Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
 
Weekly Message from your Rabbi...... 
  
This weekend we celebrate the Bar Mitzvah of Noah Rosensweig.... Mazal tov to Noah and to his family who share the simcha... and to the "Beth Hillel congregational family" which also shares in the simcha. We all look forward to times of celebration and promise for the future. So try to come this Shabbat and share in the simcha.
 
But equally importantly, I sense how a simcha like this can be central to influencing Jewish identify and connection. I recently met a young woman who is the grandchild and child of congregants. She may not have been physically active in the synagogue for a few years, but when she met me and heard that I was the rabbi of Beth Hillel, she immediately said, "That's my synagogue!" Her identity had been formed there; part of her remained there. And seeing me re-awakened it.
  
There are lots of events happening that can develop and reinforce YOUR Jewish identity.... Consider signing up (or just coming) for my Adult Education class, discussed below. Or sign up for the "Chai mitzvah" program. Or volunteer to commit yourself to attending a daily minyan, or to chanting a haftarah. Or volunteering in the office. Or sharing in Sisterhood. Or helping in the community... the list is endless. I will be mentioning on Shabbat that it is "National Make A Difference" Shabbat - each of us can make a difference in the world! 
 
In short, Beth Hillel is YOUR synagogue.... I look forward to seeing you often here! Do remember to  check out the upgraded website as well... it's up and running!
  
Shabbat Shalom.... come to shul and be with your "synagogue family" here at Beth Hillel!
 
Rabbi Gary and Iris Atkins
"No one should leave services unmoved or unchanged..."
 Shabbat Services & Candle Lighting
 
CANDLE LIGHTING 
FRIDAY EVENING, OCT. 23,  5:37pm 
FRIDAY EVENING, OCT. 30, 5:27pm
 
Note: You may see a few minutes difference between different times given in different sources. It all depends how many minutes before actual sunset the source feels candles should be lit. You  may use any source you choose!
 
SHABBAT  SERVICE TIMES:                               
Friday, Oct. 23
Saturday, Oct. 24
Shaharit 9:30am, Mincha/ Ma'ariv/ Havdalah 5:30pm.... 
 
Come enjoy the beautiful Havdalah ceremony that ends Shabbat! 
Veterans Day.... drawing near  
 
The Jewish War Veterans Laurel Post 45 will be sponsoring the Oneg on Friday evening, October 23, as  part of their annual Veterans Day Beth Hillel Service commemoration. Please come and share in this special evening.
 
One colleague of mine, who also served in the military, composed the following meaningful prayer for our Servicemen/women and Veterans..... 
 
A Prayer for Servicemembers...    by Rabbi David Greenspoon
 
Maker of Peace in Your heavens, our country has men and women engaged in wars on multiple fronts, and in service and sacrifice even beyond the fields of battle.  Be with all those who serve, and protect them body and soul.  May their sacrifices for the sake of peace be of enduring effect.  Bring under the wings of Your Presence the souls of all those who die in the service of our country.  Comfort those wounded by battle and by the loss of their comrades.  Send your love and support to those who await their return with longing and hope; extend your grace and solace to those bereaved families who will forever leave an empty chair at their family table to match the empty places in their hearts.  Maker of Peace, extend your heaven'speace to our place here on earth so the experience of war will no longer be a reality for any of your children. May this peace come soon.  Amen.
Special Upcoming Events
 
FEDERATION SUPER SUNDAY
Coming up Sunday, October 25. Answer the call or help to make calls... contact Karyn Burns at 727-6117 to volunteer!
 
RABBI AWAY
Rabbi Gary and Iris will be away the Shabbat of October 30-31 visiting family in Chicago. Services 
 
FALL ADULT EDUCATION
Rabbi Atkins will teach on Monday Evenings November 2, 9, 16. Subject: Looking at New Prayer Books of the 21st Century.... Sign up with the office!
 
