The Jerusalem Post

Why is a thriving Boston-area synagogue spending $15 million – to downsize?

- • By URIEL HEILMAN (Facebook)

BROOKLINE, Massachuse­tts ( JTA) – Times are good for Kehillath Israel, the storied Conservati­ve synagogue in this Boston suburb.

While many other area Conservati­ve congregati­ons are shrinking, membership at KI is growing. The 430-member synagogue has a thrice-daily minyan and hosts three different services on Shabbat mornings; a fourth is slated to be added this fall. KI is also home to several Jewish agencies, has a growing preschool, and for the third year in a row is running a budget surplus.

Now the 98-year-old synagogue on Harvard Street is about to embark on a radical renovation plan that might seem counterint­uitive: It is downsizing.

The first phase, which will cost $15 million and is scheduled to begin next summer, is all about making the facility more flexible. The fixed pews in the sanctuary will be yanked out and replaced with stacking chairs, and movable walls will be installed to make the space usable for purposes other than worship. In phase two, Jewish senior housing will be built on the site, creating a significan­t long-term revenue stream. Overall, the building’s footprint will decrease slightly, to 53,000 square feet from 55,000, excluding the senior housing facility.

It’s all part of an unconventi­onal master plan designed to position KI for future success – or decline.

“We’re very mindful of what’s happening to suburban synagogues across the American Jewish frontier that have found their synagogues to be very costly and challengin­g to maintain, and we’re doing everything possible to hedge against that,” the synagogue’s rabbi, Bill Hamilton, told JTA. “We know that life won’t always be this way and things will change. Hopefully we’ll have left the people who follow us with a campus that is versatile enough and endowed enough financiall­y to serve future generation­s.”

With Reform and Conservati­ve affiliatio­n on the decline, large urban and suburban synagogues across the country are facing some stark choices. Built during the good times of the early and mid-20th century, many have become burdens to shrunken congregati­ons now too small to afford their upkeep. Synagogues with sanctuarie­s built to seat 1,500 or more may barely see 100 worshipers on Shabbat, and many congregati­ons now use their sanctuarie­s only on the High Holy Days or special occasions. And if current trends hold, the worst is yet to come.

KI is one of four non-Orthodox synagogues in the Boston area in the midst of making major changes that reflect how synagogues are trying to adjust to these trends.

Just blocks from KI, Massachuse­tts’ oldest congregati­on, the Reform Temple Ohabei Shalom on Beacon Street, has turned to rental income for survival. Five years ago, the synagogue built an addition that generates revenue by renting space to a local public preschool. Now the 350-member synagogue is fixing its roof and updating its 1,700-seat sanctuary as part of a $2.3 million renovation project it hopes will make the massive sanctuary more attractive for rentals to cultural institutio­ns and universiti­es.

“We need outside rental income in order to sustain this building,” said Ohabei Shalom Rabbi Sonia Saltzman. “We can’t do it just from the membership.”

A few miles away, in the Chestnut Hill neighborho­od in south Brookline, the Conservati­ve Temple Emeth is pursuing an if-you-build-it-they-willcome approach. The shul just began a $1 million renovation to raise ceilings, brighten hallways, increase handicappe­d accessibil­ity and upgrade the 67-year-old building’s roof and air-conditioni­ng systems. Additional renovation­s totaling $2 million are on the drawing table.

“It’s going to be a much brighter office, which fills people with optimism,” Rabbi Alan Turetz told JTA. “We decided this is a good time to put our best face forward, and we timed it to our 75th anniversar­y.”

Temple Emeth has tried this approach once before. In 2005, a $1.5 million renovation updated the sanctuary while slightly shrinking its size, but it failed to arrest the slide in membership. Since then, the synagogue has merged its weekday minyan with another struggling Conservati­ve synagogue and combined its supplement­ary religious school with those of two other synagogues. To capitalize on its unused space, Temple Emeth rents part of the building to a local public preschool and sometimes to the popular Chabad across the street.

Mishkan Tefila, the Conservati­ve synagogue that shares a weekday minyan and religious school with Emeth, may not survive at all. One of the largest synagogue properties in Massachuse­tts, Mishkan is entertaini­ng bids to sell off some or all of its 23-acre property. Though Mishkan’s sanctuary seats 800 and can be opened up to seat 2,000, the synagogue barely has 300 members.

“We need to do something to secure a long-term future, because there are not that many young families in the Newton area right now,” Mishkan Rabbi Leonard Gordon told JTA. “For Mishkan to thrive in a new iteration, it would have to be more than a local synagogue. It would have to be an institutio­n that’s open seven days a week with programmin­g and outreach. It would have to become a destinatio­n synagogue.”

Located in semi-urban Brookline, which abuts Boston, Kehillath Israel already has succeeded in becoming a destinatio­n – not just for synagogue members but for the wider community. The synagogue has welcomed two independen­t minyans into the building on Shabbat (both of which seat the sexes separately, one with a barrier and one without) and adopted many of the best practices of independen­t egalitaria­n minyans in the shul’s main Shabbat service, including layled prayers, abundant singing and traditiona­l liturgy.

The congregati­on also serves as home to a couple of Jewish start-ups and the regional offices of an Orthodox organizati­on, Yachad, which works with the disabled. KI charges only token rent to these groups. Its sole genuine tenant is the Dancesport Academy of New England, which rents out the social hall during the week.

While KI may be bucking the Conservati­ve movement’s downward trend for now, the synagogue’s master plan demonstrat­es how it is simultaneo­usly trying to accommodat­e its current vivacity while also preparing for a future that may not be as bright.

The plan – for which over $8 million has been raised, including from Patriots owner Robert Kraft – includes additional income streams: The Jewish Community Housing for the Elderly facility will hold a longterm lease on the site, and a new synagogue social hall better suited to wedding rentals will be constructe­d over most of what is now a garden. The renovation will also make the building more handicappe­d-accessible and energy efficient.

“This is a complete rethinking of what a synagogue can be,” said Jonathan Sarna, a KI member and professor of American Jewish history at Brandeis University. “The different institutio­ns maintainin­g their integrity and identity but all interactin­g together will be a very significan­t experiment to watch.”

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 ??  ?? THE KEHILLATH ISRAEL synagogue in Boston.
THE KEHILLATH ISRAEL synagogue in Boston.

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