Shabbat-O-Gram

 

March 4, 2006 – Adar 4, 5766

 

 

Rabbi Joshua Hammerman, Temple Beth El, Stamford, Connecticut

 

 

Welcome to Scholar-in-Residence Rabbi Joseph Telushkin,

and to all who will be attending Shabbat Across America on Friday!

(We’ll be having a nice crowd of about 150)

 

 

Send your friends and relatives the gift of Jewish awareness -- a Shabbat-O-Gram each week, by signing them up at www.tbe.org.   To be removed from this mailing list, sent e-mail request to office@tbe.org.  If you have signed up and are not receiving our e-mails, check your spam filter to make sure that TBE is not being “spammed out.”

 

 

 

Contents of the Shabbat O Gram: (click to scroll down)

 

Just the Facts (service schedule)

The Rabid Rabbi (including E-mail from the Front)

Mitzvah/Tzedakkah Opportunities

Ask the Rabbi

Spiritual Journey on the Web   

Required Reading and Action Items (links to key articles on Israel and Jewish life)

 Announcements (goings on in and around TBE)

Joke for the Week

 

 

Quotes for the Week

 

"Teach your tongue to say, 'I do not know,'

lest you be led to lie."

 

(Talmud Bavli, Berakhot 4a as translated by Rabbi Joseph Telushkin in Jewish Wisdom)

 

 

 

JUST THE FACTS

 

Friday Evening 

Candle lighting Candle lighting: 5:12pm on Friday, 17 February 2006  Havdalah is at 6:16 on Saturday evening. For candle lighting times, other Jewish calendar information, and to download a Jewish calendar to your PDA, click on http://www.hebcal.com/.  To see the festivals of other faiths as well, go to http://www.interfaithcalendar.org/

 

Kabbalat Shabbat: 6:30 PM – in the sanctuary

 

Shabbat Across America Dinner - 7:15 (by reservation)

 

Rabbi Telushkin will speak during dinner, at approximately 8PM

(Those not signed up for dinner are welcome to join us for the lecture):

 

“The 21st Century: A Jewish Vision, One Day at a Time”

 

Shabbat Morning: 9:30 AM – Scholar in Residence Weekend

 

Rabbi Telushkin will speak on:

“What Jewish Humor Tells Us about the Jews”

with question and answer period during lunch

 

We also will honor the memory of Shirley Fish, long time Associate Principal of our Hebrew School

 

Children’s services: 10:30

Torah Portion:  Terumah - Exodus 25:1 - 27:19

1: 26:1-3
2: 26:4-6
3: 26:7-11
4: 26:12-14
5: 26:15-21
6: 26:22-25
7: 26:26-30
maf: 26:26-30

Haftarah – I Kings 5:26 - 6:13

See a weekly commentary from the UJC Rabbinic Cabinet, at www.ujc.org/mekorchaim.  Read the Masorti commentary at http://www.masorti.org/mason/torah/index.asp.  University of Judaism,  JTS commentary is at: http://learn.jtsa.edu/topics/parashah/. USCJ Torah Sparks can be found at http://uscj.org/item20_467.html. UAHC Shabbat Table Talk discussions are at http://uahc.org/torah/exodus.shtml. Other divrei Torah via the Torahnet home page: http://uahcweb.org/torahnet/. Test your Parasha I.Q.: http://www.ou.org/jewishiq/parsha/default.htm. CLAL’s Torah commentary archive: http://click.topica.com/maaaiRtaaRvQhbV2AtLb/.  World Zionist Organization Education page, including Nehama Liebowitz archives of parsha commentaries: http://www.moreshet.net/web/index.asp?f=1 For a more Kabbalistic/Zionist/Orthodox perspective from Rav Kook, first Chief Rabbi of Israel, go to http://www.geocities.com/m_yericho/ravkook/index.html. For some probing questions and meditations on key verses of the portion, with a liberal kabbalistic bent, go to http://www.jewishealing.com/learning.html or, for Kabbalistic commentaries from the Zohar itself, go to http://www.kabbalah.com/k/index.php/p=zohar/weekly/intro. To see the weekly commentary from Hillel, geared to college students and others, go to  http://www.hillel.org/hillel/NewHille.nsf/FCB8259CA861AE57852567D30043BA26/DF7D129F15B3DF0885256AB80058E9C3?OpenDocument. For a Jewish Renewal and feminist approach go to http://rabbishefagold.hypermart.net/Torah1.html .  For a comprehensive Orthodox viewpoint from the Israeli rabbi, Yaakov Fogelman, go to the Torah Outreach Program at http://israelvisit.co.il/top/previous.shtml.  Guided meditations for each portion by Judith Abrams at http://www.maqom.com/kavannah.pdf For online Parsha quizzes from Pardes in Israel, go to  http://www.pardes.org.il/online_learning/parsha_quizzes/ Torah for Kids: http://www.torah4kids.net/  Weekly Lesson of Popular Israeli Rabbi Mordechai Elon: http://www.elon.org/archives/archives.htm - and his parsha sheets: http://www.mibereshit.org/special/download_eng_pdf.htm   From Bar Ilan University: http://www.biu.ac.il/JH/Parasha/eng/; http://www.torahproductions.com/weekly_article.jsp

