Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
 
Weekly Message from your Rabbi...... 
 
This Friday evening Matt Baram, son of Paula and David Baram, will share on his recent exciting experience of leading a USY Pilgrimage group to both Israel and Italy. Come and hear about touring Israel from the perspective of a group of enthusiastic Jewish teens -- and how interesting it was to be their leader!
 
This Shabbat morning we read the laws of kashrut as part of the weekly sedrah. I will speak about them as my teaching at services. There will hopefully be an interesting discussion after my short talk. 
 
During these summer months,  minyanim continue each morning and evening and the office is "humming" during the new hours of 9:30am-2:30pm Mon-Thurs and 1:30 on Friday. The library is open and accessible any time the building is open!
 
Both when the office is open, and at the upcoming Shabbat Under The Stars, congregants are invited to help the synagogue by purchasing Synagogue Scrip! It's an easy way for you to help your synagogue!
 
Iris and I will have family visiting for a few days next week; I will be on vacation Thursday and Friday. Thus there will be no e-shul next week. But we will be at the Fish Fest/ Shabbat Under the Stars next Friday evening. Be sure to make your reservation ASAP if you plan to attend.
 
Note that the worship part of the evening will begin at 7:30pm! Ethan Nash will be with us once again to make for a real ruach-dik service! And then on Shabbat afternoon, August 22nd, between Minchah and Maariv, we have our monthly Saturday Sundaes program!
 
 
 With wishes for Shabbat Shalom.... 
 
Rabbi Gary Atkins,
Your Rabbi 
This Shabbat.... Services and CLT
 
CANDLE LIGHTING 
FRIDAY AUGUST 14 7:32pm 
FRIDAY AUGUST 21 7:21 pm 
FRIDAY AUGUST 28 7:10pm
 
 
SERVICE TIMES:
8:00pm FRIDAY NIGHT AUGUST 14
7:30pm FRIDAY NIGHT AUGUST 21  
8:00pm FRIDAY NIGHT AUGUST 28
 
9:30am SHABBAT MORNING ALL DAYS
 
7:30pm SHABBAT AFTERNOON, AUGUST 15
7:30pm SHABBAT AFTERNOON, AUGUST 22 -
         SATURDAY SUNDAES!!!!
7:15pm SHABBAT AFTERNOON, AUGUST 29
New Synagogue Committes - Your Participation Invited!!   
Mitzvah Committee - Help to beautify our Synagogue and its grounds... Have you seen the work that a number of congregants are doing? 
 
Hesed committee - help members of the congregration who are in need of a friendly gesture or any kind  of  temporary assistance. The best kind of "people to people" tsedakah.
 
Call the office to sign up... or check with the rabbi if you have any questions!
 
Todah rabbah!!
2010 Israel Tour  ....        
Interested in seeing Israel for the first time? Interested in returning again? 
 
April 11-22, 2010 are the dates. Susan Marcus will again be our Tour Guide "par excellance."
 
We will spend time in the South (Beersheva area), Jerusalem, and the North (Galil), seeing many different places  than were visited in 20008. Rabbi Atkins is putting together the itinerary over the summer..... Susan will be visiting Beth Hillel and speaking on Friday evening, October 9th fall to share details first hand!
 
Summer Travel????? 
 
Rabbi Atkins' favorite mitzvah (or one of them anyway) is "shaliach kesef" -- giving the prayer for a safe journey to those who are traveling -- as well as some tsedakah to give at their destination. But he can only do this if you let him know before you're travelling!
 
Summer reading - check out the many new Jewish books and periodicals in our library.
Weekly Torah commentary...  by  Rabbi Bradley Artson, Dean of the Ziegler Rabbinical School   
 It is a rabbinic dictum not to attempt to weigh the value of one mitzvah against the other. Rather than saying that this mitzvah is more important than another, we are to recognize that all mitzvot are grounded in our brit (covenant) with the Holy One and derive their authority out of our chosen response to God's will.
 
And yet... it is hard to resist the temptation to create a hierarchy. So, at least in the popular mind, there are some mitzvot so central to Jewish identity that they are almost synonymous with Judaism itself. Lighting Shabbat candles is one of them. Wearing a head covering is another. And a third is kashrut, the dietary laws. When you think of a religious Jewish home, it is a kosher home. So central, in fact, is kashrut, that it has became the way to refer to any action or person that is moral, upright, and proper. In that sense, it has even entered the English language.
 
The dietary laws are simple in their larger principles: meat and meat products (fleishig) are strictly separated from dairy products (milhig). Vegetables, fish, and fruits may be served with either meat or milk. Only a small percentage of animals are permissible as possible food sources: fish with fins and scales, land mammals with cloven hooves and who chew their cud, and a specified range of birds that fly. Additionally, those permissible animals must be slaughtered through shehitah, as painless a way to kill an animal as has been devised. While the general principles of kashrut are simple to list, the details of their application fill volumes.
 
The most complex of those details pertain to the eating of meat, when most of the regulations of kashrut become active. Today's Torah portion elaborates God's permission to eat meat: "When the Holy One enlarges your territory, as God has promised you, and you say 'I shall eat some meat,' for you have the urge to eat meat, you may eat meat whenever you wish... You shall slaughter ... as I have instructed you, and you may eat." Meat is a concession to human urges: if you feel compelled to take an animal's life for the sake of your hunger, you may do so, but only in this conscribed and supervised way. What possible benefits does keeping kosher provide? What lessons does kashrut teach?
 
