This site requires Javascript to be turned on. Please enable Javascript and reload the page.
Thanks for your patience during our recent outage at scalar.usc.edu. While Scalar content is loading normally now, saving is still slow, and Scalar's 'additional metadata' features have been disabled, which may interfere with features like timelines and maps that depend on metadata. This also means that saving a page or media item will remove its additional metadata. If this occurs, you can use the 'All versions' link at the bottom of the page to restore the earlier version. We are continuing to troubleshoot, and will provide further updates as needed. Note that this only affects Scalar projects at scalar.usc.edu, and not those hosted elsewhere.
Romaniote Memories : A Jewish Journey from Ioannina, Greece to Manhattan: Photographs by Vincent Giordano
Main Menu
Introduction
Romaniote Jews
Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue
Kehila Kedosha Janina - Seth Kofinas Bar Mitzvah
Kehila Kedosha Janina - Celebration
Ioannina Synagogue Art & Architecture
Ioannina - Rosh Hashanah
Ioannina - Bet Chaim Jewish Cemetery
Learn more
About the exhibition
Queens College Special Collections and Archives
e5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
Queens College Special Collections and Archives & Hellenic American Project
The Open Ehal (Ark)
1
media/Ark-Torah-cases_thumb.jpg
2020-12-01T09:14:20-08:00
Queens College Special Collections and Archives
e5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
37713
3
The open ark, showing the distinctive cases (tiks) for the Torah scrolls with their metal decorations.
plain
2020-12-01T10:16:21-08:00
Queens College Special Collections and Archives
e5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
This page has paths:
1
media/000 0 KKJFACADE.jpg
2020-07-29T10:04:24-07:00
Queens College Special Collections and Archives
e5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue
Queens College Special Collections and Archives
21
splash
1012820
2021-01-07T17:51:02-08:00
Queens College Special Collections and Archives
e5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
Contents of this path:
1
media/000 9c.JPG
2020-12-01T07:21:46-08:00
Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue
14
plain
2020-12-01T09:35:32-08:00
1
2021-01-07T14:23:27-08:00
Façade
5
plain
2021-01-07T17:45:07-08:00
1
2021-01-07T17:42:31-08:00
Main Entrance
8
plain
2021-01-07T17:48:37-08:00
1
media/000 00_thumb.JPG
2020-07-29T11:19:49-07:00
Landmark Plaque Designation
9
In 2007 a plaque was installed celebrating Kehila Kedosha Janina’s history and its designation as a New York City landmark.
plain
2020-12-01T08:41:32-08:00
1
media/000 9_thumb.jpg
2020-07-29T12:00:15-07:00
Stained Glass
2
Stained-glass window on door leading into sanctuary from vestibule. Stained glass was included in the original 1920s synagogue design. The façade windows were restored or replaced during the restoration of 2003.
Stained-glass window on door leading into sanctuary from vestibule. Stained glass was included in the original 1920s synagogue design. The façade windows were restored or replaced during the…
plain
2020-12-01T07:59:18-08:00
1
media/000 3_thumb.jpg
2020-07-29T11:48:03-07:00
Interior
3
Interior, looking north, across the bimah (platform and desk from where the Torah is read), to the Aron ha-Kodesh (Holy Ark where the Torah scroll are kept).
plain
2020-12-01T08:41:47-08:00
1
media/000 7_thumb.jpg
2020-07-29T11:49:41-07:00
Women’s gallery
3
As in all traditional (Orthodox) synagogues, there are separate seating areas for men and women. In most New York immigrant synagogues this means that men are seated on the main sanctuary floor and women are seated upstairs in galleries, that cover two or three sides of the building interior. At KKJ the gallery, shown here in a view looking south, also serves as the congregation’s museum.
As in all traditional (Orthodox) synagogues, there are separate seating areas for men and women. In most New York immigrant synagogues this means that men are seated on the main sanctuary floor and…
plain
2020-12-01T08:42:01-08:00
1
media/000 4_thumb.jpg
2020-07-29T11:52:19-07:00
Chairs and menorah in front of Aron ha Kodesh
3
Chairs and menorah in front of Aron ha Kodesh, Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue. While the presence of this new metal seven-branched menorah as a light stand is meant to recall the Temple in Jerusalem, it is the ner tamid (eternal light) in front the Ark that is the actual symbol of the ever-burning menorah of the Tabernacle and Temple, first made by the artist Bezalel and described in the Book of Exodus.
