The synagogue was founded in 1929 by the United Synagogue of America to serve the needs of Jewish professionals working in Chicago’s downtown business district, providing kosher food and a place to pray during the workday. Following the COVID-19 global pandemic, there were concerns that, due to the exodus of workers from the city center, the synagogue would be unable to sustain its future operating costs.[4][5][6][7]
A sculpture Hands of Peace by Nehemia Azaz is situated over the entrance doors.[1]: 105 The work depicts "priestly hands raised in benediction" (the Priestly Blessing).[10]
Let There Be Light
Abraham Rattner's 30 ft × 40 ft (9.1 m × 12.2 m) Let There Be Light[a] occupies the entire eastern wall of the second-floor sanctuary. It stands in juxtaposition to the "reserved minimalism" of the rest of the interior.[2] The art depicts images from Genesis 1:3 and Jewish religious symbols including a menorah, a shofar and an etrog. Additional influences include kabbalistic symbolism of "the force and the spirit of the ineffable and unknowable power".[11]: 114–115
It was described as "[p]erhaps the most beautiful synagogue interior in the United States".[12] Another critic said the glass "bathes the sanctuary in a shower of color, artistically consecrating the space as a place apart from the grey concrete scene on the other side of the glass".[13]
Wolfe, Gerard R. (2004). Chicago in and Around the Loop: Walking Tours of Architecture and History (Second ed.). McGraw-Hill. pp. 414–415. ISBN0071422366. OCLC951323502.
Frystak, Alyssa (207). "Chicago Loop Synagogue"(PDF). Historical American Building Survey: HABS No. IL-343 – via ShulCloud.