Beth El is an egalitarian synagogue providing worship in the Reform tradition and is a founding member of the Union for Reform Judaism. Beth El's aims to provide a safe, supportive environment that allows all individuals to continue their spiritual journeys through exploration, education, and participation. Beth El is dedicated to bringing wholeness and healing to members of the congregation and the community as a whole.[3][self-published source?]
Clergy and leadership
Beth El's clergy consists of Rabbi David Spinrad and Cantor Jason Kaufman.[1] Brett Isserow serves as Rabbi Emeritus.
The Beth El Early Childhood Learning Center offers a Jewish preschool program.[7][self-published source?] Beth El's religious school offers a religious curriculum to students in kindergarten through tenth grade.[8][self-published source?]
Beth El's social action projects include conducting food drives,[10] collecting baby items for victims of domestic violence, supporting a social service safety net for those in need, and serving food to residents at a local shelter.[11][self-published source?]
History
Early history
The congregation was established by approximately forty Jewish families living in Alexandria, Virginia, on September 4, 1859.[2] The congregation went by the name Beth El Hebrew Congregation or the alternative name of Hebrew Congregation of Alexandria.[2] For the High Holy Days of 1859, the congregation held separate services for those wishing to worship in the Orthodox tradition and those preferring a more liberal tradition.[2] The two groups decided to worship together beginning in the following year's High Holy Days.[2]
Services were conducted in Hebrew with accompaniment from a choir and an organ.[2] Services were held either in a rented space in the Young Men's Christian Association or in a congregant's home.[2]
By the 1860s, Beth El worshiped at a rented space in Stewart's Hall at the northeast corner of King and Pitt streets.[2] During this period, some of Beth El's services were led by ordained rabbis, while others were led by lay leaders.[2] By 1867, Beth El finally had a permanent rabbi, Dr. Leopold Lowensohn.[2]
First synagogue
Beth El held a Purim ball on March 8, 1871, in order to raise funds to construct a synagogue building.[2] The next month, Beth El's leaders decided to build the synagogue on land located on Washington Street, just north of Cameron Street.[2] Construction began on June 26, and the building was completed by August 1871.[2] Dedication and the first Shabbat services were held on September 1, 1871.[2] The second floor served as the sanctuary, while the first floor was used for social purposes and the religious school.[2] Three years later, Beth El purchased the land on which the synagogue was built from its owner, partially from funds raised from selling pews to twenty of its families.[2]
In 1873, Rabbi Lowensohn left Beth El, and he was replaced by Rabbi A.A. Bonnheim.[2] A year later, several members accused Bonnheim of unbecoming conduct.[2] After some deliberation, the majority of the membership gave a vote of confidence to the rabbi, and at least four families resigned in disgust and formed their own congregation.[2] The families rejoined Beth El two years later when Bonnheim left Beth El.[2]
Following Bonnheim's departure, Beth El did not have another rabbi who stayed with the congregation for more than two consecutive years for several decades.[2]
Six days after Kristallnacht, Beth El's members convened in a special meeting.[2] Benedict Weil, Beth El's president, proposed that Beth El hire Rabbi Hugo B. Schiff of Karlsruhe, Germany, as its permanent rabbi.[2] Schiff had been known in Northern Virginia for his work with Rabbi Ulrich Steuer of Fredericksburg, Virginia's reform congregation.[2] A graduate of the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau and Erlangen University,[15] Schiff had been the spiritual leader of a congregation of 1,000 members in Germany and a member of the Great Synagogue Council of Baden.[16] Rabbi Schiff had been imprisoned at the Dachau Concentration Camp.[15] Because Schiff would enter the United States on a religious visa, the visa would be relatively simple to obtain, and otherwise restrictive visa quotas would not apply.[2]
