Tag Archives: Synagogue

Next Chapter: Harrisburg synagogue moves from long-time location to new home

Rabbi Elisha Friedman leads a service in Kesher Israel’s new building.

A Harrisburg synagogue made the move last week from its mid-century building to a new place of worship.

Kesher Israel renovated and officially opened its new synagogue in the former Riverside Methodist Church on the 3000-block of N. 3rd Street.

The congregation purchased the building in January 2020 and sold its former home on the 2500-block of N. 3rd Street—where it was located for over 70 years.

“The new building came out beautifully,” Rabbi Elisha Friedman said. “The old building was way too big for us. This building works really well.”

Since purchasing the property, Kesher Israel completed extensive renovations to modernize the space and constructed an addition onto the building with a new sanctuary.

There are offices, conference rooms, a room to display the synagogue’s historical artifacts, a prayer chapel and a main chapel, among other rooms.

The building is far more manageable for the congregation, which, during COVID, has seen about 30 to 40 regular attendees, Friedman said. However, it’s still plenty of space for the congregation to grow.

Kesher Israel’s new building

According to Friedman, the new building is in a much more convenient location for congregants. At the old building, members had to walk anywhere from one-half to two miles from home to a service on Shabbat, the Sabbath day, on which driving is restricted. This new location cuts down that walking time for many.

“It will make it easier for people to come,” he said.

While it wasn’t an easy transition for all members to leave their former building, people are excited now to be in their new space, Friedman said.

“Our hope is always to grow,” he said. “Moving into this building shows that we plan to be here for awhile.”

Kesher Israel is located at 3200 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit their website.

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Harrisburg community, leaders hold vigil to show unity, support for Kesher Israel

Community gathers for a vigil at Kesher Israel on N. 3rd Street.

On Monday, Rabbi Elisha Friedman stood outside of his synagogue, looking at a pair of swastikas that had been painted on the building—a symbol of hate.

Today, he stood in that same place seeing signs of love.

A diverse crowd gathered outside of Kesher Israel on Wednesday evening to stand in solidarity with the Jewish community.

“The response from this community has been really incredible,” Friedman said. “Each person by being here today is making a statement that this is unacceptable to go on in this area. We are not going to allow this kind of behavior to happen again.”

The vigil was held by the Mayor’s Interfaith Advisory Council. Police Commissioner Thomas Carter, Rep. Patty Kim (D-Harrisburg) and local faith leaders were among those who spoke.

“What I see here is love,” Carter said. “It took some cowards under the shield of nighttime to paint a swastika. But it didn’t drive a fork in any of our hearts. It brought us together.”

Friedman said that Harrisburg police arrived minutes after he called them on Monday morning. He added that the state troopers and FBI were helpful, as well.

Rabbi Elisha Friedman of Kesher Israel Congregation speaks at the vigil.

Pastor James Jackson of Goodwin Memorial Baptist Church was one of the many faith leaders who spoke at the event.

“We members of the Goodwin Memorial Baptist church, who are your closest neighbors of faith, want to say to whoever did this, this is not acceptable,” he said.

This act of anti-Semitism is just one of many related incidents in the state, said Russell Goodman, who is part of the Interfaith Advisory Council.

The negative impact the swastika has on the Jewish community mirrors that of the confederate flag on the Black community, said Tameka Hatcher of the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission.

“Symbolism matters,” she said. “As a person who believes in the dignity and the sanctity of lives of all people, we the Black community stand with our brothers and sisters of faith in the Jewish community.”

In closing, Jackson prayed for peace and unity in the community.

“The thing that we leave here with will be a renewed determination to see that this city, this community and this nation, turns into a place where all of our kids can grow up in an atmosphere of love and peace,” Jackson said. 

Kesher Israel Congregation is located at 2500 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit their website. To learn more about the Mayor’s Interfaith Advisory Council, visit their Facebook page.

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Community rallies around Jewish congregation after swastikas found painted on synagogue

Kesher Israel Congregation in Uptown Harrisburg

Members of the Kesher Israel Congregation heading to morning services on Monday were met with a disturbing surprise.

Swastikas had been painted on the front of their synagogue, said Rabbi Elisha Friedman.

“My security antenna went up,” he said. “People were worried about safety.”

Friedman quickly called the police. Local officers, state troopers and the attorney general came to the synagogue, he said.

Finding no sign of a threat to safety, Kesher Israel could continue services, and by the afternoon they had power-washed off the symbols of hate.

According to Friedman, the only other time something similar happened to their congregation was about 30 years ago.

By Tuesday morning, over 30 local people and organizations expressed their support for Kesher Israel and denounced acts of hatred in the community.

