Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
International

Saving Torah scrolls and saying prayers, Los Angeles fires leave congregants without worship spaces

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jan, 2025 10:50 AM
  • Saving Torah scrolls and saying prayers, Los Angeles fires leave congregants without worship spaces

Flames were already attacking the campus of Pasadena Jewish Temple and Center when the cantor, Ruth Berman Harris, and three companions rushed in to rescue its sacred Torah scrolls.

Physically, that’s now all that is left of the 80-year-old synagogue, destroyed by wildfires that also destroyed a mosque, a Catholic parish and a half-dozen Protestant churches. Many members of these congregations were among the thousands of Angelenos who lost their homes this week. As the threat of new fires persisted, clergy were left with the huge challenges of offering comfort and pondering paths toward rebuilding and recovery.

“There’s absolutely nothing except for a few walls and the empty space,” said the Pasadena Jewish Center’s executive director, Melissa Levy.

Nevertheless, hundreds of its congregants have gone to the site “to say, ‘Goodbye’” to the places where they celebrated milestones in their faith and family lives, Levy added.

Navigating road closures to rescue Torah scrolls

Berman Harris — along with her husband, another congregant and a custodian — managed to get the Torah scrolls into their cars and whisked away to safety before the synagogue was engulfed in flames Tuesday night.

“It’s the heartbeat of any Jewish community,” she said of the Torah. That’s why, despite road closures, she rushed in to try to save the scrolls after a congregant who lives near the temple called her to say the flames were getting closer.

Several houses of worship were destroyed in Pasadena and Altadena, including a mosque — Masjid Al-Taqwa. Its imam lost his house as well, said Enjy El-Kadi, digital communication manager for the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Los Angeles.

The wildfires destroyed Altadena Community Church, as well as several homes owned by members of the congregation of about 60 people, said its pastor, the Rev. Paul Tellström.

“It’s shocking,” said Tellström. “It’s a reminder to us of all of the fragility of life.”

Worship without a building

The church, built in the 1940’s, was known for its colorful stained glass and for hosting a popular choir.

The church’s Facebook page shared images of the building engulfed in flames. Another photo showed parishioners singing outdoors. Underneath, the image it read: “WE are the church! We can worship anywhere.”

“This is a big blow, but it will not impede our progress,” Tellström said. “The most important takeaway is that we are the church — not the building."

Altadena United Methodist Church also burned down, as did the homes of many members, according to Facebook posts by its pastor, the Rev. J. Andre Wilson. He said that this Sunday, the church would have a brief online service.

“Our building is gone,” he wrote. “But YOU and US, are the church.”

Fire spoils church's weekend wedding plans

Ricardo Springs II, a church member who came to see the remains of the building, said the congregation had been planning this Sunday to host the wedding of a couple that recently joined the church.

The devastation is “just heartbreaking,” he said. “God will see us through this.”

“My sons grew up in this church, my wife grew up in this church,” he told The Associated Press on Thursday. “It’s an awesome church community.”

St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Altadena also was destroyed.

“It is with a broken heart that I share with you the news that our church building is lost,” the Rev. Carri Patterson Grindon, the rector, wrote on Facebook. She said several community members lost their homes and the church staff was organizing a network of mutual support.

“We will need one another in the days ahead as we face these devastating losses,” she wrote. “I am here for you, and I know our community will hold together, and love and support one another through whatever lies ahead.”

Prayers — and faith — bolster affected congregations

The Parish of St. Matthew, an Episcopal church in Pacific Palisades, whose campus also includes a preschool-through-8th grade school, reported that all of its clergy residences were destroyed, though its sanctuary, middle school and other buildings were intact.

The church has hosted online gatherings, using the liturgy of Compline or night prayer.

“We feel your prayers,” the school’s chaplain, the Rev. Stefanie Wilson, said in the Thursday night online gathering, responding to the outpouring of concern from people far and near. “We need them and we want them and we feel that you’re with us right now.”

In Pacific Palisades, Corpus Christi Catholic Church was destroyed. Its website displayed a photo of the skeletal remains of the church, accompanied by this message: “I have no words. Our beautiful church in Pacific Palisades, as of this morning.”

Also destroyed was Pacific Palisades Presbyterian Church, which posted photos on its Facebook page showing the church intact before the fire and in ruins afterward.

Throughout the stricken areas, faith leaders were concerned about congregation members who lost their homes and have found temporary shelter with friends or in hotels. But they are finding hope in their faith and their communities.

