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The congregation was founded in 1933. It is affiliated with the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism [3] and is the oldest synagogue in Port Washington. [2] The congregation initially met in a rented location at Shore Road and Main Street, and in 1938 purchased a building at 138 Bayview Avenue. [2]
Congregation Beth Israel, Walla Walla(formerly Congregation Beth Israel Myer Youdovitch Memorial, unaffiliated) Congregation Emmanu-El, Spokane (merger of Congregations Beth Haverim and Ner-Tamid in 2009) Temple Beth Israel, Aberdeen. An antecedent was the Grays Harbor Reform Hebrew Congregation that met in a F.O.E. hall 1913–1928.
Congregation B'nai Israel (Bridgeport, Connecticut) Congregation B'nai Israel (Millburn, New Jersey) Beit Shalom Jewish Community; Congregation Beth Emeth; Congregation Beth Israel (Lebanon, Pennsylvania) Temple Beth Israel (Port Washington, New York) Temple Beth Sholom (Miami Beach, Florida)
The congregation was first founded as the Jewish Reconstructionist Society of New York in the 1950s by a group of socially-concerned and involved Jewish families. [2] One of the key founders of the congregation was Rabbi Ira Eisenstein, who would also serve as its rabbi. [3] [1] The former Highland School in 2020.
In 1953, the congregation purchased the land on which it remains and the campus currently houses four buildings (two residences for clergy, the Gantz School building, and the main sanctuary). Today, the congregation draws membership from the greater Westchester area—specifically from Rye, Port Chester, Rye Brook, and nearby Greenwich, CT.
The community is a direct continuation of the pre-Second World War Jewish community of Frankfurt am Main led by Samson Raphael Hirsch.Khal Adath Jeshurun bases its approach, and structure, on Hirsch's philosophy of Torah im Derech Eretz; it was re-established according to the protocol originally drawn in 1850, to which the congregation continues to adhere.
Bikur Cholim Machzikay Hadath, abbreviated as BCMH, is an Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue located at 5145 South Morgan Street, in the Seward Park neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, in the United States. It is the oldest synagogue in Washington state; [1] and practises Ashkenazi traditions.
Plans call for the Capital Jewish Museum to be a $34 million, 25,000-square-foot (2,300-square-meter) facility located in the Judiciary Square and Capitol Crossing neighborhood of Northwest Washington, D.C. [6] [9] According to the organization, the new four-story building at 3rd and F Streets NW will include three floors of exhibit and programming space.