Cold Synagogue, Mogilev
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The Cold Synagogue or Školišča Synagogue (, ) was a
synagogue A synagogue, also called a shul or a temple, is a place of worship for Jews and Samaritans. It is a place for prayer (the main sanctuary and sometimes smaller chapels) where Jews attend religious services or special ceremonies such as wed ...
located near the intersection of Vyalikaja Hramadzianskaya (now Grażdanskaya) and Pravaya Naberezhnaya Streets, in
Mogilev Mogilev (; , ), also transliterated as Mahilyow (, ), is a city in eastern Belarus. It is located on the Dnieper, Dnieper River, about from the Belarus–Russia border, border with Russia's Smolensk Oblast and from Bryansk Oblast. As of 2024, ...
,
Belarus Belarus, officially the Republic of Belarus, is a landlocked country in Eastern Europe. It is bordered by Russia to the east and northeast, Ukraine to the south, Poland to the west, and Lithuania and Latvia to the northwest. Belarus spans an a ...
. The wooden synagogue was established in , sited adjacent to a
cheder A ''cheder'' (, lit. 'room'; Yiddish pronunciation: ''khéyder'') is a traditional primary school teaching the basics of Judaism and the Hebrew language. History ''Cheders'' were widely found in Europe before the end of the 18th century. L ...
. The interior was almost entirely covered with magnificent polychromes made in 1740s by the Słuck painter, Chaim ben Yitzchak ha-Levi Segal. In the beginning of the 20th century, several ethnographic expeditions, by Alexander Miller, S. An-sky and Solomon Yudovin, and by
El Lissitzky El Lissitzky (, born Lazar Markovich Lissitzky , ; – 30 December 1941), was a Soviet Jewish artist, active as a painter, illustrator, designer, printmaker, photographer, and architect. He was an important figure of the Russian avant-garde, h ...
and Issachar Ber Ryback documented and photographed interiors of the synagogue. After the article by Lissitzky, interior murals of the synagogue became quite famous in artistic circles. It was decided by the state authorities in 1918 that the synagogue was covered by legal protection. However, the synagogue was closed in 1938 and then dismantled by government authorities. The photos, drawings, and article by El Lissitzky is almost all evidence that preserved.


History

The Cold Synagogue (named Cold because was unheated in winter), considered the most important in Mogilev, was built around 1680. It was located near the intersection of Vyalikaja Hramadzianskaya and Pravaya Naberezhnaya Streets, in the Jewish district of Školišča (literally "School district"), in a place marked today with a symbolic menorah (at the back of the preserved synagogue in Školišča, next to the blue gazebo erected on the occasion of the anniversary of the local water supply company). In 1918, by one of the first decrees of the new Soviet government, the synagogue was recognized as a monument of the past and placed under state protection. Later it turned out to be the last stronghold of Jewish religious life in Mogilev and was closed in 1937. In 1938, it was dismantled into logs used for wells. Images of Segal's frescoes remained only in photographs and drawings by Ryback and Lissitzky. Lissitzky’s original copies of the Mohilev synagogue decorations have been lost. They were reproduced in the journal that published his article and reprinted in many books on the cultural heritage of East European Jewry. They remain among Lissitzky’s most frequently reproduced works. Mahiloŭ, Školišča, Alejnaja brama. Магілёў, Школішча, Алейная брама (N. Lvov, 1800).jpg, Painting by N.Lvov, 18th century. Synagogue is on the left, before the cathedral. Mahiloŭ, Dniapro. Магілёў, Дняпро (J. Pieška, 1800).jpg, Painting by
Józef Peszka Józef Peszka (19 February 1767, in Kraków – 14 September 1831, in Kraków) was a Polish painter and art professor; known mostly for his portraits and watercolor landscapes. Biography His first drawing lessons were with , an Austrian painter l ...
, 1800. Synagogue is on the left, under the Dnieper river. Mahiloŭ,_Dniapro-Školišča._Магілёў,_Дняпро-Школішча_(1918)_(2).jpg, Školišča, photo from 1918.


