A Jewish Community is Thriving in the “Land of Fire and Ice” and celebrating Chanukah

A Jewish Community is Thriving in the “Land of Fire and Ice” and celebrating Chanukah
Since 2020 a ten-foot electrified menorah has been displayed during Chanukah on the main street of Reykjavik. Photo © Gabriel Rutenberg.

Story and photos by Jim Winnerman 

Is there a Jewish presence in the remote country of Iceland? For most people, the answer will invariably be that they have no idea, and then are surprised to learn that the island nation is in fact home to a small but thriving Jewish community.

Located just south of the Arctic Circle and known as the "Land of Fire and Ice” due to the presence of large glaciers and some of the world's most active volcanoes, Iceland’s capital of Reykjavík is home to three hundred Jews in a country of 354,000 people.

The history of the now permanent Jewish community is very recent. Despite the fact the Icelandic government only recognized Judaism as an official religious organization in 2021, there has been a sporadic presence beginning as far back as 1625 when Jewish trade merchants are known to have begun to make occasional visits. 

Fritz Heymann Nathan is thought to be the first practicing Jew to settle in Iceland in 1917 when he built a five-story building in Reykjavík. The building was significant for being the first in town lit by electricity, as well as Iceland's first “skyscraper.” Today, it remains one of the most imposing buildings in Reykjavik.

In the 1930s, some refugees from Nazi-occupied Europe settled in Iceland, and in the 1940s the United States military presence included hundreds of Jews temporarily assigned there.

The wife of Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, the fifth president of Iceland from 1996 to 2016, was Israeli-born Dorrit Moussaieff.

In the early 2000s there were occasional outreach visits to Iceland by of the rabbis from the Chabad sect of Hasidic Judaism to serve what had finally become a tiny but growing community. 

Then, in 2018, twenty-seven-year-old Rabbi Avraham Feldman arrived with his wife Mushky and two children to become the first permanent rabbi for the small but diverse Icelandic Jewish community. 

In 2020 when Iceland’s first Torah was completed it was joyously paraded down the main street of Reykjavik. photo © by Gabriel Rutenberg.

“There are Icelandic Jews from several generations back, and there are expats from many different countries, as well as Jews who have married Icelandic citizens,” Rabbi Feldman explains.

“Even though the Jews of Iceland come from diverse backgrounds, everyone enjoys Jewish events where we can celebrate what we have in common. The Jewish Community Iceland - Beit Tovah Chabad, is a place where everyone is welcome to explore and experience Judaism in a meaningful and enjoyable way,” Rabbi Feldman says. “Jews here were yearning for a synagogue, for a rabbi, for some sort of a community – and it has been amazing to fill that hole.” 

Since Rabbi Feldman and his wife have taken permanent residence, organization and recognition of the small but closely knit Jewish community has progressed at a remarkable pace. After meeting for years in church basements and other rented spaces, a building in Reykjavik was purchased in 2024 and is being renovated for what will be the northernmost Chabad House in the world. It is scheduled to open in 2026.

The Chabad House will include a dedicated sanctuary, a large function room for Jewish events, space for Jewish child education and activities, offices and a kosher store and gift shop.

Rabbi Feldman says here will also be a display case containing three small prayer books donated by early Jewish residents. “These are the only historical physical remnants of a Jewish presence in the nation,” he says. 

Ten years prior to Rabbi Feldman’s arrival, a small bimah had been built by a local Jewish businessperson in anticipation of the hoped for arrival of a Torah. Then, in 2020 and thousands of miles away in Zurich, Switzerland, Adina Krausz commissioned a Torah as a surprise for her husband Uri’s 50th birthday, and she felt donating the scroll to a community that did not have one would be appropriate. 

When she learned of Rabbi Feldman’s presence in Iceland and the lack of a Torah there, she delivered the unfinished scroll to Reykjavik where the last few words were penned by members of the Icelandic congregation. Afterwards the holy manuscript was joyously held aloft under a chuppah and paraded in an emotional celebration down the main street of town. 

Interestingly, the arrival of the Torah was a year before Iceland recognized Judaism as an official organized religion. “There had been attempts at filling out the required and complicated paperwork before, but the process had never been completed,” Rabbi Feldman says. “It took two years, but we succeeded. The important thing for us is that with official recognition by the government we have a sense of pride in being a legitimate organization in the eyes of the government.” 

Also, Iceland citizens can allocate $100 of their yearly taxes per person to support a religion of their choice, and recognition has resulted in significant support from the non-Jewish community.

The governmental approval also granted the community legal status to have life-cycle events such as the right to have a Jewish cemetery, and recognition of a Jewish marriage as being valid.

Rabbi Feldman has also been instrumental in having a ten-foot electrified menorah built and displayed during Chanukah. “We sent a letter to the city asking permission to put up a public menorah, and when we did not receive a response, we were concerned it might be ignored,” he recalls.

A city clerk told Feldman that when they received the request, they were unsure of what to do with it. “We had never heard of such a thing, and your letter passed from department to department, until it finally made its way to the mayor’s desk. He approved it immediately,” the clerk said.

 “They granted us a space right on the main street of Reykjavik,” Rabbi Feldman says. “We couldn’t have asked for a better location.”

