ABOUT US: A Unique Blend of Tradition and Innovation
Adas Israel ("the community of Israel") was founded in 1869 by a group of immigrants from Europe who sought to maintain traditional Jewish observances in the context of the modern American community. They conducted their earliest services in a small loft above a carriage factory near the U.S. Capitol. Eventually, they joined the Conservative movement and created a synagogue that is unique in its blend of tradition and innovation. In 1876, President Ulysses S. Grant attended the dedication of Adas Israel's first permanent house of worship. That building, at 3rd and G Streets, N.W., is a Jewish museum. Adas Israel has been at its present location since 1951.
Today, Adas Israel is the largest Conservative synagogue in Washington. Often described as a "congregation of congregations," the diversity of our membership is one aspect of our strength.
We are proud of the influence our congregation has achieved because of our distinguished leadership and the quality of our activities, which broadly extend from the religious and cultural to active concern for the poor and homeless in the Washington area. We note with pride the number of community organizations that are led by our congregants.
Because of our location in the heart of the nation's capital, our pulpit has long encouraged the expression of a wide range of viewpoints. Adas Israel was the first synagogue in the United States to be addressed by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Other distinguished speakers have included Israeli Prime Ministers Golda Meir, Yitzhak Rabin, Presidents Nixon and Ford, Senator Robert F. Kennedy and Vice Presidents Hubert Humphrey and Albert Gore. Today Adas Israel remains a socially-conscious congregation whose contributions bespeak the highest values which our tradition teaches. Above all, Adas Israel aspires to perpetuate Judaism, to enrich the lives of our members to celebrate Conservative Judaism at its creative best, and to bring Jews closer to God.
WE DEFINE OURSELVES…
Adas Israel Congregation
A Tradition of Innovation for Over 130 Years
Adas. The very name of our synagogue, inspired by Torah, means “congregation” as well as “community,” suggesting both our traditional roots and our contemporary mission. Since its founding in 1869 in Washington, D.C., Adas Israel has continued to evolve and expand as a congregation, as a community, and as an active congregational citizen of the national capital area. We value diversity in our members, in our services, and in our programs, while treasuring gifts of community and continuity.
Israel. Long before there was a State of Israel, there was Klal Yisrael – the Jewish people. Today, we remain conscious that we are indeed Adas Israel – at once an individual community of Jews and a part of the whole of Israel – by helping to support the State of Israel and Jewish communities worldwide.
Bet haknesset. As a house of assembly, we constitute a vibrant Conservative synagogue, brimming with formal and informal opportunities to come together as a congregation. Throughout the Jewish year, we meet to pray, to celebrate, to serve, to study, to express our spirituality, to welcome newcomers – and to enjoy good company and good food at a kiddush or oneg shabbat.
Bet tefillah. As a house of prayer, we offer a wealth of traditional and innovative opportunities to worship under the rubric of egalitarian Conservative Judaism. These include Shabbat and holiday services with our rabbis and hazzan; daily minyanim; diverse congregant-led Shabbat services, as well as special services for young people, singles, families, and adult learners.
Bet midrash. As a house of study – the historic center of Jewish life – Adas Israel takes learning seriously and joyfully. Here, too, the range of options is extraordinary, including entry-level pathways for adults embarking on Hebrew and Jewish literacy, sophisticated study with our rabbis and visiting scholars, and ongoing self-led study groups. For our children, we create a full and varied educational environment with a nursery school, religious school, and creative youth and family programs.
Kehilla. As a community, we are here for each other. In times of joy as well as sorrow, we reach out with the help of Jewish tradition to celebrate, to commemorate, to comfort. The mitzvah of gemilut chasadim – performance of worthy deeds – offers us ways to care for and support our fellow members, to give and derive strength and courage at difficult times. The mitzvah of tzedakah – giving of ourselves to others through social action – provides us tangible opportunities to serve those in need and to affirm our interconnectedness with those around us. The mitzvah of tikkun olam – repair of the world – reminds us of our ethical purpose as Jews, which is nothing less than to help perfect the world under the rule of God.
