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[[Image:Temple Emanu-El 1914.jpg|right|200px|Temple Emanu-El in 2005]]
[[Image:Temple Emanu-El 1914.jpg|right|200px|Temple Emanu-El in 2005]]
'''Temple Emanu-El''' was the first Jewish congregation founded in the city of [[Birmingham]]. The current synagogue is located at 2100 [[Highland Avenue]].
'''Temple Emanu-El''' was the first Jewish congregation founded in the city of [[Birmingham]], and is a Reform Judiasm synagogue. The current synagogue is located at 2100 [[Highland Avenue]].


== History ==
== History ==

Revision as of 15:01, 6 August 2008

Temple Emanu-El in 2005

Temple Emanu-El was the first Jewish congregation founded in the city of Birmingham, and is a Reform Judiasm synagogue. The current synagogue is located at 2100 Highland Avenue.

History

Temple Emanu-El was founded on June 28, 1882 by members of the pioneer Simons, Marx and Hochstadter families along with more recent arrivals from the Schuester, Fox, Wise, Lazarus, Jacobs, Adler and Welman families. The group began meeting on the Masonic Hall in the First National Bank Building on 20th Street and 1st Avenue North. The first president of the organization was Abe Wise. During that first year's holy days Joseph Stolz a student at Cincinnati's Hebrew Union College was engaged to lead services at Comberland Presbyterian Church on 5th Avenue North. Frank P. O'Brien organized a choir made up of singers from a "conglomeration" of religions to accompany the services. Isaac Hochstadter founded a Sunday School in 1883, just as many new Jewish arrivals were moving to Birmingham.

Later that year the congregation purchased a plot of land northwest of the city for use as a cemetery. In 1884 it bought another plot at 5th Avenue North and 17th Street from the Elyton Land Company on which to build a worship hall. Samuel Ullman joined Emanu-El that Spring and immediately applied his skills as a leader. Hochstadter, noting his spiritual gifts, invited Ullman to conduct services as a lay-reader as well. In 1886 he became president of Temple Emanu-El, just as the building committee prepared to move forward with construction. The cornerstone of the new temple, the first synagogue in Jefferson County, was laid on July 13, 1886.

The first Temple Emanu-El

Construction was interrupted by the need to raise additional funds, partly because the membership of the organization was already outgrowing the planned temple's capacity. The enlarged structure was dedicated on January 24, 1889. A year later the rapidly-growing group faced a split as 30-40 members, led by Joseph Beitman, broke off to found B'nai Israel. The splinter group rejoined Emanu-El in November, after the resignation of Eisenberg.

After a call to a prominent Jewish leader was declined, the congregation made the unprecedented move of asking Ullman, a layman, to become rabbi. His resistance to making the move was overcome by the earnestness of the call and Ullman took the pulpit in 1890. Over the next few years financial setbacks in Birmingham's economy threatened the congregation's mortgage. The leadership of Burghard Steiner as president and of David Marx and Morris Newfield as rabbis helped Emanu-El triumph over the threat and grow to the point that two new wings were added to the synagogue in 1896.

Newfield, a young Hungarian immigrant, was elected to lead the congregation in 1895 and stayed for over 45 years. Over the next 20 years the congregation swelled to over 300 families. $10,000 was spent to enlarge and improve the cemetery with a funeral chapel. By 1910 the congregation was planning for a move to a larger synagogue and chose a site on Highland Avenue, convenient to the city's newer residential development. A grand, domed sanctuary was completed in 1914 at 2100 Highland Avenue, which is still used today.

Arriving the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Rabbi Milton Grafman took the reins of Temple Emanu-El and led the congregation for the next 34 years — through World War II, the establishment of Israel, and the struggle for civil rights in Birmingham.

Temple Emanu-El today

Today, the congregation is led by Rabbi Jonathan Miller, who joined Temple Emanu-El in 1991. Under his leadership, the congregation continues to grow and flourish in both numbers and activity. He embraces the congregation's philosophy of community and is innovative in his programming.

Rabbi Miller is joined on the pulpit and in pastoral functions by Cantor Jessica Roskin and Rabbi Scott Hausman-Weiss, Director of Adult Jewish Educational Outreach.

In 2002, with leadership and participation from both the congregation and the clergy, Temple Emanu-El completed a $17 million campaign for renovation of its spiritual home on Highland Avenue and to further build its endowment.

Rabbis

Presidents

References