Chairs and menorah in front of Aron ha Kodesh, Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue. While the presence of this new metal seven-branched menorah as a light stand is meant to recall the Temple in Jerusalem,…
plain
2020-12-01T07:50:01-08:00
1
media/000 6_thumb.JPG
2020-07-29T11:54:02-07:00
South side of prayer hall
3
South side of prayer hall showing entrance and benches. At KKJ, male congregants sit in these benches and face the Ark, or they sit on benches along the side walls of the synagogue. The large metal plaque on the right is the contemporary way of remembering the death anniversaries of part of congregation members.
South side of prayer hall showing entrance and benches. At KKJ, male congregants sit in these benches and face the Ark, or they sit on benches along the side walls of the synagogue. The large metal…
plain
2020-12-01T08:43:24-08:00
1
media/Ark-southeast_thumb.JPG
2020-12-01T09:15:00-08:00
View of the Ehal (Ark)
3
This view looks north to the ehal (ark) where the Torah scrolls are stored. The ehal is covered by an embroidered parochet that refers to the curtain in front of the Holy of Holies in the Jerusalem Temple.
plain
2020-12-01T10:15:18-08:00
1
media/000 10b_thumb.jpg
2020-07-29T12:07:20-07:00
Silver rimmonim (finials)
3
These silver rimmonim (finials) decorate Torah scrolls in the Ark. They were made in Ioannina, but the silversmith was probably not Jewish. Rimmonim and other decorations of the Torah scrolls are customary as a way of fulfilling Hiddur Mitzah; the glorification of the commandment. The first such finals in the Middle Ages were probably decorated with pomegranates (rimmonim), hence the name. Small bells are attached so that there is music when the Torah scrolls are carried in procession.
plain
2020-12-01T08:43:48-08:00
1
media/11D_thumb.jpg
2020-07-29T12:33:36-07:00
Memorial lamp
3
Memorial lamps of different kinds lit to mark the anniversary of the death of a congregant have been used at least since the Middle Ages. This distinctive lamp is like others from Ioannina and still sued at KKJ, names the deceased and the date of the adar (anniversary of death) with the request that the deceased be remembered by prayers on that date. The lamp also resembles those used in Greek Orthodox Churches. Those, however, have cross rather than the Magen David (Star of David). Originally these lamps burned oil, but now they are electrified.
Memorial lamps of different kinds lit to mark the anniversary of the death of a congregant have been used at least since the Middle Ages. This distinctive lamp is like others from Ioannina and still…
plain
2020-12-01T08:44:03-08:00
1
media/Ark-Torah-cases_thumb.jpg
2020-12-01T09:14:20-08:00
The Open Ehal (Ark)
3
The open ark, showing the distinctive cases (tiks) for the Torah scrolls with their metal decorations.
plain
2020-12-01T10:16:21-08:00
1
media/000 10a_thumb.jpg
2020-08-15T16:00:24-07:00
Torah scroll
4
In Romaniote synagogues and in many other North African and Middle Eastern congregation scrolls of the Torah (the Five Books of Moses) are kept in hard cases called tiks, usually of wood covered with metal or leather. When opened, this tik reveals decoration of the Ten Commandments. This is one of the three Torah scrolls at Kehila Kedosha Janina that can from Ioannina. The scroll that was brought for the dedication of the synagogue in 1927 is in the large silver case. In the 1980s four scrolls in tiks were stolen and only two were recovered. One was replaced by the creation of a new scroll sponsored by the synagogue brotherhood. One tik is left empty to remember the scrolls that were lost.
In Romaniote synagogues and in many other North African and Middle Eastern congregation scrolls of the Torah (the Five Books of Moses) are kept in hard cases called tiks, usually of wood covered with…
plain
2020-12-01T08:44:14-08:00
1
media/Section1_12A_thumb.jpeg
2020-08-15T17:58:13-07:00
Shofars from Ioannina
4
These distinctive shofars come from Ioannina. They were donated to Kehila Kedosha Janina from the estate of Rabbi Bechoraki Matsil. The blowing of the shofar – a ram’s horn – dates to Biblical times. It was used as a bugle in battle and blown to indicate the times of services (like the running of church bells) in the time of the Jerusalem Temple. Today, the shofar is blown multiple times on Rosh Hashanah – the Jewish New Year – and at the close of Yom Kippur (The Day of Atonement). Because of its distinctive history and associations, the shofar is often depicted in Jewish art as a symbol of God’s Covenant with Abraham and with the Jewish people.
These distinctive shofars come from Ioannina. They were donated to Kehila Kedosha Janina from the estate of Rabbi Bechoraki Matsil. The blowing of the shofar – a ram’s horn – dates to Biblical times.…
plain
2020-12-01T08:44:24-08:00
This page is referenced by:
1
2021-01-08T13:17:06-08:00
The open ehal
6
plain
2021-01-28T10:57:14-08:00
The open ehal (ark), showing the distinctive cases (tiks ) for the Torah scrolls with their metal decorations.