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Yoni Birnbaum

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Yoni Birnbaum,

Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

In a new building, our tree of life takes root

Opening a new shul is a truly momentous event, says the rabbi of just such a shul. Today, somehow, it seems more meaningful than ever.

November 22, 2018 12:49
Shabbat Candles
3 min read

For most shulgoers, synagogue life is characterised above all by the familiar. Shabbat services are run in pretty much the same way each week and you encounter the same, hopefully friendly, faces whenever you visit. Even the herring at the kiddush looks remarkably similar to last week’s offering, perhaps worryingly so. But very occasionally, an event occurs in the lifecycle of a Jewish community which is genuinely transformative.

One of these events is the completion of a new building, which we celebrate this weekend in my own community in Hadley Wood. For most of our members, such an event is something they will experience only once or twice in their lifetimes. Some will no-doubt recall with emotion departed friends and relatives whose efforts at building the community over many years have finally borne fruit. Others will dream of the future potential that the new building represents and the many events and simchas that will, God willing, take place there.

But in light of the trials recently experienced by the Jewish community, trials which have shaken the diaspora community in particular to its very core, the dedication of a new shul building takes on an even greater significance.

The response to the global call to “Show up for Shabbat” in the aftermath of the Pittsburgh massacre was exceptionally moving. Many shuls saw significantly higher attendance rates than normal, including a number of people who normally attend just once or twice a year. People felt the need to show solidarity with a Jewish community several thousand miles away — and to demonstrate this through their commitment to the very building in which the atrocity took place, a synagogue.