MinchaMa’ariv – Havdalah: 5:00 PM – Mazal Tov to Sarah Liffmann, who will become Bat Mitzvah this Shabbat afternoon.

 

 

THE ENTIRE HEBREW BIBLE (AS WELL AS OTHER JEWISH SOURCES) CAN BE FOUND WITH SIDE-BY-SIDE TRANSLATION AT

http://www.mechon-mamre.org/

Morning Minyan: Weekdays at 7:30, Sundays at 9:30 AM

TO ENSURE A “GUARANTEED MINYAN” FOR THE DAY OF YOUR YAHRZEIT – GO TO THE ROSNER MINYAN MAKER AT WWW.TBE.ORG AND ALSO CONTACT ME AT RABBI@TBE.ORG.

 

LOWELL EITELBERG:  TBE’s Minyan Man

At his Bar Mitzvah two weeks ago, Lowell Eitelberg announced that, as part of his Mitzvah Project, he would be aiming to increase awareness and attendance at our morning minyan.  Lowell will be communicating his ideas with the congregation, as he did with the Ritual Committee this past week.  Here is an excerpt from Lowell’s Bar Mitzvah d’var Torah:

“The more I’ve come, the more I’ve come to appreciate everything about being here.  I enjoy the half hour ride from Bridgeport every day with my dad.  I enjoy being able to daven at my own synagogue.  I enjoy being given parts like ark openings.  I even enjoy some of Frank’s jokes.  But most of all I enjoy the fact that I now count as one of the ten needed for a minyan.  There already have been many days when I’ve been counted as the tenth person, which has enabled a mourner to say the Kaddish.  I can remember one morning a few weeks ago when I had to study for a grammar test, but I saw that we needed one more person – so I ran to the car to get my tefillin, said the blessings and joined in the minyan.  It feels great to count equally with any adult there, even though in some ways I’m still a kid.  It makes me feel like I’m making a real difference.”

 

Winter Weather Advisory

Note that in the case of bad weather, weekday minyan does not take place when Stamford public schools are cancelled OR delayed.  On Sunday, minyan is cancelled if our Religious School sessions are cancelled. Friday evening and Shabbat morning’s main service is never officially cancelled, but do use your best judgment in deciding whether to come.  We will endeavor to get proper notification to WSTC radio regarding cancellations, but that may not always be possible for children’s services held on Shabbat.

 

 

The Rabid Rabbi

 

 

 

 (The Jewish Week 2/17/06)

 

The Zigzag Life

By Joshua Hammerman

 

            A couple of years ago, when visiting Jerusalem during the height of the Terror War, I had the pleasure of witnessing a series of skits presented by a popular Israeli theatrical troupe named Nalaga’at (“Please Touch”), consisting primarily of actors who are both deaf and blind.  The touching production is entitled, “Light is heard in Zigzag.”  At a time when Israelis reasonably feared that every bus ride, every cup of coffee, could be their last, when each mundane act contained tremors of impending apocalypse, they were inspired by the heroic daily activities of people for whom the simplest affirmations of life had become the ultimate triumph. 

