Eastern Illinois Jews Search For Place To Pray

At Eastern Illinois University, where Jews and synagogues are few and far between, it takes an extra effort to stay committed to Judaism. Michelle Simek talks to one student in the Daily Eastern News.

Morgan Prestage cannot practice her religion in Charleston. The reason she can’t worship is simple: there’s no place for her or the rest of the Jewish community.
The only local option is the Jewish Community Center in Mattoon.
Prestage, a junior political science major, prefers to travel to Champaign to worship on weekends because the trip to Mattoon seems inconvenient.
“I lived in Champaign for two years before attending school here,” she said. “All my friends are at U of I so I would rather observe with them.”
[…]
Prestage understands that the lack of Jewish facilities has nothing to do with the community or Eastern but because the Jewish community is very small.
“Few people realize that Jews comprise such a small part of the global population when one looks at the variety of religions in the world,” said Marjorie Hanft-Martone, member of the Jewish Community Center and Psychology professor at Eastern.
The Jewish Community Center, located on Richmond Ave. in Mattoon, will probably never move closer to Charleston, according to Marty Megeff, a local officer at the center.
“We could not afford to re-locate,” he said. “The Jewish community is not large enough.”
Only about 10 Jewish families attend worship regularly in Mattoon and the numbers are dropping.
“This brings challenges financially,” Megeff said. “Because we are so small it brings us together and we have become very close.”

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