The synagogue was so special that it was thought to be a mosque at first sight. It was actually a Byzantine-style classical Romantic Moorish building. Tobacco Street synagogue is famous throughout Europe, not only for its size, but also for its acoustic structural advantages, it also has a huge pipe organ, very good sound. It is said that Liszt and Saint San (the authors of the cello song "Death of the Swan") often played their repertoire here. But when we came near the synagogue, we found that we had to charge 2400 forks for the visit. This was a Jewish style, and we had to talk business. I was always very disgusted with the admission of religious places, so I decided not to go in. Walking along the synagogue's wall to the back door, through the iron fence, you can see a backyard of a man-made tree with shiny stainless steel leaves, each of which is said to have been engraved with the names of the Hungarian Jews who were massacred by the Nazis in World War II. There are still a large number of Jews living around the synagogue, and the Jewish six-pointed star sign is everywhere.