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At one shul, online attendance is often two to three times larger than when services were in person, while one critic fears it could create an ‘atomized hive of like-minded individuals, not a community’
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Apr. 28, 2021 3:33 PM
BARRINGTON, Rhode Island – Rabbi Howard Voss-Altman stepped in front of his congregation at Temple Habonim Friday night, inviting the worshippers to “welcome Shabbat into our hearts and our spirit.”
As he began the service, he gazed into the camera in the middle of the sanctuary full of empty chairs, looking as it has for over a year since the coronavirus lockdown began. The service was then live-streamed on the synagogue’s YouTube channel.
That evening, a very different service was unfolding in Delray Beach, Florida, as 25 members of Temple Anshei Shalom excitedly greeted each other before they began their service. They did so with confidence and without fear, knowing that, to attend, they had to provide proof of vaccination against COVID-19.