Congregation B'nai Torah

Synagogue in Georgia, USA
33°56′36.16″N 84°21′34.73″W / 33.9433778°N 84.3596472°W / 33.9433778; -84.3596472ArchitectureDate established1981 (as a congregation)Completed1984Websitebnaitorah.org

Congregation B'nai Torah is a Conservative synagogue located in Sandy Springs, Georgia, in the United States.[1][2] It was founded in 1981 by young, unaffiliated Jews who had attended the Hillel High holiday services at Emory University since the 1970s.[3] The 125 member families met in a closed grammar school until 1984, and then for two years in trailers, until they constructed a synagogue building.[2]

Overview

The congregation was highly unusual, as it was founded as an Orthodox shul, but without a mechitza. Because of the challenge of being an independent synagogue, it gradually moved towards the Conservative movement, first identifying as "traditional" ("Conservadox") and then finally affiliating with the Conservative movement in November 2003. Soon after, the synagogue completed a transition to an egalitarian practice, with women now integrated into all ritual roles.

B'nai Torah hired its first Conservative-ordained rabbi, Joshua Heller, in 2004. At the time, membership was approximately 420 families. As of June 2009, that had grown to 660,[2] by July 2015, it had reached 750, and in 2023 its members included over 850 families.[citation needed] As of November 2023[update], B'nai Torah's clergy team included Rabbi Heller, Rabbi Hillel Konigsberg, and Rabbi Elizabeth Breit.

The present location on 700 Mount Vernon Highway contains a large sanctuary, a gift shop, meat and dairy kosher kitchens, a religious school, and a preschool, all of which were renovated in 2014–2015.[4] The congregation also maintains an eruv around surrounding neighborhoods. B'nai Torah hosts many community organizations and events, including MACoM, the Metro Atlanta Community mikvah was constructed on its campus in 2015.

References

  1. ^ MacDonald, Mary. "Be civil about school expansions, clergy tell flocks", The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, August 28, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c Kron, Michaela. "B'nai Torah's youthful growth leads to expansion on pulpit"[permanent dead link], Reporter Newspapers, June 26, 2009.
  3. ^ "A glance back, a look ahead; 'Acts of faith' built congregation's home", The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, September 3, 1992.
  4. ^ "B'nai Torah's $6m groundbreaking". Atlanta Jewish Times. May 2014.[permanent dead link]

External links

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