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Temple Israel (Tulsa, Oklahoma)

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Temple Israel
Religion
AffiliationUnion for Reform Judaism
LeadershipRabbis: Karen and Micah Citrin
Cantor: Kari Siegel-Eglash
StatusActive
Location
Location2004 East 22nd Place,
Tulsa, Oklahoma,
 United States
Architecture
Architect(s)Percival Goodman
Completed1955
Website
templetulsa.com

Temple Israel is a Reform Jewish congregation located at 2004 East 22nd Place in Tulsa, Oklahoma.[1] Founded in 1914, the synagogue affiliated with the Union for Reform Judaism in 1915, and constructed its first building on the corner of 14th and Cheyenne Streets in 1919. Early rabbis included Jacob Menkes, Charles Latz, Samuel Kaplan, Jacob Krohngold, and Benjamin Kelsen.[2][3]

In 1932, Temple Israel constructed a new building on South Cheyenne. Rabbis there included Hyman Iola, Abraham Shusterman, Randall Falk, and Morton C. Fierman. In 1955 the congregation moved to its current home, a building on East 22nd Place designed by Percival Goodman. Rabbis serving in this building have included Norbert Rosenthal (1951–1976), Charles Sherman (1976–2013),[2] and Karen and Micah Citrin (2013–present).

Membership rose from 170 families in 1943[3] to 525 in 1979,[4] but has since fallen to 425.[1] As of 2011, Temple Israel was the only Reform synagogue in Tulsa.[1]

Early history, South Cheyenne building

Temple Israel was founded in December 1914, and joined the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (now Union for Reform Judaism) in 1915.[2][3] Its first religious leader was Abraham Feldman, who, at the time, was studying at the Reform Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. He served until 1915. In 1917, the members hired Jacob B. Menkes as their first rabbi.[2] A 1910 graduate of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America,[5] he served until 1919, the year the congregation occupied its first permanent building (until then services had been held in a series of temporary premises).[2]

Located at 1306 South Cheyenne (at 14th Street),[2] it was, according to some sources, the oldest synagogue building in Oklahoma.[6] It was eventually abandoned and fell into disuse. Early in 2009, real estate developer Kevin Stephens stated that he planned to move forward with plans to save its facade and develop the building into a center for sustainability, community, and non-profit space,[7][8] but less than one week[9] after Stephens was interviewed about his plans[10] the building was damaged by a fire on January 27, 2009, which caused the roof and floors to collapse.

The year the synagogue moved to South Cheyenne, Charles B. Latz, a 1914 graduate of Hebrew Union College,[11] succeeded Menkes as rabbi.[12] That same year a synagogue sisterhood was formed, followed the next year by a brotherhood.[12] During the early 1920s the Tulsa All Souls Unitarian Church (founded 1921) met for a time in Temple Israel's building.[13]

Latz served until 1924.[12] He was followed by Samuel S. Kaplan, a 1920 graduate of Hebrew Union College,[11] who served from 1924 to 1927, then Jacob P. Krohngold, who joined in 1927.[12] 1929 saw three rabbis at Temple Israel; Krohngold, who left that year, Benjamin Kelsen, who came and left that year, and Hyman Iola,[12] a 1921 graduate of Hebrew Union College.[11]

South Rockford building

White building
Temple Israel 16th&Rockford

During Iola's tenure, in 1932, Temple Israel moved to another building, at 1602 South Rockford (at 16th Street),in what is now the Swan Lake historic district.[12][14] That same year the congregation formed a choir. Iola was succeeded in 1935 by Abraham Shusterman.[12] Shusterman, a 1931 graduate of Hebrew Union College,[11] served until 1941,[12] moving to Baltimore, Maryland's Har Sinai Congregation.[15] While Shusterman was rabbi, Temple Israel starting having bar mitzvah ceremonies, and added Torah readings to the Friday night services.[12]

Shusterman was replaced in 1941 by Ely E. Pilchik.[12] Pilchik had been born in Baranowicz, Poland, and had immigrated to the United States in 1920. He was a graduate of Hebrew Union College, but "was more traditional than the typical Reform rabbi".[16] By 1943, the congregation had around 170 member families.[3] Pilchik served until 1947, moving to Newark, New Jersey's Temple B'nai Jeshurun.[17]

Randall M. Falk also joined as rabbi in 1945. His tenure was only one year, until 1946, and he focused on Temple Israel's religious school. In 1947 Morton C. Fierman joined as rabbi, succeeding Pilchik, and served until 1951.[12]

Fierman was succeed in 1951 by Norbert L. Rosenthal, who concentrated on "a variety of holiday celebrations and educational programs".[12] Rosenthal had previously served as rabbi of Old York Road Temple in Willow Grove, Pennsylvania.[18] In 1972, he allowed Oral Roberts to address the congregation at the bar mitzvah of a member.[19] Rosenthal served until 1976,[12] becoming rabbi emeritus. In 1981, he assisted in the establishing of Temple Shalom of Northwest Arkansas, and served thereafter as its first rabbi, visiting every other week to conduct Friday services.[20]

