This page was created by Manish Tyagi.
Digital Stories of Cleveland Synagogue Dispersion: Moving Pieces of Congregational Life
Participant - Alanna Cooper
Mentions
- https://scalar.case.edu/freedman-fellows/cooper-2020-2021
- https://thedaily.case.edu/faculty-members-named-2020-21-freedman-faculty-fellows/
This project implements database design and GIS software to offer a digital study of the movement of Cleveland’s Jewish congregations over space and time (from when Jewish immigrants first arrived in the area in the mid 19th century until today). In tandem, the project uses Freedman Center hardware and software to provide a visual study of trends in preserving and re-locating synagogues’ sacred bits (such as stained glass windows, Torah arks, and memorial plaques), as the congregations have moved. Based on preliminary research conducted for my book, "Preserving and Disposing of the Sacred: America’s Jewish Congregations" (under contract with Penn State University Press) I suggest that congregations which moved out of urban centers into the suburbs following World War II were inspired by modernist aesthetic and optimism about Judaism’s place in the American landscape. This pilot study is situated in the Cleveland metropolitan region, and is designed to develop best-practices for collecting, organizing and comparing data on a national scale. Cleveland offers a wonderful place to begin for many reasons, including the fact that it is close to home and easy to access (particularly important in the midst of this Covid era). In addition (1) the number of existing synagogue congregations in the metropolitan area (approximately 20) offers a manageable group to study over the course of a year (2) greater-Cleveland’s Jewish population is highly compact, with almost all current in-use synagogue buildings occupying a region of only a few square miles, making comparison easy to manage and (3) the history of Cleveland’s synagogues has been well-studied and documented in secondary sources, and is easy to access.