Shabbat-O-Gram

 

 

December 21 and 28, 2007- Tevet 12 and 19, 5768

Rabbi Joshua Hammerman, Temple Beth El, Stamford, Connecticut

 

Have a safe and happy secular New Year

 

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Contents of the Shabbat O Gram:

(Click to scroll down)

 

Just the Facts    

The (Occasionally) Ranting Rabbi Month-Long Chanukah Offers Second Chances

Mitzvah/Tzedakkah Opportunities

Ask the Rabbi Dealing with Pet Loss

 Spiritual Journey on the Web

    The Beth El Bar/Bat Mitzvah Commentary   Dana Gordon on Vayigash

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

Joke for the Week

 

Quote for the Week

 


““The status quo proves the most illusory of goals”

- David Reisman, sociologist,

“The Lonely Crowd” (1961)

 

 

JUST THE FACTS

 

 

Candle lighting: 4:12 pm on Friday,  December 21, 2007 and 4:16 on 12/28.  For Havdalah 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/.  The United Synagogue has updated its candlelighting information. To learn more, click here.

 

THE FULL SERVICE SCHEDULE NOW APPEARS ON THE SEPARATE TBE ANNOUNCEMENTS E-MAIL

Shabbat Services: 6:30 Friday night in the chapel,

Tot Shabbat – this Friday, Dec. 19, AT 6:45 pm. 

WE THANK OUR TOT SHABBAT HOSTS THIS WEEK, CHERYL BADER GOLDBLUM AND STEPHEN GOLDBLUM, IN HONOR OF EVAN’S BIRTHDAY!

        On Friday evening, Nurit will lead Tot Shabbat services with singing and stories and Evan will lead the Torah procession. We will also have delicious challah, cookies, and juice.

9:30 Shabbat morning (Nurit’s Tot Shabbat Morning at 10:30), both weeks.  This week we wish Mazal Tov to Mel Bloomenthal, who will be celebrating a special Bar Mitzvah Anniversary and chanting the Haftarah.

This Shabbat’s D’var Torah will be given by Rabbinic Pastor David Daniel Klipper

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

TO ENSURE A “GUARANTEED MINYAN” FOR THE DAY OF YOUR YAHRZEIT – GO TO THE ROSNER MINYAN MAKER AT WWW.TBE.ORG AND THEN NOTIFY OUR OFFICE.

WE NEED YOUR SUPPORT, ESPECIALLY DURING VACATION WEEKS, WHEN MANY ARE OUT OF TOWN!!!

Reminder of our “No School No Shul” policy: On days when Stamford public schools are cancelled or delayed, morning minyan is officially cancelled.  During school vacation weeks, please use your own judgment.  If significant snow has fallen during the night, it is unlikely that our lot will have been plowed out by morning.  On Sunday, when our religious school is cancelled because of weather, minyan is also cancelled.   Friday night and Shabbat morning services are never cancelled, but people are asked to use their own good judgment on days when the weather is very bad.

 

Torah Reading For Shabbat Morning

Parashat Vayechi (The story of Joseph concludes)


Genesis 47:28 - 50:26

1: 47:28-31
2: 48:1-3
3: 48:4-9
4: 48:10-13
5: 48:14-16
6: 48:17-19
7: 48:20-22
maf: 48:20-22

Haftarah I Kings 2:1 - 2:12

 

The (occasionally) Ranting Rabbi

My column in this week’s Jewish Week: http://www.thejewishweek.com/viewArticle/c55_a1445/Editorial__Opinion/Opinion.html#

Month-Long Chanukah Offers Second Chances

by Rabbi Joshua Hammerman
Special To The Jewish Week

I love it when Chanukah falls in early December. Long after the last candle has melted and the potato graters have been stashed away, the holiday refuses to disappear. Store clerks still seal the deal with a cheerful “Happy Chanukah,” menorahs still glisten at the mall, and school assemblies still sing “Dreidel.” In a year like this, Chanukah becomes a Jewish version of the holiday in the film “Groundhog Day,” recurring incessantly until, at last, as the calendar turns, the torch is passed to Tu b’Shvat.


Yes, I know that this miraculous, endless Chanukah has more to do with that Other December Holiday than with that fabled jug of inexhaustible oil. So why do I think that’s a good thing? Because, as the holiday extends through weeks three and four, outlasting even that stale latke smell embedded in every nook of the kitchen, it reminds us that Judaism places a premium on second chances. 


