Union Libérale Israélite de France


The Union Libérale Israélite de France, commonly referred to as the rue Copernic synagogue, is a Liberal Jewish synagogue, located in Paris, France. Inaugurated on the first of December 1907, it is the oldest Reform synagogue in France.

History

The synagogue was damaged in a fascist riot in 1941, but was repaired after the war.

1980 attack

On October 3, 1980, on the eve of Simchat Torah, a bombing was directed against the synagogue of the ULIF. A bomb hidden in a motorcycle went off outside the synagogue, killing four pedestrians.
The bombing was the start of a string of other attacks by terrorists against Jews in Europe. In August 1981, a synagogue in Vienna, Austria, was attacked by Palestinian gunmen, killing two people, and in October 1981, three people were killed when a bomb went off in the center of Antwerp, Belgium.

Leadership

Rabbi Louis-Germain Levy trained at the Seminaire Israelite de France served as its first rabbi.
Rabbi Levy was succeeded by Rabbi Andre Chalom Zaoui in 1946.
In 1970, Rabbi Daniel Farhi was appointed the new senior rabbi and left ULIF in 1977 to create the second Reform synagogue of Paris, Mouvement Juif Liberal de France. Rabbi Michael Williams assumed the spiritual leadership of the community in the summer of 1977. He retired in 2014.
An Argentinian-Israeli rabbi, Yossef Kleiner, ordained by the Seminario rabinico was named as Williams successor and served the congregation until 2014.
Since 2014, Philippe Haddad and Jonas Jacquelin are its new rabbinic leaders