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Jewish Temple Encourages Worship Through The Arts
Located in the Beverly Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles, one synagogue is also a theater where people come for an experience unlike traditional Jewish services. David Baron1 is the founding rabbi of the Beverly Hills Temple of the Arts. “We operate within a theatrical2 space with lighting3 and sound that relates to a theater. Our prayer books are all Biblical works of art," he said.
Baron says his synagogue does not belong to any mainstream4 Jewish movement. He tries to create a religious experience by fusing religion with art - drawing , in large part, from Hollywood's talent pool. “Our cantors who sing the service are Broadway stars. Our choir5 is LA opera and Master Choral," he said.
Even the African American community and a gospel choir take part in the service before the Jewish holiday of Passover, which celebrates the ancient Exodus6 from Egypt and bondage7.
“We try to reach out to cross borders that historically have, that has kept our communities separated and bring them together to celebrate," said Baron.
Baron says Orthodox Jews would not approve of services that mix the traditional with the contemporary. “I think they'd approve conceptually of bringing people back to faith. I think the means used would not be acceptable because they don’t follow the very strict guidelines of orthodoxy," he said.
For many traditionalists, the use of instruments could violate Sabbath laws. But instruments are used in monthly services at the Temple of the Arts because, Baron says, they were used in ancient Jewish worship.
The rabbi is no stranger to Orthodox Judaism. He was ordained8 by an Orthodox rabbi in Jerusalem. He spent the first part of his career working in Conservative synagogues. But he says he wasn’t reaching enough people. Twenty years ago, he founded this temple and created a new style of worship.
“And people started coming in greater and greater numbers and began to engage in worship. The vast majority who are unaffiliated and have no connection but know they have a Jewish identity can reconnect in a way that is comprehensible," he said.
They reconnect, he says, through works of art in prayer books and music during a service - like this one, at the start of Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year for Jews.
Blind mezzo-soprano Laurie Rubin participated in the service.
Inspirational stories are also incorporated into the services. Eighty-two-year-old Holocaust9 survivor10 Ela Weissberger tells about singing in a children’s opera when she was held in a Nazi11 concentration camp. “The Nazis12 wanted to show the world that they're not harming children. And they put this little opera on Nazi propaganda film. We were 15,000 children in the camp; they were sent little by little to the gas chambers13 to die. So we were left only a hundred," she said.
Baron says he tries to reach out to people of all backgrounds to share values that transcend14 religious and cultural boundaries.
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