Architecture

The synagogue building was a wooden structure built on a stone foundation. It was a typical example of
wooden synagogues in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth Wooden synagogues are an original style of vernacular synagogue architecture that emerged in the former Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.Wischnitzer, Rachel ''The Architecture of the European Synagogue''. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society ...
, very few of which preserved (most were destroyed in wars, pogroms, or by Soviet authorities). The walls of the Cold Synagogue were cut from edged logs into a clean corner. The central log house was dominant in height, to which side log houses were adjoined as covered galleries. A pentagonal structure was added to the main facade, which covered the main entrance. The building was covered with a high gable roof, with a complex plan and numerous outbuildings. In the end of 19th - beginning of 20th century the roof was covered with tin. The most detailed memoirs of the synagogue are in the article by
El Lissitzky El Lissitzky (, born Lazar Markovich Lissitzky , ; – 30 December 1941), was a Soviet Jewish artist, active as a painter, illustrator, designer, printmaker, photographer, and architect. He was an important figure of the Russian avant-garde, h ...
: Mahiloŭ,_Školišča,_Chałodnaja_synagoga._Магілёў,_Школішча,_Халодная_сынагога_(A._Miller,_1908).jpg, Photo by , 1908 Mahiloŭ, Školišča. Магілёў, Школішча (S. Judovin, 1913).jpg, Photo by
Solomon Yudovin Solomon Yudovin (or Iudovin) (, 1892-1954) was a Belarusian Jewish graphic artist, photographer, and researcher of Jewish folk art. Biography Yudovin was born into a family of artisans in Beshenkovichi, Vitebsk Governorate of the Russian Empire ...
, 1913 Mahiloŭ,_Školišča,_Chałodnaja synagoga._Магілёў,_Школішча,_Халодная сынагога_(S._Judovin,_1913).jpg, Photo by Solomon Yudovin, 1913


Ethnographic expeditions

First known ethnographic expedition that visited Mogilev was by archaeologist and ethnographer in 1908. In 1913, S. An-sky, founder of Jewish Historical Ethnographic Society, together with artist and photographer
Solomon Yudovin Solomon Yudovin (or Iudovin) (, 1892-1954) was a Belarusian Jewish graphic artist, photographer, and researcher of Jewish folk art. Biography Yudovin was born into a family of artisans in Beshenkovichi, Vitebsk Governorate of the Russian Empire ...
, also visited Cold Synagogue. Some photos made by Miller and Yudovin are now in the
Russian Museum of Ethnography The Russian Museum of Ethnography (Российский этнографический музей) is a museum in St. Petersburg that houses a collection of about 500,000 items relating to the ethnography, or cultural anthropology, of peoples of ...
in
Saint Petersburg Saint Petersburg, formerly known as Petrograd and later Leningrad, is the List of cities and towns in Russia by population, second-largest city in Russia after Moscow. It is situated on the Neva, River Neva, at the head of the Gulf of Finland ...
. According to published data, attention was drawn to the synagogue and its murals after the 1916 expedition by
El Lissitzky El Lissitzky (, born Lazar Markovich Lissitzky , ; – 30 December 1941), was a Soviet Jewish artist, active as a painter, illustrator, designer, printmaker, photographer, and architect. He was an important figure of the Russian avant-garde, h ...
and Issachar Ber Ryback, famous representatives of avant-garde art movement, and an article by an influential art critic
Rachel Wischnitzer Rachel Bernstein Wischnitzer (German: ''Rahel Wischnitzer-Bernstein''), (April 14, 1885 – November 20, 1989) was a Russian-born architect and art historian. Biography Wischnitzer was born into a middle-class Jewish family in Minsk, in Russia ...
, published in the Volume XI of "History of the Jewish People", "History of the Jewish People in Russia", in 1914 along with several photographs of the paintings. Some researchers argue that this expedition was also sponsored and commissioned by S. An-sky's Jewish Historical Ethnographic Society, while others said that there are no evidence of that.


Interior murals


Chaim Segal

The interior was almost entirely covered with magnificent polychromes made in 1740 by the Slutzk painter Chaim ben Yitzchak ha-Levi Segal. It is unusual that the name of the mural painter is known, the only reason to that is the inscriptions that Chaim Segal made on the walls of the synagogue. First inscription, on a cartouche at the springing or base of the dome on the entrance side said: The text continues on a shield below: The first inscription contains a chronogram of the Hebrew year, that corresponds to 1740.


