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Partly Cloudy ~ River stage: 34.01 Rising Saturday, November 21, 2009 |
B'nai Israel Synagogue up for sale a second timeTuesday, July 8, 2008
Now on sale for the second time, former members of Cape Girardeau's Jewish community say they're disappointed -- but not surprised. "There aren't any Jews in Cape to take an interest in it," said Harry Samuels, a member of the Cape Girardeau Jewish community from 1931 until 1948. The synagogue is being sold by John and Jerry Wyman after they took over ownership from Martin Hecht in 2003. Many former members of Cape's Jewish community can remember a time when the orthodox synagogue was widely attended by Jews from the surrounding area. Samuels said when he left Cape Girardeau in 1948 to attend Washington University in St. Louis, there were regular services every Friday night at the synagogue. "I think there were probably a dozen Jewish families in Cape Girardeau and another dozen within a radius of 50 miles," Samuels said.
For various reasons, the Jewish community in Cape Girardeau has become almost nonexistent. Samuels said after the fourth generation of Jews in Cape Girardeau began to move away around 1950 the community stopped growing. Lionel Minnen, whose father, David, helped establish the synagogue, said the Jewish community started to lose support after World War II and throughout the 1950s when shopping centers away from the downtown area started to take away business from retail stores, which were popular business ventures within the local Jewish community. "It wasn't a good deal to move out near the shopping centers, because the rents were so tremendous that nobody could support the rent," Minnen said.
But not all Jewish-owned stores went out of business. Martin Hecht maintained the clothing store his father began in 1917 until 2004. Some Jews moved out of Cape Girardeau because life was more "advantageous" in other places, Dessie Sewel said. Sewel, Lionel's brother, left Cape Girardeau in 1948 to attend Washington University. She eventually moved to Memphis, Tenn., with her husband because he had a good job and she liked the larger Jewish community. Moving away
The move away from Cape Girardeau, by the fourth generation, was "a natural occurrence" by some in the Jewish community, said Sydney Pollack, who owned Pollack Hide & Fur Co. and Pollack Steel Supply Inc. Since 1989, Sydney has lived near three of this children in Memphis. The fourth has also moved out of Cape Girardeau. "After World War II, with the spread of transportation it became easier for people to travel to larger communities," William Pollack said. "The probability to meet single Jewish guys and girls was greater in larger communities." By the early 1970s it became difficult to find a full-time rabbi, or 10 adult males, a requirement in Judaism to practice in a synagogue. By 1989 services were only being held on high holidays, Sydney said. A long history The B'nai Israel Synagogue of Cape Girardeau was constructed in 1937 after the Jewish community's 450-year-old Torah, which was being kept in their meeting spot in Cape Girardeau, was incinerated in a fire, said Dr. Frank Nickell, director of regional history at Southeast Missouri University. In 1937, the 450-year-old Torah had been brought back by Isaac Becker, a Sikeston merchant, who after visiting his father in Germany told him life for Jews in Germany was getting bad and the book would be safer with him. Over the years, various members of Cape Girardeau's Jewish community have tried to revive the group. Rhon Abraham moved to Cape Girardeau in 1999 and was enthusiastic about the city's Jewish awareness group that began meeting in 2002. She was disappointed when it stopped meeting around 2005. "I was willing to do it with someone else, but no one stepped up to the plate," Abraham said. At the time the group was active, Abraham said they were meeting at someone's house about once a month to put together cultural events and plan meetings with other Jewish communities in Paducah, Ky., and St. Louis. Currently, Abraham attends Friday services in Carbondale, Ill. Selling the synagogue Since May 27, the synagogue has been up for sale. In 2003, the property was bought by John Wyman from Martin Hecht. Originally, Wyman had wanted to revamp the building's interior and build either a children's library or a not-for-profit Jewish museum. "We bought it with the intent to save it," Wyman said. Wyman said his efforts for the children's library didn't work because it wasn't the right time. Betty Martin, director of the Cape Girardeau Public Library, said the library board of trustees didn't feel the children's library would draw enough people to justify the expense of maintaining it. Wyman said the not-for-profit museum was hard to get going because volunteers were hard to find. While they owned the building, he and his wife worked to get it in better shape. They have installed a new roof and fixed support beams for the floor boards. In 2004, they obtained a place on the National Register of Historic Places, which made future repairs to the synagogue tax-deductible. Wyman said the status educated people about the building's historical significance and helped convince them it shouldn't be torn down. He said he hopes someone will buy the synagogue and will turn it into a public venue. Since the synagogue has been up for sale, many potential buyers have looked at it, but no contracts have been written, said Adrienne Poe, a real estate agent at Realty Executives & Cape County. A coffee shop, a bookstore and an antique shop are some of the ideas Poe has heard about. She's also heard a church would like to buy it. She said nobody she's talked to has wanted to tear it down. 335-6611 Does this affect you? Have a comment? Log on to semissourian.com Comments |
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This is terribly sad. This represents such an important fabric of this town. I have heard from many individuals of the jewish faith that moved to St. Louis that this town has become very hostile towards the jewish faith.