A close friend will be returning in a few days from several months of military service in Iraq. Although he missed the official Chanukah with his family the first time around, he’ll be able to do it when he gets home without missing a beat.  And in doing so, he’ll be following in the very footsteps of the Maccabees, who, according to some, created their new eight-day festival because they had been unable to commemorate the week-long holiday of Sukkot in their defiled temple two months earlier.  The idea of a second chance celebration has additional precedence in the Torah, where a second Passover was instituted for those not able to participate fully in the ritual observance the first time around. 


Judaism is filled with mulligans, which, unlike in golf, are perfectly legal. It’s not merely about second chance celebrations; it’s about having second chances at almost everything. The sages differentiated between transgressions committed intentionally and those committed by innocent error. The accidental sinner (“shogeg,”) is often given a halachic do-over, or at least the consequences of his actions are made far less severe, even for the most extreme of crimes.


It has become increasingly important to promote second chances, because our world has become so unforgiving. Ours has become a “gotcha” society, where every miscue is instantly immortalized on TV and in cyberspace.  The political campaign now under way will be the most closely scrutinized ever, where thousands of bloggers, many unfettered by standards of journalistic ethics, will document each candidate’s every sniffle. There will be no margin of error. Think we’ve seen ruthlessness before?  We’re about to enter an era where Swift Boats and Willie Horton will seem quaint.

In our unrelenting world, there is no place to hide, no benefit of the doubt and no room for the “shogeg.” All errors are immortalized digitally and scrutinized incessantly.  Notice that every DVD now includes out-takes, which, in many cases have become as popular as the movie. In life, there no longer is a “take two,” and the words “unedited and uncut” have taken on a sacred aura. We can’t even be forgiven for our bloopers.

As American Jews have wandered farther from their traditional roots, even grandparents now often struggle to remember the Torah blessings and associated rituals. Rarely, now, do people get it right the first time around. We rabbis all have our favorite bar mitzvah bloopers.  Like the time when a befuddled relative was dressing the Torah and was handed the silver breastplate along with the simple instruction, “Put it on.” 

Which is exactly what she did.

My favorite shul blooper, related by a colleague, involves a student reciting the blessing over cookies, the one that usually concludes, borei minei mezonot;” only this child said, borei pri zonot,” thereby thanking God for the fruits of the world’s oldest profession.

Everyone makes mistakes. But at a time when the Jewish future requires that we try to nurture people into feeling comfortable on the bima, our “gotcha” culture feeds into their trepidation. No one wants to be humiliated, especially when the error will be seen live by hundreds of relatives, enshrined forever on the video and then maybe uploaded for millions to view on the Web (A recent search found 1,310 bar mitzvah and 809 bat mitzvah videos posted on YouTube.) “Trial and error” now means that if you make an error, you’ll face the most public of trials — with no second chance.

Judaism values highly the art of constructive correction. Leviticus implores us to rebuke our neighbor. Later authorities went to great lengths to demonstrate how this reproof must be delivered sensitively and privately to avoid humiliation. 

Rabbis should be especially sensitive in this area, because so many see us as being “holier than thou,” even when we try desperately not to be. Rabbis are also prime victims of this “gotcha” culture. The high standards we are trying to set are the very same standards by which we are judged, so our mistakes are amplified. At life cycle events, the stakes are especially high; sometimes there can be no do-overs.

But for Chanukah there can be, so let’s keep on spinning that dreidel from here ‘til the ball drops, if that’s what it takes. Let’s keep the light shining all month — until we get it right.

Joshua Hammerman is spiritual leader of Temple Beth El in Stamford, Conn.

 

 

 

Yitz and Blu Greenberg Peer Across the Denominational Divide

 

Two decades ago, Rabbi Yitz Greenberg first sounded the ominous warning that the Jewish people would soon be irreparably divided on personal status issues.  In other words, because of questions regarding “who is a Jew,” large groups of Jews would not be considered Jews by other large groups of Jews.  Those warnings have proven to be prophetic. 

 

In this advice (Bintel Brief) column from last week’s Forward, Yitz and his wife Blu discuss a question where a newly Orthodox Jew is concerned that his non Orthodox conversion will render him non Jewish in the eyes of his fellow congregants.  So should he come clean and let them know about this should he be counted as the tenth in a minyan. 

 

Sound farfetched?  This is the Jewish world we live now in.   Yitz and Blu call it “one of the great tragedies of Jewish life.”  Check out the Greenbergs’ sensitive response at http://www.forward.com/blogs/bintel-blog/12103/, and let me know if you agree.

