Itzkovitch Synagogue
Itzkovitch (Hebrew: איצקוביץ') is a shtiebel located in central Bnei Brak on Rav Shach street (formerly Herzl), near Rabbi Akiva Street. The building is known to be one of the most active synagogues in the world with prayer services taking place in parallel around the clock in multiple rooms. There are an average 17,000 visitors a day.[1]
History
The synagogue is named after Zvi Itzkovitch, the original owner of the house, who wanted to prohibit traffic passing by his home on Shabbat. He took advantage of a law requiring that streets containing synagogues be closed on Shabbat by declaring one room in his house to be a synagogue.
gollark: Finally, a vaguely good version of that memetic hazard, although the sentiment is still terrible.
gollark: Have you actually *tested* this or are you assuming you can infer such things?
gollark: You are not in containment at Anomalous Artifact Site-2991 → invalid.
gollark: "God" is in containment at Anomalous Artifact Site-2991.
gollark: No, this is actually bad.
References
- Ariel Shenbal (24 September 2004). מפעל תפילה. Maariv (in Hebrew). Retrieved 30 November 2010.
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