Sisak Synagogue

Sisak Synagogue was the 19th century synagogue in Sisak, Croatia built in the 1880. During World War II it was devastated and robbed, and synagogue rabbi Beno Heisz was killed in 1943. Synagogue today serves as a music school.

Sisak Synagogue
Sisačka Sinagoga
Sisak Synagogue on the postcard
Religion
AffiliationJudaism
RiteAshkenazi
LeadershipRabbi: Beno Heisz[1]
StatusDevastated and robbed in 1942, today serves as a music school
Location
LocationSisak, Croatia
Architecture
StyleNeo-romanticism, neo-Mudéjar
Completed1880
gollark: I mean, by one interpretation, sure.
gollark: (I mean, even if it did, that's hardly a very good reason, but eh)
gollark: Does it actually say, or even strongly imply, "children need two opposite-gender parents"?
gollark: Does Christianity actually *say* that anywhere?
gollark: The role of mother/father probably varies more across cultures than across genders in modern culture.

References

  1. "Benno Heisz". Pages of testimony by Reuven Incardona (grandson). Yad Vashem.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.