The next year, the mayor attended the lighting himself and pledged there would always be a public menorah in Iceland.

Early in 2025 Rabbi Feldman met Iceland’s new Prime Minister Kristrún Mjöll Frostadóttir shortly after she took office. Describing their initial conversation as “remarkably warm and comfortable,” he extended an invitation to her to speak and stand in solidarity with Iceland’s Jewish community on International Holocaust Memorial Day on January 27, and she did.

 “At the heart of this remembrance lies the profound call to empathy and kindness, to recognize our shared humanity in one another,” she said in her remarks. 

Frostadottir’s speech occurred on the sixth year Feldman organized the Holocaust Memorial Day event, which, in addition to the Prime Minister’s presence featured speeches from the German, Polish and U.S. ambassadors to Iceland.

Unique aspects to Judaism in Iceland

There are unique aspects to practicing Judaism just below the Arctic Circle. “Iceland is the land of the midnight sun,” Feldman says, "and this creates epic Shabbat and Shavuot experiences. You start Shabbat well after midnight in the summer when it is light for almost 24 hours, and in the early afternoon in the winter when it is light only a few hours a day.”

There are plans for a mikvah in Reykjavik, but presently an isolated and remote natural hot spring is used. Reached after a 90-minute drive and then a ten-minute walk over volcanic rock, “It is quite an adventure, especially in wintertime, but luckily, once you get inside, it’s hot,” the rabbi says.

While keeping kosher can be challenging, some local kosher products can be purchased, but most are imported by sea. However, Iceland is famous for its fish, which are easily accessible and exceptionally fresh. 

The geology of the land also presents a unique opportunity for Jewish prayers. Recently, speaking in front of the Fagradalsfjall Volcano as it spewed orange lava through crevices in the black igneous rock, the rabbi created a video that expressed how the wonder of creation makes us stop and think of the world we live in.

" We think about the artist who created all of it," he says in the video. "So, we make a blessing together, and this blessing is about God's power and God's strength which we feel even more when we see a sight like this."

Despite Rabbi Feldman’s remarkable success at establishing a recognized community and building an adhesive Jewish spirit, there is a lengthy history of antisemitism in Iceland, beginning long before there was a Jewish community. 

While a few Jews settled in the country as refugees during World War II, others were turned back and perished in concentration camps. More recently anti-Israel sentiments have been expressed by some government officials.

One member of Iceland’s Chabad House, who did not want their name used in this article, spoke in hushed terms when talking about antisemitism in Iceland during an interview in a restaurant. “I lost a job when my boss found out I was Jewish,” he said.

Yet, Rabbi Feldman is making a positive impact in the furthermost capitol in the world. Universities invite him to speak about Judaism, and local media interview him about his religious lifestyle. 

In fact, he has become somewhat of a local celebrity, easily recognized in public dressed in dark clothing, wearing a full beard, a black skullcap, and the traditional knotted tzitzit.

What rabbi Feldman has accomplished in eight years in Iceland exhibits the determination that has sustained Jewish communities in unlikely places for millennia.


Jim Winnerman is a feature travel article journalist. Visit him at https://jimwinnermantravelwriter.weebly.com/. His stories often appear in the St. Louis Jewish Light.

Read more by Jim Winnerman in the NM Jewish Journal:
*Jews in the Civil War: Were they Union or Confederate?
Synagogue Without Walls: Into the Wilderness
*The History of the Ten U.S. Jewish Hanukkah Stamps


Community Supporters of the NM Jewish Journal include:
Jewish Community Foundation of New Mexico
Congregation Albert
Jewish Community Center of Greater Albuquerque
The Institute for Tolerance Studies
Jewish Federation of El Paso and Las Cruces
Temple Beth Shalom
Congregation B'nai Israel
Shabbat with Friends: Recapturing Together the Joy of Shabbat
New Mexico Jewish Historical Society
Where the North Ends, A Novel by Hugo Moreno 


Policy Statement Acceptance of advertisements does not constitute an endorsement of the advertisers’ products, services or opinions. Likewise, while an advertiser or community supporter's ad may indicate their support for the publication's mission, that does not constitute their endorsement of the publication's content.

Copyright © 2025 New Mexico Jewish Journal LLC. All rights reserved.

Read more

8th Night! New Mexico Jewish Journal Dec. 21, 2025 ~ 3X Match Only Ten Days to go, and we still need $2,200 to unlock $18,000 by Dec. 31st! ~ Read: Jews in Iceland. Latkes and Blintzes. Children's Art 4 Synagogues. The 8th Night: A story. Avid Readers.

8th Night! New Mexico Jewish Journal Dec. 21, 2025 ~ 3X Match Only Ten Days to go, and we still need $2,200 to unlock $18,000 by Dec. 31st! ~ Read: Jews in Iceland. Latkes and Blintzes. Children's Art 4 Synagogues. The 8th Night: A story. Avid Readers.

We still have $2,200 to go, to raise $6,000 by December 31st and unlock our $12,000 match for a total $18,000. NOW IS THE TIME to SUBSCRIBE, CONTRIBUTE , and DONATE. A $36 ($3/month) subscription becomes $108! Are you already a subscriber but unpaid or want