Lost Prison Synagogue
Open for First Time in Thirty-Five Years
- Dates:
-
Saturday and Sunday,
April 5 and 6, 2008
- Lost Synagogue Tour:
-
A 45-minute tour to the synagogue space,
never yet open to the public, including
artifacts, photos, and brief presentations
by historians and architects.
- Tour Times:
- Ongoing, from 10 am to 4:20 pm
- Price:
-
Free with admission to historic site.
General Eastern State audio tour included.
- Availability:
-
Reservations are strongly recommended for
the Lost Synagogue Tours. Call (215) 236-5111 x14.
Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Sites beautiful,
long-abandoned Synagogue will open to the public for
the first time, Saturday and Sunday, April 5 and 6,
2008. Preservation and rehabilitation of the Synagogue
will begin later in the month, and this will be the
only chance for visitors to see the space in its eerie,
but surprisingly beautiful condition.
It has been more than three and half decades since the
last Jewish service at Eastern State Penitentiary, but
the small Synagogue, tucked into a narrow alleyway off
Cellblock 7, still feels like a holy place. The
Readers Table still faces the Ark, the room is still
lined with benches, and sunlight still filters through
the skylights onto the red tile floor. A ghostly Star
of David is just visible on the door. But very few
peopleaside from a handful of historians,
preservationists, and special guestshave seen the room
during the past 35 years. It has never been open to
the public.
Visitors attending the Lost Synagogue Weekend, April 5
- 6, can meet the historians and planners, see the
vision for the Synagogues rebirth, and visit this
beautiful, poignant space tucked into areas of the
prison never before opened to the public. The 45-minute
tours will include extensive photographs of the Synagogue
throughout its history, artifacts found in the space,
and sections of the penitentiary complex normally closed
to the public. The Lost Synagogue Weekend tours are free
with admission, but subject to availability.
The Lost Synagogues History
The Synagogue was originally built in the early 1920s under
the leadership of Philadelphia businessman and philanthropist
Alfred Fleisher, who was the President of the Eastern State
Penitentiary Board of Trustees at the time. Mr. Fleisher
attended all Jewish services at Eastern State until his death
in 1928, and the Jewish inmates named the Synagogue The Alfred
Fleisher Memorial Synagogue, as a lasting memorial of the
kindness and justice Fleisher has always shown.
When public tours of Eastern State Penitentiary began in 1994,
the Synagogue was deteriorated, primarily because leaks in its
roof led to extensive damage to the plaster ceiling and wooden
elements. In addition, public access to the space was made
impossible by invasive trees that collapsed portions of the
stone walls along either side of the Synagogues alleyway entrance.
In 2004, Laura Mass, a graduate student in historic preservation
from the University of Pennsylvania, finished writing her thesis
on the Synagogue. Her research helped uncover the history of
Jewish life at Eastern State, dating to the 1830s, and identified
the men from the Philadelphia Jewish community whose loyalty to
the prisoners led to the construction of the Synagogue in the
early 1920s. (At its peak, the Jewish population within the
prison was no more than eighty inmates.) Ms. Mass thesis
revealed a compelling story of the volunteers, each dedicated to
supporting the small group of inmates over many years, attending
to their personal lives, and helping them maintain their faith.
One volunteer was Joseph Paull, (left, with inmates and
officers in the Synagogue) who first visited Eastern
State Penitentiary as a strongman to entertain the
inmates. Mr. Paull attended Jewish services at the
prison, donated food from his kosher butcher shop, and
found jobs for more than 300 inmates upon their release.
William Portner, President of the Prison Aid Committee in
the 1920s and 1930s, attended all Jewish services at the
prison from 1923 to 1940.
Following the completion of her thesis, Ms. Mass led a
team of interns that carefully evaluated and removed the
twelve inches of debris covering the Synagogue floor.
Although consisting primarily of fallen ceiling plaster,
the debris had potential to contain other artifacts relating
to the Synagogues history, and the team approached the
room as an archeological site: it was sectioned, the debris
was removed with trowels, and was then sifted through a
screen to catch artifacts. The team found pages from a
song book used for holiday celebrations, intact portions
of the decorative ceiling plaster, including a point of
the ceilings Star of David, and samples of painted plaster
that helped determine the interior decorative scheme of the
Synagogue through time. The team also discovered the use of
the service area at the rear of the space, establishing its
use for holidays and other events that involved kosher food.
By 2005, the historic site had secured funding to provide
the Synagogue with a new roof, gutters and downspouts, and
to complete extensive stone restoration along the alley
leading to the space.
Modern Witnesses
Howard Fleisher and Suzanne Fleisher Roberts, children of
Synagogue founder Alfred Fleisher, remembered their fathers
role as a prison reformer and President of the Eastern State
Penitentiary Board of Trustees, but they were completely
unaware of their fathers involvement in the Synagogue.
Howard was deeply moved by his first visit the small space,
and by the story of the Jews that volunteered to visit
prisoners and celebrate their faith. At age 92, he hopes
that he can witness the Synagogue restoration in honor of
his father.
Rabbi Martin Rubinstein began working as the last Jewish
Chaplain at Eastern State Penitentiary in the mid-1960s.
He remembers being fingerprinted and checked out by the
FBI before his application was accepted. He came into Eastern
State once a week to conduct services and meet with inmates
individually. To this day, he says, I am proud of the fact
that my congregants were the only religious group that never
had a guard present during their services. He remembers
that it was the inmates themselves who enforced the rule:
Nothing [rowdy behavior, outside conflicts] comes into the
Synagogue. Nothing. Rabbi Rubenstein said he tried to also
remember this saying: Do not judge your fellow man until
youre standing in his place. Because God forbid we should
be put to that test.
Religion at Eastern State Penitentiary
In addition to the Synagogue, there are two other spaces
that have been used for religious purposes at Eastern
State. The Catholic Chaplains office stands opposite the
alley that leads to the Synagogue. Originally built as the
office for Warden Cassidy in the 1870s , it was later used
by visiting chaplains of several faiths. An inmate painted
a series of murals there in the 1950s, depicting the life
of Christ and Catholic life. These murals have been
stabilized until this space can be conserved and restored.
A large, multi-denominational chapel occupies the second
floor of the Industrial Building. Here, Protestant
services and Catholic mass were held for large groups of
inmates.
The Lost Synagogue Brought Back
Eastern States Synagogue Restoration Committee, chaired
by Board President Cindy Wanerman, has raised more than
$280,000 to complete the restoration of the Alfred Fleisher
Memorial Synagogue. These funds include substantial gifts
from the Fleisher/Roberts and Portner families. The
Synagogue restoration is expected to be complete by Yom
Kippur, October 9, 2008. Upon completion, the Synagogue
will be available primarily for public access on the
historic sites tour program. However, the Philadelphia
chapter of Bnai Brith has pledged a Torah that will be
used in the Synagogue to celebrate holidays and special
occasions. The Committee still seeks $50,000 for exhibits
and other programs to tell the Synagogues story.