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Esther Maxwell Fine Art
Esther Maxwell Fine Art
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Originals The Hurva Shul
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The Hurva Shul

$3,300.00
sold out

One of the most impressive synagogues in the Old City of Jerusalem was originally built in the 16th century but was destroyed by the Ottomans. The synagogue became known as the Hurva, which means The Ruin, because its erconstruction in the early 19th century was begun and then abandoned- leaving the damaged shul a ruin for several decades. It was finally finished in the 1850s. 

On May 28, 1948, the Palestine Post reported the synagogue had been razed by Arabs. When Israeli forces recaptured the Old City in June 1967, the only thing left of the Hurva was a single arch. The Hurva synagogue was a ruin again. The arch was kept as a war memorial until 2010 when the synagogue was restored to its former glory. 

The Hurva synagogue symbolizes Jerusalem's indomitable spirit and the Jewish people's tenacious desire to claim its rightful land.

30” by 40

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One of the most impressive synagogues in the Old City of Jerusalem was originally built in the 16th century but was destroyed by the Ottomans. The synagogue became known as the Hurva, which means The Ruin, because its erconstruction in the early 19th century was begun and then abandoned- leaving the damaged shul a ruin for several decades. It was finally finished in the 1850s. 

On May 28, 1948, the Palestine Post reported the synagogue had been razed by Arabs. When Israeli forces recaptured the Old City in June 1967, the only thing left of the Hurva was a single arch. The Hurva synagogue was a ruin again. The arch was kept as a war memorial until 2010 when the synagogue was restored to its former glory. 

The Hurva synagogue symbolizes Jerusalem's indomitable spirit and the Jewish people's tenacious desire to claim its rightful land.

30” by 40

One of the most impressive synagogues in the Old City of Jerusalem was originally built in the 16th century but was destroyed by the Ottomans. The synagogue became known as the Hurva, which means The Ruin, because its erconstruction in the early 19th century was begun and then abandoned- leaving the damaged shul a ruin for several decades. It was finally finished in the 1850s. 

On May 28, 1948, the Palestine Post reported the synagogue had been razed by Arabs. When Israeli forces recaptured the Old City in June 1967, the only thing left of the Hurva was a single arch. The Hurva synagogue was a ruin again. The arch was kept as a war memorial until 2010 when the synagogue was restored to its former glory. 

The Hurva synagogue symbolizes Jerusalem's indomitable spirit and the Jewish people's tenacious desire to claim its rightful land.

30” by 40

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