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Light in the Prairie (Hardcover, New)
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Light in the Prairie (Hardcover, New)
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Temple Emanu-El, the first Jewish congregation in North Texas, has
played a historic role in the growth of Dallas. Founded in 1875,
the temple evolved from the Hebrew Benevolent Association,
organized in 1872 by eleven men who established a cemetery and held
the first Jewish services. This initial gathering of pioneer Jews
occurred just two weeks before the arrival of the first train--the
indispensable catalyst for Dallas' development into a bustling
commercial center. Arguably, Temple Emanu-El owes its ascendancy to
the auspicious designation of Dallas as a railroad crossroads.
Jews, like other enterprising newcomers, were drawn to the railroad
boom town and became part of the westward sweep of trade and
emigration to Dallas. These early settlers participated in every
aspect of civic growth and responsibility. They invested their life
savings in stores on the courthouse square, manned the volunteer
fire department, and ran for public office. Like Alexander Sanger,
who opened the Dallas branch of Sanger Bros. in 1872 and was
elected city alderman the next year, Jews quickly identified with
the progressive "Dallas spirit." While retaining the basic
principles of their ancestral faith, Temple Emanu-El's Reform Jews
adapted their religious practices to conform to the secular demands
of life in America. With confidence in the city's promise of
progress, congregants actively promoted Dallas' business, civic,
and cultural development. Each succeeding generation of temple
families produced important leaders whose contribution to the
advancement and enrichment of both the temple and the city shaped
both. The temple's rabbis addressed controversial issues--Dr. David
Lefkowitz denounced the Ku Klux Klan in the early 1920s and Levi A.
Olan preached to the troubled city after President Kennedy's
assassination in 1963. Gerry Cristol has set this absorbing story
against the history of both Dallas and American Judaism. Temple
Emanu-El's story affirms a unique but nonetheless eloquent tribute
to the American experience, and in A Light in the Prairie,
significant social history becomes fascinating reading.
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