ADAS ISRAEL CONGREGATION MISSION STATEMENT
“Together we must maintain our
commitment to fulfilling
the threefold mandate of the synagogue as a
Bet Tefilla; a place of prayer, a Bet Midrash; a place of study,
and a Bet Knesset, a place of gathering.”
Remarks at the
Adas Israel Board Retreat, Sunday, April 28, 2002
By Rabbi Jeffrey Wohlberg
The Jewish community in America and its
institutions are changing. The members of the community are aging
and the Jewish birth rate is declining. There is an increase in the
number of Jews by choice as well as of those who are Jewish by
patrilineal descent. Studies also show that ethnicity is fading as
a point of identity and as a means for engendering Jewish values.
At the same time, however, there is a search for spirituality and
meaning. Thus, while ethnicity is weakening as an essential factor,
religious identity is gaining in strength. In the middle of the
last century Judaism was often translated into political liberalism
and acts of social conscience. But as the liberal agenda changed
and Jews moved up socio-economically, they often felt alienated from
liberalism. The unanticipated resurgence of right-wing Judaism
served to highlight the differences in emphases between liberalism
and traditional Judaism, such as pluralism versus community,
universalism versus particularism. Looking at the community today,
it is clear that there are fewer who call themselves “cultural
Jews,” even as religious institutions are gaining in strength and
are well placed to help the modern Jew find the sense of meaning
he/she seeks.
Among the challenges we face as a “religious
institution” are how to make best use of the synagogue to meet
contemporary needs and, at the same time, how to keep the synagogue
from becoming a fee-for-service institution. Jews will join; how
can we move them along the continuum of participation? How can we
enlarge the core of those who see the synagogue as a life-long
endeavor? While we cannot refuse membership to those willing to pay
dues, we can emphasize commitment by highlighting the things for
which the synagogue stands. There was a time when those who joined
a synagogue were literally asked to sign the constitution of the
congregation and a few synagogues actually read their constitution
publicly, some each year on Shavuot. We want our members to know
what this synagogue stands for. We would like them to take personal
responsibility for its character as well as for the Jewish future.
We at Adas Israel have a wonderful, unique,
and influential congregation. In many ways it is distinctive and
unlike most other synagogues. Because of our urban location, we
have attracted many singles, many families with young children, as
well as Jews returning to Judaism. We must be attentive to their
varied needs and try to integrate them into a single community.
Together we must maintain our
commitment to fulfilling the threefold mandate of the synagogue as a
Bet Tefilla; a place of prayer, a Bet Midrash; a place
of study, and a Bet Knesset, a place of gathering. Here we
worship, study, and create a supportive community. The mandate is
to do all three of these, not just one or the other. We must speak
to an older generation as well as to a generation which sometimes
takes Judaism for granted, which can often regard services as
tedious and not relevant. We must remain a “big tent” which
welcomes Jews of many stripes while maintaining the Adas Israel
character of liberal Conservative Judaism. We want to be careful
not to create a pediatric style Judaism, one which is geared towards
young children only, which they then outgrow after Bar/Bat Mitzvah.
We need to move from ethnicity to spirituality, to make the
synagogue a heimish community, like the tavern in the
television series Cheers, “where everybody knows your name.”
We can begin to accomplish these goals by
clearly enunciating the principles for which we stand as a
Conservative synagogue and by clarifying our congregational
expectations. These expectations apply to the leadership as well as
to the membership. We must clearly state what we expect beyond
paying dues. I suggest that we emphasize six areas of commitment:
1) Prayer. We should make clear that
we expect everyone who joins the synagogue to attend religious
services with some regularity, on Friday evening and Shabbat
morning, during the week and on Yom Tov. We have many varieties of
services and they are accessible regardless of how little one knows
or how skilled one is. It is imperative to the dynamic of the
synagogue that members know that we want them to make a commitment
to coming to services so that prayer will be at the core of the
synagogue and of their lives.
2) Adult Education. Those
who join must understand that our goal is to have every member grow
intellectually. Everyone should be encouraged to be part of the
adult education process. If a member joins who does not know how to
read Hebrew, he/she must be helped to learn to read. If they know a
little bit of Hebrew, they can be placed in one of the next levels.