 

 

8 Ways to Increase Hope (from Beliefnet)


You see, hope is actually something we create. It's not something that magically appears from an outside source. We each have within us the capacity to generate hope.   Read more... 
·  "Hope is a Choice"    ·  How Optimism is Good for You

 

 

Mitzvah/Tzedakkah Opportunties

 

Beth El Cares:

Inreach and Outreach

 

2007 CHRISTMAS EVE DINNER AT ST. LUKE’S AND PACIFIC HOUSE

 

THANK YOU TO THE FOLLOWING FAMILIES WHO WILL BE HELPING US AT THE SHELTERS THIS COMING WEEK:

 

St. Lukes

 

1-Liz & Eran Vasbein-Liz is "captain"

2-Cathy Bernstein

3-Elissa Stein

4-Suzanne Horn

 

Pacific House

 

1-Wolff-Cheryl is "captain"

2-Suzanne and Lindy Fruithandler

3-Stu & Stacye Nekritz

4-Wendy and Melissa Miles

5-Finkelstein

 

 

This year, Beth El Cares will be continuing a long standing tradition of serving dinner at

St. Luke’s and Pacific House on Christmas Eve.

 

To make these dinners a success we need volunteers to sign up to donate:

 

Cranberry Sauce (cans or homemade)

Mashed Potatoes

Sweet Potato Casseroles

Tossed Salad with Dressing on the Side

Cooked Vegetables

Fresh Fruit

Dessert

Rolls and Butter

Breads (Banana, Cranberry)

Soda, Coffee, Tea, Sugar, Artificial Sweetener and Milk

Paper Goods (plates, silverware, hot and cold cups, and napkins)

 

Thank you to Rosemarie Licari of Court Square Café who has generously agreed to provide most of the turkeys, stuffing and gravy,

 and to Suzanne Horn Stone who is also preparing a turkey.

 

If it’s easier for you, make a Monetary Contribution towards the above items and we’ll do the shopping. 

Make your checks payable to Temple Beth El Cares and note in the memo area “Beth El Cares/Xmas Eve dinner”.

 Please send your checks to the office by Thursday, December 20.

 

PLEASE BRING YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE TEMPLE ON MONDAY, DECEMBER 24 BETWEEN 9 AM AND NOON. 

 

 

Temple Ahavat Achim in Gloucester, MA

 

Temple Ahavat Achim in Gloucester, MA where burned to the ground over the weekend.  There was a fire in an adjacent apartment building that killed one person.  If you would like to help, see the temple website, http://www.taagloucester.org.  Gloucester is a very special place to so many, including my own family.  Our thoughts are with the synagogue.

 

BE PART OF ANOTHER COMMUNITY FIRST AT TEMPLE BETH EL

BETH EL REMEMBERS

L’dor vador … past, present and future

 

Our past has done so much to make us who we are as Temple Beth El

 yet we know so little about TBE’s and individual congregants’ past glories within the Temple and the larger community. How can we better use our past to guide our individual,  congregational and community growth … spiritually and morally, in pride and in membership?

 

Our future will no doubt be very bright, with many of us involved

yet, will our grandchildren and their grandchildren even know what we’ve done … or how to further our work for the benefit of themselves, the congregation in their time and the community?

 

The Temple’s Trustees have authorized a new committee to solve these challenges and exploit new opportunities, and appointed a part president to chair it (Fred Golove) We are currently the only congregation in the community that has formalized a standing committee to REMEMBER, with a mission to help its congregation strategically. .

 

And YOU can be involved … listen, enjoy and/or work!!!

 

BETH EL REMEMBERS (our historical preservation and dissemination committee) has been formed and will hold its kickoff meeting on Wednesday night, January 9, 2008, from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. The meeting will be held in downtown Stamford at the local Jewish Archives, an operation of the Jewish Historical Society of Lower Fairfield County, where we will be joined by the JHS’s Archivist and its world class Historian. The JHS Archives has a large TBE Collection and we will spend some fun time looking through and understanding it. We will then start into our major business of planning the Committee’s work.

 

All interested adults including teenagers who are b’nai mitzvah are invited to this meeting. Space for this first meeting is limited because of the ample but somewhat limited meeting facilities at the Archives. Please call Steve Landers at the Temple (322-6901, ext. 304) to let us know that you want to attend.  Just before the meeting, we’ll provide address and parking information on a first come first served basis (with the exception that those desiring to join this committee will be given priority for attending).

 

 

TBE’s Own Doug Jossem  - “Team in Training”

Friends and Family,

 

In September of 1995 my mother sat me down to discuss a decision that she had to make.  She had been thinking for days of what to say and how to say it.  She looked me in my eyes and said that the doctors have given her a year to live and that she had 2 options: She could live out the year with the inevitable outcome, or she could try an experimental drug that might get rid of the cancer/leukemia--but if the drug didn’t work, she could potentially die within a month.  As she was explaining these options to me, and before I could even speak, she said she wanted to try the experimental treatment so she could have the chance to live and see me grow up.  Unfortunately she passed away one month later and her 5 year struggle ended. We were both too young! 

