
Amanda Beitman, chief advancement officer and director of development at Beth El Congregation, is as Beth El as Beth El gets.
“Beth El was actually my synagogue that I had been attending for services for about six or seven years … and someone told me that there was a position open [at the synagogue], and I was a little unsure, because I was very happy where I was,” she said.
After meeting synagogue leadership and clergy, however, her mind changed.
“Once I did that, I just knew it was where I needed to be,” Beitman said.
At Beth El, Beitman spends most of her time fundraising for the synagogue, as well as shaping the strategies that guide Beth El toward the future, whether that’s creating fundraising campaigns or partnerships with peer organizations. However, as it is with any synagogue employee, she wears many hats.
“I kind of have my hands in everything, just trying to make Beth El the best place that it can be,” Beitman said.
The Stevenson resident added that she doesn’t see herself as both a congregant and an employee, or as one or the other. It’s all one.
“I feel like it’s never in a professional or in a congregant way; I just am who I am. It’s kind of hard to explain, but I feel like I just live and breathe Beth El,” she said. “My son goes to the preschool; my daughter’s in the religious school; it’s where my husband and I spend the holidays. It’s a really important part of our life.”
One of Beitman’s favorite parts of her relationship with Beth El is the Torah cohort in the synagogue’s Soul Center, which is the part of the synagogue that focuses on personal development and community building through Torah study, yoga and team-building exercises.
“We’re the ‘millennial-ish’ Torah cohort. There’s about 20 of us that meet every single week to read, and we go parsha by parsha through the Torah — all the books. We actually just went to Israel together as a group,” Beitman said.
That trip is just one of many ways in which Beth El shows its support for Israel, which Beitman said is another reason she feels so close to the community.
“[The trip] was traveling with women who are deeply connected to their Judaism and are true Zionists. It’s so important for us to show up to Israel right now, because it’s easy to show up when things are good. It’s not easy to show up when things are hard there, and it’s really important for us to go there,” Beitman said.
Israeli-centric programming and fundraisers are also frequent, and Beitman said that the Beth El community is always looking to educate itself and others on the world’s only Jewish state.
For Beitman’s children, Israeli education started at an early age. Her daughter just graduated from preschool after starting as an infant, while her nearly 4-year-old son is currently in the program. She said that, just like her, her children are Beth El lovers.
“It is the most welcoming and friendly environment,” Beitman said. “You just feel good when you’re leaving your kids in the hands of people who truly care about them.”
Beitman’s only time spent outside of the Baltimore Jewish community was as an undergraduate at York College of Pennsylvania, and she said that time spent in a community with few Jews showed her just how important Jewish life in Baltimore really is. While she may have left for a short time before, she doesn’t think she will again.
“I don’t plan on going anywhere,” she said.