USCJ BIENNIAL CONVENTION
WE ARE FAMILY---that's the slogan of the USCJ Convention in Cherry Hill, NJ December 6-10, only a few months away.  There's still time to get the reduced rate by Nov. lst.  On the internet go to uscj.org for details and a registration form.  This Convention will be very exciting due to the many changes in store for the United Synagogue. As a registered delegate you too can have a say and a vote.  Come hear Chancellor Arnold Eisen, Exec. Director Rabbi Stephen Wernick and other notable speakers; make selections from many interesting seminars; be entertained.  Can't take time away for full Convention?  Select the day or days you wish to go and drive down.  Call Shirley Morrison for further details or the office in Rocky Hill (563-5531).  Shirley is driving down, would enjoy company for the trip.
Food Drive..... Social Action News
 
Hazardous Waste Sunday collection
Tikvah Chodashah hosts the only Sunday collection in Connecticut on October 25, 2009 between the hours of 8 and 11. If you have such materials, this is your chance!
 
Volunteer Opportunities
The Federation-sponsored Volunteer Directory is now available, with a copy in both the rabbi's office and the library. This is your reference book for areas in which to get involved in the mitzvah of tikkun olam!!
 
Food Donations
We fasted on Yom Kippur... many of us brought donations of food before you Kol Nidre Services. The need continues. Consider a donation to Mazon, as featured in Chai-lites, or to Foodshare here in Bloomfield.
 
Todah rabbah!!
CHAI MITZVAH study...... 
 
This is the exciting new community-wide Adult Education program that Hartford is "piloting"  this year.  Beth Hillel need a few more participants to be a full member of the program.... as well as to receive a CHALLENGE GRANT from the program.
 
Please call the office or the rabbi TODAY if you are interested and we'll get you started.....
 
Again, todah rabbah!!
Israel News.... courtesy of CIJR 
 
Robert L. Bernstein, the founder of the flagship group Human Rights Watch, examined his former organization's recent critique of Israel.  Highlights of his article are copied below: 
 
"As the founder of Human Rights Watch, its active chairman for 20 years and now founding chairman emeritus, I must do something that I never anticipated: I must publicly join the group's critics. Human Rights Watch had as its original mission to pry open closed societies, advocate basic freedoms and support dissenters. But recently it has been issuing reports on the Israeli-Arab conflict that are helping those who wish to turn Israel into a pariah state."
"Israel, with a population of 7.4 million, is home to at least 80 human rights organizations, a vibrant free press, a democratically elected government, a judiciary that frequently rules against the government, a politically active academia, multiple political parties and, judging by the amount of news coverage, probably more journalists per capita than any other country in the world - many of whom are there expressly to cover the Israeli-Palestinian conflict."
 
"Meanwhile, the Arab and Iranian regimes rule over some 350 million people, and most remain brutal, closed and autocratic, permitting little or no internal dissent. The plight of their citizens who would most benefit from the kind of attention a large and well-financed international human rights organization can provide is being ignored as Human Rights Watch's Middle East division prepares report after report on Israel."
"Leaders of Human Rights Watch know that Hamas and Hezbollah chose to wage war from densely populated areas, deliberately transforming neighborhoods into battlefields. They know that more and better arms are flowing into both Gaza and Lebanon and are poised to strike again. And they know that this militancy continues to deprive Palestinians of any chance for the peaceful and productive life they deserve. Yet Israel, the repeated victim of aggression, faces the brunt of Human Rights Watch's criticism."
 
Robert L. Bernstein was the chairman of Human Rights Watch from 1978 to 1998.
Weekly Torah  Commentary...  
written by Rabbi David Kraemer, Professor of Rabbinics at  JTS .......
 
