Membership

We are a community synagogue serving the diverse Jewish community in Southern Saratoga County and surrounding areas.

If you would like more information, contact the synagogue office at 518-371-0608 (office staff is available Monday through Friday 9:30 AM – 2:30 PM). Our Vice President, Membership, Coleen Silverman will contact you. Alternatively, Rabbi Shara’s office hours are Wednesdays from 11 am – 3 pm or by appointment.

Congregation Beth Shalom is blessed in many ways, now more than ever before in our history. 
 
We are a vibrant and strong congregation, with excellent programs, and strong rabbinic leadership.
 
Numerous offerings beyond our scheduled services and classes enrich our synagogue community:

A wide variety of social, cultural and social action activities are sponsored by our

  • Partnership (includes Sisterhood & Men’s Club),
  • Social Action Committee,
  • Reyut (friends in need), and
  • COEJL (Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life).

Activities vary from year-to-year, but an example this year includes a Shower to benefit the Domestic Violence and Rape Crisis Center of Saratoga County. Partnership Chanukah chocolate dinner, break-the-fast, and hamentaschen baking events are always popular.

If you would like to become a member of Beth Shalom, please complete the fillable application below and mail to or drop off at the Congregation office. Our V.P. of Membership will contact you.

Application for Membership

Clergy Contact Information

Rabbi Shara Siegfeld cbsrabbishara@gmail.com

Executive Board

Co-Presidents Tiffany Paruolo and Linda Russell
VP Administration Bob Silverman
VP Fundraising open
VP Membership Colleen Silverman
Treasurer Miriam Cooperman
Financial Secretary open
Recording Secretary Wendy Pyle
Immediate Past President Linda Gellman

Board of Trustees

2027 Mark Cury (Security)
2027 Wendy Pyle (Recording Secretary and Publicity)
2026 Bob Silverman (VP of Administration and Partnership)
2026 Fern Hayden
2026 Barbara Lazarow (Cemetery)
2026 BJ Rosenfeld (Israel Affairs)

Directions

Cemetery

Beth Shalom Cemetery is on Schermerhorn Street adjacent to Workmen’s Circle Cemetery. It was acquired from the Hebrew Sick and Benevolent Association of Schenectady in 1991 by Congregation Beth Shalom in Clifton Park, N.Y. The gravestones are perpendicular to the ones in Workmen’s Circle and to Mt. Stuart Road, and parallel with Schermerhorn St. It ends with the treeline next to Agudat Achim.

Unfortunately, a major desecration of three Jewish cemeteries, including  Beth Shalom’s, took place when approximately 100 monuments were toppled. This is believed to have occurred during April 2024. The Community Alliance for Jewish Affiliated Cemeteries (CAJAC) is assisting the three congregations to respond to this tragic event. Please consider a donation to our cemetery fund via the “Donate” button above.

Directions to Cemetery

Note that Beth Shalom has received a bronze cemetery plaque that has been placed on the gate leading into our Beth Shalom cemetery.  This plaque is important to our cemetery because there are no other visible signs stating where the Beth Shalom cemetery is located.

Board of Advisors

Partnership (Sisterhood and Men's Club) Sandy Rubin, Annie Friedman, & Bob Silverman, David Clayman
Cemetery Barbara Lazarow, Colleen Silverman
House David Clayman
Israeli Affairs BJ Rosenfeld
Publicity Wendy Pyle
Reyut Carol Davis, Sandy Rybaltowski
Security Mark Cury, David Clayman, Stephen Gellman
Ritual Brenda Sugarman
Adult Prayer Education Group Brenda Sugarman
COEJL Lewis Morrison
Webmaster Steven Hayden
Social Action Rabbi Siegfeld (does not have voting rights)
Listserv Linda Gellman

Our History

The history of a congregation is the history of the people who came together to establish a Jewish identity in Clifton Park. On Yom Kippur in 1973, a group of Jewish families gathered together to break the fast after services in synagogues elsewhere.  We decided to start a congregation in Clifton Park, where we could share prayers as well as a social life. While “next year in Clifton Park” does not have the same ring as “next year in Jerusalem,” this goal inspired twenty families to create Beth Shalom in 1974.

Our spirited need to share the common bond of Judaism included, from time to time, heated debates over procedures, which often ended with the argument of “that’s not how we did it in Brooklyn!” Out of a full range of Jewish perspectives, the families of Beth Shalom created our own model of Jewish life, together. Woman have always been full participants, and leaders, in our synagogue’s life.

Buying the land, and building the synagogue, involved most of the families in the congregation, whether it was legal work or paneling the sanctuary.  While the building is the center for Jewish life in Clifton Park, the congregation is the Jewish life.

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