| PERFORM YOUR FIRST MITZVAH OF THE NEW YEAR
Ramapo Readers is collecting gently used or new books for distribution to elementary and high school students in Paterson.
Please consider bringing such a book to drop off at the GRJC
when you join us for High Holiday services and programs. |
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LULAV AND ETROG ORDERS FOR SUKKOT
PLEASE SEND OR DROP OFF YOUR CHECK ($36 A SET) ALONG WITH YOUR NAME, PHONE NUMBER AND EMAIL ADDRESS, TO THE GRJC, ATT: RABBI TOW
SUKKAH DINNER 10/2, 6:00 pm
Next Friday evening we will have our annual dinner in the Sukkah. Join us in the GRJC Sukkah as we welcome Sukkot! Menu: Brisket or chicken, vegetarian dinner upon request.
Please see the full page ad in the September bulletin for sign-up form.
See you in the Sukkah! :-)
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JOB SEARCH NETWORK
Announces: 8 Week Workshop Series and Support Group (Free of Charge)
Everything you need to know about successful employment strategies.
Tuesdays 10-11:30am Jewish Family Service of Bergen and North Hudson 1485 Teaneck Rd. Teaneck, NJ.
Starting Date:
OCTOBER 6, 2009
To Register: Call and ask for Information & Referral 201-837-9090 or email
IRA@jfsbergen.org
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GRJC JEWISH SKILLS LEARNING VIDEOS NOW at www.grjc.org
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At www.grjc.org, click on the link for the "videos of ritual practices". Learn how to take an aliyah and more! Thank you to Walter Goldman for shooting and editing the videos.
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ENTERTAINMENT 2010 BOOKS HAVE ARRIVED! SAVE UP TO 50% ON EVERYDAY PURCHASES
At only $30, the Entertainment Books are a huge value. To order or to see a sample book, please call Robin Frizzell: 201-445-1796 or email: robindale59@verizon.net
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HIGH HOLIDAY VOLUNTEERS NEEDED -- HALL MONITORS DURING YOUTH SERVICES
The High Holidays are approaching and we need adult help during the youth services and program time on Yom Kippur morning
We'll have two one hour shifts , 10-11am and 11-12. If you can help us by volunteering for a half hour or hour shift, please contact the office at office@grjc.org.
Thank you!
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Strike up a Friendship and Join our Team!

The Temples Team
(TBS, Fairlawn and GRJC)
ˇMeets at Brunswick Lanes in Fair Lawn
ˇStarts Sept. 26 at 8:30 pm
ˇLeague meets one Saturday night each month.
ˇ 3 games per session
(10 sessions)
ˇ$290 per couple
(includes league trophy and bowling dinner)
ˇCall GRJC member Nancy Sperling at 201-797-9087 to reserve your spot in the league. A detailed schedule will be provided upon joining. | |
Shabbat Shuvah September 25-26, 2009 8 Tishrey 5770
We light our Shabbat candles at 6:30 pm
Evening services begin at 8 pm
As part of our Shabbat evening service, we will celebrate all SEPTEMBER birthdays & anniversaries with a blessing and song.

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Friday Evening Yartzeit Observance:
Friday night, all yartzeits in the week 9/19-9/25 and for 9/26-10/2 will be announced.
---------------------------------------------------- Shabbat Morning services will begin
at 9 am
Shabbat ends at 7:28 pm
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YOM KIPPUR Sunday evening, Sep. 27 - We light our Yizkor candles and Yom-Tov (Festival) candles before leaving for the Mincha-Kol Nidre service.
Yom Kippur Evening Services: Mincha 6 PM Kol Nidre 6:15 PM
Yom Kippur Day: Shacharit-Morning service: 8:45 AM Torah Service: 9:45 AM Rabbi's D'var Torah/Sermon: 10:45 AM Musaf - Additional Service: 11-12:45 PM YIZKOR: 12:45 PM
Mincha-Afternoon Service: 5:30 PM Ne'ilah-Closing Service: 6:15 PM All are invited to bring a shofar to play the last shofar blast at the end of Ne'ilah! All students are invited to the bimah during the Havdalah ceremony that's part of the evening service.
*All Monday B'nai Mitzvah lessons are canceled.
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Blessing for Lighting Candles for Yom Kippur:
Baruch Atah Ado--nai Elo--heinu Melech ha'Olam, asher kidshanu be'mitzvotav ve'tzivanu, le'hadlik ner shel Yom ha'Kippurim.
Praised are You, Ado--nai, Our God, Ruler of the Universe, who made us holy with the commandments and instructed us to light the candles for Yom Kippur.
We follow with the Shehecheyanu...
