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Beth Jacob Congregation is an Orthodox synagogue, located at 9030 on West Olympic Boulevard in Beverly Hills, California, in the United States. It is the largest Orthodox synagogue in the Western United States. [1]
Persian Jews from the congregation initially worshipped at Beth Jacob Congregation, a long-established Orthodox synagogue in Beverly Hills. [2] [3] Later, they met at the Saban Theatre, also in Beverly Hills. [3] Later, they moved into a building in Santa Monica, California. [3]
Beth Jacob Congregation (Beverly Hills, California) ... Temple Emanuel (Beverly Hills, California) This page was last edited on 3 March 2024, at 03:50 (UTC). Text ...
Justin Bieber and Hailey Bieber made a solemn appearance this week as they attended church in Beverly Hills. The couple emerged from Churchome Church on Wednesday evening, sporting subdued ...
In August 2009, he joined Congregation Beth Jacob of Beverly Hills as Senior Rabbi. [ 2 ] In May 2008, Rabbi Topp was appointed by the Nassau County Legislature to serve as a Human Rights Commissioner in Nassau County on a multi-racial commission that investigates human rights complaints, promotes tolerance and fights all types of ...
Beth Jacob Congregation (Beverly Hills, California), in the United States; Beth Jacob Congregation (Mendota Heights, Minnesota), in the United States; Beth Jacob Social Hall and Congregation, Miami Beach, Florida, in the United States; Beth Jacob V'Anshei Drildz, Toronto, in Canada; Beth Yaacov Synagogue (Madrid), in Spain
The congregation was founded as Beth Jacob in 1869, [7] by more traditional members of an existing Reform German Jewish synagogue, [1] the Keap Street Temple. [8] They objected to the installation and use of a pipe organ to accompany Yom Kippur services, which was forbidden by halakha (Jewish law), and seceded and created their own congregation. [1]
In 1956, the congregation moved to a former church on Boulevard and, in 1962, moved to its current location in Toco Hills. At that time the synagogue had grown to 190 families. Membership reached 500 families in 1976 and 560 families by 1994. [4] Feldman remained with the synagogue for 39 years until his retirement in 1991.