In the 1980s, Rabbi
Yissachar Dov Rokeach, the fifth Belzer
Rebbe, spearheaded plans for the huge synagogue to be erected in the Kiryat Belz neighborhood of Jerusalem. The building, designed with four entrances accessible to each of the four streets of the hilltop neighborhood, would be an enlarged
replica of the structure that the first Belzer Rebbe, the
Sar Shalom, built in the town of
Belz in 1843. It would include a grandiose main sanctuary, smaller study halls,
wedding and
bar mitzvah halls, libraries, and other communal facilities. Funds for the ambitious, multimillion-dollar project were raised among Belzer Hasidim and were supplemented by various
fundraising projects throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Like the original synagogue, which took 15 years to complete, the new Belz synagogue that now dominates the northern Jerusalem skyline also took 15 years to construct. It was dedicated in 2000. The ornate wooden
ark is high and weighs . It has the capacity to hold 70
Torah scrolls. Nine chandeliers, each standing at high and wide, contain over 200,000 pieces of
Czech crystal apiece. In stark contrast to the majestic synagogue, the simple wooden chair and
shtender used by
Rabbi Aharon Rokeach when he came to Palestine in 1944 stand in a glass case next to the ark. == Architecture ==