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JewishColumbus is a leading organization and is a result of the merger of the Columbus Jewish Federation and the Columbus Jewish Foundation [5] Synagogues in the region include: Ahavas Sholom - Orthodox, Bexley [6] Agudas Achim - Traditional-Egalitarian, Bexley; Beth Jacob Synagogue - Orthodox, Columbus [7] Beth Tikvah - Reform, Worthington
Circleville has a congregation, Children of Israel. Columbus, the capital of the state, had in 1902 a Reform congregation, Temple Israel; and two Orthodox congregations, Agudas Achim (which became a Conservative congregation in the 21st century) and Beth Jacob. Dayton is also the seat of a considerable Jewish community. It has three ...
Congregation Beth Israel, Honesdale; Congregation Beth Israel, Lebanon; Congregation Beth Or, Maple Glen; Temple Adath Israel of the Main Line, Merion; B'nai Jacob Synagogue, Middletown; Beit Harambam Congregation, Philadelphia; Temple Beth Zion-Beth Israel, Philadelphia; Historic Congregation B'nai Abraham, Philadelphia
For nearly thirty years he was the rabbi at Beth Jacob Congregation of Columbus, Ohio. He wrote some forty works, most notably Kol Bo Al Aveilut, a halachic compendium and digest on laws of death and mourning.
Congregation Beth Jacob may refer to: Congregation Beth Jacob (Atlanta), Georgia, in the United States; Congregation Beth Jacob Ohev Sholom, Brooklyn, New York, in ...
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]
Temple Israel is a Reform Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 3100 East Broad Street, in Columbus, Ohio, in the United States.Founded as the Orthodox Bene Jeshurun congregation in 1846, [4] the congregation is the oldest Jewish congregation in Columbus, [5] and a founding member of the Union for Reform Judaism. [6]
Beth Tfiloh Congregation is a Modern Orthodox congregation and synagogue located at 3300 Old Court Road, in Pikesville, Maryland, in the United States. With approximately 3,500 members, [ 1 ] and seating for 1,600 worshippers, Beth Tfiloh claims it is the largest Modern Orthodox congregation in the United States.