Description

Segal's murals, made on boards, represented the images of 12 signs of the zodiac, arabesques, mythical animals and cities. Wischnitzer and Lissitzky wrote about the decorations at length.


Chaim Segal and Marc Chagall

Marc Chagall Marc Chagall (born Moishe Shagal; – 28 March 1985) was a Russian and French artist. An early modernism, modernist, he was associated with the School of Paris, École de Paris, as well as several major art movement, artistic styles and created ...
claimed that Chaim Segal was his great-grandfather, and compared his own art to Segal's synagogue murals: Most modern researches doubt it, and there is no evidence that Chagall had ever seen any murals that Segal created. It's also possible that ''elter-zeyde'' ("great-grandfather" in
Yiddish Yiddish, historically Judeo-German, is a West Germanic language historically spoken by Ashkenazi Jews. It originated in 9th-century Central Europe, and provided the nascent Ashkenazi community with a vernacular based on High German fused with ...
) simply means "forefather" or "ancestor" with no hereditary commitment.


El Lissitzky and Issachar Ber Ryback's expedition

The description and copies of the paintings were left in an article dedicated to Jewish art, "On the Mogilev Shul: Recollections", by
El Lissitzky El Lissitzky (, born Lazar Markovich Lissitzky , ; – 30 December 1941), was a Soviet Jewish artist, active as a painter, illustrator, designer, printmaker, photographer, and architect. He was an important figure of the Russian avant-garde, h ...
, who visited Mogilev with his colleague-artist Issachar Ber Ryback. They toured a number of cities and towns of the Belarusian Dnieper region and Lithuania in order to identify and fix on photo the monuments of Jewish antiquity. Lissitzky's article on the Cold Synagogue was published in 1923 in Berlin by the Jewish magazine '' Rimon–Milgroim''. In the work of
Rachel Wischnitzer Rachel Bernstein Wischnitzer (German: ''Rahel Wischnitzer-Bernstein''), (April 14, 1885 – November 20, 1989) was a Russian-born architect and art historian. Biography Wischnitzer was born into a middle-class Jewish family in Minsk, in Russia ...
, the painting of the Mogilev synagogue is compared with the paintings of the synagogues in Yablonovo and Kopys. Moreover, the Yablonov painting is assessed by the author higher than the painting by Chaim Segal, at least "in terms of the selection of ornamental material." Lissitzky wrote enthusiastically and emotionally describing elements of wall painting. Here is his first impression of what he saw: "No, this was something different from that first surprise I received when I visited the Roman basilicas, the Gothic cathedrals, the Baroque churches of Germany, France, and Italy. Maybe, when a child awakens in a crib that is covered with a veil upon which flies and butterflies are sitting and the entire thing is drenched by the sun, maybe the child sees something like that." Lissitzky's assessment of the skill of Chaim Segal is also very different in comparison with that given by
Rachel Wischnitzer Rachel Bernstein Wischnitzer (German: ''Rahel Wischnitzer-Bernstein''), (April 14, 1885 – November 20, 1989) was a Russian-born architect and art historian. Biography Wischnitzer was born into a middle-class Jewish family in Minsk, in Russia ...
: "The treasury of forms used by the painter is inexhaustible. One sees how it all flowed from him, as from a cornucopia, and how the hand of the virtuoso never grew tired and never allowed itself to be outpaced by the speed of thought. On the back of the holy ark I discovered the first sketches in pencil of the outline of the entire painting, which served as the foundation of the later work in paint. This outline was sketched on the wall by a master with intense confidence, for whom the pencil is perfectly under the control of his will." Further, about Chaim Segal, El Lissitzky mentions a common legend told about the old masters who created a kind of miracle: "People say that he painted three shuls. In Mogilev, Kopust, and in Dolhinov (others recall a different location for the latter). After he had finished, he fell from the scaffolding and died. Each shtetl tells the story about itself: the Mogilevers say he died in Mogilev, the Kapusters—in Kopust, the Dolhinevers—there. The last two shuls burned down. The Dolhinov burned long ago; my father used to say that he remembered a giant fresco in it of the burial of Jacob with a wagon, horses, the sons of Jacob, Egyptians, etc. Today we cannot compare. But the story is characteristic for our understanding of the artist. His work was so great that his continued life could only diminish him. Once his work was completed his soul had no more reason to be in his body." Lissitzky finished his article about the synagogue with a statement: "That which is called art is created when one does not know that what one is doing is art. Only then does it remain as a memorial to culture. Today art is created through those who fight against it." The description of the synagogue made by El Lissitzky is well illustrated by the sketch drawing of Issachar Ber Ryback. Art historian Ruth Apter-Gabriel, curator of the
Israel Museum The Israel Museum (, ''Muze'on Yisrael'', ) is an Art museum, art and archaeology museum in Jerusalem. It was established in 1965 as Israel's largest and foremost cultural institution, and one of the world's leading Encyclopedic museum, encyclopa ...
in Jerusalem, calls this drawing "the first and only one of its kind, giving an idea of the plot of the ceiling of the famous the Mogilev synagogue ... and living evidence of the search for modernist Jewish art in Russia during the revolution." The researcher notes that, despite the sketchy drawing of Ryback, it is an invaluable visual addition to the text of Lissitzky. Many details from Lissitzky's description can be easily identified, such as the Ark, lions, signs of the Zodiac or the Tree of Life. Ryback's drawing is not only easily compared with Lissitzky's description, but also fills in unknown parts of the plot. "Of course, one can regret the sketchiness of the drawing," writes Ruth Apter-Gabriel, and one of her explanations is the artist's desire to convey the idea of the plot of the ceiling painting as a whole. Another version, she believes, is the possibility that the drawing is actually not a sketch of a ceiling painting, but a preparatory composition for future work. "Jewish period" was very short in the art of Lissitzky, though many of his works were inspired by Jewish folk art; on the contrary, for Issachar Ber Ryback everyday life of a Jewish
shtetl or ( ; , ; Grammatical number#Overview, pl. ''shtetelekh'') is a Yiddish term for small towns with predominantly Ashkenazi Jews, Ashkenazi Jewish populations which Eastern European Jewry, existed in Eastern Europe before the Holocaust. The t ...
became the foundation of his art. Lissitzky and Ryback also visited the synagogue of Kopys, located 50 km north of Mogilev, with very similar decoration by the hand of the same master - Chaim Segal.


