Congregation Beth Israel (Bangor, Maine)

Congregation Beth Israel (Hebrew: בית ישראל) is a Conservative synagogue, located for most of its history at 144 York Street in Bangor, Maine. The oldest continuously operating synagogue in Maine, it was organized in 1888 after an influx to Maine of Lithuanian and Polish Jews. There was a previous community of German Jews from the 1850s named Congregation Ahawas Achim (founded in 1849), who gradually assimilated or left Maine, leaving behind the Webster Street cemetery plot now maintained by the Bangor Jewish community.

Beth Israel
Congregation Beth Israel in 2015
Religion
AffiliationConservative Judaism
StatusActive
Location
Location144 York Street
MunicipalityBangor
StateMaine
CountryUnited States
Geographic coordinates44.8030309°N 68.7644996°W / 44.8030309; -68.7644996
Architecture
StyleByzantine-Romanesque[1]
Completed1897 and 1913
Website
cbisrael.org

The synagogue has an active Sisterhood, leads a community-wide Chevra Kadisha, and has an active Hebrew school.

Congregation Beth Israel has taken on Torah scrolls and memorial boards for Temple Israel in Old Town, Maine, Congregation Chiam Yosef in Calais, Maine, and the Aroostook Hebrew Community synagogue in Presque Isle, Maine.

Early history

The first of Beth Israel's founders, Ezriel Lemke Allen, arrived in Bangor in 1882, after Ike Wolper, an Oldtown peddler, convinced him to leave Boston to pursue work in Maine. They were joined by Jacob Altman, Harry Cohen, Israel Goldman, Joe Byer, Joe Bernstein, Marks Goldman, Philip Hillson, and Simon Kominsky forming the first formal minyan of Bangor's Eastern European Jewish community. When they were joined by mohel and shochet Morris Golden, their rituals became more formal, and with a Torah on loan from Ohabei Shalom of Boston, in October 1888 they created the Beth Israel Society.[2]

On August 22, 1897, the cornerstones were emplaced on Center Street, between Cumberland and Garland Street. This would be the first synagogue constructed in the state of Maine.

The 1913 Board of Directors

On April 30, 1911, the Great Fire of 1911 destroyed much of downtown Bangor, and Beth Israel's Center Street building along with it. With a $4000 insurance payment as the basis, on March 9, 1913, the present Beth Israel building was dedicated. It features "Byzantine-Romanesque" architecture to reflect the origins of Jewish life in Asia Minor.

Full-time rabbis

RabbiYearsOrthodox / Conservative
Rabbi Louis Seltzer1903 - 1906Orthodox
Rabbi Louis Plotkin1906 - 1909Orthodox
Rabbi Mordecai Klatchko1909 - 1912Orthodox
Rabbi Moishe Shohet1912 - 1921Orthodox
Rabbi Eliezer Levine1925 - 1930Orthodox, simultaneously served Congregation Beth Abraham of Bangor.
Rabbi Bernard L. Berzon1937 - 1939Orthodox
Rabbi Moishe Zucker1945 - 1947Orthodox, simultaneously served Congregation Beth Abraham of Bangor.
Rabbi Avraham Freedman1949 - 1969Orthodox
Rabbi Irving A. Margolies1971 - 1976Orthodox
Rabbi Alan M. Kalinsky1976 - 1981Orthodox
Rabbi Joseph P. Schonberger1982 - 1997Conservative
Rabbi Yisrael Rod Brettler1998 - 2000Conservative
Rabbi David Cantor2001 - 2007Conservative
Rabbi Steven Schwarzman2008 - 2011Conservative
Rabbi Justin Goldstein2011 - 2013Conservative
Rabbi Bill Seimers2014 - CurrentConservative

Notes

References

  • Thompson, Seth. 'Sacred Spaces of New England'. Accessed August 4, 2019.
  • Congregation Beth Israel's Centennial History, ed. James Adam Emple, Bacon Printing and Paper Company, 1988, p. 17.
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