 

            Adina Gal, one of the co-directors of Nalaga’at, said that when she began working with the group many of the actors had been contemplating suicide, but now they understood the contribution they could make to society.  That in turn has changed her.  "I always believed that there is no limit to the human spirit,” she said, “and, yes, today I know it, and this one of the biggest gifts I got in life." 

 

            For the dozen disabled actors of Nalaga’at, simple survival becomes an act of transcendence, and through their performance we begin to perceive sight and hearing in a different way, not as straightforward products of the eye, ear and brain, but as indirect perceptions, as resonant metaphors.  We “hear” light in zigzag, just as the trembling Israelites “saw” the thunder at Sinai when receiving the Ten Commandments in Exodus 20:15.  Each moment of life vibrates with significance and sometimes the most powerful path to truth is the one that is least direct.   Just as light and sound reach us obliquely, in waves, rather than in a straight line, so is life truly lived in zigzag. 

 

Scientists and philosophers have long discussed the implications of linear versus cyclical time.  Judaism presents us with a perfect balance of both.  When I pick up the Kiddush cup on Friday night at 6:01 and finish the prayer at 6:03, I’ve moved forward two minutes in linear time. I’m two minutes farther removed from Creation – and that much closer to my death.  But simultaneously I’ve tapped into distant memories of other Kiddushes on other Shabbats: I see my late father’s smile as I chime in with the final verse, I see my great grandparents, whom I never met, singing the prayer with their grandson, my father, at their side; I see Moses at Sinai reading off the fourth commandment, and I see God at Creation’s twilight, replenishing the Soul of the Universe.  While I’ve undoubtedly moved forward by those two minutes, I’ve also tapped into a timeless cycle of an ever-present Shabbat.

 

            Exodus 12 is one of my favorite examples of life in zigzag.  Just as the Israelites are about to escape centuries of slavery with a dab of lamb’s blood on the door, we pause for a message from our sponsor.  Moses gives the Israelites detailed instructions as to how Passover is to be celebrated generations into the future, right down to the matzah, the bitter herbs and the search for leaven.  These slaves haven’t yet dipped their toes in the Red Sea and already they’re being given the school vacation calendar for 5766.

 

            But that’s exactly the point.  The first thing free people need is a calendar.  They need to control time.  And for Jews, a life of freedom is one where time’s tyranny is vanquished.  We “pass over” the angel of death by conjuring an eternal present that lies beyond the destroyer’s grasp.

 

            The zigzag path is normally associated with someone who is either drunk, learning how to ride a bicycle, skiing or fleeing a hail of bullets.  Only the crow gets to fly directly to North Dakota; we have to zigzag by way of O’Hare.  But how many of us would choose if given the option for non-stop, to take the least direct route – the path of the zigzag, the drunkard’s way?

 

            Natan Sharansky did.  When the former refusnik finally won his freedom after spending years in prison camps and a lifetime in Soviet captivity, his first supreme gesture as a free man was to walk in a zigzag across the bridge, to the other side where his liberators awaited.  One would think that he would have run across, given his intense thirst for freedom and desire for reunification with his wife Avital.  Yet when a Soviet officer ordered him to go straight over the bridge and make no turns, Sharansky said, “Since when have I started making agreements with the KGB?  If you tell me to go straight, I’ll go crooked!”

 

            Sharansky knew that life is lived in zigzag.  History moves relentlessly forward, but to be fully human and fully free means to have the cherished ability to transcend time’s arrow and decelerate its monotonous, torrid pace. 

 

            A while back, a congregant in the hospital, recovering from a painful ski injury, recalled the 1998 film “Sliding Doors,” in which the protagonist’s future hinges on whether she makes it onto a departing train.  The film gives us two versions, one in which she makes it and the other where the doors slide shut. 

