

Moorish architecture is a variation of Islamic architecture.
It is named after the Moors, North
African people who conquered the Iberian Peninsula in the 700s. The Moors
controlled what is now Spain, Portugal, and the Pyrenees region of France for
hundreds of years. The Moorish style evoked a high point in Jewish life in 11th
century Spain when Jews, Christians and Muslims lived peaceably together. It
was a time when Jewish intellectual and spiritual life flourished.
So it is not a surprise that a lot of synagogues
all over the world were built in
the Moorish Revival Style.
Since 1962, the synagogue's rabbi has been Arthur Schneier. Rabbi
was born in Vienna in 1930. His family fled in November 1938 from Vienna to Budapest,
where Arthur survived the Holocaust in the Budapest ghetto. In 1947 he moved to
the United States. Schneier became a
Rabbi and was awarded an honorary doctorate in theology at Yeshiva University
in New York City.
To protest religious repression in the Soviet Union, Rabbi
Schneier recruited a group of civil rights leaders, politicians and members of
the clergy for an Appeal of Conscience rally. On the synagogue balcony across
the street from the Soviet mission to the United Nations, Rabbi Schneier
displayed a bronze plaque, inscribed in English and Hebrew with the
biblical phrase, ''Hear the cry of the oppressed. The Jewish community of the
Soviet Union '' .
I wrote about
the Soviet Mission building at the
corner of East 67 and Park Avenue in one of my posts.
23 years later, in 1988, rabbi Schneier said that New York Jews should greet Gorbachev
respectfully ''in recognition of the increased opportunity for Jews in the
Soviet Union to emigrate and practice their religion and their culture at
home.'' The same year Rabbi visited Moscow, Russia where he met with Soviet officials about religious
rights.
Twenty years later, in April 2008, Pope Benedict XVI paid a 22-minute visit
to the Park East Synagogue — the first papal trip to a United States
synagogue. He presented the synagogue with a replica of a medieval Jewish
manuscript from the Vatican library and received three gifts: a seder plate, a
Passover haggadah and a box of matzo. The
visit was only the third known visit by a pope to any synagogue. There is also
a plaque on the wall of the building memorizing this event.
There is Early Childhood Center and Lower School, grades kindergarten through
grade five at the synagogue. There is also a Sunday Shkola that educate
Russian Jewish children about their heritage.
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