'Praying without Paying' is becoming a more popular option among shuls
By Sue Fishkoff
Jewish Telegraphic Agency
When 63-year-old Steven Fruh was growing up in Manhattan, his parents did not belong to a synagogue.
"They couldn't afford it," he says.
At the High Holidays, they would buy one ticket between them, for the congregation's overflow service in the
basement.

"As a kid, I was very affected by this second-rate, third-rate thing," he says. "That's what I grew up with this
one ticket my parents shared, and not even in the main sanctuary."
The only thing that's changed since then is the price. Fifty bucks if you're lucky. Hundreds of dollars if you're
not. As summer draws to a close, tens of thousands of unaffiliated American Jews begin the yearly hunt for affordable
Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services, which fall this year on Sept. 12-14 and Sept. 21-22.
Tickets for these services are usually free for dues-paying members of a congregation, but can be quite expensive
for non-members, if they are even available. Price is driven by demand -- these are the only two times of the year
that many Jews, synagogue members or not, step inside a shul. And while the extra crowd puts pressure on a synagogue's
resources, it can also be a major source of revenue.
In recent years, however, more and more synagogues have begun opening their doors for free on the High Holidays.
Some look at it as an outreach strategy aimed at introducing non-members to their congregation, in the hopes they
will be so entranced with the community that they will become dues-paying members.
Other congregations view it as a mitzvah, providing worship opportunities for those who cannot afford tickets,
or are away from home. Still others emphasize the communal responsibility aspect, explaining that a synagogue
should be open to any Jew.
"It's a growing trend, dating back at least to the 1994 G.A. and the 50 percent intermarriage rate," says Mayer
Waxman, former director of synagogue services for the Orthodox Union, referring to the General Assembly of the
then-United Jewish Appeal that focused on the results of the 1990 National Jewish Population Survey.
"The keruv," or in-gathering, "mentality has entered the mainstream," he says.
Many people credit Chabad-Lubavitch with spearheading the movement for free holiday services across the
denominational spectrum. Building on its extensive network of more than 2,000 outreach centers, the movement
operates a global search engine, www.chabad.org/HighHolidayServices, which lists free services at its centers around
the world.
The Orthodox Union offers a list of "beginners minyanim" for the High Holidays on its Web site, at
www.ou.org/community_services/minyan. Some are free, while others are low-cost.
None of the liberal streams offer such comprehensive listings, but they are taking other steps and individual
congregations of various stripes are launching initiatives of their own.
Rabbi Jerome Epstein, executive vice president of the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, says there have
always been some Conservative synagogues that offer free holiday services, but it's become "much more in vogue
this past decade, especially the last five years."
He says the movement encourages synagogues to offer free tickets to a non-member for a year or two, but not
forever. They need to ante up and join eventually, and it's up to the synagogues to encourage it.
Some congregations and institutions are going beyond just opening their doors:
* The Young Adults Division of the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia is co-sponsoring "Taste of the
New Year," a first-time outreach event aimed at students and young Jewish professionals. At the Aug. 29 event,
representatives of most local synagogues will hand out sips of kosher wine along with free seats to their High
Holiday services.
* Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld of Ohev Shalom-The National Synagogue in Washington is holding a "Honey Giveaway" on Sept.
11, blowing the shofar and giving away free High Holiday tickets at the corner of Connecticut and K.
* Baltimore Hebrew Congregation is expecting 2,000 to 3,000 people for "Rosh Hashanah Under the Stars," a free
Rosh Hashanah Eve service that its sponsoring on Sept. 12 at Oregon Ridge Park. Things will get rolling at 5 p.m.
with picnicking, family activities and a performance by the Israeli group Seeds of Sun. At sundown, seven shofars will
be blown from the hills, and the service will be conducted from a symphony bandshell.
In general, most congregations will give tickets for free to those in financial need, but the person has to ask
for it, a process many find embarrassing.
