Synagogue in Siberia damaged by meteorite

A synagogue in Siberia was lightly damaged by a meteorite that fell nearby.

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Rabbi Yechiel Michel Levitin standing next to the stained glass windows of the synagogue in Chelyabisnk, Russia that he said were shattered by a blast caused by a likely meteorite, Feb. 15, 2013. (Chabad Online)

Rabbi Yechiel Michel Levitin standing next to the stained glass windows of the synagogue in Chelyabisnk, Russia that he said were shattered by a blast caused by a likely meteorite, Feb. 15, 2013. (Chabad Online)

(JTA) — A synagogue in Siberia was lightly damaged by a meteorite that fell nearby.

On Friday, Rabbi Yechiel Michel Levitin, director of the Or Avner Jewish day school in Chelyabinsk, a city located 1,000 miles east of Moscow, was quoted by an Israeli website as saying congregants heard a huge explosion during morning prayers followed by a bright flash that lit up the sky.

“Glasses shattered and people tried to escape, but they weren’t sure were to go,” Levitin told COL, a media outlet affiliated with Chabad. “Outside we were told a meteor had fallen from the space.”

Media on Friday reported a suspected extraterrestrial object had landed somewhere in western Siberia. Videos posted on YouTube by drivers in the area showed a bright orb streaking the early morning sky. 

Levitin uploaded photos of the Chelyabisnk synagogue’s stained-glass windows, which he said were shattered by the shock waves. The rabbi said one congregant was spared serious injury when a large shard of glass landed in his seat seconds after he went to the window to investigate the cause of the blast.

“It was a real miracle,” Levitin said, according to COL. Levitin said authorities were telling residents to stay indoors while they were investigating the incident.

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