Etz Chaim Synagogue | |
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Religion | |
Affiliation | Judaism |
Rite |
|
Ecclesiastical or organizational status | |
Leadership | Rabbi Gary S. Berenson |
Location | |
Location | 267 Congress Street, Portland, Maine 04101 |
Country | United States |
Location in Maine | |
Geographic coordinates | 43°39′44″N 70°15′09″W / 43.662095°N 70.252478°W |
Architecture | |
General contractor | Louis Serota |
Date established | 1917(as a congregation) |
Completed | 1921 |
Website | |
etzchaim-portland |
Etz Chaim Synagogue (transliterated from Hebrew as "Tree of Life") is a unaffiliated Jewish congregation, synagogue, and Jewish history museum, located at 267 Congress Street, at the head of India Street, in Portland, Maine, United States. The congregation is the only immigrant-era European-style synagogue remaining in Maine.[1] It was founded in 1917 as an English-language Orthodox Sefardi congregation, rather than in the Yiddish-language tradition; and the synagogue was completed in 1921.[2] In c. 2003, the dwindling Orthodox congregation became egalitarian and unaffiliated with any movement.
Gary S. Berenson is the congregation's rabbi.[3]
Located in the India Street Historic District, the building has also housed the Maine Jewish Museum since 2010.[4]