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Beth Israel Congregation of Chester County

Coordinates:40°05′01″N75°41′26″W / 40.083551°N 75.690474°W /40.083551; -75.690474
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Synagogue in North America
For similarly named synagogues, seeBeth Israel.
Beth Israel
Religion
AffiliationConservative Judaism
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusSynagogue
LeadershipRabbi Jon Cutler
StatusActive
Location
Location385 Pottstown Pike, (Route 100),Upper Uwchlan Township, Chester County,Pennsylvania
CountryUnited States
Beth Israel Congregation of Chester County is located in Pennsylvania
Beth Israel Congregation of Chester County
Location inPennsylvania
AdministrationUnited Synagogue of Conservative Judaism
Coordinates40°05′01″N75°41′26″W / 40.083551°N 75.690474°W /40.083551; -75.690474
Architecture
ArchitectCallori Architects
TypeSynagogue
Established1904(Coatesville congregation)
Groundbreaking1994
Completed
Website
bethisraelpa.org
[1][2][3]

Beth Israel Congregation is aConservativesynagogue located at 385 Pottstown Pike (Route 100) inUpper Uwchlan Township, Chester County,Pennsylvania, in the United States.[1] The congregation was founded inCoatesville in 1904 asKesher Israel byEastern European immigrants, and formally chartered as "Beth Israel" in 1916.[4] It constructed its first building in 1923, and expanded it afterWorld War II.[2]

Linda Joy Holtzman was appointed rabbi in 1979, the first female rabbi appointed to lead a Conservative congregation in the United States.[5][6] Holtzman served until 1985,[7] and was succeeded by Michael Charney.[8] The congregation purchased its current property in 1989, and completed its facility there in 1995.[2] Charney was succeeded in 2015 by Jon Cutler.[9]

Early history

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Beth Israel was founded in 1904 asKesher Israel by Jewish immigrants to Coatesville, Pennsylvania from Eastern Europe. It established a Sunday school and purchased a cemetery in 1907, and was formally chartered as "Beth Israel" by the Chester County Court of Common Pleas in 1916.[4]

The congregation purchased land on Fifth Avenue and Harmony Street in Coatesville in 1923, and constructed a new synagogue building there,[2] completed in 1924.[10] After World War II, an extension to the building added a chapel/library and classrooms, and expanded the kitchen and social hall.[2]

Elihu Schagrin wasrabbi from 1945 to 1953. Born in Wilmington, Delaware in 1918, he wasordained at theReformJewish Institute of Religion in 1946. During his tenure at Beth Israel he also served as chaplain of Coatesville'sVeterans Hospital, and, from 1949 on, was president of the Greater Coatesville Inter-Racial Committee. In 1953 he moved to Temple Concord of Binghamton, New York.[11][12]

Linda Holtzman

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In 1979, the congregation (which now numbered 110 families) hiredLinda Joy Holtzman as rabbi.[13][14][15] She had been ordained that year by theReconstructionist Rabbinical College, and was one of thirty applicants.[13][16] She became the second woman in the United States to serve as the presiding or senior rabbi of a synagogue, followingMichal Bernstein.[6] She was the first woman to serve as a rabbi for a Conservative congregation, as the Conservative movement did not then ordain women.[5]TheReform andReconstructionist movements had previously ordained at least ten women rabbis, but (aside from Bernstein) they all served as assistant rabbis, hospital chaplains, or directors of university campusHillel organizations.[13][14]The New York Times described her hiring as "a marked breakthrough for the growing numbers of women who have faced obstacles in becoming a rabbi-in-charge", and quoted Holtzman as saying "the fact that I have an appointment in a small town and that they have entrusted me with functions they believe are important is very significant for women and for the Jewish community".[14] At the time, there were only 22 female rabbis in the entire world.[15]

