Synagogues / Anshe Emes
Congregation Anshe Emes was founded as Russian Hasidic Shul on the East Side of Buffalo and was also known as the Little Hickory Shul.
Overview
Congregation Anshe Emes (c.1906-1947) was founded as a Russian Hasidic shul on the East Side around 1906 in a home of a founding member Morris Simon on Mortimer Street near Peckham. It formerly incorporated in 1908. Members eventually bought a building at 209 Hickory Street in 1912 from Brith Israel and the Anshe Emes congregation became known as the “Little Hickory Shul”. A small cemetery at 548 Pine Ridge was also established in Cheektowaga, that is now administered by the Jewish Federation Cemetery Corporation.
The congregation was led by two long serving Presidents: Morris Simon 1910 to 1918 and Morris Bergman from 1920 to 1932. Morris Simon (1880-1952) helped establish the short-lived council of Orthodox congregations known as the Jewish Kehillah of Buffalo that formed in 1918, and supported other Jewish organizations and charities, most notably the Rosa Coplon Jewish Old Folks Home. Two rabbis were heavily identified with Anshe Emes. Until just before his death in 1932, Rabbi Abraham M. Frankel (d. 1932, originally from Vilna), served the congregation for over a decade. He was followed by Rabbi Samuel Gitin (1872-1942), who served from 1931 to 1942. In 1947, the congregation relocated to North Buffalo merging with Brith Israel, the former Big Hickory Shul, which rented space at 1191 Hertel Avenue. A synagogue designed by Jack Kushin was built at 1287 Hertel Avenue and the merged congregation became Brith Israel-Anshe Ames. The 390-seat building was formerly dedicated during services on 30 August, 1954 and a plaque erected in honor of Morris Simon was added to the building below the cornerstone.
Discover More
- Rabbi Abraham Mayer Franklin, vice-president of the Rabbinical Association of America. He was a descendant of the Vilna Gaon
- Rabbi Abraham Mayer Franklin obituary in the NY Times
- Find a Grave, database and images (accessed 21 October 2020), memorial page for Rabbi A. M. Franklin (1863–1933), Find a Grave Memorial no. 161703554, Anshe Ames Cemetery, Cheektowaga, Erie County, New York, USA ; Maintained by gracedv (contributor 48727850).
- Rabbi Samuel Gitin: Listing of his grave at Find a Grave, database and images (accessed 21 October 2020), memorial page for Rabbi Shimaryau Gitin (unknown–28 Feb 1942), Find a Grave Memorial no. 163345412, citing Anshe Ames Cemetery, Cheektowaga, Erie County, New York, USA ; Maintained by Laurie (contributor 2811407).
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