Great Synagogue
Dake KangDake Kang|Guest Contributor|SIGHTSEEING, PILSEN Updated : Mar 31, 2017, 11.02 AM IST
Dake Kang
A history and math student at the University of Chicago, Dake has been roaming the world since he was born, moving with his family from the United States to Korea and China as a child and most recently popping up in Oman, the Czech Republic, and India. With an insatiable curiosity about everything and anything - coupled with an unrelenting restlessness - he"s found himself in some pretty unusual situations, from being struck by lighting to interviewing North Koreans to befriending Burmese soldiers on overnight trains. Catch up on his latest journalistic explorations at dakekang.com.
In the mid-19th century, the Jewish community of Pilsen started expanding, fuelled by the return of Jews who were expelled from Pilsen back in the 1500s, necessitating the construction of a new synagogue. Completed in 1893, the building became the centre of the Jewish community. Tragically, in less than fifty years, the Synagogue was abandoned, as the entire Jewish population was deported to concentration camps during World War II. The Synagogue survived the war almost unscathed, but the Jewish community was devastated by the Holocaust; only 204 Pilsen Jews survived, the rest having perished in Auschwitz, and most of the survivors left for Israel and the United States. But fortunately the Synagogue reopened in 1998, and today, a small revived Jewish community runs the Synagogue―one of Pilsen’s must-visits.
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