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Stop 10 of 17

Tempel Synagogue, Kraków

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

On your right, look for a cream-coloured masonry facade with a tall central block, lower side wings, and broad round-arched windows that give the synagogue an almost theatrical sense of arrival.

This is Tempel Synagogue, completed in eighteen sixty-two, and it announced something bold before anyone even stepped inside. Architect Ignacy Hercok gave Kraków’s Progressive Jewish community a building in the Moorish Revival manner, mixed with a German round-arched style called Rundbogenstil. In plain terms, it was meant to look modern, confident, and very much part of the wider world of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Hercok even followed the example of the famous Leopoldstädter Tempel in Vienna. This was not a shy neighbourhood prayer room. It was a public statement.

And the congregation inside was making a statement too. These were reform-minded Jews who wanted worship to follow the German model rather than traditional Orthodox practice. To more conservative neighbours, some ceremonies here seemed downright scandalous. In the interwar years, women sang together with the cantor and choir. That alone tells you something important about Kazimierz: disagreement lived here not at the edges, but at the heart of communal life.

Take a moment and study the front. Notice how the taller middle section stages itself against the street, almost like a civic hall. Imagine how startling that must have seemed to those who thought a synagogue should speak more softly.

If you glance at the image on your screen, you can see another layer of ambition inside: donor names preserved in stained glass panes, the community’s memory written quite literally into the building. The Torah Ark, the sacred cabinet that holds the Torah scrolls, came from Leon Horowitz, president of Kraków’s Jewish congregation. And the interior grew lavishly ornate, with dense colour, gold leaf, and a gilded dome over the Ark that quietly echoes the famous dome of the Sigismund Chapel at Wawel. You can see that richness here.

Stained-glass panes that still carry donor names, preserving the people who funded Tempel’s original progressive congregation.
Stained-glass panes that still carry donor names, preserving the people who funded Tempel’s original progressive congregation.Photo: Jakub Hałun, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.

One man shaped this place more than any other voice: Rabbi Doctor Ozjasz Thon. From eighteen ninety-seven until nineteen thirty-six he preached here in Polish and German, and he also served in the Polish parliament. So Tempel joined religious reform to public life in a very unusual way.

The building kept expanding in eighteen sixty-eight, then again in the eighteen nineties, and again in nineteen twenty-four as the congregation grew to around eight hundred members, including artists and intellectuals. Then came wartime abuse: the Germans turned the synagogue into storage, even an ammunition depot and stable. That profaned it, but also helped it survive. After the war, prayer returned, a ritual bath opened here in nineteen forty-seven, restoration followed in the nineteen nineties, and new communal life returned again.

That is Tempel’s quiet lesson: continuity here never meant everyone agreeing. It meant arguing, rebuilding, and deciding again how Jewish life should look and sound. When you are ready, continue to the Wolf Popper Synagogue, about an eight-minute walk from here. If you plan to come back inside, Tempel usually opens from ten in the morning until four in the afternoon, and it closes on Saturdays.

The main facade on Miodowa Street, where Tempel Synagogue has stood since 1862 as a landmark of Kraków’s Progressive Jewish movement.
The main facade on Miodowa Street, where Tempel Synagogue has stood since 1862 as a landmark of Kraków’s Progressive Jewish movement.Photo: Igor123121, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A clear recent view of the synagogue’s tall central body and side wings, reflecting the Moorish Revival and Rundbogenstil design.
A clear recent view of the synagogue’s tall central body and side wings, reflecting the Moorish Revival and Rundbogenstil design.Photo: Igor123121, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A wider street-level view that shows Tempel Synagogue in its Kazimierz context, still active at the heart of Kraków’s Jewish quarter.
A wider street-level view that shows Tempel Synagogue in its Kazimierz context, still active at the heart of Kraków’s Jewish quarter.Photo: Rakoon, Wikimedia Commons, CC0. Cropped & resized.
Tempel beside the Jewish Community Centre, showing how the site has grown into a living cultural campus, not just a historic monument.
Tempel beside the Jewish Community Centre, showing how the site has grown into a living cultural campus, not just a historic monument.Photo: Rakoon, Wikimedia Commons, CC0. Cropped & resized.
The Jewish Community Centre under construction behind Tempel, a sign of the synagogue’s modern revival as a communal hub.
The Jewish Community Centre under construction behind Tempel, a sign of the synagogue’s modern revival as a communal hub.Photo: No machine-readable author provided. Slav assumed (based on copyright claims)., Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
The synagogue interior during a service, with the richly decorated sanctuary still used for prayer and cultural events today.
The synagogue interior during a service, with the richly decorated sanctuary still used for prayer and cultural events today.Photo: Suicasmo, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A close look at the Aron Kodesh area, where the gold-leaf finish and ornate decoration reflect the synagogue’s lavish 19th-century interior.
A close look at the Aron Kodesh area, where the gold-leaf finish and ornate decoration reflect the synagogue’s lavish 19th-century interior.Photo: Steven1991, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
One of Tempel’s colorful stained-glass windows, part of the decorative interior that survived later renovations and restoration.
One of Tempel’s colorful stained-glass windows, part of the decorative interior that survived later renovations and restoration.Photo: Jakub Hałun, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
Another stained-glass detail from Tempel, echoing the synagogue’s long tradition of donor patronage and careful restoration.
Another stained-glass detail from Tempel, echoing the synagogue’s long tradition of donor patronage and careful restoration.Photo: Jakub Hałun, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0. Cropped & resized.
A 2008 view of Tempel Synagogue in Kazimierz, useful as a modern historical record of the building’s exterior after restoration.
A 2008 view of Tempel Synagogue in Kazimierz, useful as a modern historical record of the building’s exterior after restoration.Photo: I would appreciate being notified if you use my work outside Wikimedia. More of my work can be found in my personal gallery., Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.
A 2012 exterior view documenting Tempel after renovation, when the synagogue had already resumed its role as a cultural landmark.
A 2012 exterior view documenting Tempel after renovation, when the synagogue had already resumed its role as a cultural landmark.Photo: Jakub Hałun, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. Cropped & resized.
This 2014 image records the facade and its 19th-century form, recalling the original 1860–1862 construction and later reconstructions.
This 2014 image records the facade and its 19th-century form, recalling the original 1860–1862 construction and later reconstructions.Photo: Daniel.zolopa, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0 pl. Cropped & resized.
A lively service inside Tempel, showing the synagogue’s continued use for religious life and community gatherings in the postwar era.
A lively service inside Tempel, showing the synagogue’s continued use for religious life and community gatherings in the postwar era.Photo: Rj1979, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
Interior worship in Tempel, a reminder that the building was returned to prayer after wartime desecration and later restoration.
Interior worship in Tempel, a reminder that the building was returned to prayer after wartime desecration and later restoration.Photo: Rj1979, Wikimedia Commons, Public domain. Cropped & resized.
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