Kashrut teaches us the value of responding to a divine command. God tells us to observe kashrut by separating meat and milk and only eating ritually slaughtered meat as a way of learning self-discipline and fidelity to God's word. Just as it did in the past, kashrut teaches that lofty lesson today as well.
 
Kashrut, like vegetarianism, teaches reverence for life. How does eating meat instill reverence? Because kashrut restricts the number of animals that may be eaten, and then insists that the method of slaughter be strictly regulated, kashrut makes sure that the animal's death is as painless as possible. By forcing a kosher Jew to have to choose whether to eat meat or milk, and then forcing a waiting period after any consumption of meat, kashrut ensures that eating becomes a more conscious act, that we make ourselves aware of what we are doing and how that animal was transformed into food. Unlike vegetarianism, which elevates the value of animal life beyond the possibility of human consumption, kashrut represents a compromise that insists on humane slaughter and an awareness of having eaten meat, but which doesn't require as strict a commitment as does vegetarianism. Hence, it is a compromise that more Jews can live with.
 
The commitment to keep kosher, and to maintain a kosher home, is one that expresses and enforces solidarity with the Jewish people across time and around the world. Throughout the ages, Jews have hallowed their lives and nurtured a sense of community through observance of the kosher laws. By forcing us to make specifically Jewish choices about how and what and when we eat, kashrut reminds us of our larger Jewish commitments and privileges every time we sit down to dine. And by maintaining a level of kashrut, we assure that Jews the world over can eat comfortably in our own home. Kashrut is a non-verbal reminder that Jewish values are practiced here.
 
The Torah contains God's call to become a nation of priests. Just as the priests used the laws of purity and impurity to extend the service of God to every aspect of their lives, we can do the same. By observing kashrut, we make every snack, every meal an occasion to serve God through one of our most basic and elemental acts.
 
The laws of kashrut remind us of who we are and of what we may yet become. Observing the dietary laws is a response to God's will and a way of integrating a wise and ancient wisdom in our lives. In the words of this week's parashah: "thus it will go well with you and with your descendants after you forever, for you will be doing what is good and right in the sight of the Eternal your God." 
Off the Pulpit.... Notes by  Rabbi David Wolpe 
 
There is a lovely rabbinic tale of a man whose father had died and left a very strange provision in his will. (Mid. Ps. 92:13) The will left everything to the only child, his son. But the gift was conditional. It said the son could not inherit "until he became a fool."
 
Consulting all the wise men of the town, the son could not find anyone capable of interpreting the statement. Finally, he went to the local rabbi. His rabbi too was stumped and decided to consult another authority, Rabbi Joshua ben Karcha.
As he approached Rabbi Joshua's house, he was greeted by an outlandish sight. He saw Rabbi Joshua on all fours, a reed sticking out of his mouth, pulled along by a child. He soon spotted the rabbi's small daughter and realized that what he had seen was Rabbi Joshua playing with her, pretending to be a horse.
 
He asked about the will, and instantly the sage had the answer: "What you just saw is your answer." The will meant the son could not inherit until he had children. No one should live a life surrounded solely by adults. It induces a seriousness that is really foolish.
News from Israel..... Some recent quotes,  courtesy of CIJR
 
 "If Hezbollah joins the Lebanese government as an official entity, let it be clear that the Lebanese government, as far as we are concerned, is responsible for any attack--any attack--from its area on the state of Israel. It cannot hide and say: 'It's Hezbollah, we don't control them.'"--Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, responding to news that Hezbollah could join the new Lebanese government, and declaring that Israel would then hold Lebanon responsible for any future attack from its territory. (Ha'aretz, August 11)
 
"If one hair on the head of an Israeli representative or tourist is harmed, we will see Hezbollah as responsible and it will bear the most dire consequences.... We know it's not just Egypt...we know that Hezbollah has tried and is trying to collect intelligence and to carry out some actions...it has had its failures but it keeps trying. So it's important to put things on the table and send this warning to Lebanon, which is eventually responsible for Hezbollah, that it will also be responsible for any harm it may suffer if Israelis are targeted."--Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Daniel Ayalon, in an interview on Israel Radio, responding to the arrest of a group in Cairo allegedly plotting to kill Israel's ambassador to Egypt. The Israel Counter-Terrorism Bureau issued a warning Tuesday against traveling to the Sinai--where a large Hezbollah cell was recently exposed. (Ha'aretz, August 10; Ynet News, Aug. 11)
 
"At this stage, we are focusing on popular struggle, but the armed struggle is a right reserved to us in international law."--Senior Fatah member Nabil Shaath, at the conclusion of Fatah's first convention in twenty years, clarifying that although party members voted to endorse a platform calling for a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, they would not rule out the use of armed aggression against Israel. (Ha'aretz, August 10)
 
"We have to be careful not to repeat the mistakes of Gaza. We left, and Hamas came in and started shooting against us."--Israeli President Shimon Peres, addressing a delegation of U.S. Democratic Congressmen, conveying Israel's caution regarding a final peace settlement with Palestinian neighbours. (Jerusalem Post, August 10) 
Ongoing Announcements
  *  Bring clothing  and  food  for  the "Help Those In Need " drive.... bins are in the synagogue.
  
* Read the United Synagogue "Torah Sparks" each week -- - either at the shul or via the USCJ website.
 
* Work for a solution to end the killing  in Darfur
 
* Stop by the synagogue library ..... new Jewish periodicals and  books. "Todah rabbah" to all those who keep our library current!
 
* Purchase synagogue Supermarket Scrip! 
 
* Help support our daily minyan - come at least one morning or evening each week !