Paul Golin, assistant executive director of the Jewish Outreach Institute, says synagogues should be more helpful.
"If you really don't have the room, at least know what other services are going on in your community," he suggests.
"That's very rare."
Most congregations of all denominations let young Jews in for free, or at a highly reduced rate.
The Conservative movement sponsors Project Reconnect, encouraging its member synagogues to offer free seats to
young alumni of Conservative youth programs. In Manhattan, the High Holy Days Committee of the New York Metropolitan
Conference of the Men of Reform Judaism sponsors "Bernie's Services," free services for students, young professionals
and faculty members. Three to four hundred people attended last year.
Fewer synagogues are willing to open their doors for free to adults beyond college age. "It's a trend that makes
more traditionally structured synagogues nervous," says Golin. "In the liberal movements, a lot of their economic
model is built around the number of Jews that only come to synagogue three times a year, so they say, we have to
make those days how we support ourselves financially."
While such thinking is widespread, none of the movements keep track of how member congregations' budgets are
affected by High Holiday ticket sales.
Brenda Barrie, executive director of Beth Shir Sholom in Santa Monica, Calif., says she doesn't "think it's
true" that synagogues need the holidays to stay afloat. Last year her congregation took in $7,500 during the
holidays, but that barely covered renting a hall, paying for security, and providing food and drink.
"The High Holy Days aren't a moneymaker for us, not even close," she says.
Some congregations report that offering free services actually helps fundraising.
Last year, Congregation Sinai, a small Conservative synagogue in San Jose, Calif., offered free services for
the first time. Congregational President Steve Dick reports they took in more money than in any previous year,
as many of those who attended for free made substantial donations afterwards.
"People enjoyed the services, and wanted to contribute," Dick says. "Some even became members. The year before,
when we charged for tickets, people felt that was their donation."
Chabad rabbis say free services help membership grow. "Our experience is, get people involved, get them excited,
it generates more vitality in the Jewish community. And they say, hey! I want to support this," says Rabbi Mendel
Lifshitz, who runs the three-year-old Chabad Jewish Center in Boise, Idaho.
That happened to 60-year-old retail salesman Jan Toas, who moved to the Philadelphia-area two years ago after
many years as a self-described "three-times-a-year Jew," loosely affiliated with his family's Reconstructionist
synagogue.
He went to the free Rosh Hashanah services last year at Congregation B'nai Abraham, a Lubavitch-led
congregation in downtown Philadelphia, liked what he found, and joined up right after the holidays. "It was the
most welcoming, non-judgmental place," he explains.
"Our philosophy is, everyone is welcome," says Rabbi Yochonon Goldman, spiritual leader of B'nai Abraham.
That is, he admits, "an expensive philosophy, " and he "understands the perspective" of congregations that don't
do it."
Even congregations that feel compelled to charge for tickets draw the line at actually turning people away.
Congregation B'nai Israel, a small Conservative congregation in Danbury, Conn., charges for tickets, but doesn't
check for them at the door.
"We've been doing it for years," says Rabbi Nelly Altenburger. "We have a number of 'regulars' who always show
up, and there's always some kvetching."
Recently a board member suggested a "pay as you pray" system, whereby those who only want to come for the
holidays would pay reduced dues. The idea was quickly voted down.
"We go back and forth a lot," Altenburger says. "But at the end of the day, we decided we are not going to
check. That's not how we see ourselves."
That's not how Congregation Beth Simchat Torah, a gay- and lesbian-friendly congregation in New York, sees
itself either. It's had an "Open Door" policy since its founding 15 years ago.
Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum says that for a community that has faced "so many barriers in coming to Judaism" over
the years, offering free High Holiday services "has a deeply religious meaning for us, it's not just a strategic
move."
And Steven Fruh, the one whose family needed to share one ticket when he was growing up, is now a member
of Beth Simchat Torah; these days he "gives significantly" to the congregation to make sure the doors are never
closed.