12021-01-13T16:50:48-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0377134plain2021-01-28T11:20:31-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
Looking southeast in the prayer hall, the ehal (ark) is on the left, memorial plaques are on the walls, and abundant light pours into the space from the many large windows. Synagogues are meant to be well lit for practical and spiritual purposes, but the windows are high enough not to allow worshippers to be distracted by the outside world.
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1media/04.JPG2020-12-14T10:56:29-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0Interior of Ioannina SynagogueQueens College Special Collections and Archives18splash10128232021-01-14T04:54:47-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
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1media/04_thumb.JPG2020-12-14T10:58:58-08:00Looking Southeast in the Prayer Hall2Looking southeast in the prayer hall, the ehal is on the left, memorial plaques are on the walls, and abundant light pours into the space from the many large windows. Synagogues are meant to be well lit for practical and spiritual purposes, but the windows are high enough not to allow worshippers to be distracted by the outside world.media/04.JPGplain2021-01-13T16:50:24-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Hellenic American Projectcirca 1999-2010Vincent Giordano Collection on the Greek-Jewish Community in New York City and Ioannina, GreeceShared under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/Iōannina (Greece)Giordano, Vincent