Beth El's members enthusiastically approved the proposal.[2] Schiff came to Beth El as its rabbi on April 18, 1939, bringing with him a Torah that had been rescued from Karlsruhe's destroyed synagogue.[2] Virtually all Jewish residents of Karlsruhe who remained in the city were murdered in the Holocaust.[17]
Schiff expanded Shabbat services, reintroduced Bar Mitzvah and Confirmation ceremonies, hosted congregational Passover seders, organized an adult study group,[2] and held lectures about the history of Jewish people.[18] The interior and exterior of the synagogue were refurbished.[2] Under Schiff's leadership, Beth El's membership quadrupled within nine years.[2]
In 1941, Schiff became rabbi of the Arlington–Fairfax Jewish Center (since renamed Etz Hayim) on a part-time basis, which Beth El approved.[2] Schiff also served as the rabbi of the Washington Hebrew Congregation during the summer months.[2] Schiff became a professor of religion at Howard University in 1945.[19]
Schiff resigned from Beth El on July 1, 1948, in order to become a full-time assistant rabbi at Washington Hebrew Congregation.[2][20]
Rabbi Helfgott
C. Melvyn Helfgott, a newly ordained rabbi from Hebrew Union College, became Beth El's religious leader in 1949.[2]
Instead of a conventional sermon during Shabbat services, Rabbi Helfgott moderated a series of adult discussions on Judaism.[2] Shabbat morning services became more family-oriented.[2] A youth group was formed.[2] An adult-discussion group convened each Sunday morning.[2] Helfgott formed a Jewish study group for young married adults.[2]
Helfgott led Beth El until May 1953.[2] Rabbi Emmet A. Frank became Beth El's spiritual leader in April 1954.[21] A graduate of the University of Houston and Hebrew Union College, Cincinnati, Frank had served as assistant rabbi for a congregation in Houston before joining Beth El.[21]
New facility
Because Beth El's membership quadrupled in size during the 1950s, the congregation began to consider moving to a larger location.[2] By 1952, Beth El held additional High Holy Day services at a nearby church, and Beth El did the same for Shabbat services by 1955.[2] By 1955, Beth El held an additional Shabbat service at a nearby Baptist church.[2] The religious school's enrollment had also increased similarly, and Beth El had begun to rent space at local school buildings.[2]
In 1955, Beth El purchased a wooded 5.5-acre (22,000 m2) piece of land on Seminary Road for $42,500.[2] Beth El sold its synagogue for $25,000.[2]
Plans for the new synagogue included a 440-seat sanctuary, a social hall large enough for 460 people, and 22 classrooms for the religious school.[22] A fundraising campaign paid for some of the costs, and a mortgage paid for the remainder.[2] Groundbreaking began on May 26, 1956.[2] and the cornerstone was laid on February 10, 1957.[23] The building was formally dedicated on September 13, 1957.[22]
In 1958, Rabbi Frank criticized Byrd's massive resistance movement in his sermon during Kol Nidre services.[26]
Segregationists in Virginia were quick to denounce Frank's sermon.[2] Newspapers in southern Virginia, Washington,[2] and New York criticized the sermon,[2] and Frank received multiple threatening phone calls.[27] while many rabbis and Christian churches in Metropolitan Washington supported Frank.[26]
A few weeks later, Frank was invited to speak about Judaism at Arlington Unitarian Church.[28] Due to a bomb threat; the church was evacuated and the speech was canceled.[29]
Frank said he would return to speak at the church the following Sunday because "I have a lot to say and I don't run that easy."[27] Frank said the bomb threat was the work "of a group of cowards who are afraid to come out into the daylight."[27] People from around the country mailed letters to Beth El in support of Rabbi Frank.[2]