 

My congregant related the film to her own experiences, wondering what the past two hellish weeks would have been like had she veered left instead of right.  She probably would have lived out those days in meaningless daily drudgery, not appreciating her good fortune, she surmised.  When she heals from the injury, I suggested, she may find that her life has actually been enriched because she zigged when she should have zagged.

 

But such is the way of Judaism’s giant slalom. Replace the first “l” with an “h” and slalom becomes shalom.  Through the zigs and zags of our wavy descent, our hellos become indistinguishable from our goodbyes and our descent lands us back on top of the mountain – ready to begin anew.

 

 

Report from Israel

 

Sue and Alison Greenwald just returned from a trip to Israel. 

Here are excerpts from their correspondences.

 

sunday-afternoon-i am thinking of you all.

asher, please forward to your folks.joyce, please share with mom and the boys. my note is a bit disjointed-memories are flooding my mind-so, please disregard the grammar, but i want to share some things with you...

 

Alison and I have had a glorious week in Israel which we will hold in our hearts for the rest of our lives.….We got to experience a rest stop with mcdonalds and merchants making pita...worlds colliding! Tzfat was a lovely, magical place. i guess i share the hotel story because that woman is what i will remember about israelis-every one has been kind to us.

 

today i am happy to say that ali is mostly back to her old sweet self. we ended up deciding that the best thing to do is stay in Netanya. for one thing, we are experiencing a sand storm!  Layers of dust on the cars...

but early this morning, i took a long walk along the Mediterranean, picked up shells and unusual rocks which I’ve added to Jan’s collection on the window sill overlooking the sea. then we went to see a stone business that jan's neighbors own. we had been with them for Shabbat dinner. it was amazing to see all of the beautiful jerusalem stone and marble from all over the world. then we ventured into a  small local grocery. now, i know there are many famous museums and sites to see, but ali and i had a wonderful time winding our wagon through the market and picking out some silly things to bring home...the stainless sponges-silver and gold for meat and dairy...shabbat candle foils...later we will go for dinner in the center of town.tomorrow we will venture forth one more time to the shuk (outdoor market--WE NEED ONE AT HOME!!!).  We met lovely friends of Jan’s at the store-the most fun is to meet the people...

 

I am hoping ali will stay well now.  We agree that she will finish her homework (she's doing Spanish now) and try her best to make it to school after we return home, G-d willing, Tuesday morning.

 

i am looking forward to sharing our wonderful photographs. we have memories of meeting my relatives for the first time, taking the tunnel tour under the Wall. at the place closest to the "foundation stone," the closest place to the kodesh ha kodashim, the holy of holies,i said a prayer for all of you there-ali held me as she saw that i was so moved. (M-I said a prayer for your friend, especially). more memories-  having dinner with amy's sister, neice and nephew near ben yahuda street, walking on the streets of old and new jerusalem with sally wasserman (my jcc buddy), lighting the yahrtzeit candle for my mother looking out onto the mediterranean sea from jan's window, seeing ali's camp counselor, Chen, playing in a club, going to the border near Tulkarm, and the wall separating the west bank. ali and i had dinner in the center of ben yahuda st in jerusalem. we gave tzedukah to those who came up to us and asked, then finally a woman came and gave us both shabbat candles-i went to give her money and she said, "no-this is for you-for Shabbat- for free"-ali saw friends of hers from camp at LIFELINE, a wonderful workshop/day program for the elderly-we bought many lovely things they produce at this site. On of our fondest memories was spending a morning at the nutrition project for ethiopian women, supported by jan and barbara's fund.  THE FORGOTTEN PEOPLE'S FUND -please, if you want a place to make a donation in israel, this one is awesome.  jan, ali and i watched the class-picture a horseshoe arrangement of tables. 18 Ethiopian Israeli women, some with babies in arms, listening as the teachers show them how to prepare eggs, falafel, cabbage salad. the children played with ali and me. and yes, i did hold a lovely baby boy for a long time.  of course i could not speak with the mother because of the language barrier, but we understood each other nonetheless.  i helped to pass out the dishes and food for the mothers to try. then the teachers distributed toothbrushes and toothpaste. then we met with the social worker who described other programs going on at the center. i had the pleasure, that evening, of presenting checks from Ali and other people at home who had given me donations, to the Board of the Forgotten People's Fund. Yad Vashem, (the holocaust museum) touched ali and i deeply. we walked through arm in arm. people were silent as they walked through the exhibition. we looked for a photograph of the Salpeter family in the hall of names as my mother-in-law had asked me to do. we did not see them, but we did see them in the computer registry.

