Honoring Beth Am’s Clergy & Leadership

Over the past 50 years, Beth Am has been guided and served by incredible clergy and lay leaders. Learn more about them, and share your stories that highlight their contributions, teachings, and the impact they’ve had on the community.

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"Do not frown on the children. The synagogue was never intended to be a cemetery. You don't want pandemonium, but if they make a little noise, remember-that's our future."

- Dr. Louis Kaplan

The Potts Effect

Beth Am might not exist were it not for Efrem and Debbie Potts.

Efrem said the first service he attended at 2501 Eutaw Place was “in utero” in 1927 when it was Chizuk Amuno Congregation. The synagogue building remained his second home until his death at age 90 in 2017. 

The Potts family was deeply committed to Chizuk Amuno. His father Isaac served as vice-president (1947-1953) and as president (1953-1959), and his mother Leah was the Sisterhood president from 1932-1934. In the 1950s, as Chizuk Amuno began transitioning activities to its new home in Stevenson, Efrem remained an active member of the in-town Chizuk Amuno. He not only was devoted to the maintenance of the 1922 edifice, from the boiler in the basement to the pulley system in the dome that controls the sanctuary lighting, he was deeply committed to maintaining a Jewish house of worship in Baltimore City.

In 1974 when Chizuk Amuno determined it would no longer support the Eutaw Place building, Efrem spearheaded the effort to purchase the synagogue and create a new congregation. Efrem and Debbie’s living room was the site of a meeting of supporters who agreed to participate in the plans for a new shul.

Beth Am began as a family affair. Dr. Louis Kaplan, Debbie’s father, agreed to serve as Rebbe, and her mother Etta suggested the name Beth Am, House of the People. Debbie assumed the role of administrative director, which entailed managing membership, assigning High Holy Day seats, and washing tallit. As Judy Miller, Beth Am president from 1977-1979, wrote in recognition of Debbie’s 18th year of service, “Debbie cleaned, shined, schlepped, organized, cooked, shopped, mailed, phoned, typed, created, dreamt, cajoled, pleaded, cried, and laughed. She drew on her amazing bank of knowledge about the people in the congregation and the way in which they could help Beth Am grow.” 

Efrem was president of Beth Am from 1974-1977 and continued to serve on the Board through 2017. He also kept his eyes on the books, overseeing finances for many years, chanted Torah, sang in the choir, and was Beth Am’s institutional memory. Most importantly, he was dedicated to the congregation and the new life and activity that filled the building that he loved.

At the first general membership meeting on June 8, 1975, Efrem said, “I think it is not unfair to say that observing Beth Am take form and progress to its present state of development is akin to watching a dream unfold into reality. I find it particularly gratifying that the blending of tradition inherent in the half-century old synagogue and the innovation as new and fresh as Beth Am’s existence has struck such a responsive chord in the hearts and minds of so many.”

Beth Am continues to strike a responsive chord in the hearts and minds of its members, and we have Debbie and Efrem to thank for laying the groundwork. A plaque in the Potts-Kaplan Lobby, adjacent to the sanctuary, states our admiration for the family: 

“This building and congregation stand as testament to the wisdom, devotion, and untiring efforts of our dedicated founders, The Potts-Kaplan Family.”

The Founding Rebbe

Dr. Louis Kaplan became Beth Am’s first religious leader. Not a rabbi, he was Beth Am’s rebbe, its teacher – and his influence spread far beyond Eutaw Place. 

Dr. Kaplan was born in Lithuania in 1902 and emigrated to Brooklyn when he was six. He graduated from Columbia University and received his Ph.D. from Dropsie College for Hebrew and Cognate Learning in 1927.  From 1930-1970, He was President of Baltimore Hebrew College and Executive Director of Baltimore’s Board for Jewish Education. From 1970-1975, he was Chair of the University of Maryland Board of Regents, where he had served as a Board member since 1952. He was interim chancellor of University of Maryland from 1976-1977 and was named Executive Vice President of the Joseph Meyerhoff Fund in 1970. His board memberships included Dropsie College, The Annenberg Research Institute, B’nai B’rith Commission on Adult Education, and the National Foundation for Jewish Culture. In addition, in 1946, he was awarded the King Christian X Liberation Medal in appreciation of his leadership in raising funds for the relief of Danish Jews who had escaped to Sweden.  

In 2001, Beth Am produced a publication in memory of Dr. Kaplan. Beth Am member Jack Fruchtman Jr’s essay from that booklet, We Are What We Do, discusses Dr. Kaplan’s and his role at the “do-it-yourself” synagogue he helped to found and guide.

