Temple Society of Concord

[citation needed] Religious services are held every Friday night and Saturday morning, and on Jewish holidays.

Temple Concord is also the setting for a wide array of educational, cultural and social events the serve then entire Syracuse-area community.

By 1841 they had moved to the second floor of a member's home on Mulberry Street, from where they hired their first religious leader (he was not formally trained or ordained as a rabbi).

The group incorporated under the laws of the State of New York on February 24, 1942. and first took the name "Comrades of Peace" and shortly thereafter Keneseth Shalome, which they translated in formal English as Temple Society of Concord.

The Hiram and Mabel Weisberg Religious School, designed by Edward C. Roock, was built on the east side of the complex and dedicated on February 12, 1961.

[9] In July 2019, in light of stagnant membership, a rising deficit, and declining participation,[10] members of the congregation voted to sell the building for $9 million, to be converted into student housing.