jewishsighsteeing.com staff report, April 11, 2006
HELSINKI— Sometimes visitors who are unfamiliar with Finland's rich Jewish
heritage are surprised to find that Helsinki boasts a large synagogue.
This year, they are even more astonished to learn that
the congregation is celebrating its 100th anniversary, and that in the
city of Turku, another Jewish congregation will celebrate its centennial in
2012.
The Helsinki synagogue , which today serves a Jewish community numbering 1,200,
was built in 1906 following the settlement in Finland of Jews who had served in
the army of czarist Russia, which then exercised control over what had been formerly
Swedish Finland. When Finland became an independent country in 1917,
Jews who first started arriving in the country as early as the 17th century, were
granted the rights of full citizenship.
Finland's Jewish population grew in the period between the 1917 Russian
revolution and World War II. In response to the Soviet Union's
expansionist tendencies, Finland defended itself in the Finnish-Russian War of
1939. When Germany attacked the Soviet Union during World War II, Finland
found that it and Germany had a common enemy, but not a common purpose.
The can be no clearer illustration of the difference in the two countries'
goals than the way they treated their Jewish populations. Finland refused
to take the anti-Semitic measures against its Jews notwithstanding the pressure
it was under from Nazi Germany to do so.
It is a well-known story that during the war Finland had Jews as members of its
armed forces and that in some cases, these units fought alongside the German
units against the Russians. Finland's war hero, Marshall Mannerheim,
attended a ceremony in 1944 at Helsinki's synagogue.
In addition to prominence in business affairs, the Jews of Helsinki have been
active in cultural and governmental arenas of Finnish life. For example,
the painters Rafael Wardi and Sam Vanni and the composer Simon Parmet
established international reputations, while Max Jakobson served as Finland's
ambassador to the United Nations and Ben Zyskowicz was elected as a member of
parliament. Jakobson was nominated to be secretary general of the United
Nations, but was defeated by Kurt Waldheim.
Although many of Finland's early Jewish settlers spoke a
Lithuanian dialect of Yiddish, over time that language fell into disuse.
Today, most Jews speak Finnish as their first language and Swedish as a second
language. Yiddish classes are taught in the Jewish community center, built
in 1962 adjacent to the synagogue. Hebrew, as it is
around the Jewish world, is used for prayers and increasingly to converse with
visitors from Israel.
Finland was among the first countries granting recognition to the State of
Israel, and since 1948, there has been some Jewish immigration from Finland to Israel, as well as
various projects emphasizing friendship between the two countries.
Organized Jewish life is quite extensive under a Central Council of Jewish
Communities which coordinates Jewish affairs in Helsinki, Turku and a tiny
community in Tamere. Helsinki has a kosher delicatessen and butcher shop,
a chapter of the Women's International Zionist Organization (WIZO), Maccabi
athletic competitions, a highly regarded Jewish choir, longstanding societies
for the burial of the dead and visiting of the sick, and a Jewish day school
founded in 1918.
Some information for this report was provided by Andre Zweig of
the Jewish-Heritage-Finland travel
organization.
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