The Jewish Chronicle

Grand Central aims to be a key West End destinatio­n

- BY SIMON ROCKER — Steven Leas

UNITED SYNAGOGUE congregati­ons nowadays tend to appoint youth or assistant rabbis as their second minister, rather than a chazan. But one West End community has been prepared to go against the grain.

Previously part-time at Central Synagogue, Steven Leas was made full-time a year ago — the only full-time chazan currently serving a US shul.

And it is not only musical talent that the Central has invested in as Mr Leas has been the driving force behind its expanding social and cultural programme, relaunched recently under the title of Grand Central.

“We want to make this the JW3 or London Jewish Cultural Centre of the West End,” he said. “There were a lot of local people not affiliated to any particular shul and we are trying to get them involved. A synagogue is more than a place of prayer, it’s a place of community.” People who had not previously visited the shul were coming in to take a Pilates class.

A year ago, a film club was launched at the home of one of Central’s veteran members, Ze’ev Galibov, called Ze’ev’s Place. “We started with three, four, five and now we get 30,” Mr Leas said. “We’re going to have to move it to a hall and spend money on a sound system and projector because we were turning people away.

“A number of members said that we had a lovely service but they didn’t understand­itandcould­n’treadHebre­w. So we started Hebrew classes in associatio­n with the Spiro Ark. We started with two, now we have eight a week.”

A highlight is the series of classical concerts that take place in the sanctuary. The musical programme may not be explicitly Jewish but, said Mr Leas, “each concert must have a connection to something Jewish so we have an essay written about a Jewish thought prompted by the piece”.

Other events lined up include food and cultural evenings with different cuisines from around the Jewish world.

He and Central’s rabbi, Barry Marcus — both of whom are from South Africa — have also increased Shabbat hospitalit­y, hosting regular lunches and start-

Children enjoying the results of the shul’s pre-Pesach bake-off ing children’s services. “Before we were hardly getting any kids, the last time we got 40, which is amazing for this type of synagogue,” Mr Leas added. “We do see people coming to shul as a result. If you engage the kids, you engage the parents and grandparen­ts.”

Once a month, he leads a choral service on Shabbat morning which, he stressed, is “not a concert. While we may do one classic piece of chazanut, we sing modern harmonies which people can identify with.”

Founded in 1870 and rebuilt after the war, Central is one of three US synagogues­intheWestE­nd,alongwithW­estern Marble Arch and New West End.

For many years, there have been suggestion­s that three is at least one too many and that a merger could help free assets for the US to plough into emerging communitie­s elsewhere. Central and New West End have two of the US’s three most valuable properties. They are jointly sitting on close to £30 million of real estate.

USpresiden­tStephenPa­cksaidearl­ier this year that “if you take the two closest together, Central and Western Marble Arch, everybody agrees there should be one [but] nobody can agree which”.

This is not a debate Mr Leas wants to get into. “Each of these synagogues has a different feel to it,” he observed diplomatic­ally. The three communitie­s are, in fact, about to launch a new joint education programme, Connect, later this month. The first evening, on fashion, has already attracted attention because one of the guest speakers will be designer John Galliano.

Whereas many old congregati­ons have numericall­y declined, Central has managed to increase its membership from 623 to 711 in a decade. Grand Central is intended to keep it on a roll.

 ??  ?? Classical concerts are a
highlight
Classical concerts are a highlight
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 ??  ?? ‘We want to make this the JW3 or the London Jewish Cultural Centre of the area’
‘We want to make this the JW3 or the London Jewish Cultural Centre of the area’

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