Temple Emanu-El
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Established in 1845, Temple Emanu-El was the first Reform Jewish congregation in New York City. Its landmark building on Fifth Avenue is the largest Jewish house of worship in the world. The congregation's current spiritual leader is Senior Rabbi Dr. David M. Posner.
| Contents |
Philosophy
Since its foundation, Temple Emanu-el has served as a flagship congregation for the Reform movement of Judaism.
History
The congregation was founded by 33 mainly German Jews who assembled for services in April 1845 in a rented hall near Grand and Clinton Streets in Manhattan's Lower East Side. The first services they held were highly traditional. The Temple (as it became known) moved several times as the congregation grew larger and wealthier.
In October 1847, the congregation relocated to a building at 56 Chrystie Street which had been purchased from a church. Radical departures from Orthodox religious practice were soon introduced to Temple Emanu-El, setting striking precedents which proclaimed the principles of 'classical' Reform Judaism in America. In 1848, the German vernacular spoken by the congregants replaced the traditional liturgical language of Hebrew in prayer books. Instrumental music, formerly banished from synagogues, was first played during services in 1849. In 1853, the tradition of calling congregants for aliyot was abolished (but retained for bar mitzvah ceremonies), leaving the reading of the Torah exclusively to the presiding rabbi.
Further changes were made in 1854 when Temple Emanu-El moved to 12th Street. Most controversially, mixed seating was adopted to further gender equality, allowing families to sit together, instead of segregating the sexes on opposite sides of a mechitza. After much heated debate, the congregation also resolved to observe Rosh Hashanah for only one day rather than the orthodox two.
In 1857, after the death of founding rabbi Merzbacher, German speakers still formed a majority of the congregation and appointed another German Jew, Samuel Adler, to be his successor.
In 1868, Emanu-El erected a new building for the first time, at 43rd Street and 5th Avenue after raising about $650,000 (a very large sum of money in 1868).
The congregation hired its first English speaking rabbi, Dr. Gustave Gottheil, in 1873, from Manchester, England.
In 1888, Joseph Silverman became the first American born rabbi to officiate at the Temple. He was a member of the second class to graduate from Hebrew Union College.
The 1870s and 1880s witnessed further departures from traditional ritual. Men could now pray without wearing kippot to cover their heads. Bar mitzvah ceremonies were no longer held. The Union Prayer book was adopted in 1895.
Emanu-El merged with Temple Beth-El on April 111927 and both are considered co-equal parents of the current Emanu-El. In 1929, the congregation moved to its present location at 65th Street and Fifth Avenue, where the Temple building was constructed on the former site of the John Jacob Astor mansion.
By the 1930s, Emanu-El began to absorb large numbers of Jews whose families had arrived in poverty from Eastern Europe and brought with them their Yiddish language and devoutly Orthodox religious heritage. In contrast, Emanu-El was dominated by affluent German-speaking Jews whose liberal approaches to Judaism originated in Western Europe, where civic emancipation had enticed Jews to discard many of their ethnoreligious customs and embrace the lifestyles of their neighbors. For the descendants of Eastern European immigrants, joining Temple Emanu-El often signified their upward mobility and progress in assimilating into American society. However, the intake of these new congregants also helped to put a brake on, if not force a limited retreat from, the 'rejectionist' attitude which 'classical' Reform had espoused towards traditional ritual.
Well known members
- Adolph S. Ochs
- Solomon Loeb
- Oscar S. Straus
- Louis Marshall
- Felix M. Warburg
- Irving Lehman
- Lewis L. Strauss
- Herbert H. Lehman
- Eliot Spitzer
Link
- Official website (http://www.emanuelnyc.org)