The Urban Rabbi

Daniel Cotzin Burg is the Alexander Grass Rabbinic Chair of Beth Am Synagogue, where he has been senior rabbi since July of 2010. Prior to his position at Beth Am, he served at Anshe Emet Synagogue in Chicago. Ordained by the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University of Judaism in Los Angeles (now American Jewish University), he holds an M.A. in Rabbinic Studies and another in Jewish Education from there and a B.A. in Hebrew Studies and Anthropology from the University of Wisconsin.

His writing has appeared in The Washington Post, The Baltimore Sun,The Chicago Sun-Times, eJewish Philanthropy, The Jewish Review of Books, The Forward, and the Baltimore Jewish Times. He initiated the “Baltimore Justice” column at Jmore, which he has penned since 2016.

He is a contributing author of Keeping Faith in Rabbis: A Community Conversation about Rabbinical Education (Ed. Herring and Roscher) and Celebrating the Jewish Year: The Spring and Summer Holidays (Ed. Steinberg). He writes the monthly “Baltimore Justice” column for Jmore and blogs at www.theUrbanRabbi.org. Rav Daniel is a senior rabbinic fellow of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem and mentors rabbis through the national Clergy Leadership Incubator program (CLI). He previously served on the Maryland Task Force on Reconciliation and Equity.

Rabbi Burg has helped to articulate a congregational mission and vision for Beth Am’s community engagement work and “In, For Of, Inc.” a 501(c)3 organization affiliated with Beth Am. He serves on the boards of the Elijah Cummings Youth Program, the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore, and is a former board member of the Institute for Islamic, Christian and Jewish Studies (ICJS), the IFO, and Jews United for Justice. He has been a vocal supporter in Annapolis and Baltimore of marriage equality, police reform, environmental justice, legislation to curtail gun violence and other important social and societal issues affecting Beth Am’s city and state.

1970s

Rabbi
1974-1980 – Dr. Louis Kaplan

Cantor
1974-1990 – Cantor Harry London

Presidents
1974-1977 – Efrem Potts
1977-1979 – Judith P. Miller
1979-1981 – M. James (Jim) Goodman

1980s

Rabbis
1980-1987 – Rabbi Earl Jordan
1987-1996 – Rabbi Ira Schiffer

Cantor
1974-1990 – Cantor Harry London

Presidents
1981-1982 – Martin B. Greenfeld
1982-1984 – Ivan Stern
1984-1987 – Sara W. Fishman
1987-1989 – Robert S. Hillman
1989-1991 – Solomon Snyder

1990s

Rabbis
1987-1996 – Rabbi Ira Schiffer
1996-2000 – Rabbi Paul Kaplan

Cantors
1974-1990 – Cantor Harry London
1991-1995 – Cantor Beth Weiner
1996-1998 – Cantor Ann Sacks

Presidents
1989-1991 – Solomon Snyder
1991-1993 – Gilbert Sandler
1993-1995 – Herbert Goldman
1995-1997 – Elaine K. Freeman
1997-1999 – Arthur Perschetz
1999-2001 – Lainy Lebow Sachs

2000s

Rabbis
1996-2000 – Rabbi Paul Kaplan
2000-2002 – Rabbi Sheila Russian, Interim
2002-2010 – Rabbi Jon Konheim

Cantor
2000-2020 – Cantor Ira Greenstein

Presidents
1999-2001 – Lainy LeBow-Sachs
2001-2003 – Don Akchin
2003-2005 – Miriam Tillman
2005-2007 – Jim Jacobs
2007-2009 – Bonnie Strauss Stainman
2009-2011 – Julian L. (Jack) Lapides

2010s

Rabbis
2002-2010-  Rabbi Jon Konheim
2010 – Rabbi Daniel Cotzin Burg
2011 – Rabbi Kelly Gludt – Director of Congregational Learning

Cantor
2000-2020 – Cantor Ira Greenstein

Presidents
2009-2011 – Julian L. (Jack) Lapides
2011-2013 – Cy Smith
2013-2015 – Scott Zeger
2015-2017 – Julie Gottlieb
2017-2019 – Lisa Akchin
2019-2021 – Jonathan Fishman

2020s

Rabbis
2010 – Rabbi Daniel Cotzin Burg
2011 – Rabbi Kelly Gludt – Director of Congregational Learning
2021 – Associate Rabbi Tyler Dratch – Shailach Tzibut

Cantors
2000-2020 – Cantor Ira Greenstein
2020 – Abby Woloff – Ba’alat Tefilah

Presidents
2019-2021 – Jonathan Fishman
2021-2023 – Adina Naomi Amith
2023-2025 – Sally Scott