Beth Israel hired the Reconstructionist-ordained Holtzman despite the fact that it was a Conservative synagogue.[5] The executive vice president of the ConservativeRabbinical Assembly, RabbiWolfe Kelman, described the appointment as "an historical breakthrough and simply fantastic", and felt that other synagogues would be encouraged to follow suit. At the time, the Rabbinical Assembly did not accept women as members, and the Conservative movement did not ordain its first woman rabbi—Amy Eilberg—until 1985.[13] The hiring of a non-Conservative rabbi in itself was not unusual, however; due in part to a shortage of Conservative rabbis, a fifth of all Conservative synagogues in the U.S. had non-Conservative rabbis in place.[14] While Holtzman believed in the tenets of the Reconstructionist movement, she said that members of the congregation could choose to follow either traditional or nontraditional ideas.[14]

Beth Israel's membership was 125 families by 1983, and the synagogue building also housedB'nai B'rith andHadassah chapters.[10] Holtzman served at Beth Israel until 1985, when her contract was up for renegotiation.[17] She had been living in Philadelphia and commuting to Coatesville for several years; although she and her lesbian partner had had an open commitment ceremony in Philadelphia, she had not yet come out to her congregation (but despite living something of a double life, she had enjoyed her time with the synagogue and found it very rewarding).[17] Now she informed Beth Israel's board of directors that she and her partner were planning to have children and that she wanted co-parenting leave, and by her subsequent account, each board member privately indicated they were okay with this but that the other board members were not ready for such a development.[17] She left the synagogue and later that year became spiritual leader of Beth Ahavah, anLGBT congregation inCenter City, Philadelphia.[7][18]

Events since 1985

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Holtzman was succeeded as rabbi in 1985 by Michael Charney. The son and grandson of rabbis, he was ordained at the ReformHebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati, and served congregations in Clearwater, Florida and Bowie, Maryland before coming to Beth Israel. While serving at Beth Israel, he also work as a chaplain atNorristown State Hospital, and taughtHebrew atArcadia University. Charney retired in 2015, though continued to instructBar and bat mitzvah candidates, and died in 2019.[8]

The congregation purchased its current property at 385 Pottstown Pike (Route 100) inUpper Uwchlan Township in 1989. Construction on a new synagogue building there began in 1994 and completed in 1995. Designed by Callori Architects, the 30,000-square-foot (2,800 m2) facility[3] houses a sanctuary, chapel/library, and school wing. Behind the school wing is aHolocaust memorial garden.[2]

Jon Cutler became the rabbi of Beth Israel in 2015. A native of Philadelphia, he graduated fromTemple University in with a Masters of Arts in Religious Studies, and was ordained by the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. He then earned his Doctor of Ministry (Counseling) fromHebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. He previously served in congregations inFlemington, New Jersey andWarrington, Pennsylvania.[9] Cutler also had a long career as a chaplain for the U.S.Navy andMarines, retiring as aNaval Reserve captain on April 30, 2017, 32 years to the day after his originalcommission.[19]

A member of theUnited Synagogue of Conservative Judaism,[1] it holds services Friday evenings,Shabbat mornings, and onJewish holidays.[2]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^abcBeth Israel website.
  2. ^abcdefgWelcome, Beth Israel website.
  3. ^abBeth Israel Congregation, Callori Architects website.
  4. ^abWelcome, Beth Israel website.Rosen (1983), p. 363 states Beth Israel was established in 1916.
  5. ^abcGoldstein (2009), p. 337.
  6. ^abGallob (August 22, 1979).
  7. ^abSchwartzman (2007).
  8. ^abWeisberger (January 3, 2019).
  9. ^abLeadership, Beth Israel website.
  10. ^abRosen (1983), p. 363.
  11. ^Schneiderman & Carmin (1955), p. 841.
  12. ^Who's Who in Religion, 1992–1993
  13. ^abcdKaplan (2009), pp. 237–238.
  14. ^abcdeBriggs (1979), p. A20.
  15. ^abMontreal Gazette (August 25, 1979), p. 42.
  16. ^Weiser (1981), p. 392.
  17. ^abcHoltzman (2001),pp. 39–49.
  18. ^Hasbany (1989), p. 93.
  19. ^Tenorio (2017).

References

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External links

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