| South Philadelphia Shtiebel | |
|---|---|
Hebrew:סאוט פילאדעלפיא שטיבל | |
The synagogue in 2022 | |
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Judaism |
| Rite | |
| Ecclesiastical or organizational status | Synagogue |
| Leadership | Hadas Fruchter |
| Status | Active |
| Location | |
| Location | 1311 South Juniper Street,East Passyunk,Philadelphia,Pennsylvania 19147 |
| Country | United States |
Location inPhiladelphia | |
| Coordinates | 39°56′01″N75°10′00″W / 39.9335049°N 75.166696°W /39.9335049; -75.166696 |
| Architecture | |
| Established | 2019(as a congregation) |
| Completed | 2021(current location) |
| Website | |
| southphiladelphiashtiebel | |
TheSouth Philadelphia Shtiebel (Hebrew:סאוט פילאדעלפיא שטיבל) is aJewish congregation,synagogue, and community center, located in theEast Passyunk neighborhood ofSouth Philadelphia,Pennsylvania, in the United States. The congregation is led by Rabbanit Hadas "Dasi" Fruchter, and offers educational, community, and religious programming. Its prayers follow traditional Ashkenazi Modern Orthodox traditions, but it uniquely uses a "tri-chitzah," a mechitzah (the divider between the men's and women's sections) that has a third section for those who feel more comfortable sitting outside the gender-binary-defined two-section construction.
South Philadelphia's Jewish communityflourished between the 1880s and World War II. Between Third and Eighth Streets, and from Spruce Street south to Oregon Avenue, the Jewish community numbered 150,000 at its height in the 1940s. South Philadelphia was home to more than 150 "rowhouse Shuls" — small synagogues located in rowhouses where often therabbi lived upstairs, and prayer took place downstairs. Rabbanit Fruchter chose to call the synagogue a "Shtiebel" in homage to this history.
The number of South Philadelphia shuls decreased in the late 1960s and early 1970s with changes in neighborhood demography. In 2019 there were approximately ten active synagogues in Society Hill and South Philadelphia, with only two south ofSouth Street.[4] In recent years, South Philadelphia neighborhoods have attracted new residents including a growing number ofOrthodox Jews.

Hadas "Dasi" Fruchter was ordained by theOpen Orthodox-affiliatedYeshivat Maharat in June 2016 upon completion of the Maharat Semikha Program. She served three years as assistant spiritual leader atBeth Sholom Congregation and Talmud Torah inPotomac, Maryland. With initial funding and support fromHillel International's Office of Innovation, private donors, and Start-Up Shul, an Open Orthodox-affiliated organization that builds institutions,[1] Fruchter announced her plans in July 2018 to move to Philadelphia and open her own synagogue that "will look like a typicalmodern Orthodox congregation".[5][6]
Seeing the growing Jewish community in South Philadelphia and interest in additional local Jewish programming, Fruchter founded the South Philadelphia Shtiebel in 2019.[7] The synagogue moved into a space at 1733 East Passyunk Avenue in March 2019,[8] previously Philadelphia Scooters.[9]
The synagogue held its first prayer services on Friday night, July 19, 2019 with 80 in attendance.[10]
The synagogue was unable to hold indoor gatherings in its storefront following Purim in March 2020 and through theCOVID-19 pandemic in Philadelphia. Programming was offered online and limited services held in open outdoor spaces.[2] In closing its Passyunk Avenue location, the synagogue announced its plans to move into a larger physical location when indoor activities proved safe to resume.[11]
The synagogue relocated in 2021 to a building on South Juniper Street in the same neighborhood and continued its community activities including hosting an annual publicHanukkah lighting.[12]