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・ Congregation B'nai Israel (St. Catharines)
・ Congregation B'nai Israel (Toledo, Ohio)
・ Congregation B'nai Israel Synagogue
・ Congregation B'nai Jacob (Woodbridge, Connecticut)
・ Congregation B'nai Torah
・ Congregation Baith Israel Anshei Emes
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・ Congregation Berith Sholom
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・ Congregation Beth El (Bethesda, Maryland)
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Congregation Beth Israel (Asheville, North Carolina)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Austin, Texas)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Bellingham, Washington)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Berkeley, California)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Brooklyn)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Charlottesville, Virginia)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Gadsden, Alabama)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Honesdale, Pennsylvania)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Houston)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Jackson, Mississippi)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Lebanon, Pennsylvania)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Malden, Massachusetts)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Media, Pennsylvania)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Meridian, Mississippi)
・ Congregation Beth Israel (Milwaukee)


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Congregation Beth Israel (Asheville, North Carolina) : ウィキペディア英語版
Congregation Beth Israel (Asheville, North Carolina)

Congregation Beth Israel ((ヘブライ語:בית ישראל)) is a Conservative synagogue located at 229 Murdock Avenue in Asheville, North Carolina. Founded in 1899 as Bikur Cholim, it was an Orthodox breakaway from Asheville's existing synagogue. It hired its first full-time rabbi in 1909, opened a religious school in 1911, and acquired its first synagogue building, which burnt down in 1916, in 1913.
The congregation completed its second building in 1924, affiliated with Conservative Judaism in 1949, and changed its name to Beth Israel in 1950. It completed construction of its current building in 1969.
Robert Cabelli joined as rabbi in 2006. he was the rabbi, and the president was Marc Penansky.
==Early history==
Significant Jewish immigration to Asheville, North Carolina began in 1880, when the railroad link to Asheville was completed. The community founded Asheville's oldest synagogue, Beth HaTephila, as a "conservative" congregation in 1891, before the Conservative movement was formally founded.〔 By 1899, however, some members of the Jewish community felt Beth HaTephila was not traditional enough, and eight of them founded Bikur Cholim as an Orthodox alternative.〔〔〔 ''Bikur cholim'' is Hebrew for "visitation of the sick";〔 the name was used in recognition of the many people who came to Asheville to recuperate from tuberculosis.〔
The congregation initially worshiped in the Masonic Temple and the Church Street Odd Fellows Hall. Membership grew very slowly, and the congregation went through a series of rabbis whose terms were generally short. The congregation frequently had no rabbi at all, and High Holiday services were often led by lay members.〔〔 Solomon Schechter came to Asheville in 1904 to assist in executing a merger of Beth HaTephila and Bikur Cholim, but the negotiations fell through.〔

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