At Frank's next sermon, he said that a "Jew who remains silent in the face of prejudice leveled at another group of God's children is traitorous to the basic principle of Judaism."[30] Referring to the people who violently supported segregation, he pointed to the Jewish concept of repentance and forgiveness, saying, "no man should be so merciless that he will not forgive even the most sordid actions of men."[30]
Frank returned to speak at the church the next Sunday.[31] In the audience was George Lincoln Rockwell, a neo-Nazi leader.[31] On the church's lawn before his speech, Frank introduced himself to Rockwell and welcomed him to hear his speech.[31] When Rockwell proposed that he meet with Frank later to clear up some misunderstandings, Frank agreed to do so.[31]
Centennial
Beth El marked its centennial with a three-day celebration in March 1960.[32]
Second schism
On January 11, 1962, the Jewish Community Council stated it opposed public schools having celebrations of religious holidays such as Christmas. In response, Frank wrote a letter to the editor of The Washington Post saying there was nothing wrong with a public school having a celebration of Christmas together with a celebration of Hanukkah.[33] Frank wrote that such religious holiday celebrations were a way to teach children to respect others' religion.[33][a]
Many of Beth El's congregants were unhappy with Frank's letter.[2] Opposition to the rabbi and lay leadership at Beth El resulted in 43 families leaving and forming in new congregation, Temple Rodef Shalom in Falls Church in 1962.[2][36]
Frank left Beth El in 1969 after accepting a position at Temple De Hirsch, a Reform congregation in Seattle.[37] Frank said he was proud of always speaking from his heart about what he believed to be true.[37] He was replaced by Rabbi Arnold G. Fink, an 11th-generation rabbi who graduated from Princeton University and Hebrew Union College.
Expansion
By the mid-1960s, Beth El's synagogue was no longer large enough, particularly for its religious school, which had become overcrowded.[2] A committee's proposal to expand the synagogue building included a larger social hall, additional classrooms, and a room for youth groups.[2] The expansion plan was approved in 1967.[2]
Beth El's membership continued to grow through the early 1980s.[2] With more of its families consisting of two parents with full-time careers and raising a family, fewer members were available to volunteer, and Beth El began to hiring employees to do the work that volunteers had always done.[2]
Due to the growing number of congregants, Beth El's rabbi, Rabbi Arnold G. Fink, found he was stretched too thin.[2] Rabbi Amy Perlin became Beth El's first Assistant Rabbi in the summer of 1982.[2]
In 2017, Isserow announced his retirement, and Rabbi David Spinrad was selected as his replacement,[40] while Isserow would remain on in the role of rabbi emeritus. Spinrad also served at Hebrew Benevolent Congregation in Atlanta before beginning his tenure at Beth El in July 2018.
Notes
^On June 25, 1962, in the case of Engel v. Vitale, the United States Supreme Court ruled that it is unconstitutional for state officials to compose an official school prayer and encourage its recitation in public schools.[34] On June 17, 1962, in the case of Abington School District v. Schempp, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that school-sponsored reading of Biblical verses in public schools is unconstitutional.[35]
Keluarga Clunies-Ross, generasi 1930-an Raja Kepulauan Cocos adalah sebuah gelar, yang awalnya adalah julukan dari pers[1] namun belakangan diklaim sendiri oleh para keturunan John Clunies-Ross, seorang kapten kapal dan petualang asal Skotlandia. Keluarga Clunies-Ross menguasai Kepulauan Cocos selama 150 tahun, hingga keturunan kelima John Cecil Clunies-Ross menjual kepulauan tersebut kepada Persemakmuran Australia pada tahun 1978. Asal keturunan John Clunies-Ross adalah seorang pelau...
Kejuaraan Dunia Tenis Meja Tunggal Putra Putri Ganda Putra Putri Campuran Tim Putra Putri Sebelumnya 1985 Selanjutnya 1989 Kejuaraan Tenis meja Dunia 1987 yang diadakan di New Delhi[1][2] acara ini diadakan mulai 19 Februari hingga 1 Maret 1987.[3] Hasil Tim Event Emas Perak Perunggu Swaythling CupMen's Team TiongkokChen LongcanChen Xinhu...
