 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
It was an eventful week here at Beth Hillel. Last Thursday evening a number of congregants watched the moving and meaningful video, Praying with Lior, which documents how even children with disabilities can reach God in prayer - and how a community is blessed and inspired by such efforts. Last Saturday afternoon we had a most enjoyable hav-deli program -- the next one is in early December! Then on Tuesday evening there was a "much greater than expected" attendance at the informational meeting regarding strategic future choices for the synagogue. You'll be hearing more about this in other communications!
This Shabbat I am looking forward to the "Community Shabbat" at Emanuel Friday evening, October 29. Over 450 people from at least 11 congregations will gather together for dinner and prayer. You can attend Shabbat prayer at 5:35 (with a choice of services (traditional or modern), even if you don't attend the dinner... and, again, there will be NO SERVICES here at Beth Hillel that evening! This weeks's Torah Sparks, distributed by United Synagogue, is especially rich in content, so we will use it as a basis for our study at services Shabbat morning.
Sunday morning there is no religious school, as it is the date of the annual Mitnick educational conference, and both the teachers and myself will be attending. Then I have two unveilings in the afernoon.... so it goes!
Look forward to a special weekend (and more) of inspiring educational activities starting next Shabbat. Details about Library Shabbat and our guest speaker, Professor Ron Keiner, are in the "Chai-lites." Sunday, Nov 7, there is a breakfast (sponsored by Brotherhood) and then we take part in the Global Day of Jewish Learning. Monday evening, Nov 8, my adult ed class begins.
All good things! Look forward to being with your "synagogue family" in shul here at Beth Hillel Synagogue!
Rabbi Gary and Iris Atkins
"All it takes to study Torah is an open heart, a curious mind and a desire to grow a Jewish soul."
|
|
|
Shabbat Services & Candle Lighting Times
CANDLE LIGHTING Friday, October 29... NLT 5:29pm
SERVICE TIMES
Friday, October 22, 5:35pm at Emanuel!
Saturday, October 30, 9:30AM, 5:30PM Mincha/Hav-deli/Maariv/Havdalah
|
Congregational Announcements
Traveling in the weeks ahead????? Becoming a Snowbird???
Ask Rabbi Atkins for "shaliach kesef" - messenger money - along with a prayer for a safe journey; it will "guarantee" you a safe trip.
It's one of my favorite mitzvot!!
There are a number of items left in the synagogue that are in the office. Anyone missing their glasses or a cellphone? Check with the office and see if it's yours!
Going to Florida or elsewhere? Be sure to let the rabbi and the office know!
|
|
Upcoming Special Events - For more info see Chai-lites!!
Friday, October 29 - Community Shabbat Service at Emanuel - Note that there will not be services at BHS that Friday evening... you can attend the community service at 5:35 even if you do not attend the dinner afterwards! Our weekly yahrzeit list will be read on Saturday morning, October 30.
Tuesday, Nov. 2 - BE SURE TO VOTE!!
Library Shabbat - November 5 and 6. Guest speaker, Professor Ronald Keiner of Trinity University: Between Star and Crescent: What Jews Ought to know about Islam...." See flyer for more details!
Sunday Nov 7 - Global Day of Jewish Learning - Brotherhood Sponsored Breakfast - and then group study on the topic of "Miracles." ...Open to the entire BHS community!! Attend another program developing and strengthening the sense of community and togetherness for Jews throughout the world!
Coming: Fall Adult Education Study: The Golem of Prague.... November 8 and 15... after evening minyan!
|
|
Social Action Updates
DONATIONS OF FOOD ARE GREATLY NEEDED FOR THE KOSHER AND REGULAR FOOD BANKS!! PLEASE DONATE AT THE SYNAGOGUE NOW!!
Blue neckties are needed for the students of Millner school. Bring in your gently used neckties to either the shul or rabbi's office.
Help with Darfur ..... Help in Hartford... Help in Ethiopia
The 2010 Handbook of Hartford Volunteer Opportunities is now available for your perusal in the library!
Be aware of those less fortunate than we are!! Carry out the mitzvah of tikkun olam!
|
Israel and Islam...... Thanks to a congregant for forwarding this piece to me!
There seem to be a very few who are modern thinkers and not afraid to stand up and be counted.......
"I am a Muslim by faith.... a Christian by spirit....a Jew by heart....and above all I am a human being." Dr. Tawfik Hamid.
Dr. Hamid is an noted Egyptian scholar and author
From the heart of a Muslim - Tawfik Hamid
|
|
|
|
I was born a Muslim and lived all my life as a follower of Islam.
After the barbaric terrorist attacks done by the hands of my fellow Muslims everywhere on this globe, and after the too many violent acts by Islamists in many parts of the world, I feel responsible as a Muslim and as a human being, to speak out and tell the truth to protect the world and Muslims as well from a coming catastrophe and war of civilizations.
I have to admit that our current Islamic teaching creates violence and hatred toward Non-Muslims. We Muslims are the ones who need to change. Until now we have accepted polygamy, the beating of women by men, and killing those who convert from Islam to other religions.
We have never had a clear and strong stand against the concept of slavery or wars, to spread our religion and to subjugate others to Islam and force them to pay a humiliating tax called Jizia. We ask others to respect our religion while all the time we curse non-Muslims loudly (in Arabic) in our Friday prayers in the Mosques.
What message do we convey to our children when we call the Jews "Descendants of the pigs and monkeys".. Is this a message of love and peace, or a message of hate?
