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The center was located in the Dallas Jewish Community Center in North Dallas. [7] In January 2005, the Memorial Center changed its name to the Dallas Holocaust Museum Center for Education and Tolerance and moved to a transitional space in downtown Dallas. The Museum is now in a 55,000-square-foot permanent location at the former Kingman-Texas ...
Rabbi Gutow is a community and political organizer [3] and Jewish community leader who has mobilized the Jewish community and built grassroots coalitions across multiple faith groups to advocate on a broad range of issues including preventing hunger, [4] building interfaith relations, [5] promoting civil discourse in public life, [6] and protecting the security of Israel. [7]
The group reflects on a legacy of promoting Jewish artists and works with Jewish themes. Its 75th season begins on Oct. 15. Jewish Community Center theater troupe celebrates 75 seasons of ...
Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life. "Dallas." Encyclopedia of Southern Jewish Communities. Kerry M. Olitzky, Marc Lee Raphael. The American synagogue: a historical dictionary and sourcebook. Greenwood Publishing Group, 1996, page 340 (retrieved 2011-08-22). ISBN 0-313-28856-9, ISBN 978-0-313-28856-2.
Carol and Kaylen Silverberg designed and donated the wall as a way to educate the community about the global impact Israel has had. Dell Jewish Community Center displays Israeli innovations ...
Temple Emanu-El of Dallas was founded in 1873 and chartered in 1875. It was renamed from the Jewish Congregation Emanu-El to Temple Emanu-El Congregation in 1974. The small but growing Jewish community sought a permanent religious structure as well as for a rabbi to conduct services and to offer religious education for children, so several ...
At Carshon’s Deli, a local institution with roots stretching back more than 90 years, credit cards are taboo. Repeat customers know to pay with cash or local checks.
B. Levinson, a Jewish Texan civic leader, arrived in 1861. [3] Today the vast majority of Jewish Texans are descendants of Ashkenazi Jews, those from central and eastern Europe whose families arrived in Texas after the Civil War or later. [1] Organized Judaism in Texas began in Galveston with the establishment of Texas' first Jewish cemetery in ...