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News Archive 2006

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GROUNDBREAKING NEW BOOK PUBLISHED

November 2006

Jewish Heritage in England

Jewish Heritage in England

English Heritage has published Jewish Heritage in England, the first ever comprehensive guidebook to England's historic synagogues and sites.

Jewish Heritage in England, published in association with Jewish Heritage, celebrates in full colour the architectural heritage of 350 years of the Jewish community, the oldest non-Christian minority in England. It is based on the authoritative Survey of the Jewish Built Heritage carried out with the support of English Heritage, but appears at a time when Anglo-Jewry has shrunk in size by almost a third and congregations have abandoned urban centres, leaving some of the country's most spectacular religious architecture with an uncertain future. English Heritage's Inspired! campaign launched last summer (see below) aims to secure a future for historic places of worship of all faiths, including synagogues as well as churches.

Jewish Heritage in England covers more than 300 sites organised on a region-by-region basis, ranging from Britain's oldest synagogue, Bevis Marks Synagogue in the City of London, through the Georgian gems of the West Country to the splendid High Victorian "cathedral synagogues" of Birmingham, Brighton and Liverpool. Heritage trails around former Jewish quarters of the major cities are featured, beginning with the East End of London. Relics of Anglo-Jewry's medieval past are explored in York, Lincoln and Norwich and venerable burial grounds with Hebrew inscriptions are found in the unlikeliest of places. Curious oddities not to be missed include a 19th century private penthouse synagogue in Brighton and an Egyptian style Mikveh [ritual bath] in Canterbury. A valuable appendix covers Jewish sites elsewhere in the UK, in Scotland, Wales, the Channel Islands, the Isle of Man, Northern Ireland, and in the Irish Republic.

The book's author,  Dr Sharman Kadish (Director of Jewish Heritage), said, "England's historic synagogues express the stability of Jewish life in this country, which we are celebrating this year, the 350th year since the re-establishment of the Jewish community in England (1656-2006)."


150th BIRTHDAY BASH IN BRUM

September 2006

Singers Hill Synagogue

Singers Hill Synagogue

Birmingham's Singers Hill Synagogue was packed for a choral Selihot service a few days before Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. The special occasion, which was presided over by the Chief Rabbi Dr Jonathan Sacks, and attended by Jewish Heritage Director Dr Sharman Kadish, doubled as an opportunity to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the senior "cathedral synagogue" of England, which was opened back in September 1856. In recent years, owing to dwindling membership, the building has been fighting hard to stave off the possibility of redundancy. Situated in the middle of a neighbourhood that is rapidly being regenerated, the signs are now good for its long-term future. Worshippers were treated to a fine rendition of the traditional prayers by Hazan Lionel Rosenfeld and the Shabbaton Choir, enhanced by the excellent acoustics of the building.

MIXED NEWS ON INTER-WAR SYNAGOGUES

“INSPIRED!”

CAMPAIGN FOR CHURCHES  - AND SYNAGOGUES TOO!

May 2006

Crumpsall Synagogue Renovations

Higher Crumpsall Synagogue in Manchester under repair
(© English Heritage Photo: Keith Buck)

English Heritage, the leading organisation for the historic environment in Britain, has launched Inspired!, a major campaign to secure a future for historic places of worship nationwide: www.english-heritage.org.uk/inspired.

Whilst thousands of historic churches are threatened with redundancy and deterioration, a tiny number of historic synagogues also face a continuing battle to survive. “England’s historic synagogues express the stability of Jewish life in this country, which we are celebrating this year, the 350th year since the re-establishment of the Jewish community in England [1656-2006]”, says Dr Sharman Kadish, Director of Jewish Heritage UK.

Dr Kadish represented Jewish Heritage UK at Inspired! launch events in London: a reception at the House of Commons hosted by the Rt Hon. Frank Dobson MP and a glittering dinner (kosher food kindly provided) presided over by Simon Thurley, Chief Executive of English Heritage. Guest of Honour was His Royal Highness the Duke of Gloucester and, in addition to heritage professionals and church leaders, celebrities from politics, the media and entertainment were present, including composer Andrew Lloyd Webber and journalist Simon Jenkins, author of Britain’s 1000 Best Churches.