“Nothing in my faith has been rocked by this,” said Melissa Levy of the Pasadena Jewish Center. “ If anything, it’s been bolstered by the support we have received and we can give.”

Synagogues still standing offer a place to worship

The Los Angeles area is home to more than 600,000 Jews, the second-largest community in the United States. The Pasadena synagogue also lost its preschool, and in Pacific Palisades, fires seriously damaged another synagogue and a Chabad center, said Rabbi Noah Farkas, president of the Jewish Federation Los Angeles.

Synagogues away from danger will host services over the weekend for those congregants who cannot attend their regular temples, and volunteers have been helping with everything from food and cash assistance to providing a dedicated text messaging line for hundreds of displaced families who have no idea what, if anything, of their homes survived the fires.

“I’ve been here 32 years and literally every person I know has lost their house,” Rabbi Zushe Cunin said of the neighborhood of his Chabad center. “Apocalyptic is the word I’ve been using.”

As clouds of smoke started building in the area earlier this week, Cunin said, he and other staff escorted about 100 children from their school to safety through growing traffic jams to the Pacific Coast Highway, and then ran back to save the scrolls. The fire damaged classrooms and other spaces, though the sanctuary is intact.

But even as they remain determined to rebuild, the immediate priority for Cunin, Levy and Farkas is helping their congregants and the broader communities who have lost all their possessions.

“Even with the people of means, everything is gone,” Cunin said.

 

MORE International ARTICLES

Slow-moving Pacific storm threatens to bring California flooding and mudslides

Slow-moving Pacific storm threatens to bring California flooding and mudslides
Heavy rains drenched parts of California on Wednesday, bringing the threat of flooding and mudslides as millions of people geared up for holiday travel, the National Weather Service said. The Pacific storm centered offshore was moving gradually southeastward, sending bands of rain ashore and hitting particularly hard on the central coast after sweeping through the San Francisco Bay Area. Flood watches were posted all the way south to San Diego.

Slow-moving Pacific storm threatens to bring California flooding and mudslides

Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh in Cairo for ceasefire talks, hostage release

Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh in Cairo for ceasefire talks, hostage release
Israel launched a ground offensive inside Gaza on October 27 after Hamas attacked Israel in a surprise attack on October 7 in which 1200 Israelis were killed and over 200 were taken hostage. Since the outbreak of hostilities between Hamas and Israel, over 19,667 Palestinians have been killed mostly being children and women.

Hamas leader Ismael Haniyeh in Cairo for ceasefire talks, hostage release

2 Indian-origin men jailed for 34 years in UK for drug smuggling

2 Indian-origin men jailed for 34 years in UK for drug smuggling
Two Indian-origin men have been sentenced to prison in the UK for smuggling cocaine, cannabis and cigarettes into the country hidden in shipments of perishable goods. Anand Tripathi (61) and Varun Bhardwaj (39) were both sentenced to 19 years and 15 years in jail, respectively, after they were convicted in November, following a 71-day trial at Isleworth Crown Court, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.

2 Indian-origin men jailed for 34 years in UK for drug smuggling

New Covid strain JN.1 likely to be around in US through X-Mas holiday season

New Covid strain JN.1 likely to be around in US through X-Mas holiday season
A new Covid-19 virus, known in the medical community as, JN.1, close relative to BA.2.86, is the fastest growing variant in the US, according to estimates from the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). JN.1 was responsible for more than one in five new Coronavirus cases in recent weeks.

New Covid strain JN.1 likely to be around in US through X-Mas holiday season

Human rights NGO accuses Israel of deliberately starving Gaza people

Human rights NGO accuses Israel of deliberately starving Gaza people
Human Rights Watch (HRW), a nongovernmental organisation (NGO) with global foot print, has attacked Israel stating that it is deliberately creating starvation in the Gaza Strip as a means of war. In a statement issued on Monday, the HRW said that Israel is deliberately depriving the people in Gaza access to food, water and other basic necessities, and described this denial of basic amenities to the civilian population as a war crime.  

Human rights NGO accuses Israel of deliberately starving Gaza people

Indian national sentenced for assaulting three women in New Zealand

Indian national sentenced for assaulting three women in New Zealand
A 67-year-old Indian national, who assaulted three women on a beach in New Zealand on the pretext of taking photographs with them, was ordered to pay NZ$3,000 to his victims on Monday. Jawahar Singh had previously pleaded guilty to three charges of indecent assault and one charge of an indecent act, relating to three incidents at the Tahunanui beach in Nelson, news website Stuff.co.nz reported.

Indian national sentenced for assaulting three women in New Zealand