Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
 
Weekly Message from your Rabbi...... 
  
This coming Shabbat there will be some especially good learning and discussion at services -- on Friday evening I will be sharing some fascinating reports from Dr. Joe Olzacki, the Bloomfield High School Music Director who has pioneered the "Identity Project," and who has been in Rwanda this past week at a UN Conference on preventing genocide. Saturday morning I will be talking about and leading a discussion of the message of the movie Invictus, which stars Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela.
 
It has been a difficult week for the congregation, with several deaths of both members and family of members. As a community, we have the obligation to be mutually supportive and caring. Do try to attend shiva minyanim as they are announced and do whatever you can to be "m'nahaym avelim," comforting those who mourn.  A number of congregants are also ill or hospitalized; we share the names of those I am aware of at services... and I ask you to share those of members or friends (Jewish or non-Jewish) that you feel would benefit by having a prayer said for them.  Feel empowered to do the mitzvah of "bikkur holim," of visiting and cheering those ill, by either a personal visit or a telephone call. A copy of the listing will be in the office......
 
On Sunday after minyan I am leading a "Question and Answer" program.... otherwise known as "Stump the Rabbi!" The Adult Education Committee has promised a nice breakfast as well. RSVP if you can, but come even if you haven't!!
 
We will be expanding the role of the e-shul to share with you, each week, upcoming synagogue events. "Being Green" means less paper and mailings -- and is of economic benefit to the synagogue as well! Be sure, then, to read this e-shul regularly. We will continue to provide copies in the office/chapel rack for those without e-mail.
 
Lastly, note the several upcoming and ongoing Social Action projects. Warm your soul on these cold January days by participating, however you can, in the mitzvah of "Tikkun Olam."
 
Shabbat Shalom....looking forward to your coming to shul and being with your "synagogue family" here at Beth Hillel Synagogue!
 
 Rabbi Gary and Iris Atkins
"No one should leave services unmoved or unchanged..."
 Shabbat Services & Candle Lighting
 
CANDLE LIGHTING   
FRIDAY EVENING, JAN. 8, 4:17 pm
FRIDAY EVENING, JAN. 15, 4:25 pm
FRIDAY EVENING, JAN. 22, 4:33 pm
 
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, Jan. 8  - 8:00pm
Saturday, Jan. 9 - Shaharit 9:30am, Mincha/ Ma'ariv/ Havdalah 4:15pm.... 
THIS WEEK SATURDAY SUNDAES - ENJOY ICE CREAM EVEN IN WINTER!!
 
Friday, Jan. 15  - 8:00pm
Saturday, Jan. 16 - Shaharit 9:30am, Mincha/ Ma'ariv/ Havdalah 4:30pm.... 
 
Friday, Jan. 22  - 8:00pm
Saturday, Jan. 23 - Shaharit 9:30am, Mincha/ Ma'ariv/ Havdalah 4:30pm.... 
 
Come enjoy the beautiful Havdalah ceremony that ends Shabbat! 
Some  Upcoming Events for your calendar   
 
MAH JONG CLASSES - JAN .  13, 20,    7:45pm ...
THERE  WAS A GREAT GROUP OF ENTHUSIASTIC LEARNERS  FIRST WEEK!!
 
SATURDAY SUNDAES - JAN. 9    4:15pm
 
RABBI ATKINS Q & A  BRUNCH  JAN 10  AFTER 9AM MINYAN
 
SISTERHOOD PROGRAM, JAN.  12. SEE  DETAILS  BELOW
 
SHMOOZE and LUNCH  PROGRAMS JAN .14,  28 11AM
 
SHALOM HARTFORD ........ INTERFAITH TIKKUN OLAM PROGRAM, WITH TEMPLE BETH HILLEL  JAN 18,  9:00-2:30PM   SEE DETAILS BELOW
 
MARTIN LUTHER KING COMMUNITY INTERFAITH SERVICE, JAN. 18, 7:00pm....
at SEABURY
 
MUSICAL MUSAF, JAN .23, 9:30AM  with ETHAN NASH
 
CONGREGATIONAL TU BISHEVAT SEDER
FRIDAY EVENING, JAN. 29,  6:15pm DETAILS IN UPCOMING FLYER
 
RELIGIOUS SCHOOL TU BISHEVAT SEDER
SUNDAY MORNING, JAN. 31, 11:00am
 
WORLD WIDE WRAP  -- SUNDAY MORNING, FEB 7,
 9:00am MINYAN AND BREAKFAST FOLLOWING
 
COMMUNITY WIDE HAVDALAH/ SOCIAL EVENING.... FEB. 13, 7pm
AT CONGREGATION BETH ISRAEL
 
PURIM WEEKEND - FRIDAY FEB. 26, MEGILLAH READING AND KAROAKE SATURDAY EVENING FEB. 27, TIMES TBA
Social Actions Projects  
 
FOOD AND COAT DRIVE 
Every time you are at synagogue, consider bringing a donation of food for the kosher or general food bank, or appropriate-to-wear clothes and coats to help the needy.
 