The Inspired! campaign literature highlights the case of the former New Synagogue, Egerton Road in London’s Stamford Hill. This synagogue has been restored and given a new lease of life as the Hasidic Bobov Synagogue, thanks to grant-aid under the English Heritage and Heritage Lottery Fund Joint Repair Grant Scheme for Listed Places of Worship.

The Joint Places of Worship Repair Grant Scheme is set to continue and to be enhanced as part of the Inspired! campaign.  Indeed, amongst lucky recipients of new grants announced as part of the package is Higher Crumpsall Synagogue in Salford, Greater Manchester which is to receive a further £151,000. This new grant is in addition to an original grant of £130,000 made in 2004.

Ironically, during the very week of the launch of Inspired!, news broke that the former Clapton Federation Synagogue, situated not very far from Egerton Road, had been stripped bare of its fixtures and fittings, including the attractive Ark. This 1930s synagogue was sold in 2005 to a Jewish charitable trust; apparently the new owners were afraid that it was about to be Listed. DEMOLISHED July 2006.


MIXED NEWS ON INTER-WAR SYNAGOGUES

March 2006

Stained Glass Window (Higher Crumpsall Synagogue)

Art Deco "Vision of the Temple" window at Higher Crumpsall Synagogue
(Photo: Bob Skingle  Copyright © English Heritage)

Manchester’s Higher Crumpsall is under Repair

Major repair work to one of Britain’s most important 1920s synagogues, Higher Crumpsall Synagogue in Salford, Greater Manchester, is finally underway, supported by a grant of £130,000 from the English Heritage and Heritage Lottery Fund Joint Listed Places of Worship Grants Scheme. It is anticipated that Phase I repairs to the Grade II Listed building will be completed by Heritage Open Days in September 2006. For more on this story see Sites at Risk.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the city, the fate of South Manchester’s two Sephardi synagogues in Didsbury is to be decided by market forces. Withington Synagogue, Queenston Road and Sha’are Tsedek Synagogue, just around the corner in Old Lansdowne Road, have both been put up for sale, but only one of them will be sold. The Sephardi and Mizrakhi communities in the neighbourhood have dwindled in recent years and no longer require both buildings that were erected in the 1920s.  It is expected that the extensive Sha’are Tsedek site will be sold for redevelopment, the congregations combining forces at Withington (Delissa Joseph with Joseph Sunlight 1925-27, Grade II Listed).


Sunderland’s last remaining synagogue at Ryhope Road has held its final service. This Grade II Listed synagogue, designed by little known Newcastle Jewish architect Marcus K. Glass, is an essay in Art Deco Ottoman,  rated by Pevsner as ‘vigorous and decorative’. The building was sold to a Jewish charitable trust some years ago and it is to be hoped that a sympathetic new use can be found for the synagogue in a town which was once a bastion of Jewish Orthodoxy. The almost identical but unlisted sister Clapton Federation Synagogue in London, also by Glass, closed in May 2005 and was DEMOLISHED July 2006.


Birmingham’s Art Deco Synagogue is Demolished

February 2006  Ernest Joseph’s unlisted International Style Birmingham Progressive Synagogue, Sheepcote Street, was finally demolished  - on Shabbat - [Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath] in redevelopment plans that have been in the offing for at least eight years. The reinvention of Birmingham city centre seems unstoppable. The synagogue is due to be replaced by a new worship space inside an office block less than a quarter of a mile away in a deal worked out with the developer who has acquired both sites. But will the planned ‘Shul-in-an office block’ be a worthy successor? At least the charming Art Deco Ark has been salvaged from Sheepcote Street. Ernest Joseph designed Shell Mex House, an Art Deco London landmark.

The sad fate of the Birmingham Progressive Synagogue draws attention to the vulnerability of the few good inter-war synagogues in Britain that remain unaltered.

 

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