and yes, we did do our bit to help the israeli economy. i came ready to spend, on important things of course-- a new menorah, gifts--and not so important-spices, sponges, ahava moisturizer, potholders for my mother-in-law! it was a pleasure.

 

of course, throughout our stay we are reminded of the ongoing unrest-soldiers, checkpoints, bag checks, panels devoid of glass at the netanya mall from the bombings. we are just doors away from the park hotel where the Passover massacre occured. landmarks recognized because suicide killings took place there. they are always there to see and remember. but here i see people trying to live normal, productive lives-to study, to raise their children, to grow old, to prosper. to make a difference in eretz yisroel.

 

we will never be able to thank jan enough for having us here. love to you all. l'hitraot.

sue

 

 

         

COMING THIS FALL!!

 

 

 

The last Shabbat-o-Gram included a moving story about a math teacher whose students wrote down all the positive qualities they saw in other students.  This story has an interesting story behind it – unlike so many other Internet inspirational forwards, this one is true.  Read about it at http://www.snopes.com/glurge/allgood.asp

 

 

 

 

 

Mitzvah/Tzedakkah Projects

 

 

 

New Orleans-February, 2006 - 5 ½ Months Post Katrina

 

(TBE MEMBER ROSALINE FEINSTEIN RECENTLY RETURNED FROM THE KATRINA-RAVAGED SOUTH.  HERE IS HER REPORT.  A BETH EL CARES SHABBAT IS BEING PLANNED FOR THE NEAR FUTURE TO FURTHER UPDATE THE CONGREGATION.  IN ADDITON, THE SISTERHOOD HAS MADE A SUBSTANTIAL DONATION OF FUNDS RAISED FOR KATRINA VICTIMS, WHICH HAS BEEN FORWARD TO ROZ, WHO WILL PRESENT IT TO THOSE IN NEED)

 

I returned from a two week volunteer stint, in New Orleans the evening of February 8.  The past weeks have been spent in decompressing and putting my thoughts in order to share this searing experience with you

 

I have been asked why I went.  My before and after answer is the same.  When I saw the television feed of the mess at the Convention Center and the sight of desperate people waving at helicopters from bridges or from rooftops with water lapping at the edges begging to be rescued, much of a grand city under water I knew immediately that everyone there was going to need a lot of help for a long time.   I was compelled to go and, I now add, that I was glad I did. 

 

It was a very intense time.  My assignment as a mental health professional took me into the field everyday seeing the very worst of the devastation and the very best of people determined to survive and rebuild their lives and communities.   In a chase car I followed the Red Cross vehicle, called an ERV (emergency recovery vehicle), that brought hot food (prepared by rotating volunteers from the Southern Baptist Convention for the past 6 months) water, snacks and blankets to people living in these still destroyed areas trying to reclaim their homes. Over 10,000 meals were distributed daily.  My task was to speak to everyone and anyone in line for food gauging their emotional status. . All of the people I met were somewhere in the process of reclaiming their homes. Gutting a house in the aftermath of Katrina is a mean, hazardous and emotionally draining task.   This is true whatever your station in life. 

 

I met men in their 60’s and  70’s who were  fixing up their mammas houses’; women of the same age  fixing up their own houses; a woman and her daughter grateful to be moving into their long awaited little FEMA trailer; a man with tears running down  his checks recounting his still fresh, harrowing and  to him, inexplicable, escape from the flood waters(as he put it  God “carried” him to safety.); a 70 year old helping to rebuild his church who could not yet face tackling his own home having  lost his wife of many years in June just before Katrina struck; men and women gutting their large brick houses carefully noting which of their neighbors were returning and with sadness those who were  not.  Fatigue was everywhere but resolve everywhere as well.

