
On your left, look for a tall, pale plastered Renaissance building with a broad rectangular front and rows of simple windows set above the ground-floor level, its unusual height giving away why people called it the High, or Tall, Synagogue.
This building tells its story first through shape. The prayer hall sat above street-level shops, and that arrangement was not merely an architectural quirk. It likely gave the congregation privacy, dignity, and a measure of practical protection from unfriendly Christian neighbors. In other words, the elevation helped worshippers gather slightly apart from the street without vanishing from the city altogether.
A wealthy merchant, known to us only as Israel, set that story in motion in the second half of the sixteenth century. He petitioned King Sigismund the Second Augustus for permission to build a Jewish house of prayer here in Kazimierz. He received consent, and by fifteen sixty-three the synagogue stood complete in the late Renaissance style. Some historians suspect Sephardic Jews, perhaps from Greece or Italy, shaped its beginnings. If so, this modest facade holds a surprisingly wide map of Jewish movement across Europe.
Pause for a moment and notice the building’s height in relation to the street. Even from where you stand, across the road, the separation still changes the feeling of approach. It is not lofty in the grand church sense; it is lifted, guarded, deliberate. If you glance at the image on your screen, the raised prayer level becomes especially clear.

Inside, the sanctuary once carried far more colour than the exterior suggests. The walls showed scenes of Jerusalem, including the Western Wall and the Tomb of the Israelite Kings, and the women’s gallery included a handsome pair of lions. The sacred focal point was the Aron HaKodesh - the cabinet that holds the Torah scrolls - on the eastern wall. Remarkably, its stone niche survives, and it is considered the oldest and largest Renaissance Aron HaKodesh in Poland. It has channeled pillars, composite capitals, and above the frame, griffins that once supported the Crown of the Torah inscription. If you open the interior view, you can sense how the prayer room once hovered above the commerce below.

Then came rupture. In nineteen thirty-nine, the Nazis stripped the synagogue interior, turned the building into warehouses and a locksmith’s shop, and in nineteen forty-one they intensified the destruction. Iron fittings went for scrap. Textiles, documents, books, and ritual objects were carried off. One rare survivor, a seventeenth-century Baroque Hanukkah lamp, was taken on Hans Frank’s order to Wawel Castle; we will meet that survivor again later at the Old Synagogue.
What followed was not one neat restoration, but a long argument on behalf of the building. Władysław Łuszczkiewicz began early conservation research in the nineteenth century. Jan Ertl designed new roofs. Jan Sas-Zubrzycki proposed another facade plan. By nineteen hundred, Samuel Tilles, Józef Sare, and Stanisław Tomkowicz formed a reconstruction committee, and Zygmunt Hendel prepared the renovation project. After the war, conservators such as Józef Jamroz and Józef Ptak rebuilt vaults, the bimah - the platform where the Torah is read - the eternal lamp, portals, doors, and stone details. Later restorers uncovered painted curtains beside the Aron HaKodesh and wall paintings hidden for decades.
So when you look at this altered building, do not treat the changes as flaws. Think of them as pressure marks: proof that a damaged sacred place can still be argued back into view. When you are ready, continue on to the Bobov Synagogue, about three minutes away.















