Three decades of dedication
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Michele Marr
Ask any member of Temple Bat Yahm where the 30-year-old Newport Beach
synagogue would be today if it weren’t for Bernie and Joan Rome, two
of its founding members, and they’re likely to tell you they just
can’t picture it.
“It’s difficult to imagine how Temple Bat Yahm would have reached
and exceeded its goals so well without them,” said Martin Brower, an
early member of the congregation who has known the Romes for almost
30 years.
The temple began in 1973 with the vision of eight founding
couples, among them Bernie and Joan Rome, who were determined to
build a Reform Jewish congregation in Orange County that would have a
building of its own, an outstanding religious school, an
inspirational pulpit leader and no restriction on the size of its
membership.
Tonight, to recognize the Rome’s three decades of leadership,
labor and support that have helped make these very ambitious goals
attainable, Rabbi Mark S. Miller will present the couple with Temple
Bat Yahm’s Spirit of Life Award.
“It’s one thing to talk. It’s another to do,” Brower said. “Bernie
and Joan do.”
Bernie Rome began working for the fledgling synagogue as its
treasurer during its first year. By the end of that year, the rapidly
growing congregation had a full-time rabbi and 55 member families,
but they were meeting in whichever rented facilities would
accommodate them.
In 1975, Bernie Rome became the synagogue’s second president and
the congregation, with a membership of 120 families, began to look in
earnest for a permanent home. They found 4.5 acres, originally
earmarked for the John Wayne Tennis Club, on Camelback Street in
Newport Beach.
“We worked with The Irvine Company to pick up that land,” Bernie
Rome said. “Then there was a long struggle to change the use of the
land to religious purposes.”
And there was also the matter of a building. The congregation
discovered that Great Western Savings was moving out of a
prefabricated building in Newport Center, and Bernie Rome worked with
the bank to acquire the 2,200 square-foot building for Temple Bat
Yahm.
The building was moved to Camelback Street among a procession of
congregants on Aug. 11, 1976, at 2:08 a.m. The building was small,
but it was a building. Every square foot was put to use. Even the
drive-up teller window was fully enclosed to create an office for the
rabbi.
Since that time, Bernie Rome has served as the chairman of the
synagogue’s building committee and chairman of its building fund. The
congregation built a 31,000 square-foot facility and later a nearly
30,000 square-foot expansion for its more than 650 family and single
members.
Bernie and Joan Rome have served on many of congregation’s boards
and committees. Bernie Rome has served on the board of Heritage
Pointe, a retirement living development, and on the board and on the
land search committee for the Orange County’s Jewish Home for the
Aging.
“Joan and I feel there isn’t any task that’s either too large or
two small that we couldn’t accept responsibility for over the years,”
Bernie Rome said.
In 1994, Joan Rome received the Temple Bat Yahm Sisterhood’s Woman
of the Year Award for temple services, services that have included
volunteering in the temple’s Sisterhood gift shop, helping to prepare
for bar mitzvah and bat mitzvah receptions, preparing mailings,
helping compile the annual Yom Kippur remembrance book and singing in
the choir.
“Both Joan and Bernie have been leaders of this congregation and
servants of the Jewish people,” Miller said. “They have done so much
work behind the scenes, so many hours when few people would see them
at work, early in the morning before anyone was here and late at
night, out of a real selfless love for this temple.”
The Romes, for their part, credit the temple’s founding families,
its members, its boards, its clergy and its staff, including Miller
and Rabbi Rayna Gevurtz and Cantor Jonathan Grant. They praise their
vision, their abilities and their willingness to shoulder enormous
responsibilities.
“When I see what has been created, this entire campus, I think it
is almost a miracle,” Joan Rome said. “It’s going to be wonderful for
those who are going to follow us, and I hope they will do the same
for others. As we say in our Jewish religion, ‘L’dor v’dor,’ which
means ‘from generation to generation.’ That is what is so rewarding.
Not just the brick and mortar, but what it’s used for.”
“Joan is absolutely right,” Bernie Rome said.
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