Bet Mordechai Synagogue, La Goulette
Architecture
The building was donated to the community by community-member Isaac Bessis in the 1910s and was designed by Italian architect Benoît Barsotti. Barsotti included both neoclassical and orientalist elements in the design of the building, including acroteria, columns and corniches. Despite its style choices, it does not differ much from other buildings on the street.
Access to the synagogue involves going through a passage that leads to the building façade (now separated from the street). Above the front door of the building are the Stone Tablets of the Ten Commandments. Inside, the sanctuary is a square room centred around four pillars which once supported an upper women's section and a skylight before renovations in the 1980s replaced it with a portico above the Torah Ark.
The building was reconstructed in 1995 after the roof collapsed in 1994.
Gallery
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Entrance door with the Ten Commandments overhead
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Sanctuary with the Holy Ark
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Dedications on a side wall
See also
References
- ^ Bismuth-Jarrassé, Colette; Jarrassé, Dominique (2010). Synagogues de Tunisie. Patrimoines (in French). Le Kremlin-Bicêtre: Esthétiques du divers. pp. 261–263. ISBN 978-2-9533041-2-1.
- ^ Abdelhadi, Magdi (October 25, 2012). "Tunisia Jews: A tiny community hanging on - and cooking". BBC News. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
- ^ Bourial, Hatem (May 10, 2017). "À La Goulette, la synagogue Beit Mordekhai, un joyau en sept photos". webdo.tn (in French). Retrieved June 18, 2018.
External links
Media related to Beit Mordekhai Synagogue at Wikimedia Commons