Charleston Jews
Tensions and schism's in one of America's first large Jewish communities
By Edward S. Shapiro
Today, most people don't think of Savannah, Ga., and
Charleston, S.C., as major centers of the American-Jewish population. In
earlier times, however, these cities were home to some of America's largest and
most vibrant Jewish communities. As the article below describes, Charleston's
Jewish community consisted of both Sephardim (who traced their ancestry to
Spain and Portugal) and Ashkeanizm (who traced their ancestry to Germany and
Eastern Europe)--but the two groups did not always get along too well. Reprinted
with permission from Sephardim
in the Americas: Studies in Culture and History (The University of
Alabama Press).
A friendly rivalry has existed between Savannah and
Charleston as to which is the older Jewish community. Savannah can date its
origins as an organized Jewish settlement to 1733, its congregation to 1735. However,
periodic losses of population led to lapses and revivals. Charleston can date
its first Jew of record to 1695, when the governor used an unnamed Jew as
interpreter to a delegation of Spanish-speaking Indians. Two years later, four
Jewish names, one undecipherable, were appended to a petition. The others were
Abraham Avila and Jacob Mendes, Sephardim; and Simon Valentine, an Ashkenazi
and a nephew of New York's Asser Levy.
First Synagogue
Avila and Valentine lived out their lives in Charleston, but
few Jews joined them. It was not until 1749 that 10 heads of family, led
by Joseph Tobias, were available to form a minyan,
the quorum needed for the congregation they named Beth Elohim ("House of
God"). Of the founding families, six were Sephardic, four Ashkenazic, including
Mordecai and Levi Sheftall, both of whom were temporary residents from
Savannah.
The Sephardic majority, evidently determined to dominate
decision-making, accorded their best-informed layman, Moses Cohen, the
honorific titles Hacham v'Abh Beth Din ("chief rabbi and chief of
the ecclesiastical court"). Isaac da Costa, a leading merchant, functioned
as hazzan [cantor]. It was he who purchased ground for a cemetery in 1762.
Two years later he deeded it to the congregation, but named as trustees the
leaders and membership of Sephardic congregations in London, "King's Town,
Jamaica," and "Bridgetown, Barbados." In the deed a dash
separates these from the three North American congregations, also named with
their mixture of Ashkenazic and Sephardic leaders.
Charleston's Jewish growth was interrupted by the
Revolution. In 1780, the British captured the city, and Da Costa joined other
Jewish patriots in Philadelphia. In his absence, the congregation's leadership
was assumed by Ashkenazim. When peace was declared in 1783, Da Costa returned
to Charleston. He died within a few months, and his remains were interred in a
separate cemetery at Hampstead, subsequently described in the local press as
belonging to "the Portuguese Congregation of this City, called "Beth
Elohim Unveh Shallom."
A split had developed, but the two groups seem to have
reunited sometime between 1791, when the Ashkenazim determined to abandon their
rented facility and build their first synagogue building, and 1794, when it was
dedicated. The agreement seems to have included abandoning the separate
Sephardic cemetery, but this led to further friction and compromise, for
Sephardic burials continued there until 1847.
Largest Jewish Population
By 1800 Charleston had the largest Jewish population of any
city in the United States, numbering about 6oo. The congregation maintained
strict control over the actions of individual members. Rev. Moses Cohen and his
successors as hazzan were all Sephardim, with the exception of Abraham
Alexander, and the Sephardic ritual prevailed.
Some restlessness must have existed, though, for in 1820 the
congregation issued a new and very stringent constitution. The hazzan of the
moment was another Ashkenazi, Rev. Hartwig Cohen, a native of Wartha, Poland.
He was dismissed in 1823, and his place was taken by Selomoh Cohen Peixotto, a
native of Curaçao, where he had served as ribi (teacher) and shohet
(kosher butcher). He had left during the British occupation of the Dutch
island between 1807 and 1816 to become hazzan in St. Thomas, and had come to
Charleston in 1818.
Peixotto's election may very well have been a precipitating
factor in the formation a year later of the Reformed Society of Israelites. One
of their complaints was that the Spanish and Portuguese prayers and hymns comprising
Beth Elohim's liturgy were meaningless to the membership. However, when Reform
leader Isaac Harby prepared a prayerbook for the insurgents, it was the
Sephardic prayerbook that he translated.
The two groups eventually reunited, but when a new synagogue,
built by David Lopez, a Sephardi member, replaced the old one,
which had burned down in 1838, the agitation for an organ
and other reforms led to another break-off.
The new Orthodox congregation, Shearith Israel--led at first
by Jacob de la Motta, formerly of Savannah--still followed the Sephardic minhag
[custom]. It prospered while Beth Elohim struggled. As late as 1854, Beth
Elohim's Reform proclivities undoubtedly eliminated it from a benefaction in
the will of New Orleans philanthropist Judah Touro. Following the example of
Rebecca Gratz of Philadelphia, Miss Sally Lopez instituted a Sunday school in
1838 which she directed for four years, obtaining weekly lessons copied for her
by Rebecca Gratz.
The depredations of the Civil War and the economic
depression it engendered in the South led to a reunion of the two congregations
in 1866. They agreed to use the "Portuguese minhag" with a shortened
version of the Orthodox service. Rev. Joseph H. Chumaceiro, son of Curaçao's
hazzan, was elected in 1868 and served for six years. By 1875, the congregation
had acquired a growing influx of German immigrants who were assuming
leadership. The liturgy was modified and the board agreed to accept the
prayerbook of its incumbent hazzan, David Levy.
Martin A. Cohen is a professor of Jewish History at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion
in New York. Abraham J. Peck teaches in the Department of History,
University of Southern Maine.
(c) 1993, Martin A. Cohen and Abraham J. Peck. Reprinted
with permission from Sephardim
in the Americas: Studies in Culture and History, published by The University of
Alabama Press in cooperation with the
American Jewish Archives.