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Jewish REACH Russian Educational and Aid Center Milwaukee: active Orthodox – Chabad Lubavitch: Holds sabbath and holiday services. [48] Lake Park Synagogue Milwaukee: 1982–83 active Orthodox – Modern: OU member. [49] The Shul Bayside Milwaukee: active Orthodox – Chabad Lubavitch [50] The Shul East Milwaukee: active Orthodox – Chabad ...
Chabad's adherents include both Hasidic followers, as well as non-Hasidim, who have joined Chabad synagogues and other Chabad-run institutions. [49] Although the Chabad movement was founded and originally based in Eastern Europe, various Chabad communities span the globe, including Crown Heights, Brooklyn, and Kfar Chabad, Israel.
This is a list of Jewish communities in the North America, including yeshivas, Hebrew schools, Jewish day schools and synagogues. A yeshiva ( Hebrew : ישיבה) is a center for the study of Torah and the Talmud in Orthodox Judaism .
Congregation Beth Israel, Berkeley; Beyt Tikkun Synagogue, Berkeley; Peninsula Temple Sholom, Burlingame; Congregation B'nai Israel, Daly City; Temple Beth Israel, Fresno; Temple Ahavat Shalom Northridge, Los Angeles
Chabad of Burbank: Burbank [12] Chabad of Calabasas: Calabasas [13] Chabad of Camarillo: Camarillo [14] Chabad Carmel Valley (Del Mar Jewish Center) San Diego [15] Chabad Jewish Center of Castro Valley: Castro Valley [16] Chabad of the Central Valley: Fresno [17] Chabad of Chatsworth: Los Angeles [18] Chabad of Cheviot Hills: Los Angeles [19 ...
This is a list of Minnesota synagogues, including the city in which each is located and the branch of Judaism with which each is affiliated. Rabbi Solomon Silber, who served as Kenesseth Israel's rabbi from 1902 to 1925
The Shul was founded by Rabbi Sholom Lipskar, [2] who was sent in 1969 as an emissary of the Chabad-Lubavitch Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneersohn, to Miami Beach. [3] After finding no active Jewish community in the Surfside area, Lipskar initially met in hotel rooms before moving to a storefront. [3] [4] [5]
Although initially formed as an Orthodox congregation, Temple Jacob eventually changed to become a Reform synagogue, as did many other small synagogues throughout the U.S. [6] In the 1930s a local businessman and retailer, Norbert Kahn, who had come to the Upper Peninsula from Germany in the mid-1920s and married into the Gartner family ...