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Congregation Shearith Israel
Congregation Shearith Israel 001.JPG
Congregation Shearith Israel at Central Park West
Religion
Affiliation Orthodox Judaism
Rite Sephardi
Status Active
Location
Location 2 West 70th Street
Municipality New York City
State New York
Country United States
Congregation Shearith Israel is located in Manhattan
Congregation Shearith Israel
Location in Manhattan
Architecture
Architect(s) Arnold Brunner
Architectural style Neoclassical
Date established 1654
Completed 1897
Direction of façade East
Third Cemetery Spanish & Portuguese Synagogue 3
The synagogue's third cemetery (1829–1851) is on West 21st Street near the Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue)

The Congregation Shearith Israel (Hebrew: קהילת שארית ישראל Kehilat She'arit Yisra'el "Congregation Remnant of Israel") – often called The Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue – is the oldest Jewish congregation in the United States. It was established in 1654 in New Amsterdam by Jews who arrived from Dutch Brazil. Until 1825, when Jewish immigrants from Germany established a congregation, it was the only Jewish congregation in New York City.

The Orthodox synagogue, which follows the Sephardic liturgy, is located on Central Park West at 70th Street, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. The congregation has occupied its current Neoclassical building since 1897.

Founding and synagogue buildings

Mill Street Synagogue
The Mill Street synagogue, detail from the section "Religious Buildings of New York" in A Plan of the City and Environs of New York by David Grim
410 TEMPLE SHEARITH ISRAEL (HEBREW) 5 WEST 19TH STREET
Temple Shearith Israel, 5 West 19th Street, 1893

The first group of Spanish and Portuguese Jews were twenty-three refugees from Dutch Brazil, who arrived in New Amsterdam in September 1654. After being initially rebuffed by anti-Semitic Director of New Netherland Peter Stuyvesant, Jews were given official permission to settle in the colony in 1655. This year marks the founding of the Congregation Shearith Israel. Although they were allowed to stay in New Amsterdam, they faced discrimination and were not given permission to worship in a public synagogue for some time (throughout the Dutch period and into the British). The Congregation did, however, make arrangements for a cemetery beginning in 1656.

It was not until 1730 that the Congregation was able to build a synagogue of its own; it was built on Mill Street (now William Street) in lower Manhattan. The Mill Street synagogue was said to have had access to a nearby spring which it used as a mikveh for ritual baths. Before 1730, as noted on a 1695 map of New York, the congregation worshipped in rented quarters on Beaver Street and subsequently on Mill Street. Since 1730 the Congregation has worshipped in five synagogue buildings:

  1. Mill Street, 1730
  2. Mill Street re-built and expanded, 1818
  3. 60 Crosby Street, 1834
  4. 19th Street, 1860
  5. West 70th Street, 1897 (present building)

The current building was extensively refurbished in 1921.

Founding major Jewish institutions

As the American Reform Judaism made headway in the late 19th century, many rabbis critical of the Reform movement looked for ways to strengthen traditional synagogues. Shearith Israel, and its rabbi, Henry Pereira Mendes, were at the fore of these efforts. Rabbi Mendes cofounded the American Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) in 1886, in order to train traditional rabbis. The school held its first classes at Shearith Israel. In JTS' earliest days, it taught and researched rabbinics similarly as was done in traditional yeshivas, in contrast to the Reform Hebrew Union College.

Twelve years later, in 1896, Mendes was acting president of JTS. He promoted the formation of the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America (commonly known as the OU, the Orthodox Union). This synagogue umbrella group provided an alternative to the Reform movement's Union of American Hebrew Congregations.

As JTS grew, it needed better financing and a full-time head. The seminary moved to its own building, and Mendes was replaced by Solomon Schechter. However, Schechter developed a less traditional approach, which became the basis for Conservative Judaism (called Masorti outside North America). Initially there was considerable cooperation between the Orthodox and Conservative groups but, over time, the divide became clearer.

Schechter formed the United Synagogue of America (now the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, or USCJ)to promote synagogue affiliation with his conservative ideology.

Shearith Israel remained aligned with the Orthodox tradition. It eventually repudiated its association with JTS. In a sense, Shearith Israel helped create three of the largest and most significant Jewish religious organizations in the United States: JTS, the OU, and USCJ. Shearith Israel remains a member only of the Orthodox Union.

8 West 70th Street (landmark plaques) by David Shankbone crop
Landmark plaques

Clergy

Rabbis

  • Benjamin Wolf
  • Gershom Mendes Seixas (not ordained): Hazzan of the Congregation and an ardent American patriot; he moved the Congregation to Philadelphia after the British occupied the city during the American Revolutionary War.
  • Moses L. M. Peixotto (not ordained)
  • Isaac B. Seixas (1828-1839)
  • Jacques Judah Lyons (1839-1877)
  • Henry Pereira Mendes (1877-1920)
  • David de Sola Pool - two stints (1907-1919 and 1921-1955). He was hired as assistant rabbi in 1907, and left in 1919. A year later, Mendes retired, and the synagogue went through a succession of candidates until de Sola Pool agreed to return in 1921. Herbert Goldstein was announced as rabbi, but did not actually take the pulpit. Reverend Joseph Corcos was appointed interim rabbi.
  • Louis B. Gerstein (1956-1988)
  • Marc D. Angel (1969-2007)
  • Hayyim Angel (1995-2013)
  • Meir Y. Soloveichik (2013-)

Parnasim (Presidents)

  • Luis Moises Gomez
  • Moses Raphael Levi (1665–1728)
  • Lyon (Leon) Nathan

Hazanim

  • Saul Moreno d. 1682
  • Saul Pardo (1657–1702)
  • Abraham Haim de Lucena (1703?–1725)
  • Moses Lopez de Fonseca (??–1736)
  • David Mendes Machado (1736–1746)
  • Benjamin Pereira (1748–1757)
  • Isaac Cohen da Silva (1757–1758 and 1766–1768)
  • Joseph Jessurun Pinto (1758–1766)
  • Gershom Mendes Seixas (1768–1776 and 1784–1816)
  • Isaac Touro (1780)
  • Jacob Raphael Cohen (1782–1784)
  • Eleazar S. Lazarus (1816-1820)
  • Moses Levy Maduro Peixotto(1816–1828)
  • Isaac Benjamin Seixas (1828–1839)
  • Jacques Judah Lyons (1839–1877)
  • David Haim Nieto (1878–1886)
  • Abraham Haim Nieto (1886–1901)
  • Isaac A. H. de la Penha (1902–1907)
  • Isaac A. Hadad (1911–1913)
  • Joseph M. Corcos (1919–1922)
  • James Mesod Wahnon (1921–1941)
  • Abraham Lopes Cardozo (1946–1986)
  • Albert Gabbai (1983-1986)
  • Phil Sherman
  • Ira Rohde

Prominent members

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