1992), in 1957. The construction work
started in 1958 with the evacuation of the ruins of the former structure, of
which a few surviving elements were kept for the decoration of the new building.
The building of the Jewish Community Center in Berlin was inaugurated on
September 27, 1959.
Erected in the modern style of the 1950's, the Community
Center building was designed by the architects Knoblauch and Heisse of Essen.
Although essentially a modern structure with predominantly geometric straight
lines, the new edifice displays decorative elements from the building of the
former synagogue, most notably the main portal that survived and was
incorporated as the entrance to the modern building, and three glass cupolas as
a reminder of the most impressive architectural element of the former synagogue.
Additional Jewish decorative elements are evident on the back façade which is
decorated with a pattern of six pointed stars (Magen David).
The Jewish Community Center on Fasanenstrasse houses a number
of important cultural and educational activities, such as lectures,
concerts and workshops, and is the home of the Jewish Community Library. A
memorial wall at the right side of the entrance displays the names of the Nazi
concentration camps and ghettoes to which about 58,000 Jews of Berlin were
deported during the Holocaust, of them the great majority never returned. A
separate plaque commemorates Recha Freier (1892-1984), the founder of the Youth
Aliyah Movement. In the late 1980’s a monument in the form of a Torah scroll was
inaugurated in the forecourt of the Community Center featuring the Biblical
quotation: “There shall be one law for you and the stranger among you” (Numbers,
15:16).
HFG
Address
Jewish Community Center
Fasanenstrasse 79/80
Tel: 030 / 880 28 - 0
Berlin
Germany
Bibliography
Synagogen in Berlin. Zur Geschichte einer
zerstoerten Architektur. 2 vols. Berlin Museum: Verlag Willmuth Arenhoevel,
1983
SELLENTHIN, H.G. Geschichte der Juden in
Berlin und des Gebaudes Fasanenstrasse 79/80. Festschrift anlaesslich der
Einweihung des Juedischen Gemeindehauses. Hrsg. Vom Vorstand der Juedischen
Gemeinde zu Berlin: Berlin, 1959
Related articles
Synagogues in Germany: A Virtual Reconstruction - Exhibition at Beth Hatefutsoth
Documentation of German and
Austrian Synagogues destroyed by the Nazis
The Hans Hirschberg Collection
Links
Synagogues in Germany - A Virtual Reconstruction
Synagogues - Internet
Archive
A
personal memoir of "Kristallnacht"
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