Lore BaratKecamatanPatung megalitik Tokalalaea.Peta lokasi Kecamatan Lore BaratNegara IndonesiaProvinsiSulawesi TengahKabupatenPosoPemerintahan • CamatLeo Ledjab[1]Populasi • Total3,164 jiwa jiwaKode Kemendagri72.02.23 Kode BPS7204021 Luas428,2 km2Desa/kelurahan6 Lore Barat adalah sebuah kecamatan di Kabupaten Poso, Sulawesi Tengah, Indonesia. Ibu kota kecamatan ini terletak di desa Lengkeka.[1] Kecamatan Lore Barat dibentuk pada tanggal 6 Februari...
عزلة ال عبيد - عزلة - تقسيم إداري البلد اليمن المحافظة محافظة البيضاء المديرية مديرية الصومعة السكان التعداد السكاني 2004 السكان 6٬453 • الذكور 3٬203 • الإناث 3٬250 • عدد الأسر 746 معلومات أخرى التوقيت توقيت اليمن (+3 غرينيتش) تعديل مصدري - تعديل عزلة ال...
Das Alte Johannishospital mit der Johanniskirche um 1880, Federzeichnung von Fritz Berger Das Johannishospital war eine vom Mittelalter bis ins 20. Jahrhundert bestehende soziale Einrichtung in der südöstlichen Vorstadt von Leipzig. Sie war nacheinander in zwei Gebäudekomplexen beheimatet, dem Alten und dem Neuen Johannishospital, die beide an der Hospitalstraße lagen, wie der Teil der heutigen Prager Straße zwischen Johannis- und Ostplatz bis 1950 hieß. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Altes ...
Xpress: Platform 13 Xpress in de nieuwe kleuren (sinds april 2012) Algemene informatie Locatie Walibi Holland, Biddinghuizen Themagebied Main Street Type Stalen lanceerachtbaan Model LSM Coaster 996m Bouwer(s) Vekoma Opdrachtgever Six Flags Status Geopend Bouw eind 1999/begin 2000 Opening april 2000 Thema Verlaten metrostation waar vreemde ongelukken gebeuren. Vorige locaties en/of namen Superman: The Ride (2000-2004)Xpress (2005-2013)Xpress: Platform 13 (2014-heden) Eigenschappen Topsnelheid...
Ein Computerprogramm oder kurz Programm ist eine den Regeln einer bestimmten Programmiersprache genügende Folge von Anweisungen (bestehend aus Deklarationen und Instruktionen), um bestimmte Funktionen bzw. Aufgaben oder Probleme mithilfe eines Computers zu bearbeiten oder zu lösen.[1] Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Überblick 2 Klassifizierungsmöglichkeiten 3 Geschichte 3.1 Die Analytische Maschine von Charles Babbage 3.2 Das erste veröffentlichte Computerprogramm von Ada Lovelace 3.3 Erste...
Part of a series onMahāyāna Buddhism Unique doctrines Bodhisattva Mind of Awakening Buddha-nature Skillful Means Transcendent Wisdom The Transcendent Virtues Emptiness The consciousness doctrine Three bodies of the Buddha Non-abiding Nirvana One Vehicle Bodhisattva Precepts and Vows Pure Lands Buddhas and Bodhisattvas Shakyamuni Amitabha Akshobhya Bhaiṣajyaguru Vairocana Mañjuśrī Avalokiteśvara Vajrapāṇi Maitreya Kṣitigarbha Ākāśagarbha Samantabhadra Tara Mahayana sutras Praj�...
هذه مقالة غير مراجعة. ينبغي أن يزال هذا القالب بعد أن يراجعها محرر مغاير للذي أنشأها؛ إذا لزم الأمر فيجب أن توسم المقالة بقوالب الصيانة المناسبة. يمكن أيضاً تقديم طلب لمراجعة المقالة في الصفحة المخصصة لذلك. (يوليو 2020) هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. فض�...
