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Congregation Beth Israel (Hebrew: בית ישראל, lit. 'House of Israel', officially Beth Israel Anshe Litte – "House of Israel, people of Lithuania" [2]), is an Orthodox Jewish synagogue located at 10 Dexter Street in Malden, Massachusetts, in the United States. [3] It was founded in 1904 by Jewish immigrants from Lithuania. [2]
Congregation Tifereth Israel, Greenport; Jericho Jewish Center, Jericho; Temple Emanu-El, Long Beach; Reconstructionist Synagogue of the North Shore, Plandome; Temple Beth Israel, Port Washington; Temple Adas Israel, Sag Harbor; Congregation Aish Kodesh, Woodmere; In Manhattan. Meserich Synagogue, East Village; Sixth Street Community Synagogue ...
The Temple Tifereth-Israel (transliterated from Hebrew as "Glory of Israel") was a Reform Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 26000 Shaker Boulevard, in Beachwood, a suburb of Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States.
The synagogue building is one of three gallery locations for the Temple Museum of Religious Art, operated by Temple-Tifereth Israel. Other locations include the Temple-Tifereth Israel Gallery at the Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage and Temple Tifereth-Israel in Beachwood. The museum was founded in 1950 by Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver as part of the ...
Liat Yardeni, 59, is a rabbi for Sephardic Temple Tifereth Israel in Los Angeles who said the platforms have helped her feel connected to her homeland “every second of the day.”
Sephardic Temple Tifereth Israel, also called The Sephardic Temple, is an unaffiliated Jewish congregation and synagogue that adopts Sephardi nusach, located at 10500 Wilshire Boulevard, in Westwood, Los Angeles, California, in the United States. Established on February 1, 1920 as the "Sephardic Community of Los Angeles", the congregation ...
Opened on October 11, 2005, the Maltz Museum features two permanent collections, An American Story and The Temple - Tifereth Israel Gallery, in which personal stories are brought to life through film, computer interactives, special effects and exhibitions that feature artefacts, art, documents and images. The Museum also hosts rotating ...
600 Columbus Ave. (1885–1906) 602 Commonwealth Ave. (1906–1926) 477 Longwood Ave. (1926–present) The congregation Temple Israel, originally known as Adath Israel, [1] was founded in 1854 when Jews of German ancestry seceded from Ohabei Shalom, then the sole synagogue in Boston, because so many Polish Jews had joined the congregation.