Sacred Places Summer 2012 | Page 6

UPDATE on Partners: New Dollars/New Partners Success Story Just a block away from Philadelphia’s beautiful Rittenhouse Square, Temple Beth Zion-Beth Israel (BZBI) has been a fixture of Center City since 1954. The original synagogue, Temple Beth Zion, held its first services in 1946. After acquiring a breathtaking neo-Gothic former church at the corner of 18th and Spruce Streets, it merged in 1964 with one of Philadelphia’s oldest synagogues, Temple Beth Israel, which was founded in 1840. Today, BZBI is a vibrant congregation of about 600 households that practices Conservative Judaism with egalitarian worship. Over the last decade, leaders of Beth ZionBeth Israel were increasingly aware of their historic building’s structural needs; however, the congregation was just meeting its annual budget requirements and there was little financial leeway to make necessary improvements. Executive Director Donna Rosenthal explains, “You just push off maintenance. But at a certain point, you realize that this is going to be a problem.” That point came in late 2005, when the air conditioning units serving the sanctuary and the social hall began to leak condensate water. Temple Beth Zion-Beth Israel in Philadelphia, PA, is housed in a neo-Gothic The congregation had already discovered former church. heavy water damage after plaster fell from Nevertheless, the story was far from over. After the sanctuary ceiling earlier that year, so when the formulating an architectural master plan, the leak forced an air conditioning shutdown during High congregational leadership realized that it needed at Holiday services – when the synagogue was filled with least an additional $5 million to meet their building’s its largest annual crowd – “it was a ‘last straw’ moment needs. The master plan identified several unanticipated for us,” says Rosenthal. Along with water damage from yet critical projects, such as installing a new fire alarm faulty gutters and the resulting rotting roof timbers, the building faced a serious threat from its failing roof, system, bringing the electrical wiring up to code, and putting the finishing touches on the building’s waterwhich demanded immediate attention. management system. Fortunately, the congregation was in the midst of a To supplement their own fundraising efforts, BZBI successful capital campaign. Guided by a professional applied for and was ultimately awarded a $35,000 grant feasibility study, the congregation had set a goal of $5 from Partners for Sacred Places, on the condition that million, conducted its fundraising largely internally, it would participate in an upcoming New Dollars/New and raised $4.8 million by 2007. Partners for Your Sacred Place training session. From 5 • Sacred Places • www.sacredplaces.org • Summer 2012