Monday 11 July 2016

Middle Street Synagogue, Brighton



Roy Saatchi has recently visited Middle Street Synagogue in Brighton - read the following to find out more.

"The camera never lies.  So when I look at the pictures I took during my recent visit to a special week-long opening of the Middle Street Synagogue in Brighton, I find they have filed themselves under “Cathedrals”. 



I had absolutely no hand in this clever bit of tech which somehow knew that the term "cathedral" is often applied colloquially to any large and impressive building for public worship.  And my, what an impressive building this synagogue is.  Not from the outside, mind you.  The low-key yellow bricked Italian Romanesque shaped exterior, on a narrow street, belies the visual splendour waiting inside. 



Middle Street Synagogue was being especially reopened for one week only as part of the Brighton Festival.  It certainly lives up to its claim to have the finest 19th century decorative interior of any building in Brighton - with the exception of the Brighton Pavilion of course. It is officially described as "an extremely sumptuous example of late 19th century craftsmanship".  It was built during the so-called golden age of high Victorian synagogue architecture in the period after 1858 when Britain granted equality and citizenship rights on a communal, not merely individual basis, to its Jews. 





It is basilican in design and a riot of marble, brass, mosaic, stencilling, gilding and stained-glass, much of it donated by the Sassoon family, the synagogue’s chief patrons. The 12 richly decorated iron columns that support the gallery are individually fashioned from hammered iron and copper; each one with a different representation of flora from the land of Israel. It is said the columns represent the 12 tribes.  



It was the first synagogue in Britain to be lit by electricity but perhaps the most interesting thing for me was the Hebrew writing you would normally expect to see at eye level above the ark.  The words are way up in the heavens, out of the way, conceivably not to spoil the symmetry!  



Middle Street has to be one of the finest historic synagogues in this country and deserves national recognition as an important part of Anglo Jewry’s architectural heritage."