Read the Noah story-the whole thing, from the very end of Genesis 5 and not just from the beginning of the parashah-and you will immediately sense that there is a problem. Why are there so many repetitions, tensions, and outright contradictions? Why are we told twice about Noah's offspring (5:32 and 6:10)? Why does the story offer two explanations for God's decision to destroy all creatures, removing them from the face of the earth-one explanation relating to the transgression of the divine/human divide and the wickedness of the human heart (6:1-7), and the other relating to human violence (6:11-12)? And why, in almost a single breath, does the Torah contradict its own representation of God's command to bring animals onto the ark, first requiring two of every species (6:19) and then requiring seven of each pure species and only two of each impure species (7:2-3)?
These are the problems that made the Noah story one of the primary foundations of the so-called Documentary Hypothesis of biblical origins. In fact, if you divide the story according to the name of God used in each part (Elohim [E] or Jahweh [J]), you will find that the division produces two neat and almost complete stories, each with its distinct version of the Noah tradition. For this reason, many modern critical readers of the text have concluded that what we have here is two original documents (E and J) combined to create a larger whole, but with relative disregard for the issues their combination creates. To be sure, dividing the story eliminates the problems exemplified in the paragraph above, but it does nothing to make sense of the Torah's story as we have it, whatever its origins.
In the world before the invention of the printing press, a world that was largely illiterate, the tensions and even contradictions we see today when reading the Torah's text would mostly not have been a problem. When people experience a text orally and aurally-read out loud by a reader whose words they hear but do not see-they tend not to hear tensions or even contradictions, and they certainly cannot go back to compare what they hear now to what they heard before. Consequently, they tend to modify their memory or understanding of the earlier in light of the latter. Repetitions are assumed to be there for emphasis or simply because orality demands repetition for clarity, and tensions or contradictions are smoothed over without the listener even being aware that a problem was there to be solved. In the world where people heard but did not read the Torah, our Genesis 2 (the "second Creation story") would have been heard as a specification or filling out of Genesis 1 (our "first Creation story"), and the Noah story would have been worked out with similar lack of difficulty.
This does not mean, however, that the difficulties do not exist, and we as readers should pay attention to them. I would like to suggest that the Documentary solution provides us with an important key, but not because separating the stories solves the readers' problems. When we read the part of the story in which God is referred to by the J name and compare it with the part of the story in which God is known by the E name, we find that the two strands offer us two very different pictures of who God is and the nature of God's relationship with humanity. First separated and then combined, these two parts offer us, in the end, a very complex theology, one from which we can all learn.
In the J story, God wants to protect God's status vis-à-vis human beings and other creatures. It is in this story that the "divine beings" sleep with human women, provoking God's wrath. One expression of God's wrath is to limit the length of human life to one-hundred-and-twenty years, ensuring a clear distinction between humans and divine beings who live forever. It is in this story that God requires Noah to bring onto the ark seven of every pure animal, because it is in this story that God will demand animal sacrifices of Noah when he emerges from the ark. The God of the J story is appeased by the sweet smell of the sacrifices, because they are an expression of human subservience and obedience. All told, this is a God who demands a clearly superior position with relation to God's creation; the Supreme King to whom all creatures are radically subjects.
The God of the E story is portrayed very differently. The sin that this God sees is human violence; being concerned for human welfare, this God acts against that violence, but S/he never limits the length of human life (this God requires no such radical division between God and humans). This God requires only two of each species-male and female-to board the ark, because S/he will not demand sacrifices; the animals are needed only to perpetuate their species. Instead of demanding sacrifices upon Noah's exit from the ark, the God of the E story begins by blessing the humans, and then gives them laws. The most important of these laws is the one that protects human life.
Crucially, the God of E then goes on at length to express God's covenantal commitment to humanity, ensuring that flesh will never again be destroyed by a flood. The fact that this commitment is covenantal-the word covenant (brit) appears in this context (9:8-17) seven times!-is significant. A covenant is a contract, one in which two parties commit to one another by mutual agreement. The fact that this God can enter a covenant with humanity means that S/he views humanity as a worthy partner, not necessarily an equal but also not a radically submissive subject to be commanded and little more.
These are two very different Gods, one jealous and superior, the other caring and available for relationship. How could they have been put together? What is the meaning of the two when represented as one? The answer, I think, lies in our own need for different Gods or, to be more correct, for one God differently imagined. My guess is that most of us are more immediately and naturally attracted to the God of E, the one who respects us enough to make a covenant with us. But such a God would be only partial. We also need a God-the God of J-who is radically superior, one totally unlike us, one to whom we can submit. Perhaps better expressed, sometimes we need the God as represented in one of these stories, at other times the God represented in the other. Put together, as in the Noah story, we have a fuller God, one we can address in all of our complexity, even if God is, in reality, much simpler (i.e., more singular) than these stories express.