(
he holidays are
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i rOur Competition's
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Big Beaver Road at Coolidge, Troy. Mon.-Fri. 10-9; Sat. 10-6; Sun. 12-5
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LAII-oN PREMISES I
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NEWS
1.011. 5.4
0.
Local & Nationwide Delivery
New York (JTA) — The
first Liberal Jewish con-
gregation in the Soviet
Union, ousted from its first
home in Moscow, has now
been given a permanent
place for worship.
Moscow Mayor Gavriil
Popov has signed papers au-
thorizing the transfer of a
building in the heart of the
city to Congregation Hineni,
according to Rabbi Richard
Hirsch, executive director of
the Jerusalem-based World
Union for Progressive
Judaism, with which Hineni
is affiliated.
The two-story,
20,000-square-foot building,
located on the corner of a
major thoroughfare, is now
occupied by government of-
fices, which are scheduled to
be relocated within four
months.
Hineni's future home is
located at the corner of
Malaya Bronaya Street and
Sudova Kudrinskaya Pro-
spekt, and borders an ex-
clusive residential area,
Rabbi Hirsch said.
He will visit Moscow in the
spring to coordinate plans
for the renovation of the
building, which will likely
have three stories and
30,000 square feet added to
it by the time the work is
done, at a yet-undetermined
cost.
Hineni's new home will in-
clude a sanctuary,
classrooms for a religious
school, a Jewish library,
Judaica museum, conference
facilities and a center that
will disseminate informa-
tion about Liberal Judaism,
which in North America is
known as Reform.
The project will be funded
by gifts from American,
Canadian and other con-
tributors through the World
Union, and by a number of
successful Soviet Jewish en-
trepreneurs who have in-
dicated an eagerness to in-
vest time, energy and money
in Hineni, Rabbi Hirsch told
delegates to the recent bien-
nial convention of the Union
of American Hebrew Con-
gregations.
Acquisition of the new
building caps a two-year
effort by Hineni to obtain a
home.
It had been using the
Polyakov Synagogue, but
was forced to look for other
quarters after a Lubavitch
Chasidic congregation
challenged its right to be
there. In May, 1991, the
Moscow city council voted to
allow Lubavitch to retain
rights to Polyakov.