 

Faith for most people I met is an extremely sustaining element and references to that faith are a natural part of their conversation.  Unfailingly polite, people were always thanking me for just being there. Determined to rebuild people are nonetheless burdened by the feeling they have been abandoned by the rest of the country and that we, out there, are little aware of how slow the recovery is and how far everyone still has to travel.   Concern that the levees will not be sufficiently repaired by the upcoming hurricane season is a constant worry. Absent its infrastructure, strong leadership, much of it population, its tax base and traditional income streams the recovery of New Orleans, and its surrounds, the Parishes (counties) that abut the city on its hard hit eastern end and to the Southeast is being led by the courage and determination of individuals and small businesses that struggle to remain open or reopen.

 

Yes, the downtown area of New Orleans, including the French Quarter is intact but many hotels and restaurants have yet to re-open as well as many businesses. In that prime tourist area traffic lights work and streets are free of debris.  Not so just a few miles away.  The Garden District, a prime residential area, home of Tulane University and Loyola, is eerily normal, a virtual refuge from the destruction everywhere else.  Two large Reform Congregations are also located in the Garden District and I was able to attend a Shabbat morning service at one of them.  Though their Temple is intact 30-40% of the congregants are yet to return to their homes according to the Rabbi.

 

Meeting people in the midst of unbelievable devastation that goes on for blocks and blocks and miles and miles: houses blocking roads, streets almost impassible by mounds of toxic debris, houses with a car or boat wedged underneath ; houses smashed, sagging in the middle with a car clinging to it - its front wheels on the roof, the rear wheels on the ground; a house dumped into a canal; trailers parked next to the vacant foundation of a house that is nowhere to be found; neighborhoods like ghost towns: you can’t help but wonder where on earth you are ! Surely not this country!    Yes, 5 months after Katrina-normal is still a long way off.

 

In the course of my daily activities I met a man who owned a small business located in a hard hit commercial/residential part of New Orleans that had been flooded courtesy of Katrina.  He is in the process of rebuilding and refurbishing his business place and, at the same time, doing as much business as he can.

 

Responsible, hard-working and compassionate his priorities are to meet his responsibilities to his family (married with 5 children) and his 8 employees (four of whom were totally flooded out).  Each employee is paid for a full weeks work regardless of time they have to take off to reclaim their homes. He has shortened the work day to accommodate the reality of the fatigue of his employees who spend nights working on their own homes even though that impacts the business he can do on any given day. He sees himself as committed to his employees and they to him.  No doubt only one example of many similar brave and committed acts by countless others.

 

And while that is to be admired it is important to also note that potable water, electricity, an operating supermarket or gas station, the uninhabitable Ninth Ward, insufficient medical care are issues that have to be dealt with each and every day – by those who were in Katrina’s path.  I see Katrina as a national tragedy and a national responsibility and urge everyone to take whatever opportunity is presented to assist those most affected to recover.

 

Rosaline Feinstein

 

 

Rally for Darfur - Washington, D.C. - April 30, 2006

 

Since April 2004, American Jewish World Service has been actively responding to the crisis in Darfur. Our focus has expanded from an initial emphasis on providing humanitarian relief, to include education and advocacy to stop the genocide. This is unique for AJWS, as our core mission is to help alleviate poverty, hunger and disease around the world.

Yet it was clear from the magnitude of the genocide that we needed to launch a campaign to educate our friends and neighbors to advocate for the people of Darfur. You and I, President Bush, Kofi Annan and every person with a moral conscience must act swiftly and decisively to end this outrage.

AJWS, in conjunction with the Save Darfur Coalition, is mobilizing a grassroots demand for concrete action on the part of our elected leaders to stop the genocide. Here's how you can help:

Sign the Million Voices for Darfur Postcard: Make your voice heard. Join the national campaign to send one million postcards to President Bush, urging him to support a stronger multinational force to protect the civilians of Darfur.