Yes Beaker, we were holding anti-Jewish rallies in the early 1980's......come on get real. Hostilities towards Jews in Cape? What a joke.
Yes "Instructor_aka____________ ,"
One hears anti-semitic comments around Cape all the time; you may pretend to live in some other world, but in Cape racism is a fact of life.
Hostile toward the Jewish faith? Nobody in Cape knows any Jewish people.
Quite a diverse city we live in, isn't it!
Sure Sherry, I see the crosses burning every evening on the south side of Cape.
You live in a world of demons and dragons.
The answers you seek are in the blue tub.
I guess I'm naive or have blinders on, but why do so many people hate Jews. I know the person featured in the article (Rhon) and never cared one way or another what religion she believes. Nice girl, a bit quirky, but hey we all have our issues.
Honestly, I've heard one anti-semetic comment in Cape the 15 years I've lived here. Funny thing it was made by a black male while we were playing a pick up game at the osage. He was calling a white guy "f'n Jew" etc. as if it were a curse word. The guy was not of the Jewish faith which made the comment even more idiotic.
I guess that one incident does prove the second holocost will start in Cape.
Instructor,
I have heard from several people of the jewish faith that moved from Cape that things turned hostile in the 1980s. And to top it off, downtown businesses closed when the mall opened when everybody knew that Cape was too small to support a mall, a town plaza, and a downtown area. So now we read about the jewish synogogue going up for sale. Terrible shame that 30,000 residents live in that town, and less than 50 of those are people of the jewish faith.
The facts have alluded you. It's not about anti-semitism... that's too easy. It's about downtown Cape Girardeau parochialism. The Cape Torah has been destroyed, the tradition is gone. What we're talking about now is a piece of property, not one of religious concern at this point by either Christians or Jews (ever heard of the Limelight in NYC?). What we really have here is a pattern of selfishness and irresponsibility exhibited relentlessly and without deviation by some of downtown's "finest" business people. Here's the scenario: A guy expressed an interest in reviving the Jewish tradition in Cape. Someone buys the property before anyone else, with hopes to sell it at a profit. Who'd have thought that the idea guy was only thinking out loud? Now the property owners are stuck with the upkeep and a loss on the balance sheet. Quick, let's turn it into a children's library or museum. No, a disco. Oh, damn, sell it to Old St Vincent's at a huge profit (thank God they said NO!). You guys need to do some more fact mining, get your emotions under control and spend less time blogging on the SEMissourian. What you need to do is spend more time fighting for what's left of downtown Cape before it becomes a relic that will be moved to a museum in St. Louis for preservation.
Dear "Instructor_aka____________ "
I spoke of racist comments; if you need crosses, drive south on I-55. I hear the "N-Word" all around Cape, and how someone "jew-ed down" the price from someone else. Get you head out of your rear end and listen!
I wish we had some Jewish people in Cape. Maybe we would have real pastrami.
Keep the regents at SEMO away from this property....