Congregation Beth Israel (Lebanon, Pennsylvania) Explained

Building Name:Congregation Beth Israel
Native Name:Hebrew: בית ישראל
Image Upright:1.4
Map Type:Pennsylvania
Map Size:250
Map Relief:1
Location:411 South Eighth Street, Lebanon, Pennsylvania
Country:United States
Geo:40.3333°N -76.4238°W
Religious Affiliation:Judaism
Rite:Unaffiliated
Status:Synagogue
Functional Status:Active
Leadership:Rabbi Samuel W. Yolen
Architect:Percival Goodman
Architecture Type:Synagogue architecture
Established:1907
Year Completed:1953
Capacity:200 worshipers

Congregation Beth Israel (Hebrew: בית ישראל) is a Jewish congregation and synagogue located at 411 South Eighth Street, in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, in the United States. Founded in 1907 to provide services for the High Holidays, it was then, and remains today, the only synagogue in the Lebanon area.

The congregation's current building, designed by Percival Goodman to mirror the barns of the surrounding Pennsylvania Dutch community, was dedicated in 1953.

Rabbi Samuel W. Yolen, a graduate of The Academy of Jewish Religion in New York, is the current spiritual leader.

Early history

Beth Israel was formed in 1907 as a Conservative congregation by Jews in Lebanon, Pennsylvania who wanted a place to worship on the High Holidays.[1] [2] Services were, for a number of years, held in various homes.[2]

In 1915, when the membership reached 25, the congregation purchased a house on the southeast corner of Cumberland and Old Cumberland Streets. Beth Israel moved to the third floor of the Samler Building at Eight and Cumberland Streets in 1918, where they remained for over a decade.[2] [3] At the time of the move, the "rabbi-cantor" was Alter B. Freedman, the synagogue had 35 member families, and its annual income was $1,500 (today $).[4] The religious school held classes five days a week, and had 25 pupils. By 1929 membership had reached 90, and Beth Israel purchased the empty Emanuel Evangelical Church at 624 Chestnut Street.[2] [3]

The congregation moved to its current location, at 4111 South Eighth Street, in 1953.[5] The building, designed by synagogue architect Percival Goodman, was intended to mirror the surrounding community; as Lebanon was a region heavily populated by Pennsylvania Dutch farmers, he designed the synagogue as "a barn-style white building with Hebrew lettering on the facade."[6]

1970 to 2006

Steven M. Glazer joined the synagogue as rabbi in 1970, upon his graduation from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. He served until 1977, when he moved to Temple Beth-El of Birmingham, Alabama. At the time Beth Israel had 120 member families.[7]

Louis Zivic joined as the congregation's rabbi and principal of the religious school in 1983.[8] [9] Psychologist Julie Allender, his former wife (they divorced in 1998),[10] described the constraints involved in being a rabbi's wife in a Summer 1983 article in the Women's League of Conservative Judaism's Outlook magazine, and was cited in subsequent studies of rabbi's wives by Shuly Rubin Schwartz.[11] [12]

Zivic was a signator of an official protest letter in 2001 to President George W. Bush regarding Faith-Based Initiatives.[13] In December of that year Dr Allender[14] also argued that the annual Holiday Concert at the local Cedar Crest high school was "too Christian in emphasis"; in response, "school officials decided to no longer ask visitors to stand while the chorus sings the 'Hallelujah Chorus' from 'Handel's 'Messiah'." The Catholic League included the incident in its 2001 Report on Anti-Catholicism.[15]

In 2001, Beth Israel was also the recipient of the Solomon Schechter Gold Award for libraries.[16]

Zivic served until 2004.[8] He was followed as rabbi by Jonathan Panitz, who served during 2005[17] [18] and 2006.[19] Panitz had previously retired as chaplain for the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.[17] [18]