Save Darfur: Rally to Stop Genocide: Pledge to be there. Join AJWS at the rally to stop genocide in Washington, D.C. on April 30, 2006

 

 

Beth El Job Bank: The Highest Level of Tzedakkah

 

Thanks to Dan Zimmerman for this suggestion for those looking for employment opportunities:

AIG (American International Group), as one of the largest insurance companies, has many opportunities for many skill areas.  I suggest the aig web site (www.aig.com).

Also, here is a link for the job search page on the aig web site:

http://careers.peopleclick.com/client_aig/bu1/external_pages/jobsearch.asp

 

 
Beth El Cares
Cathy Satz (968-9191; csscounsel@yahoo.com)
Cheryl Wolff (968-6361; cwolff@optonline.net)
BETH EL CARES co-chairs
 
 
Blood Drive
Give the Gift of Life! Get involved in a short term mitzvah project that will save lives.  Who benefits from these blood donations? People who are born prematurely, people with auto-immune and other blood disorders, people involved in accidents… Many people, including temple members, have received blood transfusions in the past and some people need regular blood transfusions.  
 
On Sunday, April 30th between 8:30 am and 1:30 pm we need 125 healthy adults who are at least 17 years old, weigh at least 110 pounds and have not given blood since the beginning of March.  The Red Cross will provide the “beds”; we need to put “arms in the beds”.  Color War points will be awarded to your child’s color war team!
 
Contact Cheryl Wolff to schedule your donation time or to volunteer to help.  

 

Lock of Love

As promised, Beth El Cares will be hosting another group donation for children and teens to cut their hair for “Locks of Love”.  If your hair is 10” or longer (in a ponytail), mark Sunday May 7 on your calendar. Guy Sasson & Company will be coming to Temple Beth El to start haircuts at 12:00 noon (right after Religious School). Advance sign-up is required.  Mother and daughter teams will be accepted! Rebecca and Cathy Satz are hopeful they’ll both have their 10” by then-they’re close!

 

Contact Cathy Satz to schedule your appointment.

 

Beth El Cares Shabbat

We hope you can join us at Shabbat morning services on Saturday April 15, when we will be hosting a panel discussion regarding Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath.  We will feature at least two panelists, Gabi Birkner, staff writer for the Jewish Week who has been to the south several times since Hurricane Katrina and has written some moving reports and Rosaline Feinstein, congregant, who has also written a moving report detailing her recent visit to the south. The panel may also include some students who recently spent a few days performing mitzvah projects in New Orleans with the JCC.

 

SAVE THE DATE, SAVE DARFUR.

Rally to Stop Genocide

Sunday, April 30th

2:00 - 4:00

(Group will gather beginning at 1:00)

The Mall Washington, DC

 

Carl Weinberg is working with Beth El Cares to organize a group from Stamford to attend this rally.  For more information about the rally and other Darfur initiatives, contact Carl at 539-5560 (day), 322-8675 (evenings) or carl.r.weinberg@us.pwc.com.

 

 

 

Spiritual Journey on the Web

 

Purim…

 

Purim is one of the most joyous and fun holidays on the Jewish calendar. It commemorates a time when the Jewish people living in Persia were saved from extermination. [more from Judaism 101...]

 

Also see the wealth of material at http://www.myjewishlearning.com/index.htm and take the Purim  Quiz at http://www.myjewishlearning.com/holidays/Purim/Purim_Quiz.html

 

A Purim Multi-Media presentation: http://www.aish.com/a/purim.asp

 

And what’s Purim without a little humor??? ….

 

Check out http://www.jr.co.il/humor/purim.htm and take a look at Halachah Mi-Disney, which answer’s the pressing question, “Can mice serve as prayer leaders?”

 

 

Anti-Semitism, Renewal, and Purim

FROM THE CONSERVATIVE YESHIVA IN JERUSALEM

 

United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism

 

Joshua Kulp

 

For more information on the Yeshiva , or to make a donation, please send to P.O.Box 7456,  Jerusalem,  94265 , Israel.

Tel: 972-2-622-3116; E-mail: yeshcon@netvision