Beyond Hebrew, they must move into other areas of learning such as
structured courses in Bible, History, Jewish Thought, even
discussion groups on Jewish current events. We must provide a
structured base for education with a clear sense of progression. I
suggest that we take advantage of those who are already involved in
the educational process. We should begin our education year with a
kick-off day or evening of study with a major scholar to which all
our study groups and all those involved in adult education come and
from which they then go back to their preferred places of learning.
We can choose a study topic for the year that everybody will use as
a guide, or each group can study separately and differently, but by
beginning together and ending together, we emphasize a sense of
connected commitment. We should restructure our synagogue week, so
that Monday night is Hebrew High School night, Tuesday night is
adult education night, and Wednesday night is meeting night. In
that way our adult education programs and meetings will not conflict
and the leadership of the congregation can be involved in regular
study. We might choose a book to read for the year or for a
specified period of time, inviting the author to be one of those who
kicks off our learning so that everyone will feel a part of the
education process. It is not enough just to contribute to a
sub-group in the congregation, learning in a group which meets away
from the synagogue but never in it. We must create a program
through which everyone feels part of the synagogue educational
endeavor and contributes to it.
3) Mitzvah. Every member in
the congregation must know that mitzvah which is at the core of
Judaism, has to be part of a Jew’s life. Each should choose a
mitzvah per year to add to whatever else one is already doing. The
mitzvah can involve a ritual observance or social action. The
mitzvah should be identifiable.
4) Observance in the Home with
Family and Friends. There are an enormous number of observances
we can adopt, which will enrich our home and which will help us to
establish and deepen friendships and personal relationships. Such
observances can encompass conducting a seder, building a sukkah, Yom
Tov observance, adoption of kashrut, welcoming guests to our table
on Friday evening or Shabbat afternoon, tzedakah, the mitzvah of
visiting the sick, comforting the bereaved, reciting shema at
night on going to bed or motzi before meals. Thus our home
becomes a mikdash m’at, a small tabernacle, in which we
create an environment of Jewish joy and celebration.
5) Commitment to Israel and World
Jewry. Each of us must be knowledgeable about what is happening
in Israel and must contribute to Israel, as well as to the Jewish
communities around the world. We must make communal involvement
central, giving public acknowledgement to those in the congregation
who lead community organizations for what they do, while encouraging
each other to reach out Jewishly. Everyone must feel the mandate to
be supportive of Jewish causes at some level.
6) Community. We must
contribute to a sense of community and inner-synagogue harmony.
Because of the size of the congregation, many are happy with
diversity which is natural in an institution this large. But
diversity in and of itself is not a goal. Unity must be the goal.
It is helpful to have small groups in which people meet, within
which they celebrate, through which they feel at home. And these
groups must contribute to the larger congregation, enriching the
intricate tapestry that Adas Israel is. Together we can achieve our
goal of the synagogue as a Bet Tefilla, a Bet Midrash,
and a Bet Knesset. This contribution to community must be
planned and the activities integrated, people must be made to feel
welcome and groups should evaluate their activities in light of this
goal. We must create a cadre of “amateurs” in the original sense of
the word, meaning people who are not professionals but who are
models, who celebrate and share what is important in Jewish life,
using the smaller groups as a springboard. In this way we will
create a synagogue base which will radiate Judaism, which will
provide some things but promote many more. We will create a
synagogue in which we can celebrate our Judaism comfortably and
naturally, learn to express Jewish values, and find God through our
practice of tradition. We will be part of a synagogue which
emphasizes personal growth, a sense of mission, a feeling of
passion. Adas Israel will be a place in which God will delight to
dwell and from which God will radiate into the community.
A Talmud
sage, Akav’ya ben Mahalalel, taught, “Look to three things and you
will not be brought to sin: know from where you came, where you are
going, and before whom you will give your ultimate accounting.”
From Akav’ya we learn that we must know the past, understand the
present, and take responsibility for the future. Our mandate must
be to do both, to live and learn, to live what we value while
learning more. That which we live, we will take more seriously.
What we learn teaches us that as we take on more responsibility we
continue to grow as Jews.