Israeli Knesset's artisan-designed front doors restored

Published date03 October 2021
AuthorGIL HOFFMAN
Publication titleJerusalem Post, The: Web Edition Articles (Israel)
The three sets of doors through which Egyptian leader Anwar Sadat, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the Dalai Lama and three US presidents entered the Knesset building underwent a special restoration and cleaning process, which lasted several months, to restore the splendor lost to the ravages of time and weather.

"World leaders as well as millions of citizens and tourists have passed through these doors," Levy said. "Walking through them is like traveling through the history of the Jewish people. Only a few days ago, the Knesset marked the 55th anniversary of its building in the government quarter, and we are happy that the process of restoring the doors concluded so close to such a special event."

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The main entrance doors to the Knesset are one of the most important works of art in the building. The process undergone by the six doors, which are arranged in three pairs, aims to shed new light on the hidden details of the work, in which artist Shraga Weil used brass reliefs to depict the story of the Jewish people from its wanderings to its return to the Land of Israel and the ingathering of the exiles.

Weil, one of Israel's leading artists, was born in Czechoslovakia. During World War II, he put his artistic skills to the services of the Budapest underground by risking his life to forge documents to aid the fight against the Nazis.

After the war, Weil tried to immigrate to Israel, but he was captured and imprisoned in Cyprus. Upon the establishment of the state, he immigrated and settled in Kibbutz HaOgen where he lived for the rest of his life.

In 1966, Weil joined the national project for the construction of the new Knesset building, and he was invited to decorate the six entrance doors. Over the years, time and weather have damaged them; the doors themselves became blackened...

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