Shaare Zedek Congregation (Montreal) Explained

Shaare Zedek Congregation
Religious Affiliation:Conservative Judaism
Festivals:-->
Organizational Status:-->
Leadership:Rabbi Alan W. Bright
Status:Synagogue
Functional Status:Active
Location:5305 Rosedale Avenue, Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, Montreal,
Country:Canada
Map Type:Canada Montreal
Map Relief:1
Coordinates:45.4671°N -73.6489°W
Architecture Type:Synagogue
Year Completed:1954
Date Destroyed:-->
Elevation Ft:-->

Shaare Zedek Congregation is a Conservative Jewish synagogue located in the residential district of Notre-Dame-de-Grâce in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

History

Founded in 1953 as the Orthodox Jewish Congregation of Western N.D.G., the synagogue was established to meet the needs of those Jewish families moving to western Montreal and to set up a Hebrew elementary school.

At first, both school and services were housed in temporary locations until land was purchased and a building constructed. The new building, on Chester in N.D.G., was ready in 1954; it was further expanded in 1962. In 1955, the school became affiliated with the United Talmud Torahs of Montreal and is now rented as a day care center. The congregation changed to the Conservative rite in 1955. The facade of the synagogue, added in 1985, depicts the Ten Commandments in blue neon lights.

In an unusual move for a conservative synagogue, in 2010 the congregation adopted a siddur endorsed by the Modern Orthodox Rabbi Jonathan Sacks.[1]

Notes and References

  1. News: Arnold, Janice . Shaare Zedek adopts Koren Sacks siddur . . 7 July 2010 . 24 October 2023 .