Born
Again
by
Harry Jaffe
It Was Built as a Synagogue. As the Area
Changed, It Became an African-American Chruch. Now,
Through Events That Might Be Called Providential,
It has Returned to Its Origianl Glory.
Douglas Jemal and Abe Pollin were walking together
along a downtown street when Jemal brought up
his yearning to establish a place for Jews to
pray in the District’s revitalized center
city. That was five years ago.
“I want to put a synagogue downtown,” said
Jemal, a rough and rowdy developer who’s
been a driving force in the redevelopment of DC’s
East End.
“I’ll help you,” said Pollin,
in many ways Jemal’s opposite. Pollin is
a buttoned-down pillar of the community who owns
the Washington Wizards and the MCI Center.
In the winter of 2002, a church on the edge of
Chinatown was about to sold to a nightclub owner. It
had been the home of Turner Memorial AME Church
since 1951. But the pale brick building
at Sixth and I Streets, Northwest, originally
had been a synagogue. It was built by the
Adas Israel congregation in 1908 when the neighborhood
was a Jewish shtetl – a village within the
city packed with families who ran storefront shops
and lived upstairs.
Jemal wants the building. He’d put
down roots in the area in 1966, when he moved
into an apartment on Third Street and started
a discount store on Seventh – the first
Jew to return to the former shtetl. Jemal
may be a high roller, but he has a deep respect
for his ancestry and for the city that has made
him wealthy. He had been bidding on the
building for but couldn’t close the deal.
Laura Apelbaum, meanwhile, was desperate to save
the old temple. A native Washingtonian,
she was executive director of the local Jewish
Historical Society. Like Jemal, the group
had set up shop in the old downtown, blocks from
the former synagogue.
“I was calling anyone who had anything
to do with preservation,” says Apelbaum,
whose grandparents were married in the synagogue.
She took her board members there one day late
in 2002. Member Stuart Zuckerman was so
affected by the sanctuary’s vaulted dome
and grand curves that he asked his father, Shelton,
a successful developer, to tour the building.
“I walked through the building and fell
in love,” says the elder Zuckerman. “They’d
taken beautiful care of it. I knew we had
to do something.”
He called Abe Pollin, whom he knew only as a
fellow businessman. Zuckerman explained
that the former synagogue was about to be turned
into a nightclub and asked if he’d be willing
to help buy it,
“I’ll call back in ten minutes,” Pollin
said.
Pollin called Jemal. They agreed to work
together. Pollin called Zuckerman. “I’ll
take a third, you take a third, Doug will take
a third,” he said. None of three would
call himself a devour Jew, but all have strong
connections to Jewish culture and community. A
month later, Jemal close the deal.
“Abe never looked at it,” says Zuckerman. “We
bought it on an emotional thing.”
A little more than a year later, the historic
Sixth & I Synagogue has started holding services
and hosting community events. The inside
has new paint. The long oak benches, curved
like a silver moon, have new cushions. The
stained glass windows, which featured a cross
during the building’s decades as a church,
now depict a Star of David. The result is
a space that is at once expansive and intimate. Some
sanctuaries are gaudy, some are austere. This
new temple manages to be visually alive and warm
at the same time.
The synagogue will be rededicated on April 22. The
Turner Memorial choir is scheduled to sing.
The reformed temple will be the only sanctuary
on the East Coast to begin as a synagogue, become
a church, then return to use as a synagogue, says
Sam Gruber of the Jewish Heritage Research Center
in Syracuse, New York.
The re-creation of the synagogue has been “an
emotional thing” for everyone involved,
from Turner Memorial church members who left for
a new home in Hyattsville to the Washingtonians
who recovered pieces of their past in bringing
back the synagogue.
Washington, it is said, is a transient town,
but the reclaiming of the temple shows it to be
a city of deep roots and surprising connections,
so deep that they could give non believers second
thoughts or at least lead them to marvel at the
nature of serendipity.
First there was the matter of the organ. When
Turner Memorial sold the building, its new home
wasn’t ready, so it asked to lease the church
back for a few months. No problem. Turner
had maintained strong connections with Adas Israel,
the original owner of the building. Each
year Turner and Adas celebrated Martin Luther
King Jr. Day together.
At a meeting with Jemal after the deal was done,
church officials asked whether they could take
the organ. But Jemal replied that he and
his partners had bought the church “as is,” meaning
the organ went with the deal. Then Turner
Memorial rector John Todd asked whether the church
could buy it.
Jemal paused. “Take it,” he
said.
When the three partners took over the church
building, Jemal was taking care of his many real
estate deals and Pollin was taking care of his
sports interests, so Shelton Zuckerman took the
lead in reclaiming the synagogue.
“First problem,” he says, “we
didn’t know what the synagogue looked like
in 1908 and the next 43 years.”
Enter Stanley Warsaw. Zuckerman happened
call Warsaw, a retired kitchen designer, to ask
him for help renovating his bathroom. Warsaw,
76, agreed to help his old friend. He knew
that Zuckerman was one of the people who had bought
the former synagogue of the edge of Chinatown.
“We had no idea what was there,” Zuckerman
told him.
“I have a present for you,” Warsaw
said.
Warsaw had married Selma Lynches in the old Adas
Israel in 1949. For their 50th wedding anniversary,
they had dusted off their photo album. Among
the portraits was a black-and-white photo the “bimah,” the
pulpit where the rabbi administered the vows to
the couple.
“It was a key piece of the architectural
puzzle,” says Zuckerman. “That
picture gave us the basis for the whole thing.”
