Sharing the history of a proud city rising where the water falls
Many of his contemporaries credit him with keeping the synagogue alive even as many began to leave the community as it declined economically by quietly influencing the congregation to be more open to outsiders and to embrace less traditional ideas, such as welcoming women on to the bimah (the elevated platform on which a reader of the Torah stands during a service). As one friend remarked, “The Shul lived on thanks to and as a tribute to Sam.”