Baruch Atah Ado--nai Elo--heinu Melech ha'Olam, shehecheyanu ve'kimanu ve'higianu lazman hazeh.
Praised are You, Ado--nai, Our God, Ruler of the Universe who has kept us in life and sustained us, and allowed us to reach this occasion.
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THE ISRAEL TRIP IS ON! We're moving forward with the Israel trip that's scheduled for February 6-16, 2010. We have the final itinerary available as well as the costs.
Another general interest meeting will be held after the fall holidays. Please be in touch in the interim for more information!
Please contact
Roann Rubin ( roann@grjc.org) to learn more about this exciting Israel opportunity! This trip offers a maximum Israel experience at the most affordable price available today--a unique opportunity!.
*See Tel Aviv, Haifa, the Golan, the Galilee, Jerusalem, Masada, the Dead Sea and more... *Participate in an archaeological dig and planting a tree in Israel
*Dinner with members of a Masorti/Conservative congregation in Rehovot. *Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial *Wine tasting in the Golan Heights Winery *See where King David lived *And so much more...
Join us on our Israel adventure!
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A Yom Kippur Thought from Rabbi TowYom Kippur is a day that we celebrate in a different way from any other festival. While we also fast from sunset to sunset on Tisha Be'Av, the Ninth of Av, the day that recalls the tragedies of Jewish history, Yom Kippur is not a day of mourning. Instead, it's a day of judgment that the Rabbis of the Talmud described as one of the happiest days of the year! It's a happy day since there will be forgiveness and reconciliation, a new start for us. There is no defining holiday meal such as a Seder or a meal in a Sukkah.
We leave off leather, as in our belts and shoes, and we substitute with simpler materials. Traditionally, all members of the community are invited to wear the kittel or to wear white to show that we are all equal before God. Our clothing choices are meant to be simpler and pushed into the background of our thinking on Yom Kippur.
We even leave out washing and "anointing", which for us would mean that we do not wear perfumes or colognes.
If Yom Kippur is "Shabbat Shabbaton", the Sabbath of Sabbaths, holiday of holidays, then why not celebrate it like other Shabbatot and Chagim/Festivals?
Yom Kippur is not connected to a historical event, like the giving of the Torah at Sinai that we celebrate on Shavuot. It's also not one of the three pilgrimage festivals of Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot, though the ritual in the ancient Temple was central to the holiday. The Torah also makes no connection between Yom Kippur and the agricultural or planting calendar. It is a day devoted to atonement, making things right between God and ourselves and between other people and ourselves. These things are not easy. Yom Kippur allows us a chance to do them without anything that might cause us to think about our own usual needs--except of course that we have to feed and take care of children! (We also have to feed and take care of those who are sick.) We focus our attention on how to summon up our courage to forgive and remake relationships that have been broken.
What do you find to be the most meaningful part of Yom Kippur? What do you find are the biggest challenges to seeking/granting forgiveness and pursuing reconciliation?
I welcome your thoughts! Please email me at: rabbi@grjc.org
May we all have a meaningful fast and holiday, Rabbi Tow
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Following is the
'09-'10 schedule of the GRJC Library book discussions. Please feel free to join any or all of the events: Sunday, November 22 10:30 a.m. Israeli author Valerie Farber will visit Glen Rock Jewish Center to speak about her historical novel, City of Refuge, set in the time of the judges (shoftim), around 1030 B.C.E. Thursday, January 14 Sarah's Key by Tatiana de Rosnay A historical novel that takes place partially in Paris, 1942, during the Vel' d'Hiv' roundup, and partially in the present. The protagonist, a French journalist, retraces the steps of a young girl during the War, and as she probes into the past, she begins to question her own place in France, and to reevaluate her marriage and her life. Tuesday, March 16 The Jew in the Lotus: a poet's rediscovery of Jewish identity in Buddhist India by Rodger Kamenetz From a historical meeting between a delegation of American Jews and a group of Tibetan Buddhists that included the Dalai Lama, the author finds similarities between the religion of the Jews and the Buddhists, and finds himself amazed by the intensity and altruism of Buddhism. We will also view the short documentary that was made of the book. May - date TBD (possibly Tuesday, May 11) Jewish Sephardic Cooking Class We will read a portion of Sephardic Flavors: Jewish Cooking of the Mediterranean by Joyce Goldstein and, in the GRJC kitchen, try our own hand at creating a few of the recipes (and eat them, too, of course!) Thursday, June 10 The Assistant by Bernard Malamud This is the classic tale of a poor Jewish grocer and the mysterious young man who comes to work for him. For further information, please contact Michelle Strassberg, mstrassberg67@hotmail.com, or Rabbi Tow, rabbi@grjc.org.
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