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MembersWithout Security, There is No Peace

We were surprised how much security was needed just so Jews could pray in peace

Photo: Nati Shohat/FLASH90

This year, we spent Yom Kippur at the Great Synagogue of Rome. My wife Anat, myself and our youngest son. We booked a hotel in the city’s Jewish quarter so as to be within walking distance from the synagogue, which was hermetically sealed to a distance of 250 yards by Italian security. Police and paramilitary forces blocked the entrances and closely monitored the situation. We had to pass a vigorous security check to attend the synagogue services. Showing our Israeli passports helped, but we were still questioned and had to pass through a metal detector.

The synagogue echoed like a vaulted cathedral. This made the Jewish prayers sound quite different than those uttered in the Holy Land, where synagogues are usually built differently. The collective “Amen” reverberated like what one would expect to hear from a Gregorian choir. This historic holy place was built 115 years ago in the form of a Greek cross with a high central dome. In the evening, the hall was relatively full, about 300...

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About the author

Patrick Callahan

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