“An attack on one Jewish institution is an attack on all Jewish institutions, and we are here for you as your neighbors and friends to fight anti-Semitism wherever it exists and to support you at this difficult time,” said Rabbi Peter Kessler and President Rob Teplitz of Temple Ohev Sholom on N. Front Street in their statement.

Other Jewish leaders in Harrisburg stepped up to reiterate the sense that what happens to one congregation affects them all.

Rabbi Arianna Capptauber of Beth El Temple explained how the swastika personally impacts her, being the granddaughter of a Holocaust survivor.

“I feel personally the sting of the swastika, as it represents the deadly hatred that killed many members of my family,” she said. “Yet I will not cower in the face of this weaponized symbol, for I know that we are held by a resilient Jewish community and a caring community of allies here in Harrisburg.”

Friedman said many people have been calling and reaching out to him to ask how his congregation is doing and to express their solidarity.

“It’s encouraging,” he said. “There’s this huge outpouring. It was every part of our community and all types of different religions in Harrisburg.”

Local churches, mosques and temples reached out to support the Jewish faith community, as well.

“We at Pine Street Presbyterian Church condemn this criminal act of hatred directed towards our Jewish brothers and sisters,” said Pastor Russell C. Sullivan Jr., in a statement. “With the people of Kesher Israel Synagogue and the Jewish community, we stand in solidarity and support.”

The Harrisburg Mayor’s Interfaith Advisory Council will hold a vigil outside of Kesher Israel’s synagogue at 2500 N. 3rd St. on Wednesday at 5 p.m. Local government, law enforcement and faith leaders will speak in support of the Jewish community.

“The person was intending to make us feel unwelcome and like a small minority in the community, but it backfired and the opposite impression was given,” Friedman said.

Kesher Israel is located at 2500 N. 3rd St., Harrisburg. For more information on their congregation, visit their website.

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A Vision, Rising: Chisuk Emuna’s Riverside synagogue takes shape.

Some big changes are happening at the corner of Vaughn and Green streets in uptown Harrisburg. The brick building once known as Riverside Elementary School has been replaced with dug-up earth and huge pieces of construction equipment. A chain-linked fence and trailers surround the property.

It’s all part of the work being done to build a new Chisuk Emuna Congregation synagogue at 3219 Green St. by this time next year.

In April 2009, right before Passover, an accidental fire decimated the former synagogue at 5th and Division streets. It left the building uninhabitable. Since then, the congregation has held events at the Jewish Community Center on Front Street. In October 2010, members broke ground for a synagogue at its new location.

“It’s going to be gorgeous,” one neighbor, who lives across the street from the construction, said. “I can’t wait for it to open,” agreed another neighbor. Both declined to give their names.

Carl Shuman, president of Chisuk Emuna congregation, said, “We have enjoyed getting to meet our new neighbors and we want Chisuk Emuna to be a place in which they, too, take pride.”

“Great excitement,” Rabbi Ron Muroff said, visiting the site one afternoon. “To see a building is rising is very exciting and the building will serve a higher purpose.

“We hope this new home will allow us to serve our members, serve our communities in ways we weren’t able to before, and move from strength to strength.”

The 15,000-square-foot contemporary building will be smaller than the 200,000 square feet at Chisuk Emuna’s former home, but it will provide the same services and more.

The new building will be one level instead of three, beneficial for older members of the congregation and for visitors with special needs. There is hope for a garden to grow vegetables to share with neighbors and those in need within the community.

While Riverside Elementary, which had been re-named Thomas Morris Chester School, no longer exists, gone the way of the wrecking ball, a member of the Chisuk Emuna congregation had actually been the principal there for years.

“I’m delighted that Jay Krevsky’s grandchildren will be attending Hebrew school at the site where he nurtured so many other children,” Shuman said.

The construction means the end of the old school’s popularly used grassy slope.

“Riverside Elementary’s hill probably won’t be available any longer for winter sledding,” Shuman said. “[But] I hope that we’ll be able to develop programs for our children, and for the children of the neighborhood, that will be as rewarding and leave them with equally happy memories.”

Rabbi Muroff said: “The story of one small congregation partnering with other congregations within the Jewish community, with Christians, Jews, Muslims, others; there’s something good going on, something is happening here.”

Chisuk Emuna is looking to open its new home in a year. It has raised $2.8 million of the $3.5 million needed, thanks to the generosity of its congregation along with the community. If you would like to make a contribution, you can do so by mailing it to: Chisuk Emuna Congregation, P.O. Box 5507, Harrisburg, PA 17110. You can also find out more by going to www.chisukemuna.org

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