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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

It is fine to sound off in shul

The story of one congregant loudly berating another at the bimah may sound shocking, but synagogues are not temples

September 28, 2010 10:15
3 min read

Hearing, and then reading of, the dramatic but cheerless story of the congregant who used the opportunity of a full house at the recent Rosh Hashanah evening service of an Orthodox synagogue in north-west London to publicly denounce a fellow male worshipper as an adulterer caused me to reflect on the appropriateness of a synagogue as a place in which such a grievance might legitimately be aired.

Some of my friends, while sympathising with the congregant - who must surely have been in a state of extreme mental anguish - felt that his action was entirely inappropriate, because "this is not the sort of thing you do in a synagogue". I wonder.

The word "synagogue" is a transliteration from Greek and simply means "assembly". The word was applied in ancient times to the places where Jews assembled, and this usage is reflected in the Hebrew phrase beit knesset - a "house of assembly". We think of a synagogue exclusively as a house of worship but strictly speaking this is incorrect. Jews can pray anywhere.

A synagogue - unlike a church - is neither a consecrated nor an especially holy place. It is most certainly not a "temple", as Reform Jews misguidedly term it, less still is it a substitute for the Temple in Jerusalem.

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