Ukraine shul where Menachem Begin was married gets first Torah since the Holocaust

The Ukraine synagogue where the late Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin was married received its first Torah scroll since World War II.

Leaders of Ukrainian Jewry gathered at the Choral Synagogue in the western city of Drohobych to celebrate the introduction of the scroll in a ceremony featuring songs, dances and speeches.

Completed in 1865, the synagogue inspired by the Rundbogenstil school was among the region’s most impressive. It became abandoned in the Holocaust, when most of the region’s Jews were murdered by the Nazis. It was a furniture warehouse during communist times.

In 2013, philanthropist Viktor Vekselberg funded a £800m restoration of the synagogue.

The project — led by Vekselberg’s father, Felix, who was born in that city — was completed last year. Viktor Vekselberg, who was born in Drohobych as well, also donated the scroll.

Begin, and his wife, Aliza, were married at the synagogue in 1936. Among the guests was Ze’ev Jabotinsky, the leader of Revisionist Zionists and mentor to Begin, who would go on to become Israel’s sixth president.

The synagogue is depicted in the famous painting by Maurycy Gottlieb, “Jews Praying in the Synagogue on Yom Kippur,” which is now at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art. Gottlieb was born in 1856 in Drohobych, then part of the Austrian Empire.

It later became part of Poland, was occupied by the Germans, and later was incorporated into the Soviet Union before becoming part of Ukraine.

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