The idea for the
Abrahamic Family House, which includes the Imam Al-Tayeb Mosque, was announced on 5 February 2019, by
Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation, during a meeting of the
Higher Committee of Human Fraternity at the
New York Public Library. The goal of the
Abrahamic Family House is to promote
interfaith understanding and dialogue between different religions. The synagogue is named after the 12th-century Jewish scholar, physician and astronomer,
Moses Ben Maimon (commonly known as Maimonides) who lived in
Morocco and
Egypt. He was one of the most prolific and influential
Torah scholars of the
Middle Ages and was a doctor by profession. Maimonides was born in Córdoba, Spain in 1135, spent 12 years traveling before settling in Cairo, where he lived for the rest of his life, teaching and writing about Judaism. He died in Cairo in 1204. The opening ceremony of the Moses Ben Maimon Synagogue was attended by members of the
Jewish community in
Abu Dhabi, as well as government officials and other religious leaders. Rabbi
Yehuda Sarna, the
chief rabbi of the Moses Ben Maimon Synagogue, opened the event and cantor
Alex Peterfreund led the congregants through a series of verses. Sarna then invited Rabbi
Levi Duchman, the first resident rabbi of the
United Arab Emirates and head of
Chabad in the UAE, to recite a Jewish prayer in
Hebrew for the leaders and government of the UAE. The same prayer was also delivered in Arabic by Rabbi
Yosef Hamdi, the leader of the small Jewish Yemenite community in Abu Dhabi that was rescued two years earlier by the Emirati government. == Architecture ==