Jump to content

Durban United Hebrew Congregation

Coordinates: 33°55′47″S 18°25′00″E / 33.929769°S 18.41663°E / -33.929769; 18.41663
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Durban United Hebrew Congregation
Religion
AffiliationModern Orthodox Judaism
RiteNusach Ashkenaz
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusSynagogue
OwnershipDurban United Hebrew Congregation
LeadershipRabbi Pinchas Zekry
StatusActive
Location
Location36 Silverton Road, Berea, Durban, South Africa
CountrySouth Africa
Geographic coordinates33°55′47″S 18°25′00″E / 33.929769°S 18.41663°E / -33.929769; 18.41663
Architecture
Architect(s)Edgar Alfred Henry The New Synagogue
TypeSynagogue architecture
Date established1841 (as a congregation)
Completed
  • 1884 (First shul)
  • 1904 (The New Synagogue)
  • 1961 (The Great Synagogue)
  • 2017 (Silverton Road Shul)

The Durban United Hebrew Congregation, also known as Silverton Road Shul, is a Modern Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue, located in Berea. The congregation was established in 1883 and its synagogues have since been the main places of worship for Durban Jewry.[1]

The congregation has occupied four buildings, most notably the purpose-built New Synagogue from 1904 to 1961 and the Great Synagogue from 1961 to 2017.

History

[edit]

The congregation was formed in 1883, following a period where services were held in private homes. In 1884, Durban's first synagogue was established in a converted Methodist chapel.[2][3] A third of the funds for the synagogue were raised by Daniel De Pass, a businessman from a Sephardi Jewish. De Pass was visiting from England as his family had established the sugar cane industry in Natal.[4][5]

In 1904, a larger purpose-built synagogue was dedicated, known as the New Synagogue and located on Musgrave Road in Berea. The imposing synagogue had two domes and was designed by the Australian architect, Edgar Alfred Henry, who had emigrated to Natal from Sydney in 1900.[6][7] The congregation was served by Rabbi Rabbi Ephraim Moses (Eric Montagu) Levy from 1924 to 1935, before he went on to serve at the Great Synagogue in Sydney. During this period there was a significant Talmud Torah, Hebrew kindergarten and Levy was responsible for bringing Hebrew language teaching into Durban High School. Levy was also president of the fraternal order, the Lodge of the Order of David. Meanwhile, his wife, Mrs Levy, was president of the Women's Zionist League.[8]

The congregation relocated again in 1961, building a larger synagogue, the Great Synagogue at 75 Silverton Road in Berea. A decade later, the city's Jewish population peaked with 7, 500 Jews, among South Africa's Jewry's peak population of 120, 000.[9][10][1] In the 1970s the community was bolstered by the arrival of Jews from Rhodesia.[5]

Tony Leon, future leader of the opposition, grew up in Durban, and had his Bar Mitzvah at the Great Synagogue in the late 1960s, and also attended High Holiday services there.[11] In 1988, the congregation and Durban Jewry were shaken by an antisemitic hate crime, when pigs heads marked with swastikas on their foreheads and Stars of David on each ear were placed on the exterior steps of the Great Synagogue, as well as at the Jewish Club in Durban. An Irish national was arrested for desecration and subsequently fled the country. The incident also prompted a response from then-State President PW Botha, issuing a strong warning to Neo-Nazis in the country, telling them that he was not prepared to tolerate their antics.[12][13]

In 2017, the congregation relocated to a smaller building in Berea to reflect demographic changes, with the city's Jewish community numbering around 2, 000, down from a high of between 7, 000 to 7,500 in the seventies. Since the Soweto Uprising in 1976, South Africa's Jewish population has declined due to emigration.[5] The top choice for Durban Jewish emigrants has been Israel, followed by the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom and Canada. There has also been internal migration to larger Jewish population centres in Johannesburg and Cape Town.[5] Children in the congregation are served by the Jewish day school in uMhlanga.[14][1]The Great Synagogue buildings are now occupied by Stadio (previously Embury), a tertiary education institute.[15]

The congregation's long-time rabbi of over thirty years is Rabbi Pinchas Zekry. In 1998, Zekry published a thesis on Orthodox conversion to Judaism.[16]

See also

[edit]


References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Sad end to Durban’s Great Synagogue The South African Jewish Report. 27 February 2017
  2. ^ HISTORY OF THE CKNJ Council of KwaZulu-Natal Jewry. Retrieved on 29 October 2024
  3. ^ Durban Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved on 29 October 2024
  4. ^ Linde, Steve. "Durban Calling! A bird's eye view of the KwaZulu-Natal Jewish community's economy history", The Jerusalem Post
  5. ^ a b c d Durban Calling! A bird's eye view of the KwaZulu-Natal Jewish community's economy history HaShalom. Retrieved on 30 October 2024
  6. ^ HENRY, Edgar Alfred Artefacts. Retrieved on 29 October 2024
  7. ^ Synagogue Artefacts. Retrieved on 29 October 2024
  8. ^ Apple, Raymond (2008). The Great Synagogue: A History of Sydney's Big Shule. University of New South Wales Press. p. 95. ISBN 9780868409276.
  9. ^ The Future of Jewish South Africa Tablet. 22 March 2023
  10. ^ Durban Jews move to Izinga Durban Jews move to Izinga The Jerusalem Post. 6 December 2014
  11. ^ Leon, Tony (2008). On the Contrary: Leading the Opposition in a Democratic South Africa. Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball. ISBN 9780868409276.
  12. ^ South African Police Arrest Irish Woman for Desecration The Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 2 May 1988
  13. ^ ‘CALCULATING, DECEITFUL’ SA CONWOMAN GUITY OF 18 CHARGES IN UK The Daily Maverick. 12 August 2013
  14. ^ Historic inauguration service at Silverton Road Shul The South African Jewish Report. 27 July 2017
  15. ^ December completion date for new Musgrave campus The Citizen. 29 June 2017
  16. ^ CONVERSION TO JUDAISM IN SOUTH AFRICA UNISA. December 1998