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Jews arrived in Halifax in 1749, shortly after its founding. By 1752, thirty Jewish men, women and children from Newport, Rhode Island moved here. Most were merchants. Samuel Hart, who arrived in 1781, became the first Jew to serve in a British North American legislative body. An early town plan allocated a separate, but never utilized, Jewish cemetery near the corner of Brunswick Street and Spring Garden Road. The site became a jail in 1758. In the 1890s, many Russian immigrants began arriving. In 1891, the Baron de Hirsch Hebrew Benevolent Society was founded. In 1893, the Society on Windsor Street purchased a cemetery site near Connaught Avenue. A renovated house at Starr and Hurd Streets became the synagogue and school. The 1901 Jewish population was 118. The Starr Street Synagogue was destroyed inh a fire in 1917. In 1920, the B aron de Hirsch Congregation constructed a new synagogue on Robie Street. Proctor Street Synagogue, referred to as Webber Shul, formed in 1914. The two synagogue united in 1936. The 1991 Jewish population was 1,480 in the Halifax-Dartmouth area. [April 2004]

Beth Israel Synagogue (Orthodox), 1480 Oxford Street, Halifax, NS B3H 3Y8. Telephone (902) 422-1301 Fax (902) 422-7451. Rabbi Saul Aranov. Baron de Hirsch Congregation constructed this synagogue called Beth Israel that opened October 21st, 1957. [April 2004]

Shaar Shalom Congregation (Conservative), 1981 Oxford Street, Halifax, NS B3H 4A4. Telephone (902) 423-5848 Fax (902) 422-2580. Rabbi Elihu Milder. Founded in 1953, Shaar Shalom Synagogue dedicated on October 31st, 1957. [April 2004]

Chabad Lubavitch of the Maritimes, 67 Chartwell Lane, Halifax, NS B3M 4G4, Telephone and Fax (902) 457-7698. Rabbi Mendie Feldman. [April 2004]

 

Parent Category: CANADA