 

This is a decision that no parent should have to make and that no child/sibling/relative/friend should ever have to face.  Because of this, I’m an active member of Team in Training, a group that works diligently with the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society  to cure blood cancers.  Team in Training also operates in conjunction with other cancer organizations to facilitate research and to coordinate studies. 

 

The group trains individuals like me for endurance events such as marathons, century bike rides and triathlons.  $.75 of every dollar I raise up to $4,600 goes to the Leukemia and Lymphoma society, and the remaining $.25 goes to the organization for training and maintenance.  After the $4,600 is reached 100% of every dollar I raise goes directly toward saving lives. 

 

Since I’m not a doctor, I felt very helpless in fighting this disease, but this organization has given me strength and hope that we can all do something to beat it.  I have now completed 2 triathlons with Team in Training, and we have helped save many lives. 

I know that most of you can’t imagine me as a triathlete, but on April 27th 2008 I will partake in my 3rd triathlon.  This event consists of a 1 mile swim, 26 mile bike ride, and a 6 mile run.  It’s an extremely difficult undertaking, and I train the entire winter for this and for this cause.

I am asking for your help to sponsor me and support the efforts of these organizations.  All donations are 100% tax deductible–even more incentive to submit before the end of the year.  To make a donation (it’s quick and easy), please click this link: www.active.com/donate/tntnyc/tntnycDJossem1   

I wrote this comment a few years ago and I still stand by it today.  It explains exactly why I’m so passionate about this:

My mother never saw me graduate from high school, never saw me on my first day of college, she will never see me get married or see any grandchildren.  I am doing this because I don't want anyone else to miss out on all the joy that life has to offer.  This is a terrible disease, one that I hope I can help end.

I hope I can inspire you all to take action and participate in supporting this cause. Thank you all for your help and support, it means the world to me.

Doug Jossem

 

Doug Jossem

125 East 87th street

Apt 6F

NY, NY 10128

201-686-5707

Bar/Bat Mitzvah Projects:

 

Keep watching for projects to appear in this space….

 

 

 

ASK THE RABBI

 

 

How Do I Deal With the Loss of a Pet?

 

               People often ask me about how to deal with pet loss.  Just this week, a congregant approached me in great distress over the sudden passing of his 13 year old dog, who had appeared in good health one day and was gone the next.  As an animal lover who has dealt with similar situations, I can understand the awkwardness of this situation.  When a pet dies, we feel profound sadness, in many cases equal to the sadness we feel at the passing of a close relative.  Yet religion and society often downplay that loss.  We feel almost an embarrassment because of that.  When children are involved, it becomes doubly complicated, because for them, the loss of a beloved pet is often their first experience of death, yet there is little in our tradition to comfort them.  Saying Kaddish seems misplaced and awkward, and while Judaism reveres all animal life (hence the laws of Kashrut), the sanctity of human life is unparalleled.

 

               While there are no official mourning practices for the loss of a pet, some creative alternatives have sprung up in recent years.  I recommend highly the following two selections, the first from Naomi Levy’s book, “Talking to God,” and the second from CLAL’s collection, “The Book of Jewish Sacred Practices: CLAL’s Guide to Everyday and Holiday Rituals and Blessings.”

 

(Here also is a link to some Pet Loss Grief Counseling Hotlines: http://www.drsfostersmith.com/pic/article.cfm?&acatid=474&aid=1092)

 

               Naomi Levy speaks of the kind of relationship that Martin Buber had with his horse, which led him to his theories of “I-Thou” relationships.  When I pet Crosby (the older poodle) and he looks up at me, there is a connection that feels almost mystical, a bond of trust and ultimate dependence.  And when Chloe (the other standard, the friskier one) wags her little tail furiously every time I mention her name (or such random words as “car,” “toy,” “treat” and “look who’s here,”) she exudes a zest for life that is simply infectious.  Our pets have enriched our lives immensely and for that my family is eternally grateful (which is a good thing, because they can also be a pain in the proverbial neck).  So the least we can do for them is to remember them appropriately and reverently when they die.  These selections will help us all to do just that:

 

1) from “Talking to God”

 

Losing a Pet

 

A dying man once told me he hoped he would be reunited with his dog in heaven.  He said it just wouldn’t be heaven without his dog.

