Saturday, / June 27, 2026
Home / news

Synagogue Burns Down In Moscow

By , MALAKHOVKA, RUSSIA, Associated Press

A fire roared through a synagogue in a Moscow suburb early Tuesday, burning down much of the wooden structure in an incident that Jewish leaders blamed on anti-Semitism.

The synagogue in the town of Malakhovka, 12 miles southeast of Moscow caught fire at about 6 a.m., and the flames quickly engulfed the entire one-story building. Firefighters were unable to prevent damage to the building’s interior and roof.

Investigators at the scene said the fire was likely an accident, although the cause was not immediately clear.

“So far we haven’t found any obvious indication that it was arson,” local police official Kalin Batrov told The Associated Press.

But Jewish leaders called it a hate crime.

“The fire was caused by arson (committed) out of religious hatred,” said Borukh Gorin, a spokesman for the Federation of Russia’s Jewish Organizations, told Ekho Moskvy radio.

Russia’s chief rabbi, Berel Lazar, said on state-run Rossiya television that he believed it was arson and that if that was confirmed, the culprits must be caught and punished. “In my opinion there is no place for this in today’s Russia,” he said.

Concerns about anti-Semitism in Russia have risen in recent years. Many rights groups accuse Russian leaders of being silent in the face of religious intolerance and xenophobia, expressed in the occasional desecration of Jewish cemeteries and synagogues and more frequent skinhead attacks against foreigners.

Lazar said public discussion of an openly anti-Semitic appeal by nationalist lawmakers in January aimed at outlawing all Jewish organizations has created a dangerous atmosphere. Russian authorities have ignored calls by human rights groups to prosecute the lawmakers.

“I think it sent a new message, (created) a new understanding that yes, in Russia, you can act on ethnic grounds, you can do whatever you want,” Lazar told NTV television in comments from the charred ruins of the synagogue.

Grigory Amromin, whose family had attended the synagogue since the 1940s, wandered around the gutted building in despair.

“I can barely resist tears. Here you were in peace,” he said. “This is such a huge part of life that has been cut off.”

Comment

Be the first to write a comment.

Add

Related Articles
In Conversation: Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky
Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky was secretary to the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, for a period of 40 years. As a young boy of 13,…
Robert Kraft “Picks His Team” at Chestnut Hill Chabad Gala
Nearly 500 people filled Boston’s JFK Presidential Library on May 14 to mark the 25th anniversary of Chabad of Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. While the occasion…
A Welcome Center Nearly 4,000 Years in the Making
In 1677 BCE, Abraham purchased a plot of land in Hebron to bury his wife Sarah — the first Jewish land acquisition in history. The…
Ask the Rabbi: Meaningful Chats and Viral Moments on the Beltline
On any given morning, the Atlanta Beltline moves the way most city trails do — runners with earbuds, dog walkers, cyclists cutting through. Just off…
Newsletter
Donate
Find Your Local Chabad Center
Magazine