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Senior care services of Los Angeles Jewish Health include: Community-based program of all-inclusive care for the elderly (PACE): The Brandman Centers for Senior Care provide quality medical care that promotes independence for seniors through PACE, which coordinates and provides all needed preventive, primary, acute, and long-term care services to older adults so they may live at home in their ...
Historically, the Fairfax District has been a center of the Jewish community in Los Angeles, after the earlier Boyle Heights period, which was home to the largest Jewish community west of Chicago in the 1920s and 1930s. [14] In 1935, there were four synagogues in the Fairfax District; by 1945, there were twelve.
Rabbi Zeldin was raised in New York City, the son of an Orthodox rabbi. [4] Ordained at the Reform movement's Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati in 1946, he came to Los Angeles in 1953 as western regional director for the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (UAHC) and as dean of the College of Jewish Studies in Los Angeles, a UAHC program that was absorbed into Hebrew Union College in 1954.
Los Angeles [123] Chabad Center of University City: San Diego [124] Chabad of the Valley Headquarters: Tarzana, Los Angeles [125] Chabad of Ventura: Ventura [126] Chabad West Coast Headquarters: Los Angeles [127] Chabad of WeHo West: Los Angeles [128] Chabad of West Orange County: Huntington Beach [129] Chabad of West Marin: Fairfax [130 ...
The original motion would allocate $400,000 to the Jewish Federation's Community Security Initiative, $350,000 for a contract with the nonprofit private security firm Magen Am, and $250,000 to the ...
The Breed Street block where the Shul was located also became home of the Los Angeles Jewish Academy (now part of Yavneh Academy) [3] and Mount Sinai Clinic (a forerunner of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center). [2] In 1945, Rabbi Osher Zilberstein of Breed Street Shul opened the city's first Jewish parochial elementary school. [3]
The B'nai B'rith Lodge on South Union Avenue in Westlake served as a hub for the Jewish community and later as the heart of the labor movement in L.A. (Michael Blackshire / Los Angeles Times)
The congregation was founded in 1938. [4] [5] The first rabbi, Ernest Trattner, served until 1947.[6] [7]The current building, completed in 1953, was the first religious building designed by architect Sidney Eisenshtat, who went on to become a noted designer of synagogues and Jewish academic buildings. [8]