 

Martin Buber, the great religious philosopher, said all relationships fall into one of two categories:  1-it, or 1-Thou.  A 1-it relationship is when we treat others as things, when we value them for their utility.  A 1-Thou relationship is when we truly experience others and embrace them in all their magnificence.   When we achieve this profound contact with another, we get a glimpse of God.  Buber insisted that we have the capacity to greet all of nature as a Thou.  One of Buber’s earliest 1-Thou encounters was with a horse.  When he was a child, Buber would regularly steal away to feed a certain dapple-grey horse.  As he stroked its neck and glorious mane, an overwhelming sense of connection flowed between the boy and the horse.  The horse was no longer a stranger, or an other; it had become a Thou.

 

Many of us have formed deep and powerful bonds with animals who have become true and faithful companions.  Losing a pet is not the same as losing a person, but we do need to take the time to mourn our loss.

 

 

 

A Prayer When a Beloved Pet Dies

 

You were my good friend. We never had a single conversation, but we understood each other.  I till keep thinking you’ll be there waiting for me when I open the door.  The house is empty without you.  I miss you more than others could ever understand.

 

I thank you for being my companion in times of joy, and my comfort in times of pain.  I was fortunate to have you in my life and I know your life with me was a happy one.

 

I will remember you with joy and a smile.  May God bless you.  Amen.

 

Saying Good-Bye to a Beloved Pet

 

When we must say good-bye to a beloved pet, the loss feels so painful.  Although we know that losing a pet is not the same as losing a human being, it is still a real loss, and we need to mourn.  Finding a loving way to say good-bye to a pet is a sensitive way to reaffirm the infinite value of life and of love.

 

 

2) from CLAL

 

 

Meditation

 

You blessed our days with love and companionship.  We will never forget you.

 

Ritual

 

Find an appropriate place to bury the pet – in the yard, in the countryside, or in a place set aside for burying animals.  If the pet is small, find an appropriately sized box and place it inside.  Find a stone or make a marker for the place where your pet will be buried.  As the burial takes place, anyone who wishes can tell stories and share special memories of the pet.

 

If it is not practical for you to bury your pet, you can still set aside a time for telling stories and sharing memories.  You might want to do this at a particular place, inside or out, that your pet loved best.

 

Blessing

 

(After you have told your stories and shared your memories)

 

Blessed are You in whose world nothing is lacking; it is filled with wonderful animals that bring joy and companionship to human beings.

 

Teaching

 

And God made all kinds of animals, wild beasts and animals of every kind, and all kinds of crawling animals that are on the earth.  And God saw that this was good.

 

(Genesis 1:25)

 

But God paid attention to Noah and all the living things, all the animals that were with them in the ark, and God brought a wind across the earth, and the waters abated.

 

(Genesis 8:1)

 

Even the sparrow has found a home, and the swallow a nest for herself in which to set her young near Your altar, O Lord…

 

(Psalms 84:4)

 

 

 

Spiritual Journey on the Web

 

 

What’s On JewTube?

 

http://www.jewtube.com/

 

Check out some of the latest hits on JewTube:

 

Boycott Israel?
It's fashionable among many on the left to boycott Israel, but have any of these "enlightened" people considered how difficult a true boycott of Israel and Jews really is?

 

Jewtopia Infomercial

 

Tribe: the Film
An unauthorized unorthodox history of the Jewish people and the Barbie doll in about 15 minutes.
Enjoy the preview. The film is now available on iTunes!  (We showed it here last year at Selichot)

 

Natalie Portman Speaks of Her Love of Israel

 

The Rabbi
THE RABBI- A new comedy film by Daniel D Moses- "Jonny is a compulsive liar, he has been all his life. But when he exploits the mistaken identity of a Rabbi, will one lie too far be his last?" Written by Sam Holtmon & Daniel D Moses :: Starring Simon Pinkus :: Directed by Daniel D Moses More info at "The Rabbi" Film website at http://www.danielmoses.com/therabbifilm & http://www.myspace.com/therabbifilm

 

Is the Exodus story true?
Rabbi Jonathan Ginsburg

 

"Perfected" - The Ann Coulter Song by Leah Kaufmann

 

OneVoice: One Million Voices to End the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

 

To be Jewish (Israeli TV)

 

Jewish and Arab Comedy Tour

 

 

The Beth El Bar/Bat Mitzvah Commentary

 

Dana Gordon on Vayigash

Those of you who know me know that music is a big part of my life.   Those who don’t know that probably figured that out as I sung my haftarah.  So you can imagine how excited I was when, as I was studying my portion, I came across a character who not only was very musical, but also was one of the most important woman in Jewish history. 

What’s even m