Zuckerman put a magnifying glass on the photo
to make out the lettering on the left of the Torah
case: REMEMBER YE THE LAW OF MOSES. And
to the right: FAITH IN GOD IS HAPPINESS.
He then gave a copy of the photo to Jemal, who
handed it to his chief carpenter, who took one
look and began the re-creation of the synagogue.
The photo also sparked a hunt for the synagogue’s
original furnishings and religious objects. It
showed two large brass menorahs flanking the ark
that held the Torah scrolls. Where were
they?
Laura Apelbaum found them stashed under the stairs
of the Adas Israel congregation’s basement
on Porter Street in Cleveland Park.
The brass wall sconces with the simple trio of
teardrop bulbs?
Apelbaum had been storing them in the historical
society since one of her members had donated them
years ago. The society lent them to the
Sixth & I Synagogue.
The eternal light that hung over the Torah case? It
also had been stored with Apelbaum’s group.
As the synagogue began to take shape, Jemal approached
architect Shalom Baranes to consult on the interior. Like
Jemal, Baranes us a Sephardic Jew, which means
his roots are in Spain and northern Africa. Baranes
is from Libya; Jemal’s people come from
Syria and Egypt.
Many synagogues were of Moorish design, like
Sixth & I,” he says. “There
was a saturation of color in those spaces, not
unlike some of the synagogues I remember growing
up in New York state. For me this was like
re-creating a space from my childhood. We
did it all with paint.”
The church left the walls clean and whitewashed.
Baranes chose warm hues for the walls and mocha
tones to accentuate the detail of the vaulted
arches.
How should they handle the dome, the synagogue’s
uplifting central architectural detail? Jemal
wanted to paint it a simple blue with clouds. Zuckerman’s
wife, Rory, had different idea. She convinced
her husband to call her cousin, Gary Goldberg,
an artist specializing in murals. He’d
done walls for Saudi princes, private residences
in New York’s Trump Tower, and mansions
in Potomac.
Goldberg’s family settled in Washington
in the late 1800s. He knew he had connections
to the synagogue – his mother had been confirmed
there – but he was about to learn just how
deep the connections were.
Together with Baranes, Goldberg researched archival
material about European synagogues with onion
domes. They proposed a complicated design
that combined stencils and gold leaf.
“We want it to be colorful, like a Faberge
egg,” he says. “We wanted to
bring alive motifs form synagogues that had been
destroyed in the Holocaust.”
The top of the dome is 69 feet above the floor. The
dome is 25 feet high and 40 feet in diameter. It
took 82 square feet of gold leaf to cover the
center medallion and paint 400 gold stars. The
centerpiece is a six pointed star intertwined
with circle, giving it a Byzantine flourish.
While Goldberg, 47, was researching the history
of the synagogue, he came across the names of
the three men who arranged to buy the property
in 1905. One was Simon Adas. He had
owned Atlas Sporting Goods. He was Goldberg’s
great-grandfather.
The outside of the dome needed attention, too.
The hundred of numbered red tiles – assembled
on the rounded top like an intricate puzzle – needed
to be examined to find a leak.
Zuckerman called his favorite roofer, Chuck Wagner,
a Washingtonian whose family has been in roofing
for generations. The developer explained
the problem and asked Wagner to send someone to
check it out.
“I’m not sending anyone,” he
said. “I’m doing it myself.”
Wagner’s first job as an apprentice to
his father had been to take every tile off the
dome and replace the steel nails with copper ones.
After taking one look at the new synagogue, he
offered to fabricate a copper Star of David and
install it on the top of the rod at the apex of
the dome, just as it had looked in 1908.
“It’s incredible the web this place
has created,” says Zuckerman.
Preservations projects typically require years. It
has taken about one year, at a cost of some $2
million, to recreate the Sixth & I Synagogue.
The synagogue built in the busting community
of 1908 is coming back to life in a part of Washington
that is itself being reborn. Pollin’s
MCI Center is around the corner. The new
Shakespeare Theatre annex will be a few blocks
away. The Gallery Place project will soon
be complete with shops, offices, and apartments. As
many as 4,000 apartments, condos, and lofts will
be filling up along Massachusetts Avenue.
“We imagine some of those new residents
will be Jewish and might want to connect,” says
Judith Levy, executive director of Sixth & I
Synagogue.
The new temple will not be a typical synagogue: It
will not have a congregation or a rabbi, as the
new owners and organizers build a following and
a funding source.
Says Levy: “I’ve never found a model
for what we’re doing, where a sacred space
has been reclaimed at the center of a city. It
has historic as well as spiritual significance. I
am working to combine all of the models.”
Its downstairs will be opened to community groups. In
addition to the main sanctuary, there are two
smaller spaces where Jews can hold services. The
historical society will help create an exhibit
to celebrate the history of the old neighborhood. Jemal
is hoping Jews will gather for daily prayers.
Says Shelton Zuckerman, “We hope it will
become part of the infrastructure of the city.”
As the renovations neared completion, Shelton
Zuckerman asked his friend Rick Zitelman to tour
the synagogue. The need for a Torah came
up.
Zitelman said he knew Menachem Youlus, a scribe
in Wheaton who rescues Torahs rediscovered after
the Holocaust. They arranged to meet with
Youlus, who had just finished work on a Torah
from synagogue in Poland that had been destroyed. They
bought in for Sixth & I.
“Perhaps the Torah would never have been
used again,” says Zuckerman. “Perhaps
the synagogue that became a church would have
become a nightclub.”
Now both Torah and synagogue live again.
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