The Potsdam Synagogue is opening its doors to the public for the first time on Thursday, only a few hundred meters from the state parliament building in the heart of the city’s historic center.
It’s an impressive building, with a sand-colored brick facade that rises a good four stories high. The seven distinctive arched windows that open up onto the sanctuary on the first and second floors look like a work of modern Gothic art.
Potsdam is the last of Germany’s 16 state capitals to now have a prominent synagogue; the construction of the building has been almost 20 years in the making.
New synagogue ‘a strong sign’ for Jewish life
In early January 2005, the state government signed an agreement with the Jewish Community of the State of Brandenburg, which included a promise by the state to support the community’s efforts to build a synagogue. However, things did not move as quickly as the state government had planned.
An architectural competition was held in 2008 and won by the Berlin architect Jost Haberland and his team. Yet both politicians and representatives of the Jewish community carried on with the discussions, rejecting plans for the project, making fresh inquiries and renegotiating.
What became clear from this process was that the groups involved represented several competing schools of Judaism. These groups have been worshipping in different temporary spaces for some time now.
is not a monolith, but consists of a variety of different movements. Just as there isn’t just one representative of the Jewish community in the city of Potsdam, there have also been not one, but two state associations for several years now.
For this reason, the Brandenburg Ministry of Science, Research and Culture opted for an unusual model, which is in fact one of a kind in Germany, when selecting the Frankfurt-based organization the Central Welfare Board of Jews in Germany (ZWST) as a cooperation partner for the construction of the building.
The groundbreaking ceremony took place in 2021, with the Brandenburg State Office for Real Estate and Construction (BLB) as the project developer. A few weeks ago, the BLB handed over the completed building to the ZWST, which will operate the synagogue in trust for three years.
According to official figures, the construction cost about €16.5 million ($17.9 million). ZWST head Abraham Lehrer said the official inauguration marks “a milestone for the Jewish community in Potsdam and Brandenburg. The new synagogue center is a strong sign that Jewish life is visible and firmly anchored in the heart of society — especially in these challenging times for Jews.”
According to the most recent statistics from the ZWST, there were 1,691 registered Jewish community members in Brandenburg at the end of 2022. Estimates indicate that up to 1,200 live in Potsdam.
The Welfare Board as a mediator
As in other parts of Germany, the ZWST supports social projects and services for the state’s Jewish community and is an important source of support for the people. Now, it will be responsible for allocating the use of the rooms in the new center and ensuring “that all people of the Jewish faith can use the synagogue.”
Specifically, this includes members of four Jewish communities in Potsdam that exist alongside each other, namely the Jewish Community of the city of Potsdam, the Potsdam Synagogue community, the Adass Jisroel community and the Kehilat Israel community. As the manager of the new synagogue, the ZWST receives up to €650,000 ($700,486) a year from the state.
A few days before the opening, Ud Joffe stands in a room on the second floor of a house that is a ten-minute walk from the new building. This is the space which the community that Joffe leads had been using as a synagogue. Nothing on the outside of the building suggests that it is a place of worship. But the room has everything a Jewish house of prayer needs: a Torah ark in an old chamber, a lectern for the Torah scrolls, and chairs in the men’s and women’s sections.
Born in Israel, 56-year-old Joffe is a very committed and well-known conductor in Berlin and Potsdam, where he has lived and worked for decades.
So how does Joffe view the opening? “With one eye laughing and one eye crying,” he told DW. Of course, the building has symbolic significance for Potsdam and the state of Brandenburg. But he feels that because of that, too much attention has been paid to “political interests” for too long. And yet, he says, as a religious community, it is good for the Jews to have this building now.
“Perhaps it will take a few years before we realize how important it was, not only that Potsdam got a synagogue, but that we, the city’s Jewish religious communities, got one. It is an instrument that also helps us members to ‘define our identity,’” he says.
Almost every time , some official says, “Those who build, stay” or “Those who build, want to stay,” Joffe explained, adding that he was tired of hearing that phrase. After all, it was the state that built this synagogue.
For him, it is an “anomaly” that the building remains the property of the state government, with the ZWST acting as the “non-local operator” and the religious communities merely as users. He hopes that this will change over the next three years.
And Joffe is indeed optimistic. The building could prove to be a magnet, he says. If so, it might be able to actively attract Jewish families from Berlin to Potsdam. “We’re not that big in Potsdam,” he says. And perhaps it will also “bring the Jews of Potsdam together, to unite the different cultures and languages.” This new start could prove to “be an impulse after all.”
The keynote speaker at the opening ceremony will be German President (who has also been known here and there to utter the phrase “Those who build, stay”). In addition to the President of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Josef Schuster, and rabbis from various communities in Germany, German Chancellor and Foreign Minister , both of whom live with their families in Potsdam, are also expected to attend, as well as the head of Brandenburg’s state government, Premier Dietmar Woidke and several members of the state government. It’s an unusually high number of prominent politicians to turn out for such an occasion.
Of the 199 seats in the synagogue, only about a third are reserved for members of the city’s Jewish community.
This article was originally written in German.
The post Potsdam’s new synagogue a ‘milestone’ for Jewish community appeared first on Deutsche Welle.