Juspa the Schammes of Worms

Lissitzky Cold synagogue Mogilev dragon 01.jpg Mahiloŭ, Školišča, Chałodnaja synagoga. Магілёў, Школішча, Халодная сынагога (1913-17) (12).jpg Lissitzky Mogilev Cold Synagogue.jpg Rachel Wischnitzer proposed that Chaim Segal was inspired for this set of three panels by the stories No. 1 and 15 from the ''Ma’aseh nissim'' (Hebrew: ''Story of Wonders''), tales of
Juspa Schammes Juspa Schammes (Hebrew: יוזפא שמש; February 14, 1604 in Fulda – February 5, 1678 in Worms) was a chronicler of the Jewish community of Worms, Germany, synagogue caretaker (''shammes''), and a writer. Life and career Personal life He w ...
of the
Worms Synagogue The Worms Synagogue (), also known as Rashi Shul, is a Jewish congregation and synagogue located in the Judengasse in the northern part of the city center of Worms, in the Rhineland-Palatinate region of Germany. Founded in the 11th century, th ...
, written in 1670 and published for the first time in 1696 in Amsterdam. Segal can be acquainted with the Juspa's stories from a book or from hearsay; it is also possible that he had travelled to
Worms The World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) is a taxonomic database that aims to provide an authoritative and comprehensive catalogue and list of names of marine organisms. Content The content of the registry is edited and maintained by scien ...
, as the inscriptions speaks of travels of "many days in the lands of the living". He may also had travelled in Galicia, were a lot of painted wooden synagogues exists at the time. Some of the motifs he used in the Mogilev synagogue, like the bear climbing on a tree for honey and the fox carrying away a goose, resembles murals in the synagogues in Jablonow and Kamianka Strumilova. First panel depicts the punishment of Worms; two other panels conclude this story from a Messianic perspective. One depicts a boat sailing towards Jerusalem. Second – a nest of storks that rests in the Tree of Knowledge, and a mother stork bringing a snake to her young, who already hold snakes in their bills. Near the Tree – an architectural structure in the form of a tower on wheels: the image of the biblical
Ark of the Covenant The Ark of the Covenant, also known as the Ark of the Testimony or the Ark of God, was a religious storage chest and relic held to be the most sacred object by the Israelites. Religious tradition describes it as a wooden storage chest decorat ...
on the way to Jerusalem. Storks on the Tree of Knowledge symbolize true righteous people who are able to defeat snakes, that is, satanic forces. The symbol is based on the consonance of the words "
Hasid Ḥasīd (, "pious", "saintly", "godly man"; plural "Hasidim") is a Honorifics in Judaism, Jewish honorific, frequently used as a term of exceptional respect in the Talmudic and early medieval periods. It denotes a person who is scrupulous in hi ...
im" ("righteous") and "Hassida" ("stork") in the Hebrew language. In story No. 1, Juspa tells how the city of Worms was punished for the refusal of its wise men in exile to return to Jerusalem. Historian Shlomo Eidelberg of the
Yeshiva University Yeshiva University is a Private university, private Modern Orthodox Judaism, Orthodox Jewish university with four campuses in New York City.
in New York notes that on the mural of the Cold Synagogue the name "Worms" on the tower was spelled the same way as in Juspa's book - ווירמש. The city of Jerusalem is labeled as ירושלים עיר הקודש (the Holy City of Jerusalem). In story No. 15, Juspa wrote the legend about the dragon, and stated that because of the ''lint wurm'' the city was named "Worms": The same monster, " lintwurm", appeared on the medieval seals of the bishops of Worms, and was a motif familiar for its citizens. According to English archaeologist