I have been into churches and synagogues where they were praying for Muslims. While all the time we curse them, and teach our generations to call them infidels, and to hate them.
I am sad to say that many, if not most of us, rejoiced in happiness after September 11th and after many other terror attacks.
Muslims denounce these attacks to look good in front of the media, but we condone the Islamic terrorists and sympathise with their cause. Till now our 'reputable' top religious authorities have never issued a Fatwa or religious statement to proclaim Bin Laden as an apostate, while an author, like Rushdie, was declared an apostate who should be killed according to Islamic Shariia law just for writing a book criticizing Islam.
Muslims demonstrated to get more religious rights as we did in France to stop the ban on the Hejab (Head Scarf), while we did not demonstrate with such passion and in such numbers against the terrorist murders.
It is our absolute silence against the terrorists that gives the energy to these terrorists to continue doing their evil acts. We Muslims need to stop blaming our problems on others or on the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. As a matter of honesty, Israel is the only light of democracy, civilization, and human rights in the whole Middle East .
We kicked out the Jews with no compensation or mercy from most of the Arab countries to make them "Jews-Free countries" while Israel accepted more than a million Arabs to live there, have its nationality, and enjoy their rights as human beings. In Israel , women can not be beaten legally by men, and any person can change his/her belief system with no fear of being killed by the Islamic law of 'Apostasy,' while in our Islamic world people do not enjoy any of these rights. I agree that the 'Palestinians' suffer, but they suffer because of their corrupt leaders and not because of Israel .
It is not common to see Arabs who live in Israel leaving to live in the Arab world. On the other hand, we used to see thousands of Palestinians going to work with happiness in Israel , its 'enemy'. If Israel treats Arabs badly as some people claim, surely we would have seen the opposite happening.
We Muslims need to admit our problems and face them. Only then we can treat them and start a new era to live in harmony with human mankind. Our religious leaders have to show a clear and very strong stand against polygamy, pedophilia,slavery, killing those who convert from Islam to other religions, beating of women by men, and declaring wars on non-Muslims to spread Islam.
Then, and only then, do we have the right to ask others to respect our religion. The time has come to stop our hypocrisy and say it openly: 'We Muslims have to Change'. Tawfik Hamid
|
|
Weekly Torah Portion Commentary - Courtesy of Rabbi Michael Gold......
NO SILVER PLATTERS
God had promised Abraham the entire land of Canaan as an eternal possession. But now Abraham's wife Sarah had died, and Abraham needed a burial place. This proved to be difficult. Abraham carried on a whole negotiation with the Hittites who lived on the land, and in particular with Ephron, before buying the cave of Machpelah and the surrounding field. Abraham had to pay a substantial sum of money for the burial plot. Today one can visit the cave of Machpelah in Kiryat Arba outside Hebron. But it is an area that is contested and can be dangerous. Recently four Israeli Jews were killed by a terrorist near-by. One gets the feeling that even if God promised the land to Abraham, God was not going to make it easy to take possession. Nothing worthwhile is handed to us on a silver platter. Chaim Weizmann, the first president of the state of Israel, once said, "The state will not be given to the Jewish people on a silver platter." This idea became part of a powerful Hebrew poem written by Nathan Alterman immediately before the founding of the state. The poem portrays a young man and young woman walking off the battlefield, still filthy and fatigued. The nation asked them, "Who are you?" The young people answer, "We are the silver platter on which the Jewish state will be given." This image of the difficulties of a Jewish state in the Jewish homeland hit home for me this week. I attended the national policy conference of AIPAC (the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.) AIPAC is an organization that teaches public officials (and many others) about Israel and seeks support from American political leaders of both parties for Israel. After a day and a half of talk about the nuclear threat from Iran, the on-again off-again peace talks with the Palestinians, and the attempts to delegitimize Israel, Weizmann's words rang true. The world is going to make it as difficult as possible for the state of Israel to survive and flourish. Nobody is going to hand it to us on a silver platter. What is true in international politics is equally true in our own personal lives. We live in a world of instant gratification. We will zap food in the microwave rather than spend the time cooking. We download all the information we need off the internet. (I will confess that I was getting upset with my computer this morning on how slowly it downloaded Alterman's poem.) We take drugs, both legal and illegal, to feel good. I constantly receive spam that I can earn all kinds of college degrees with no work. In the world of instant gratification, it is hard to get across the idea to young people that everything in life that is worthwhile takes time and effort. The quest for instant gratification is particularly true among young people. There was a time when a professional career began with entry level jobs and hard work. Today our young people immediately want management positions. There was a time when relationships were based on long term commitments, and slowly building trust. (Remember that old-fashioned word "courtship." It sounds so quaint.) Today young people do not seek relationships but rather to hook-up, a euphemism for quick one-night stands. There was a time when feeling good physically meant a careful commitment to diet and exercise. Today we take a pill, and we watch the advertisement for machines that will make us look like models in ten minutes a day. I see this quest for instant gratification in the world of religion. There was a time when learning to participate in synagogue life meant learning to read the Hebrew and taking the time to become familiar with worship services. Today we want instant spirituality. That is one reason people are flocking to the kabbalah center. The Talmud teaches, "according to the pain is the reward." (Avot 5:23) Everything worthwhile in life is going to take some effort and pain. As Abraham learned, nothing is handed to us on a silver platter.
|
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
 |
|
|
|