Recent events

Panitz was succeeded by Paula Reimers. Reimers had converted from Christianity to Conservative Judaism in 1981,[20] became one of the Jewish Theological Seminary's earliest female graduates in 1990, and subsequently served as rabbi for 13 years at congregations in Los Angeles, Connecticut and Arizona before coming to Beth Israel.[21] In Los Angeles she was the rabbi of Burbank Temple Emanu-El in Burbank, California for seven years, but in 2001, shortly after the September 11 attacks, she became embroiled in controversy there. She had invited several Muslims to join temple members in the temple's sukkah, and in order not to offend the guests, had Israeli flags removed from among the sukkah decorations, which in turn offended some of her congregants. Though neither she nor the synagogue's board attributed it to this incident, it, along with her "extremely dovish politics", contributed to her contract not being renewed.[22]

While serving as rabbi of Beth Israel, Reimers also served as the Jewish chaplain at Lebanon Valley College, and ran an interfaith dialogue program at the synagogue.[23] In 2007 she protested the Commonwealth Prayer Breakfast held in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, which, in her opinion, "clearly showed state endorsement of one particular religion (Christianity) and one particular sect within that religion (evangelical Protestantism), and even one particular Christian evangelical organization, Capitol Ministries."[24] [25]

Until 2008, Congregation Beth Israel was affiliated with the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism;[26] that year it chose to resign from the organization.[27], it was the only synagogue in the Lebanon area.[28] The rabbi was Paula Reimers and the president was Judith Clark.[29]

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://congregation-beth-israel.com/aboutUs.html About Us
  2. [#refBrener1979|Brener (1979)]
  3. [#refShenk1930|Shenk (1930)]
  4. [#refAJYearBookV21|''American Jewish Year Book'', Vol. 21]
  5. http://congregation-beth-israel.com/bitofhistory.html A Bit of History
  6. [#refGoodman2001|Goodman ''et al.'' (2001)]
  7. http://www.bethemeth.org/rabbi.htm Rabbi Steve's Corner: Bio
  8. [#refRubinSchwartz2006|Rubin Schwartz (2006)]
  9. http://heskaamuna.org/rabbi.html Rabbi Louis Zivic
  10. [#refRubinSchwartz2006|Rubin Schwartz (2006)]
  11. [#refRubinSchwartz2006|Rubin Schwartz (2006)]
  12. [#refRubinSchwartz2001|Rubin Schwartz (2001)]
  13. Web site: "An Open Letter to President Bush and Congress from America's Clergy" . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080802005511/http://www.house.gov/scott/legislative/charitable_choice/open.letter.to.pres.and.congress.pdf . 2008-08-02 .  , Congressman Robert C. "Bobby" Scott, House of Representatives website, May 16, 2001.
  14. Dr Allender
  15. http://www.catholicleague.org/annualreport.php?year=2001&id=67 Education
  16. http://www.uscj.org/Schechter_Awards6277.html The Solomon Schechter Awards Program
  17. [#refNYT20050403|''The New York Times'', April 3, 2005]
  18. [#refRifkin2005|Rifkin (2005)]
  19. [#refLVCNews20060303|Lebanon Valley College News, March 3, 2006]
  20. [#refGoldsmith2001|Goldsmith (2001)]
  21. http://congregation-beth-israel.com/rabbi-aboutme.html A Bit About Me
  22. [#refGruenbaumFax2002|Gruenbaum Fax (2002)]
  23. http://www.lvc.edu/religious-life/staff.aspx?bhiw=780 Meet the Staff
  24. https://web.archive.org/web/20080509050505/http://www.jewsonfirst.org/07b/capitol_ministries.html#reimers "The 2007 Commonwealth Prayer Breakfast"
  25. [#refReimers2007|Reimers (2007)]
  26. https://web.archive.org/web/20080722072059/http://www.uscj.org/Affiliated_Congregat5493.html Affiliated Congregations
  27. Web site: Minutes of The United Synagogues of Conservative Judaism Joint Executive Committee and Board of Directors Meeting, December 21, 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090805145815/http://uscj.org/images/board_minutes_december_2008.pdf . August 5, 2009 .  , p. 3.
  28. http://congregation-beth-israel.com/bethisraeltoday.html Beth Israel Today
  29. http://congregation-beth-israel.com/ Synagogue website