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Stop 11 of 17

Popper Synagogue

Popper Synagogue
Wolf Popper Synagogue
Wolf Popper SynagoguePhoto: Zygmunt Put, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.

On your right, look for a pale plastered rectangular building tucked behind a high wall, marked by arched upper windows and a surviving nineteenth-century gate.

From where you stand, the former Wolf Popper Synagogue feels almost secretive, and that is part of its story. Most people notice only the modest exterior. Locals know the concealment begins earlier, at the street itself: a high-walled courtyard and three nineteenth-century gates screen the synagogue from Szeroka, with the central gate made wider than the others, as if the building wanted one careful breath of ceremony before revealing itself. If you glance at your screen, image two shows that threshold rather nicely. Wolf Popper, the wealthy benefactor called “the Stork”, financed this synagogue in sixteen twenty, near the end of his life. People gave him that nickname because, when deep in thought, he could stand on one leg like a stork. Charming folklore, yes, but behind it stood astonishing wealth. Popper traded in cloth and saltpetre, the ingredient used to make gunpowder, and became Kazimierz’s richest banker. His fortune reached two hundred thousand zloty, an enormous sum for the time. His marriage to Cyrla, daughter of the merchant Juda Leib Landau, strengthened the family alliances behind that rise.

And so this tucked-away place was once among the grandest synagogues in Kazimierz. The entrance had openwork doors showing four animals: an eagle, a leopard, a lion, and a buck deer, each symbolising a virtue of a devout life. Inside stood porches, annexes, rich furnishings, and the Aron Kodesh, the holy cabinet for Torah scrolls, all of it lavishly adorned. If you want a sense of the hall’s later afterlife, image six offers a quiet glimpse indoors. Then the story darkened with almost indecent speed. Cyrla died in sixteen twenty-one. In sixteen twenty-five, Popper returned from a journey, fell ill, summoned a local official, and dictated his will. After his death, the family fortune faltered under wars, epidemics, fires, and heavy payments of allegiance. A succession battle followed, and by about sixteen fifty-three the synagogue had passed into communal hands, already appearing in tax records before anyone thought of it as heritage.

The interior of the former prayer hall, where traces of its synagogue past survive despite later reuse.
The interior of the former prayer hall, where traces of its synagogue past survive despite later reuse.Photo: Zygmunt Put, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.

The building kept losing and changing. Repairs came in eighteen thirteen. In eighteen twenty-seven, builders added the women’s gallery upstairs and rebuilt the roof and stairs. The Nazis later destroyed the rich interior. In nineteen sixty-four, Józef Steiglitz rescued the surviving ark doors and sent them to the Wolfson Museum in Jerusalem. After the war, repatriates lived here for a time; later it became a youth cultural centre, and since twenty seventeen it has housed the Austeria bookshop, with art upstairs where the women once prayed.

So the shell remains, while much of its splendour survives only in records, in museum pieces, and in a name. In two minutes, we continue to Dajwór Street, where the district turns outward again. If you plan to return, the building generally opens daily from ten in the morning until six in the evening, staying open until seven on Friday and Saturday.

The main exterior of the former synagogue at 16 Szeroka Street, now part of Kazimierz’s busy cultural landscape.
The main exterior of the former synagogue at 16 Szeroka Street, now part of Kazimierz’s busy cultural landscape.Photo: Zygmunt Put, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A wide exterior view of the historic building, useful for showing its scale and setting in Kazimierz.
A wide exterior view of the historic building, useful for showing its scale and setting in Kazimierz.Photo: Zygmunt Put Zetpe0202, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
An earlier view of the Popper Synagogue facade, documenting the building before its more recent presentation as a bookstore and cultural venue.
An earlier view of the Popper Synagogue facade, documenting the building before its more recent presentation as a bookstore and cultural venue.Photo: Jakub Hałun, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.
Another interior view, showing the adapted space that once held a richly decorated Jewish house of prayer.
Another interior view, showing the adapted space that once held a richly decorated Jewish house of prayer.Photo: Zygmunt Put, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
The interior at high resolution, helpful for touring the building’s long afterlife after wartime damage and later renovation.
The interior at high resolution, helpful for touring the building’s long afterlife after wartime damage and later renovation.Photo: Zygmunt Put, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A close view of the surviving arched doorway detail, echoing the ornate entrance once associated with the synagogue.
A close view of the surviving arched doorway detail, echoing the ornate entrance once associated with the synagogue.Photo: Birczanin at Polish Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
Windows on the building’s upper level, near the former women’s area that was later adapted for other uses.
Windows on the building’s upper level, near the former women’s area that was later adapted for other uses.Photo: Birczanin at Polish Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
Stairs inside the building, recalling the 1827 alterations that rebuilt the roof and stair access.
Stairs inside the building, recalling the 1827 alterations that rebuilt the roof and stair access.Photo: Birczanin at Polish Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
A side-angle exterior that helps show the synagogue’s modest street presence compared with its historical importance.
A side-angle exterior that helps show the synagogue’s modest street presence compared with its historical importance.Photo: Jakub Hałun, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.
A broader contextual view of the synagogue in Kazimierz, placing the site within Kraków’s historic Jewish quarter.
A broader contextual view of the synagogue in Kazimierz, placing the site within Kraków’s historic Jewish quarter.Photo: Laima Gūtmane (simka…, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.
A later exterior photo that captures the restored building in the modern era, after decades of change and reuse.
A later exterior photo that captures the restored building in the modern era, after decades of change and reuse.Photo: Ludvig14, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
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