| Beth Sholom Congregation and Talmud Torah | |
|---|---|
![]() Beth Sholom Synagogue | |
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Modern Orthodox Judaism |
| Rite | Ashkenazi andSephardi |
| Ecclesiastical or organizational status | Synagogue |
| Leadership | Rabbi Nissan Antine |
| Status | Active |
| Location | |
| Location | Seven Locks Road,Potomac,Maryland |
| Country | United States |
Location withinMaryland | |
| Coordinates | 39°03′04″N77°09′48″W / 39.051111°N 77.163333°W /39.051111; -77.163333 |
| Architecture | |
| Established | 1908(as a congregation) |
| Groundbreaking | 1994 |
| Completed |
|
| Website | |
| bethsholom | |
Beth Sholom Congregation and Talmud Torah (abbreviated asBSCTT) is aModern Orthodoxsynagogue on Seven Locks Road inPotomac,Maryland, in the United States.[1] The largestOrthodox synagogue in theWashington metropolitan area,[2] it is led byRabbi Nissan Antine.[3]
Beth Sholom Congregation holds morning and eveningtefillah services,Shabbat services,High Holidays services, andShalosh Regalim services.[4][5]
Beth Sholom Congregation hosts adult education classes and study groups.[6] The congregation has a men's club, a sisterhood, and a social action committee.[7] Beth Sholom hosts classes for school-age children and teenagers as well.[8] while Beth Sholom Early Childhood Center has classes for younger children.[9]
Antine became Beth Sholom's assistant in 2006[10] and was promoted to senior rabbi in July 2013, replacing Joel Tessler.[11]
Maharat Hadas Fruchter served as the assistant spiritual leader of Beth Sholom Congregation from 2016[3][12] through 2019.[13]
The congregation was founded in 1908 asVoliner Anshe Sfard. It initially worshiped in a congregant's house, but soon purchased a store and remodeled it as a synagogue building, with separate men and women sections. Within just a few years of its creation, the congregation had bought its own cemetery.
The Voliner Anshe Sfard Congregation joined with theHar Zion Congregation[14] in 1936 under the name Beth Sholom Congregation and Talmud Torah, complete with its ownHebrew school.
Two years later, the combined congregation spent $100,000 on a new building.[15] The new building, located at Eighth and Shepherd streets inPetworth, Washington, D.C., was dedicated on August 14, 1938,[16] and served the community for 18 years.[17]
The congregation sold the Eighth and Shepherd building to the Allegheny Conference Association ofSeventh-day Adventists and moved out of the building on December 24, 1954.[17] The congregation temporarily moved to a former bank building at Alaska andGeorgia avenues inShepherd Park, and religious classes were temporarily held atSixteenth Street and Fort Stevens Drive NW inBrightwood, while it built a new building at Thirteenth Street andEastern Avenue NW in Shepherd Park.[17] Construction of the new building on Eastern Avenue cost $900,000.[18]
The congregation held its first religious services in the new building on September 14, 1954.[19] The new building had seating for 2,000 worshippers.[19] At one point, theHebrew school had more than 400 students.
By 1975, many of the members of the congregation had moved toMontgomery County, Maryland, and only one-fifth of the seats in the sanctuary were filled forShabbat services.[20] The congregation's leadership decided to build a chapel and a religious school on Seven Locks Road inPotomac.[20][21] It was considered a branch synagogue.[20] The new location in Potomac worked out; the congregation's membership increased by ten percent, and the religious school's enrollment increased ten-fold.[20]
In the late 1980s, Beth Sholom was principally responsible for the construction of a two-mile-longeruv in Potomac that made it permissible for observant Orthodox Jews to carry and push objects within the boundaries area onShabbat, leading to the growth of the Orthodox population in the area.[2]
In order to accommodate its large community, the congregation constructed a new building on the Potomac site in 1994.[22] In 1999, the second phase of the building was completed.
In 2005, the synagogue became the first Orthodox congregation in Washington to elect a woman as president of the congregation.[23] As of 2012, the congregation numbered more than four-hundred families.[11]