The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service > BIBFRAME Works

Bibframe Work

Title
The Jewish Community of Amherst : The Formative Years 1969-1979
Type
Text
Subject
Jewish Community of Amherst (Amherst, Mass.)
Jews--Massachusetts--Amherst--History--1945
Community life--Massachusetts--Amherst--History.
Amherst (Mass.)
Could not render: xml:comment
Language
English
Geographic Coverage
Massachusetts
Classification
LCC: F74.A5 S45 2017 (Assigner: dlc)
Content
text (Source: rdacontent)
Summary
The book begins with the first Jews who settled in Amherst - seven "Hebrews" living in the town in 1938. They include a couple of families who ran shops - a shoemaker, a tailor - and a Jewish student at UMass, Max Goldberg, who later became a member of the faculty. Seidman himself was one of those Jews arriving in Amherst in the 1960s. A native of Shaker Heights, Ohio, Seidman and his wife Linda came to Amherst in 1968 with their two small children, Rachel and Ethan. Linda was an archivist and Seidman was a professor of education, both at UMass. Seidman weaves together the story of the JCA's early years, from borrowing arks and Torahs from other synagogues to the support of local rabbis, including Rabbi Arthur Langenauer of B'nai Israel and Rabbi Yechiael Lander of UMass Hillel, who later became JCA's part-time rabbi. The book goes into some detail about the renovation of the building, halachic issues that arose in the 1970s, the purchase of JCA's first Torah in 1973 and other milestones the congregation experienced from 1969 to 1979.
Authorized Access Point
Seidman, Irving, 1937- Jewish Community of Amherst : The Formative Years 1969-1979