The Union Libérale Israélite de France, abbreviated ULIF and commonly known as the rue Copernic synagogue, is a Reform Jewish congregation in the sixteenth arrondissement of Paris and the oldest Reform synagogue in the country. It was inaugurated on the first of December 1907 and continues today as a leading voice of liberal Judaism in France.
The synagogue was founded by Rabbi Louis Germain Lévy, trained at the Séminaire Israélite de France. The community first gathered in a converted painter's studio at 24 rue Copernic, rented in 1907 and purchased in 1921, before a purpose-built Art Deco sanctuary was constructed on the site between 1923 and 1924 to designs by the architect Marcel Lemarié.
The congregation has endured the tragic intrusions of antisemitic violence. On the night of the second to third of October 1941, during the German occupation, a bomb planted by the Mouvement Social Révolutionnaire damaged the building, which was repaired only after the Liberation. On the third of October 1980, on the eve of Simchat Torah, a motorcycle bomb detonated outside the synagogue, killing four passers-by.
Under successive rabbis including Louis Germain Lévy, André Chalom Zaoui and Daniel Farhi, the congregation has developed a Reform tradition adapted to French Jewish life, with services in Hebrew and French and equal participation of women and men. In 2019 the ULIF announced its merger with the Mouvement Juif Libéral de France into the new association Judaïsme en Mouvement.
The Union Libérale Israélite de France is the founding congregation of Reform Judaism in France and one of the most significant institutions of liberal Jewish life in continental Europe. Its history weaves together a century of Jewish religious creativity, the wounds inflicted by twentieth-century antisemitism and the renewed commitment of French Jews to a vibrant communal future.
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