SHEMA TOUR
 

Beth Hillel Synagogue is joining with Temple Beth Hillel of South Windsor for a Social Action experiences day. You are invited to join us as we visit the places the needy go to get their needs met.  We are going just to listen and to see.  You will see our community in a whole new light.  This is the sixth year Temple Beth Hillel is doing the program; we are glad they have included us. Note that reservations are FIRST COME FIRST SERVE for a bus that holds 55 passengers.

 

We will meet on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Monday, January 18th at Temple Beth Hillel in South Windsor for a tour through Hartford through the eyes of the less fortunate.

 

9:00    Orientation at Temple Beth Hillel, South Windsor (20 Baker Lane).

10:00 Jewish Association for Community Living in West Hartford

11:15 Hispanic Health Center in Hartford

12:00   Sack lunches provided by Beth Hillel Synagogue

12:45 Open Hearth in Hartford (and Food Share at the Regional Market)*

2:30    Return to Temple Beth Hillel in South Windsor

 
 CHARTER OAK PROJECT
 
 Save the afrernoon of Thursday, January 28, for a joint project (with Tikvoh) with at Charter Oak Cultural Center. Details TBA shortly.....
 
 TU BISHEVAT SEDER
 
This has been a traditional program/ time to show our concern for the environment. Especially this year, attend the seder and learn/participate in this Jewish program for awareness and appreciation of God's good world. See the flyer elsewhere for additional information.
Shaliach Kesef - Messenger/Mitzvah Money
 
 Many people are travelling this time of year. I sincerely invite you to let me know when you are going so I can do my favorite mitzvah of giving you the prayer for a safe journey and shaliach kesef. And if you will be away for more than a month, do update the synagogue office with your temporary address!!
Sisterhood Program - Dr. Maureen Murphy  
 
Tuesday, January 12... 12:00 gathering; 12:30 presentation.....
 
 "WHAT EVERY WOMAN IS AFRAID TO ASK..."
 
Dr. Murphy, a local urologist, will speak and answer YOUR questions.
 
Light refreshments will follow the program.....
Israel News
 
WAVE POWER.......from Israel 21c
 
It can harness 20 times more energy than any other wave technology in existence today and also produce carbon-free desalinated water. How? Israel's Seanergy 'holds the waves.'

To wean America off polluting and politically unstable foreign oil, government members and legislators are advocating technologies such as solar, wind, geothermal and also wave energy to develop new sources of power. President Obama is pushing for green jobs and Americans want them.

Inspired by children playing with a beach ball at the seaside, Shlomo Gilboa an Israeli politician-turned-inventor has invested millions of his own dollars in Seanergy, a new company and product that share a name. Seanergy harvests the energy of ocean waves through an offshore farm of buoys. It could be the next technology adopted by American utility companies, if Gilboa has his way.

In an interview with ISRAEL21c, Gilboa relates that the technology now being tested off the coast of Haifa can harness 20 times more power from wave energy than any other similar technology in existence today.

"Our harvesting system from the sea produces at least 20 times more energy than conventional or non-conventional buoys," says Gilboa, who is also the company's CEO. "In our system, we manage to 'hold the wave'. Usually it's come and gone in a second. But we manipulate it, holding the wave level in a reservoir in the buoy, to capture it."

Popping up in a burst of power

The buoy literally shoots up when it reaches the crest of the wave: "With the same impact as when you take a ball and put it underwater in the swimming pool and it pops up in a huge burst of energy," explains Gilboa. "We are harvesting this special energy. No other system in the world comes close."

Seanergy is currently working with the Israel Electric Corporation and has been endorsed by engineers at the University of Haifa.

Gilboa says that while generating electric power, the system also produces a significant amount of carbon-free desalinated water. He estimates that a million cubic meters of desalinated water will be produced by a Seanergy farm that covers a 300 square meter (about 3,229 square foot) patch of water at sea. While traditional desalination plants can produce orders of magnitudes more water, unlike Seanergy they require an extensive amount of energy input to the system.

Currently a number of large and small companies around the world are negotiating with the company about a first facility, which will require a $2 million investment for four, four-buoy clusters. Gilboa says that according to the most conservative projection, the Seanergy buoy system, which sits below the surface of the waves and pops up as it collects energy, can pay for itself in feed-in tariffs within three years.

