- Source: Sinai Temple (Springfield, Massachusetts)
- Sinai Temple (Springfield, Massachusetts)
- Temple Sinai
- Sinai Temple (Los Angeles)
- Temple De Hirsch Sinai
- Temple Emanuel Sinai (Worcester, Massachusetts)
- Temple Sinai (Oakland, California)
- Springfield Police Department (Massachusetts)
- Temple Sinai (New Orleans, Louisiana)
- Temple Sinai (Washington, D.C.)
- Har Sinai ā Oheb Shalom Congregation
Slender Man (2018)
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.
Sinai Temple (Hebrew: ×”Ö“×× Ö·×) is a Reform Jewish synagogue located at 1100 Dickinson Street, in Springfield, Massachusetts, in the United States.
Founded in 1931, Sinai was the first Reform congregation in Springfield. The congregation's first rabbi, David M. Eichhorn, was hired in 1932 and let go just two years later due to financial difficulty brought on by the Great Depression, though he went on to become a prominent American rabbi and authority on interfaith marriage and conversion for the Reform movement.
History
The congregation began meeting at a mansion at 188 Sumner Avenue in Springfield in 1932, which was used as a synagogue until the late 1940s. In 1949 Sinai broke ground on a new location at 1100 Dickinson Street, near the Longmeadow border, which was completed in 1950.
Notably, Sinai has had two long-tenured rabbis: Herman E. Snyder (1947ā1970) and Mark D. Shapiro (1988ā2016). Membership grew from 50 to 500 families under Rabbi Snyder's leadership. An interfaith leader, he created the Sinai Temple Institute for Christian and Muslim Clergy and Educators, an annual learning session that brings together clergy from the three major religions for a seminar at the Temple.
Rabbi Snyder's successor, Bernard Cohen, was the first rabbi to serve on the faculty of a Roman Catholic college (Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College). His 1970 installation was attended by 100 Catholic and Protestant clergymen.
= Rabbinical leaders
=Notable members
Eric Lesser, Massachusetts State Senator
See also
History of the Jews in the United States
References
External links
Official website