Ḳahal Ḳadosh Beth Elohim (Charleston, South Carolina)
Ḳahal Ḳadosh Beth Elohim (Hebrew: קהל קדוש בית אלהים, also known as Ḳ.Ḳ. Beth Elohim, or more simply Congregation Beth Elohim), founded in 1749 in Charleston, South Carolina, is one of the oldest Jewish congregations in the United States. The founding members of the synagogue were Jews of Spanish and Portuguese descent (Sepharadim), who arrived into Charleston via London, England. Before 1830 Ḳahal Ḳadosh Beth Elohim was a place of worship for Spanish and Portuguese Jews using Portuguese rituals as done in Portugal before the Spanish and Portuguese inquisitions. A splinter group animated by the European Reform movement, the Reformed Society of Israelites, formed in 1824. While at first this group did not succeed in reforming Beth Elohim, by the mid 1830s Beth Elohim had reabsorbed its members and its ḥazzan, Gustavus Poznanski (1804–1879), joined the Reform camp in 1840. After the first synagogue building was destroyed by fire in 1838, it was rebuilt two years afterward (in a Greek Revival style designed by Cyrus L. Warner) with an organ to the chagrin of the traditionalists. Ḳahal Ḳadosh Beth Elohim is recognized as the oldest Reform Jewish congregation in the Americas.
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AABB rhyming scheme | AABBCC rhyming scheme | AABCCB rhyming scheme | ABAB rhyming scheme | ABABCC rhyming scheme | ABBCDDC rhyming scheme | ABCB rhyming scheme | אדון עולם Adon Olam | אחדות aḥdut (togetherness) | עקדת יצחק Akeidat Yitsḥaq | על נהרות בבל Al naharot Bavel | alternate rhyming scheme | American Jewry of the United States | American Reform Movement | Classical Reform | divine mercy | אלהי נשמה Elohai neshamah | English vernacular prayer | exhortation | Floods | Har Sinai | חסד Ḥesed | הסתכלות פנימית histaklut pnimit | הושענות hoshanot | hymns | integrity | lovingkindness | מעריב ערבים ma'ariv aravim | memento mori | Opening Prayers | paraliturgical adon olam | paraliturgical aleinu | paraliturgical elohai neshamah | paraliturgical mah tovu | Paraliturgical Psalms 121 | paraliturgical Psalms 127 | paraliturgical Psalms 144 | paraliturgical Psalms 145 | paraliturgical Psalms 150 | paraliturgical Psalms 38 | paraliturgical vidui | Patriotic hymns | prayers on behalf of parents | Problematic prayers | Reform Jewry | resurrection | שבת נחמו Shabbat Naḥamu | פרשת נח Parashat Noaḥ | South Carolina | synagogue consecration | Synagogues | תשובה teshuvah | thanksgiving | התורה the Torah | תוכחות tokheḥot | United States | וידוי vidui | waking | wisdom | זמן תשובה Zman teshuvah | 19th century C.E. | 56th century A.M. | 57th century A.M.
Oh! Thou Whose Shrine the Sweetest Incense Bears, a hymn on “Charity” by Penina Moïse (Ḳ.Ḳ. Beth Elohim 1842)
Contributed on: 26 Oct 2021 by Ḳahal Ḳadosh Beth Elohim (Charleston, South Carolina) | Penina Moïse | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | ❧
“Oh! thou, whose shrine the sweetest incense bears,” by Penina Moïse, published in 1842, appears under the subject “Charity” as Hymn 37 in Hymns Written for the Service of the Hebrew Congregation Beth Elohim, South Carolina (Penina Moïse et al., Ḳ.Ḳ. Beth Elohim, 1842), pp. 40-41. . . .