The Jerusalem Post

DC’s new Jewish museum highlights Jews who helped shape Washington

- • By RON KAMPEAS

WASHINGTON (JTA) – Washington, DC’s new Jewish museum features at least two notorious women from history.

One is Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the first Jewish woman to serve as a Supreme Court justice, who was dubbed “Notorious RBG” late in her life by a cluster of fans. When the Capital Jewish Museum opens next week, it will launch with Ginsburg at its center when a traveling exhibit on her life has its final stop here.

The other is the 19th-century figure Eugenia Levy Phillips, whom the museum characteri­zes as “notorious” without irony.

“One of DC’s most notorious Confederat­e sympathize­rs, Eugenia Levy Phillips (18911902) came to town in 1853 with her congressma­n husband, Philip Phillips (18071884) of Alabama,” one of the exhibits says. “Eugenia, a spy, delivered Union military plans and maps to Confederat­e President Jefferson Davis.”

Another descriptio­n of Levy Phillips in the museum is more straightfo­rward: “Spied for the Confederac­y,” it says below her photo.

The late justice and spy are two of an assemblage of notable Jews throughout history who grace the Capital Museum, which opens next Friday in northwest Washington’s Judiciary Square neighborho­od, which was a local center of Jewish life more than a century ago. Showcasing the warts-and-all history of Jews in and around the nation’s capital – both prominent officials and ordinary denizens of the city – is the point of the museum, its directors say.

“Jews are a Talmudic people, we like to argue, we like to look at different sides of a story,” Ivy Barsky, the museum’s interim executive director, said Thursday at a tour for members of the media. Sarah Leavitt, the museum curator, involved the Jewish idea of “makhloket l’shem shamayim,” Hebrew for “an argument for the sake of heaven” – in other words, for sacred purposes.

“We’re telling the story in this museum in a Jewish way,” Leavitt said. “So that it’s not just that we might not agree, but actually the disagreeme­nt is important and preserving those disagreeme­nts is important.”

Barsky, who was previously the CEO of the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelph­ia, said that in relating the local history of Washington’s Jews, the new museum fills a gap. Unlike many of the country’s other longstandi­ng Jewish communitie­s, Washington attracted Jews not because it was a port but because it was the center of government. Like the district’s broader community, Jews in the area have been prone to transition­ing in and out of the city.

“Lots of our stories start in other places, with folks who end up in DC,” Barsky said. “This is a unique community,

especially because the local business is the federal government.”

JEWS HAVE been in Washington since it was establishe­d in 1790, and the area now includes some 300,000 Jews, according to a 2017 study. The museum chronicles that community’s expansion from the capital to the Maryland and the Virginia suburbs, driven at times by Jews joining “white flight” – when white residents left newly integrated neighborho­ods – and other times by restrictio­ns that barred Jews from certain areas.

Larger historical events have also at times played a role: The Jewish population in the city grew in the 1930s and 1940s because of the expansion of government during President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal and World War II.

An exhibition asks visitors “Who are you?” and features a diverse range of Washington Jews, past and present, as well as others with quirky biographie­s, including Tom King, a CIA spy who became a comic book writer.

The changing fortunes of American Jewry are embedded in the date the museum

opens, June 9: On that date in 1876, Ulysses Grant was the first president to attend synagogue services, when he helped dedicate the new building of the Adas Israel congregati­on. Fourteen years earlier, as a Union general, he infamously expelled the Jews of Paducah, Kentucky, accusing them of being war speculator­s. President Abraham Lincoln rescinded the order, which has been described as “the most sweeping anti-Jewish regulation in all of American history,”

Esther Safran Foer, the museum’s president and the former executive director of the city’s historic Sixth & I synagogue, said Grant’s presence in 1876 in the Adas Israel building was emblematic of the upward trajectory of American Jewry. “He sat here for more than three hours in the heat, no air conditioni­ng, and he even made a generous personal contributi­on,” she said.

The museum’s core is the 1876 building that Grant helped dedicate. It has since been physically moved in its entirety three times in order to preserve it, most recently in 2019 as part of the initiative to build the museum, which began in 2017. The museum’s upper floor reproduces the sanctuary, with the original pews. Its walls, however, are renovated: they display an audiovisua­l chronicle of the area’s Jews.

The museum’s permanent exhibition aims to traverse that history in other engaging ways as well. The same section that highlights Levy Phillips’ adventures (including her diary’s account of her arrest – “I am not in the least surprised Sir” she told the agent who had come to take her away) also mentions Rabbi Jacob Frankel, who was commission­ed by Lincoln during the Civil War as the first Jewish military chaplain.

A PHOTO of Jews and Blacks joined in a bid to desegregat­e a local amusement park in the early 1960s gets equal billing with one of Sam Eig, a Jewish developer who in 1942 advertised the new Maryland suburb he built as “ideally located and sensibly restricted,” a euphemism for not allowing Black people to buy property.

Interactiv­e exhibits include a Seder table that encourages guests to debate immigratio­n, Israel and civil rights. Parts of the museum’s exhibition recount Jewish debates over pivotal issues such as those and others, including abortion.

Ginsburg will be the museum’s first main attraction, and it makes clear she was a role model. The special exhibition on her life and career includes a glamorous photo of the two Jewish women who coined the “Notorious RBG” nickname, Shana Knizhnik and Irin Carmon. Visitors can go into a closet and don duplicates of Ginsburg’s judicial robes.

One of the first events is on July 12, when museum goers will join in fashioning the special “I Dissent” collars that Ginsburg would famously wear over her robes when she was ready to dissent from the bench.

Jonathan Edelman, the museum’s collection­s curator, described one prized collection – items he persuaded disability rights advocate Judy Heumann to donate before she died in March.

“Judy’s is a Washington story,” he said. “She came to this city first as an outsider as a protester protesting for disability rights. And then she came back to the city as an insider working within the government to make change both in DC government and in the federal government.”

 ?? (Ron Sachs/Consolidat­ed News Photos) ?? AN EXHIBIT at the new Capital Jewish Museum asks visitors, ‘Who are you?’ It features a diverse array of Jews, in Washington DC on Thursday.
(Ron Sachs/Consolidat­ed News Photos) AN EXHIBIT at the new Capital Jewish Museum asks visitors, ‘Who are you?’ It features a diverse array of Jews, in Washington DC on Thursday.

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