Charles Boutell Charles Boutell (1 August 1812 – 31 July 1877) was an English archaeologist, antiquary and clergyman, publishing books on brasses, arms and armour and heraldry, often illustrated by his own drawings. Life Boutell was born at Pulham St Mary, ...
, a lindworm is basically "a dragon without wings." Lindwurms can be found on coat-of-arms of many German towns, and in art. Art historian Ilia Rodov of
Bar-Ilan University Bar-Ilan University (BIU, , ''Universitat Bar-Ilan'') is a public research university in the Tel Aviv District city of Ramat Gan, Israel. Established in 1955, Bar Ilan is Israel's second-largest academic university institution. It has 20,000 ...
notes that "Juspa’s tale is a version of the popular German legend relating that the dragon of Worms was slain by Siegfried. This legend appeared by the turn of the thirteenth century in the chapter “How
Siegfried Siegfried is a German-language male given name, composed from the Germanic elements ''sig'' "victory" and ''frithu'' "protection, peace". The German name has the Old Norse cognate ''Sigfriðr, Sigfrøðr'', which gives rise to Swedish ''Sigfrid' ...
Came to Worms” of the Nibelung epos." He also noted that the painting of Segal is very close to the description of serpent from Juspa's book, and that " e Jerusalem-Worms contraposition in synagogue art is known to us as Hayim Segal’s exclusive innovation. Much more frequent in east-European synagogue art were expressions of the antithesis ‘Jerusalem versus Babylon’." The only other known depiction of such Jerusalem-Worms contraposition was on the murals in the synagogue of Kopys, also made by Chaim Segal, that were a copies of the murals from Mogilev. Wischnitzer published several articles about the Mogilev synagogue and interpretation of Segal's murals. Writing about Worms and Jerusalem on the opposite section of the ceiling and the sailboats depicted near these cities, she called it "an illustration of the legend about Jewish sages from Worms who declined an invitation by Ezra to return to Jerusalem with the exiles who were returning from Babylon after seventy years of
captivity Captivity, or being held captive, is a state wherein humans or other animals are confined to a particular space and prevented from leaving or moving freely. An example in humans is imprisonment. Prisoners of war are usually held in captivity by a ...
, because, they said, they were perfectly content to remain in Worms." "In other words, they preferred their well-being in exile to spiritual obligations toward the
Holy Land The term "Holy Land" is used to collectively denote areas of the Southern Levant that hold great significance in the Abrahamic religions, primarily because of their association with people and events featured in the Bible. It is traditionall ...
. Juspa he Shammesconcluded that the persecutions which the Jews of Worms suffered afterwards came as chastisement for their objection to return to the
Promised Land In the Abrahamic religions, the "Promised Land" ( ) refers to a swath of territory in the Levant that was bestowed upon Abraham and his descendants by God in Abrahamic religions, God. In the context of the Bible, these descendants are originally ...
. Hayim Segal’s terrible dragon with a red eye and a long arrow-like tongue is thus a personification of divine anger punishing the town." According to Wischnitzer, Segal had altered this story by adding a happy-ending. "The sailing vessel, which he introduced from his own imagination, denotes travel, or the eventual return of the exiles to the Holy Land. The storks - "the pious" - are shown partaking of snakes: the leviathan on which the pious will feast in the days of the Messiah. the wheeled structure is the wandering Ark of the Covenant which accompanied the Israelites on various occasions. It vanished when the First temple was destroyed; and it will reappear in the days of the Messiah. Segal ends the Worms legend on a happy note, looking to a time when no Jew will prefer exile to life in the Holy Land."