During Rosenthal's tenure, in 1955, the congregation moved to its present home at 2004 East 22nd Place,[1][12] just south of the Utica Square Shopping Center.[21] The South Rockford building was sold to Christ the King Catholic Church, which remodeled it so that it could be used as a fellowship hall. In 1975 it was renamed Fletcher Hall, after the former parish priest, and in 1991 it was removed to make way for a playground for students at Marquette Catholic School.[14]

East 22nd Place building

Designed by prolific synagogue architect Percival Goodman, the East 22nd Place synagogue's front is dominated by massive twin pillars displaying the Ten Commandments,[4] which represent the biblical Pillar of Fire and the Pillar of Cloud.[22] Goodman hired the sculptor Seymour Lipton to produce three works of ceremonial art for the sanctuary's bimah, "a ner tamid, a monumental seven-branch menorah, and an abstracted, vine motif that is placed along the top of the Torah Ark."[22][23] The shape of the ner tamid "represents two sets of angels' wings that were set over the Ark in the ancient Temple of Solomon." The vine decoration contains pomegranates, "an ancient symbol of fruitfulness." The menorah, which is lit Fridays and holidays, "is symbolic of the Tree of Life".[24]

Charles P. Sherman joined as rabbi in 1976 and retired in 2013. Originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he graduated from the University of Pittsburgh and was ordained at Hebrew Union College in 1969.[25] At Temple Israel, he focused on education, and created programs for mixed Jewish/non-Jewish couples and converts to Judaism. He was a strong supporter of the Oklahoma Chapter of the Religious Coalition for Abortion Rights, and garnered support for it from the Southwest Council of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (now Union for Reform Judaism).[26] He also "advocated social justice and religious action, as well as fuller participation in the Reform movement and community at large."[12] While rabbi at Temple Israel, he also taught at the University of Tulsa and Phillips Theological Seminary, and served as president of the Southwest Association of Reform Rabbis, the Tulsa Ministerial Alliance, the Tulsa Police and Fire Chaplaincy Corps, the National Conference for Community and Justice (Tulsa Region) and the Tulsa Metropolitan Ministry.[25] In 1979, he presided over the bar mitzvah at Temple Israel of future wrestler Bill Goldberg.[27] That year membership was 525 families,[4] but by 1995 that had fallen to under 500.[12] In 2005 Sherman was inducted into the Tulsa Historical Society Hall of Fame,[25] and in 2010 he was awarded the Russell Bennett Spiritual Inclusion Award by the Oklahomans for Equality.[28]

To succeed Sherman, Temple Israel selected a married couple, Micah and Karen Citrin, who had previously worked together as rabbis at Peninsula Temple Beth El in San Mateo, California. The Citrins met when both of them were studying for the rabbinate at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles. Micah's father was the rabbi at New Mexico's oldest Jewish congregation, Congregation Albert in Albuquerque.[29]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Temple Israel website.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Olitzky & Raphael (1996), p.  297.
  3. ^ a b c d Pilchik (1943), p.  322.
  4. ^ a b c Wall (1979), p.  8.
  5. ^ de Haas (1934), p. 251.
  6. ^ See Loren (2009). Note, however, that other claimants for "oldest synagogue building in Oklahoma" include Temple Emeth in Ardmore (1912), B'nai Emunah in Tulsa (1916), and Emanuel Synagogue in Oklahoma City (1917).
  7. ^ Nicks (2009), p.  14.
  8. ^ Easterling (2009).
  9. ^ "Tulsa, OK - Firefighters Battle Blaze at Abandoned Synagogue". Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  10. ^ Loren, Jennifer. "Developer Wants New Life For Tulsa's Temple Israel". Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  11. ^ a b c d de Haas (1934), p. 204.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Olitzky & Raphael (1996), p.  298.
  13. ^ Joyce & Harris (2007), p.  213.
  14. ^ a b Representative Sample of Properties, Swan Lake Historic District, Tulsa Preservation Commission website.
  15. ^ Olitzky & Raphael (1996), p.  162.
  16. ^ Helmreich (1999), p.  257.
  17. ^ Olitzky & Raphael (1996), p.  215.
  18. ^ Schwartz.
  19. ^ Patel & Hartman (2009).
  20. ^ Gray LeMaster (1994), p.  370.
  21. ^ About Us, Temple Israel website.
  22. ^ a b Kampf (1966), pp.  189–190.
  23. ^ Gilbert (2004).
  24. ^ Sanctuary, Tour, Temple Israel website.
  25. ^ a b c 2005 Hall of Fame Inductees, Tulsa Historical Society.
  26. ^ Joyce (1998), p.  309.
  27. ^ Farhi (1999).
  28. ^ Oklahomans for Equality Award Recipients 2010, Oklahomans for Equality website.
  29. ^ Sherman, Bill. "Married couple to serve as co-rabbis at Tulsa's Temple Israel". Tulsa World, February 16, 2013.

References

Further reading

  • Zarrow, Alison. Abandoned Tulsa, Furnace Press, 2005, ISBN 978-0-9772742-2-2, pp.  53-61.