Making waves

To illustrate his point, Gilboa describes the Seanergy cluster in a region off the coast of Oregon in the US. Each buoy there can generate 1 megawatt of power, which over a year amounts to 200 to 250 kilowatts per cluster. According to the Cnet tech journal, that's enough to power about 80 homes. The amount generated at any given site is a function of the wave action potential there.

Companies all over the world are attempting to capture the power of waves and there are a plethora of what appear to be zoologically-inspired prototypes that range from the bizarre to the sublime.

There are massive 'snakes' (655-foot-long anaconda devices), 'oysters' (large hydraulic flaps that open and close) and 'dragons' (contraptions with long arm-like devices that direct waves up a ramp toward an offshore reservoir). The weird-looking snakes move hypnotically through the waves.

Of these, Gilboa credits potential competitors such as the Scottish-based Pelamis and New Jersey's Ocean Power Technologies as two wave technology companies that "add real value to the market."

15 years of development

Seanergy presented its prototype at the "Innovation" pavilion in the Industry, Trade and Labor Ministry's NEWTech division for the estimated 19,000 people who attended the international Watec conference in Tel Aviv in November. NEWTech promotes Israeli water technologies worldwide.....

Weekly Torah  Commentary...  
written by Rabbi Michael Gold of Tamarac, Florida
 

     As we begin the exodus story, this is a perfect time to share one of my favorite Midrashim (Rabbinic interpretations).  A man from the house of Levi (Amram) took a woman from the house of Levi (Yocheved) and gave birth to a son - Moses.  Moses would become the savior of the Israelites.  But something is missing from the story; what about the two older children Miriam and Aaron?  Why is their birth not mentioned?
       The Rabbis taught in the Midrash that Amram and Yocheved had the children earlier, but when Pharaoh decreed that all baby boys would be thrown into the Nile, they separated.  They did not want to chance giving birth to a baby who would be murdered by Pharaoh.  When they separated, all the other Israelite couples separated; no babies were born.  It was a serious situation for the Hebrews.
       The Midrash continues that Miriam approached her father and said, your decree is worse than Pharaoh's.   Pharaoh decreed against the boys, you decreed against both boys and girls.  Pharaoh decreed only in this world, you decreed in this world and the world to come.  Pharaoh's decree may be overturned, your decree (not having children at all) cannot be overturned.  Miriam convinced her father to remarry her mother, and so Moses was born.  (Sota 12a)  In a certain sense, it was the older sister Miriam who was the savior of the Israelites.
       The lesson of this wonderful Midrash is a profound one.  When times are rough and everything appears hopeless, it is not proper to give up.  It is vital to keep on living.  Keep having babies and raising them, keep going to work, keep trying to find moments to enjoy life.  I am always amazed how Jews in the ghettos, enduring the Nazi horror, somehow found a way to established classes and orchestras and theater groups.  They were able to keep living even as death hovered over them.  The 23rd Psalm teaches, "Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no harm for you are with me."   (Psalms 23:4)  As terrible as the world seems now, we must walk on through the valley; we will arrive at the other end.
       I often counsel people who feel hopeless about their lives.  They are depressed; they have given up.  The future seems bleak.  It may be an illness or a financial crisis or family tension that gives them this sense of hopelessness.  But they cannot keep moving; they feel frozen.  Psychologists say one of the sure signs of clinical depression is the inability to get out of bed in the morning.  When adversity hits, some of us stop in our tracks.  We say "why bother," "what's the use," "all is lost."   Therapists tell people suffering from such a sense of hopelessness to get out of bed, get dressed, and try to start the day.  Find a way to keep moving.
       This is the lesson of the beautiful Midrash about Miriam.  No matter how hopeless everything seems, it is important to keep moving on.  Do not stop having children or trying to raise them.  Do not
stop working or trying to find a job.  Do not stop trying to rebuild broken relationships.  Do not stop playing, listening to music, going to the theater, working out, and finding whatever joy life has to offer.  As bleak as things seem, when we pick up and keep going we can find hope.
       In my work I have seen true healing from hopeless situations.  I have seen people turn their lives around and make a fresh start.  I have seen people change their financial situation for the better.  I have even seen people find a cure for terrible diseases, or if not a complete cure, at least
a sense of purpose and hopefulness once again.  The entire exodus story is a vision of going from slavery to freedom, from hopelessness to new hope.  It is a story of moving on.  And perhaps it all began with a simple story of a girl telling her parents, "Do not give up.  Get back together and have a baby."  Perhaps she had an intuition that this baby would one day become the savior of her people.