Religious Items Saved From Conn. Synagogue Fire

Oct. 15, 2012
Two Torahs, a Shofar and a citron box were saved from a fire at the Hebrew Congregation of Woodmont.

MILFORD, Conn. -- A fire has damaged the historic Hebrew Congregation of Woodmont, but the Rabbi, who was on the fire scene Sunday morning is grateful two Torahs, a Shofar and a citron box were saved.

"It's devastating," said the congregation's Rabbi, Schneur Wilhelm.

The cause of the fire is unknown and under investigation.

Assistant Chief Robert Healey said the fire caused moderate to heavy damage. He said the fire was reported by a police officer who was in the area early Sunday morning to work in connection with a road race at Foran High School.

The synagogue at 15 Edgefield Ave., was once descibed as both casual and rigorously religious.

The synagogue, once filled to the brim for services, was built in 1926 to serve Jews who flocked to Woodmont for shorefront vacations because anti-Semitism in the early part of last century kept them from more desirable spots like Greenwich and Madison. Signs in many resort areas read: "No dogs or Jews allowed."

Membership was so high that in 1946, they built a huge social hall next door that was used for dances, dinners, card parties and rummage sales and, of course, an overflow crowd for religious services next door.

Those days are long over.

Anti-Semitism let up after World War II, so many Jews sold their summer cottages and vacationed elsewhere.

But the congregation also has fallen to the general trend of fewer young people taking part in organized religion on a weekly basis. In the Jewish faith, most young people who do attend services have moved away from orthodox worship.

Copyright 2012 - New Haven Register, Conn.

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

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