Towards the end of the war, a growing number of people came to the synagogue to pray for the survival of their relatives. On one occasion, 20,000 people came to pray at a synagogue that could only accommodate 1,600. Worshipers included leading Jewish figures, such as the wife of
Vyacheslav Molotov. On September 2, 1948, Israeli’s newly appointed ambassador to the USSR, Russian-born
Golda Meir visited the synagogue for
Sabbath and the following
Rosh Hashanah. The sizable crowds (estimated at 100,000) that greeted Meir and the concluding prayer of “
Next Year in Jerusalem” stoked suspicions of
Zionism against the rabbi. On November 20, 1948, the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee was disbanded, its leading members arrested and charged with Zionist activities. Rabbi Shleifer escaped suspicion by writing a personal appeal to Stalin. ==Reputation==