The Jewish Monitor (Fort Worth-Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, January 30, 1920 Page: 2 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 16 x 10 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Two
THE JEW
ISH MONITOR
Friday January 30 1920.
also attend a religious school.
Clarksdale has a school which like-
wise owes its origin to Rabbi Mark.
Mr. Max Friedman is superintendent
and a number of volunteer women ar
the teachers.
SERMONS TRANSLATED INTO
PERSIAN.
THE UNION OF AMERICAN
HEBREW CONGREGATIONS
The sermons published in 1918 by
the Tract Commission of the Union
of American Hebrew Congregations!
SYNAGOG STARTED IN NEW
ENGLAND.
The Jewish people located in New
London Conn. and Fall River Mass.
have initiated a movement to organize
modern congregations as a result of
a visit recently paid them by Rabbi
Jerome Rosen field worker for the
Department of Synagog and School
Extension.
Some of the influential men in New
London who have undertaken to furth-
er the plan are Dr. E. A. Henkle
Messrs. Nestor Dreyfus Ludwig
Mann Ezekiel Spitz Perry J. Hollan-
dersky and Morris Lubschansky. These
gentlemen are arranging to present
the subject as a mass meeting of the
Jewish population of their city some-
time this month.
As an outgrowth of this project a
movement is under way to organize a
modern congregation in Fall River. A
committee with Edward E. Schiff
chairman; David Radovsky David
Grouse S. Radovsky and L. Madow-
sky fellow committeemen are arrang-
ing the details of a meeting to organ-
ize the congregation. The committee
was appointed from a group of fif-
teen prominent Jews who met at the
call of Rabbi Rosen.
While in Fall River Rabbi Rosen
addressed a meeting of the Y. W. H.
A. and later conferred with the chair-
man of the religious committee rela-
tive to the re-organization of the re-
ligious school which they had conduct-
ed in former years. At the request of
the chairman Rabbi Rosen outlined a
curriculum and suggested a list of re-
ligious textbooks for the pupils and
also for the teachers.
ment of Synagog and School Extension
has had in just such organization as
wide experience which the depart-
they were about to undertake. In this
work he found most helpful the co-
operation of Mr. S. S. Wolkind a stu-
dent. The first service was arranged by
a committee composed of Messrs. Ben-
jamin Pepper and David Ullman. Rab-
bi Egelson interested Mr. Marks in-
structor in English and Professor
Horwitz of the Mathematics Depart-
ment at the University in .the Stu-
dents's Congregation and Association.
Mr. Marks had taken an active interest
in the Congregation at the University
of Michigan where he formerly
taught. The Association aspires to
have its own building eventually.
RELIGIOUS SERVICES AT CORN.
ELL UNIVERSITY.
Fortnightly religious services have
been held by the Jewish students at
Cornell University Ithaca N. Y.
since Rabbi Louis Egelson assistant
director of the Department of Sfnagog
and School Extension visited that in-
stitution last November while engaged
in his work of religious organization
in Eastern and Mid-western colleges.
"The spirit manifested at the first
meeting was really inspiring said
Rabbi Benjamin Friedman of Syra-
cuse N. Y. of the opening service
which he conducted at Cornell in No-
vember. About ninety students were
present.
Two weeks later a second service
was conducted by Rabbi Louis Kopald
of Buffalo N. Y. chairman of the
Central Conference of American Rab-
bis' committee on Religious Work at
Universities. His counsel was of
great value to Rabbi Egelson in the
preliminary preparations for activities
at Cornell.
When Rabbi Egelson arrived at Cor-
nell ho learned that there was a move-
ment on foot to unite all the various
Jewish students' societies into a Jew-
ish Students' Association. A Students'
Congregation was to be one of the con-
stituent bodies of the Association.
Rabbi Egelson furthered the project
of an organized Jewry at Cornell by
. conferring with various groups of stu-
dents placing at their disposal the
FORM CONGREGATIONS IN
ARKANSAS.
It was a great day for the Jewish
communities in Marianna Forrest City
and Clarksdale Ark. when Rabbi Jer-
ome Mark of Helena Deputy Super-
visor of Synagog and School Exten-
sion in Arkansas visited those towns.
At Marianna Rabbi Mark organized
a congregation and a religious school.
Until then forty-seven Jewish adults
had no opportunity of attending or-
ganized services nor their children a
religious school.
In Forrest City Rabbi Marks re-
organized the Tifcrcth Israel Congre-
gation which had never had much of
a hold on the thirty-nine Jewish inhab-
itants. Thanks to his efforts the ten
Jewish children in this city may now
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Fox, George. The Jewish Monitor (Fort Worth-Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, January 30, 1920, newspaper, January 30, 1920; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth296746/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .