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Ex-Shuls of Brooklyn: Center Member Photo Exhibit

From Synagogue to Church: Converted Brooklyn Houses of Worship, an exhibition of photographs taken by Center member Ellen Levitt, will be on display at the Brooklyn Historical Society, 128 Pierrepont Street (map it!), from Wednesday, November 15th through February 11th, 2007. (Admission: $6, $4 seniors and students, free for children under twelve.)

The "ex-shuls" depicted in the exhibit are located in Brownsville, East New York, Flatbush, East Flatbush, Weeksville, and Gravesend. Many of these buildings still retain Judaic iconography in the masonry, stained glass windows, and other architectural or structural elements. Among the synagogues in the exhibit is Congregation Shaare Torah, which merged with EMJC in 1979.

Some photos from the exhibit can be found online here, including one of the former Congregation Shaare Torah. Writes Levitt,

In the early 1990s I took photographs of a former synagogue near the Sears in Flatbush. Formerly Kesser Torah (Crown of Torah), where my mother and her older sister attended Hebrew School, it became a church. For some years the church retained a few old synagogue symbols, including the corner stone with the founding date, and the name "Kesser Torah" in Hebrew. I went back to reshoot photos there in July 2004 and was saddened to see them gone, painted over, sheered off. A car pulled up and a woman spoke to me; she was the wife of the pastor who led the church. She told me they had gotten rid of the synagogue symbols "years ago," but was vague with details.

Over the years I have searched out former synagogues in Brooklyn-- "ex-shuls"-- to take their photos and seek out what Jewish symbols still peek through. Many of these ex-shuls have become churches. Others became day care centers, community centers, or are just shells. The Jewish population of certain Brooklyn neighborhoods has for the most part vanished (East Flatbush, Brownsville, Bedford-Stuyvesant, etc.) The buildings hang on in different incarnations. The following ex-shuls depicted are in Flatbush and the surrounding areas. I have seen and photographed other ex-shuls in other neighborhoods. I have asked older Jews for tips on such buildings. On a few occasions (particularly in Coney Island) some former shul buildings have had all Jewish references removed.

For more information contact the Brooklyn Historical Society, at 718/222-4111 or brooklynhistory.org.

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