Hurva Synagogue is home to first wedding since 1948 (JERUSALEM POST) By JOSHUA HAMERMAN 03/10/11)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=211422
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The Hurva Synagogue in Jerusalem, which was officially rededicated a
year ago, celebrated a milestone on Tuesday when for the first time
since its destruction by Jordan’s Arab Legion on May 27, 1948, the
Ashkenazi synagogue in the Old City’s Jewish Quarter hosted a wedding
ceremony as an operational house of worship.
Avraham Pashnov and Rachel-Orli Journo were married in the Hurva’s
courtyard.
During the ceremony, Pashnov said he and his wife were “only a tiny
chain link that brings together the past and the future.”
The next wedding is scheduled for Sunday. Couples had married at the
synagogue’s ruins before the rededication ceremony.
The Hurva was originally built in 1701 by Judah Hahasid’s followers,
but they were unable to repay their creditors, who burned down the
synagogue 20 years later as a result. The Hurva was reopened for
worship in 1864 after a seven-year rebuilding effort. Jewish
communities in the Diaspora contributed funds toward the project’s
completion.
At last year’s rededication ceremony, Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin
read a passage his maternal great-grandfather wrote about the
Hurva: “From the hills surrounding Jerusalem, [the Hurva] rises up.
And as it rises, it is reminiscent of a moon among the stars in the
sky.”
The Hurva’s second incarnation was blown up by Jordanian soldiers
during the War of Independence. Before independence, the Hurva hosted
Zionist leaders Theodor Herzl and Ze’ev Jabotinsky. (© 1995 - 2011
The Jerusalem Post. 03/10/11)
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