On his path to tradition, Michael Weinstein stumbled on his grandfather’s synagogue in Brooklyn. Then he photographed another 179 across New York.

PHOTO OP As Michael would go to different neighborhoods visiting he’d check out the local shuls as well. “In some of them there was barely a minyan. I’d be the tenth guy” he recalls. While in these shuls he began taking pictures with his cell phone thinking perhaps he was preserving them for posterity. In the process he began wondering if anyone had done a book about New York synagogues. Photos: Amir Levy Michael Weinstein
T he large solid brick shul with the Moorish Revival arches dominates the corner of Avenue T and Homecrest Avenue in Flatbush. “The Friendliest Minyan in Flatbush!” boasts a sign on the wall.
I’ve driven past it dozens of times yet I’ve never set foot inside the place. Today though I’ll go inside Beth El of Flatbush for the first time with Michael J. Weinstein author of the newly published Ten Times Chai: 180 Orthodox Synagogues of New York City (Brown Books 2017). Michael did what most of us New York residents never bother to do: actually step foot inside all those synagogues we pass by car and on foot every day and photograph their interiors.
A financial advisor by trade (a director of investments with Oppenheimer & Co.) Michael meets us in a blue suit and checked tie shoes neatly polished. He has a quiet sincere manner and despite his 54 years projects a very youthful wonder at the brave new world of synagogues — and Judaism — he’s discovered in the past five years. His persona may be low-key but undertaking a project of this magnitude — creating a photographic treasury of shuls in every borough of New York — clearly required no small amount of inner drive.
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