Deterioration and demolition

In 1937 Belarusian Soviet writers Jurka Vićbič and
Źmitrok Biadula Samuil Jafimavič Płaŭnik (; ; 23 April 1886 – 3 November 1941), better known by the pen name Źmitrok Biadula (), was a Soviet and Belarusian poet, prose writer, translator, and political activist in the Belarusian independence movement. He ...
visited Mogilev; they found the Cold Synagogue in deteriorated state.
Religious life Consecrated life (also known as religious life) is a state of life in the Catholic Church lived by those faithful who are called to follow Jesus Christ in a more exacting way. It includes those in institutes of consecrated life (religious and sec ...
was
persecuted Persecution is the systematic mistreatment of an individual or group by another individual or group. The most common forms are religious persecution, racism, and political persecution, though there is naturally some overlap between these terms ...
under the Soviet regime, and a lot of religious building were either destroyed or used as warehouses. The article that Vićbič wrote about the synagogue in 1971, "It was in Mogilev" ("Она была в Могилёве"), is the only known testimony of the latest days of the synagogue.


Gallery

Cold synagogue in Mogilev The Garden of Eden Serpent by El Lissitzky.jpg, The
Garden of Eden In Abrahamic religions, the Garden of Eden (; ; ) or Garden of God ( and ), also called the Terrestrial Paradise, is the biblical paradise described in Genesis 2–3 and Ezekiel 28 and 31.. The location of Eden is described in the Book of Ge ...
Serpent Milgroim 1923 1 Title page.jpg, Title page of the first issue of ''Rimon-Milgroim'', 1923 “Lion” from the Decoration of the Synagogue of Mohilev by El Lissitzky.jpg, Lion. Copy of a wall painting above the entrance of the synagogue Peacock After a wall painting on the west side of the Mohilev synagogue by El Lissitzky.jpg, Peacock, after a wall painting on the west side of the synagogue Sea Horse and Bird from Druya synagogue by El Lissitzky.jpg, Sea Horse and Bird from Druya synagogue Copy of a decorative motif (fish) from a synagogue.jpg, Copy of a decorative motif (fish) from a synagogue


Notes


References


Sources

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External links


Photos from the synagogue at The Bezalel Narkiss Index of Jewish Art
Center for Jewish Art The Center for Jewish Art (CJA) is a research institute at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, devoted to the documentation and research of Jewish visual culture. Established in 1979, it documented and researched objects of Jewish art in ca. 800 ...
,
Hebrew University of Jerusalem The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (HUJI; ) is an Israeli public university, public research university based in Jerusalem. Co-founded by Albert Einstein and Chaim Weizmann in July 1918, the public university officially opened on 1 April 1925. ...
.
3D reconstruction of the synagogue

About the synagogue at lostmural.org
{{Wooden synagogues 1680 establishments in Belarus 1938 disestablishments in Belarus 17th-century synagogues in Europe Attacks on religious buildings and structures during World War II Buildings and structures demolished in 1938 Buildings and structures in Mogilev Demolished buildings and structures in Belarus Former synagogues in Belarus Wooden synagogues