Indian king and founder of the Maratha Empire (r. 1674–80) For other uses, see Shivaji (disambiguation). Shivaji IShakakarta[1]Haindava Dharmoddharak[2]Portrait of Shivaji (c. 1680s), British Museum1st Chhatrapati of the Maratha EmpireReign1674–1680Coronation 6 June 1674 (first) 24 September 1674 (second) PredecessorPosition establishedSuccessorSambhajiBorn19 February 1630Shivneri Fort, Ahmadnagar Sultanate (present-day Maharashtra, India)Died3 April 1680 (aged 50)Ra...
Telephone numbers in SerbiaLocation of SerbiaLocationCountrySerbiaContinentEuropeRegulatorRATELTypeOpenFormat0xx xxx xx xxAccess codesCountry code+381International access00Long-distance0 Regulation of the telephone numbers in Serbia is under the responsibility of the Regulatory Agency of Electronic Communication and Mail Services (RATEL), independent from the government.[1] The country calling code of Serbia is +381. The country has an open telephone numbering plan, with most numbers ...
Adnan Menderes BoulevardPalm trees in Adnan Menderes BoulevardNative nameAdnan Menderes Bulvarı (Turkish)Length7 km (4.3 mi)LocationMersin, TurkeyCoordinates36°47′02″N 34°36′44″E / 36.78389°N 34.61222°E / 36.78389; 34.61222Majorjunctionsİsmet İnönü Boulevard Adnan Menderes Boulevard (Turkish: Adnan Menderes Bulvarı) is a major avenue in Mersin, Turkey. It is named after Adnan Menderes (1899-1961), the prime minister of Turkey between 19...
Облачно, возможны осадки в виде фрикаделекангл. Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs Жанры фантастика, комедия, приключения, мелодрама, семейный Техники анимации рендеринг и компьютерная Режиссёры Фил ЛордКристофер Миллер На основе Облачно, возможны осадки в виде фрикаделек[d] А...
Title page of the first edition of The Fatal Contract (1653) The Fatal Contract: A French Tragedy is a Caroline era stage play, written by William Heminges.[1][2] The play has been regarded as one of the most extreme of the revenge tragedies or tragedies of blood, like The Spanish Tragedy and Titus Andronicus, that constitute a distinctive subgenre of English Renaissance theatre. In this most graphic Caroline revenge tragedy...Heminges tops his predecessors' grotesque art by c...
2020 video game included in Microsoft's Edge browser 2020 video gameSurfDeveloper(s)MicrosoftPublisher(s)MicrosoftPlatform(s)Microsoft EdgeRelease2020Genre(s)Casual, sports In the skiing theme, the player is chased by the Abominable Snowman from SkiFree. Surf is a browser game developed by Microsoft that is shipped with the Microsoft Edge web browser. In the game, the player must control a surfer as they move across a body of water while also collecting power-ups and evading obstacles and a k...
This article is about Bioinformatics. For the disease in horses known by the acronym PSSM, see Equine polysaccharide storage myopathy. PWMs are often represented graphically as sequence logos. A position weight matrix (PWM), also known as a position-specific weight matrix (PSWM) or position-specific scoring matrix (PSSM), is a commonly used representation of motifs (patterns) in biological sequences. PWMs are often derived from a set of aligned sequences that are thought to be functionally re...
Suburb of Perth, Western AustraliaMount PleasantPerth, Western AustraliaBlue Gum Lake, Mount PleasantCoordinates32°01′42″S 115°50′56″E / 32.028214°S 115.8489476°E / -32.028214; 115.8489476 (Mount Pleasant)Population7,456 (SAL 2021)[1]Established1911Postcode(s)6153LGA(s)City of MelvilleState electorate(s)Bateman and Riverton[2]Federal division(s)Tangney Suburbs around Mount Pleasant: Applecross Applecross Como Ardross Mount Pleas...