
Experience one man's story of survival at the Virginia Holocaust Museum.
Photo by Al Wekelo
Jewish
By the 1760s, Jewish immigrants began settling in the Richmond Region. Thirty
years later, there were 100 Jewish residents for every 3,700 citizens in
Richmond. In 1789, the first Jewish congregation was established in Richmond,
and less than 35 years later, the first synagogue was built in Virginia. During
that same time, a growing number of German and Eastern European Jews began
immigrating to Richmond and joined this congregation. However, this new group
of Jewish residents soon longed for their more familiar form of service and
organized their own congregation, Beth Ahabah, which founded the area's first
Jewish school in 1846 and first house of worship in 1848. Fifty years later,
the area's first and second congregations formally reunited.
The Region's Jewish community continued to grow throughout the 1900s, when local
Jews worked to find sponsors for Jews who were able to escape Nazi Germany
during World War II. In the late 1900s, the population expanded again when
Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union settled in the Richmond Region.
The Region's Jewish community is diligent in its remembrance of its ancestors.
Visitors to the Region can explore the area's Hebrew Cemetery, which was
recently renovated to restore the Confederate soldiers section and create
additional burial plots, or step back in time at the Virginia Holocaust Museum,
offering an interactive tour of nearly 30 exhibits and a place for mediation
and reflection in the Survivors' Room and cattle car. The Weinstein Jewish
Community Center offers a variety of social and athletic programs in the
community, including the popular JCC Forum, which brings nationally-known
speakers to the Region four times a year. The JCC also previously hosted 1,500
Jewish teens from across the country and the world to participate in the JCC
Maccabi Games, an event that integrates sports, community service and social
activities with Jewish identity and values.
Click here to view our cultural festival sampler.
Additional Information
Click here for more information about
community organizations and resources.