(CAPITAL HILL SEATTLE) – Cherry Street Mosque and Wa Na Wari raising funds
In its current state, the Cherry Street Mosque at 720 25th Ave between Cherry and Columbia streets is in need of significant repairs, mainly to fix the roof and water damage to some of the upper level classrooms. With a fundraiser, collective members of Cherry Street Village are raising funds to raise the roof, ushering in a new era for the building as a center for the faith-based and secular arts groups that form the collective.
The future home of CSV will include Al-taqwa Mosque, Cherry Street Mosque, Dunya Productions, Kadima Jewish Reconstructionist Community, the Salaam Cultural Museum and the Middle East Peace Camp. So far CSV has raised over 42k of their 150k goal needed to repair and restore the building.
The two-story stone and brick building with a terracotta tiled roof was built in 1930, originally as the Seattle Talmud Torah School by Benjamin Marcus Priteca, a noted architect who designed some of Seattle’s earliest sites of grandeur, including the Coliseum Theater, the Paramount Theater, Temple De Hirsch Sinai on E Pike, and many other movie theaters on the west coast.
Working on a pay-as-you-go basis with Olive Construction, CSV was able to start roof repairs in mid-February, installing a composite roof, but is awaiting additional funding to restore the terracotta tiles and repair water-damaged classrooms.
“We have come together under the shared mission of saving this historic building for all of our communities,” said Jonathan Rosenblum of the Kadima.
“We’ve got to put the roof on the right so the building stops leaking. Then we’ve got lots of repair work that needs to be done inside the building.”