The Great Synagogue of Europe (French: Grande synagogue d'Europe; Dutch: Grote Synagoge van Europa), formerly known as the Great Synagogue of Brussels (French: Grande synagogue de Bruxelles; Dutch: Grote Synagoge van Brussel), is the main synagogue in Brussels, Belgium, which was dedicated as a focal point for European Jews in 2008.
Shortly following Belgian independence, in 1831, Judaism was recognised as an official religion (besides Roman Catholicism, the country's majority faith, and Protestantism).[2][3] Despite this recognition, the Jewish community in Brussels had no place of worship, so in 1833, it acquired a building called the Petite Boucherie ("Small butcher's shop") on what is now the Place de Dinant/Dinantplein[4] (formerly the Place de Bavière/Beierenplein) in central Brussels from the Society of Friends of Fine Arts and converted it into a synagogue. This first synagogue was inaugurated a few months later by the first Chief Rabbi of Belgium, Eliakim Carmoly.
On 4 June 2008, the synagogue was dedicated as the "Great Synagogue of Europe" by then-President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, who signed a dedication document alongside two chief rabbis, with his name later inscribed on a plaque inside the building. It was envisioned to become a "symbolic focal point for Judaism in Europe", comparable to St. Peter's Basilica for Roman Catholics. The dedication ceremony featured the reading of a specially crafted "Prayer for Europe" and performances by the European Choir [fr], which consists of 100 singers from 20 EU member states.[9]
^Caroline Sägesser, Les structures du monde juif en Belgique (in French), Courrier hebdomadaire du CRISP, no. 1615, 1998
^Martine Cohen and Jean-Philippe Schreiber, Les juifs de France et de Belgique à la croisée des chemins: du paradigme confessionnel à la société multiculturelle (in French), N.p., 2009