“We dreamed of this moment for years,” Rabbi Avraham Feldman told the crowd packed into the brand new center on July 7. “And now we are sitting in this dream that has become reality.”

The dream in question is the Beit Shvidler Jewish Center of Iceland, a 9,000-square-foot structure that opened that evening as the country’s first Jewish center and Jewish culture house. Three stories tall, its distinctive color and design makes the building a landmark and instantly recognizeable.

Jews have lived in Iceland for more than a century, but the community spent most of that time without a permanent rabbi or a synagogue of its own, an absence that set Reykjavik apart from every other capital in Europe.

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That changed in 2018, when Rabbi Avraham and Mushky Feldman, moved to the city as Chabad-Lubavitch emissaries and opened Iceland’s first Jewish center. For the past eight years, the Jewish Community Iceland—Beit Tovah Chabad- the only active Jewish organization in the country- has been operating out of the Feldman’s home and temporary spaces. Until now.

Rabbi Avraham and Mushky Feldman - Israel Sudry
Rabbi Avraham and Mushky Feldman
Israel Sudry

“The center is a home. It’s a place where you can walk through the door and feel comfortable,” Feldman said in his remarks. “Where you can simply be Jewish.”

Serving both Iceland’s local Jewish community and the Jewish travelers who pass through the country, the center will also have space for programming that the community’s previous, more limited quarters could not accommodate. It will house a Judaica and kosher store, as well as a stunning social hall for community events.

It is also designed to open outward: any Icelander curious about Jewish life can now walk in and encounter it directly. The center will host the Gallery of Jewish Life in Iceland, a new permanent exhibit that traces more than a hundred years of the island’s Jewish history through photographs and documents that, until now, had nowhere to be shown. Now, that history finally has a home.

“This is exactly the kind of place the Rebbe [Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory] envisioned when he spoke of ahavat yisrael, giving every Jew the chance to connect with and celebrate their Judaism.”

The distinctive 9,000-square-foot structure is the country’s first Jewish center and Jewish culture house. On top of hosting a Judaica and kosher store, as well as programming for the Jewish community, it will also host the Gallery of Jewish Life in Iceland, a new permanent exhibit inside the center that traces more than a hundred years of the island’s Jewish history. - Israel Sudry
The distinctive 9,000-square-foot structure is the country’s first Jewish center and Jewish culture house. On top of hosting a Judaica and kosher store, as well as programming for the Jewish community, it will also host the Gallery of Jewish Life in Iceland, a new permanent exhibit inside the center that traces more than a hundred years of the island’s Jewish history.
Israel Sudry

A Country-Wide Celebration

Jón Gnarr, Reykjavik’s former mayor and now a member of the Icelandic Parliament, used his remarks to talk about the country’s debts to its Jewish community, and the Jewish authors he has been influenced by. He described the new center as “a living bridge, connecting cultures, dispelling ignorance, and fostering dialogue and understanding.”

“Many Jews in Iceland have felt hesitant to say out loud that they’re Jewish,” Gnarr said. “That's why education and dialogue are key.”

Acting U.S. Ambassador Joanie Simon, Rabbi Mendy Kotlarsky, community member Patrick Sulem and Mushky Feldman also addressed the gathering, while cantor Aryeh Leib Hurwitz brought the sound of traditional chazzanut into a room that had never held it before.

Patrick Sulem addresses the celebration.
Patrick Sulem addresses the celebration.

The opening drew recognition from the highest levels of Icelandic government.

Prime Minister Kristrún Frostadóttir, a guest of Jewish community events in the past, sent a letter describing the center as “an important milestone for the Jewish community and for Icelandic society,” and expressed hope for “continued cooperation between the Jewish community and the Government of Iceland.” Þórunn Sveinbjarnardóttir, Speaker of Althingi (parliament), wrote separately to recognize the occasion.

The evening closed with thanks to the donors whose generosity built the center, among them Eugene Shvidler, whose vision, leadership and generosity helped propel the center from an idea into a building people could actually walk into and celebrate Jewish life, philanthropists Isaac and Tovah Cohen, George and Pamela Rohr, The Shmuel Isaac and Miriam Popack Foundation and Dovid and Rivka Feldman.

“Together,” Rabbi Feldman told the room, “we are writing the Icelandic chapter in the story of the Jewish people.”