On May 22–28, 1924, the cornerstone laying ceremony took place for the construction of the yeshiva building. Approximately 50,000 people participated in the event. The opening ceremony took place on June 24–25, 1930. Apart from thousands of local Jews, around 10,000 people arrived from all over Poland and abroad. When the German Army took
Lublin during
World War II, they stripped the interior and may have burned the vast library in the town square. An officer who witnessed the event reported that a brass band played while a Jewish throng loudly wept as the books burned. Recent reporting suggests that the library was not completely destroyed, and more than 800 volumes of the once 15–40,000 volume library have been identified. The building became the regional headquarters of the German Military Police. After the war, in the autumn of 1945, the property was taken over by the state as an abandoned possession and assigned to the newly established
Maria Curie-Skłodowska University. It was used by the
Medical University of Lublin. In the 1964,
Yeshiva Chachmei Lublin of Detroit was reimbursed for the building, receiving $177,042.25. In 2003 the building was returned to the Jewish community.
Its synagogue, the first to be entirely renovated by the Jewish community of Poland since World War II, was reopened on February 11, 2007. As of October 2013, a four-star hotel named Hotel Ilan was opened in the building. During the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the building was converted by the
American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee into a
refugee camp for roughly 190 Ukrainian Jewish refugees, including an educational center for refugee children operated by alumni of
HaMahanot HaOlim youth group. ==Reputation==