The History of

Wooden Synagogues


During the period between the two world wars, the approximately 3.5 million Jews living in the Polish Republic constituted the largest Jewish community in the world outside of the United States. The Jews of Poland had a tradition of many centuries of peaceful existence alongside the other inhabitants – Poles, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Belarusians, Germans, Armenians, Gypsies – creating a culture of richness and diversity. During the Nazi invasion of Poland and the Holocaust, this part of Poland's cultural richness was lost. Over two hundred wooden synagogues were completely destroyed and only through photographs, drawings and documentation compiled before the war are we able to envision a handful of the hundreds of synagogues that once existed.

Wooden architecture is a dominant element in the historic landscape of Poland. Before World War II synagogues were a significant visual component throughout the countryside in the villages and towns of Poland. Their exterior massing was reflective of Polish vernacular tradition while the interior designs, including elaborate wall paintings and a highly crafted bimah and ark signify a distinctly Jewish art form. The paintings, which often covered the entire wall surfaces, depict zodiac symbols, arabesques, animal images, floral designs and Hebrew text. Upon entering the main sanctuary, the space is organized and dominated by two significant objects, an ark, a highly decorated towering cabinet used to store the Torah scrolls, and the bimah, a raised platform with an ornamental roof held up by wooden posts covering a table where the torah scrolls were read.

There has been an abundance of research and scholarly discourse concerning Jewish society and religious beliefs, but up until recently, little has been written about the subject of the Jewish art and architecture particularly of this period and region. Scholars have suggested this may be a reaction to the second commandment that prohibits the making of and worshipping of idols.

A common misconception is that the Polish Jewish communities who built wooden synagogues were blighted by poverty. This image may be an appropriate 19th and 20th century description, but Zabludow and similar synagogues from the 17th and 18th centuries were built by cosmopolitan, relatively affluent communities who could afford the highest regional standards of construction and craftsmanship. These wooden synagogues are an extraordinary phenomenon, worthy of high artistic standing among the wooden architecture of Europe and the world. They represent a high point in Jewish architectural art and religious painting, a tradition that was later abandoned by Eastern European Jews. This gives greater importance to the study of the subject. Today, these historic wooden synagogues remain only in the memories of a handful of survivors and in the limited but significant documentation.

Most fortunately, between the two World Wars, Professor Oskar Sosnowski of the Department of Architecture of the Polytechnic of Warsaw, and photographer and art historian Szymon Zajczyk directed architects and architect students to produce extensive documentation of these wooden structures through architectural drawings, replica paintings, and photographs. Recognizing the historical importance and artistic value of this architecture and fearing its impending destruction with the rise of anti-Semitism in Eastern Europe, this team compiled extensive data and produced architectural drawings, color and detail studies and photographs of many synagogues. Much of this project was destroyed during World War II but a substantial amount survived. Today the documentation is all that remain of the wooden synagogues of Poland.

The image of the impoverished shtetl is an appropriate 19th and 20th century description but these buildings are monuments of the 17th and 18th century, a time referred to by some scholars as "a golden age" of shtetl Jewish history. These wooden synagogues were built by cosmopolitan, relatively affluent communities who could afford the highest regional standards of construction and craftsmanship. Conforming to the style of that period, wooden synagogues were an extraordinary architectural phenomenon, worthy of high artistic standing among the wooden architecture of Europe and the world.

The History of

Gwozdziec Synagogue

The early history of the Gwozdziec Synagogue is unknown. Portions of the structure may have been built about 1650. Between 1700 and 1731, the major portion of the synagogue to survive into the 20th century was built. In 1731, the painting of the wooden cupola ceiling was completed. The centerpiece of this construction project was the reconfiguration of the prayer hall ceiling, which was once a low barrel vault similar to the ceiling in the Zabludów synagogue.

The newly renovated ceiling was a towering tent-like wooden cupola, inspired by the Tent of the Tabernacle, with a curving, undulating surface in a Baroque style. This wooden cupola was probably the first of its kind to be built in the region. The interior of the ceiling was completely covered by elaborate and brightly colored paintings showing Hebrew inscriptions and vibrant animal figures set against dense, vegetative backgrounds.  When compared to the drab daily color palette experienced by most of the town's Jewish community, the experience of entering the intensely colored interior of one of the painted synagogues must have been exhilarating. If we could enter the Gwozdziec synagogue today, we would step into a prayer hall covered with a vibrant tapestry of wall paintings. Looking upward, the ceiling ascends in rich bordered tiers toward a steeply sloping pyramidal top.

Looking to either side, the ribbons of swirling vegetation and architectural fragments frame brilliant white panels inscribed with Hebrew texts. Animals both familiar and strange are prominently located throughout the prayer hall. Especially noticeable are a band of animal figures set in large medallions that ring the lower edge of the ceiling. The entire interior composition radiates a palate of deep, intense colors that saturate the prayer hall with intricate designs like those found in an oriental carpet

We chose the Gwozdziec wooden synagogue ceiling and roof not only for its beauty, but also because it is one of the best documented. By referencing the existing documentation of photographs and color studies of the Gwozdziec Synagogue from the early 20th century, the replica of the elaborately painted interior cupola ceiling brings the black and white photographs into living color. Zodiac symbols, arabesques, animal images, and floral designs divided by white strips inscribed with Hebrew text were painted on scaled wooden board panels using period techniques such as distemper (dry pigment particles bound together by a water soluble organic binder of rabbit skin glue) on traditional marble chalk gesso. This dramatic ceiling installation of the painted replica presents the complete ceiling as a towering spatial ensemble in the shape of a funneling and undulating tent-like structure. In its totality, this ceiling is a complete masterwork of Jewish liturgical and decorative art. It is here, beneath this extraordinary structure, that visitors will most directly feel the quality of the kind of space in which Polish Jews worshipped. 

The Archival

Materials

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