Membership & Policies
Rabbi by Boris Dubrov
Here are some important forms and information. Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions about them.
The Beginning of Temple Shir Shalom
Temple Shir Shalom traces its origin to an idea shared by just a few local families in early 1984. These families felt that Gainesville needed a congregation that would espouse the values of Reform Judaism, focusing on welcome, inclusion, and Jewish education for all who were interested. The first official meeting of the congregation was held on August 29, 1984, at which time a newly constituted Board of Directors ratified a Certificate of Incorporation that had been filed earlier in the month in the office of the Florida Secretary of State. The first Annual Meeting of the congregation was held on December 13, 1984 in the conference room of an office building on 13th Street. (Union of American Hebrew Congregations), which was approved in May 1985.
During our earliest years, the congregation counted twenty-four founding families, of whom several are still active members. Our celebration of our 25th Anniversary in 2010 was based upon our application to join the Union for Reform Judaism (the the congregation met for Shabbat worship at the local Unitarian Fellowship, and for the High Holidays in a hotel ballroom. Our Religious School first met in borrowed office space before moving for several years into the Thomas Center. Worship and study were led by various lay members of the congregation, with an occasional visiting ordained rabbi for special occasions. In 1988, Mr. Bernie Zeldin, then a newcomer to Gainesville, became the semi-official "lay rabbi" of Temple Shir Shalom, owing to his Jewish learning and his experience with a number of other young congregations around the country.
During eight years of service, Bernie tutored and led almost 40 students through their b'nai mitzvah, helped 15 adults through conversion to Judaism, and officiated at a variety of other life cycle events. After a six year absence from Gainesville, Bernie returned in 2002 and has continued to inspire many with his expert teaching. In 1989, Temple Shir Shalom acquired its current property on 8th Avenue in Gainesville, after much work on fundraising and a late evening session of the Gainesville City Council that was attended by nearly all of the 43 families who then made up the congregation. The small house on the property was converted into a functional temple building, and the congregation finally had a real home.