Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
 
Rabbi's Ramblings...... 


Last Monday evening our Adult Education group watched the "The Golem," a classic 1920 silent film about this mythical construct enlived by the powered of the divine name. Although our formal adult education is over for the fall, personal study can ALWAYS be arranged.

This Shabbat evening we will discuss the difficult chapter in the Torah dealing with the Rape of Dinah. Shabbat morning we will have Torah study with the aid of our Torah Sparks commentary, and Saturday afternboon at Mincha/Maariv/ Havdalah we will celebrate the Bar Mitzvah of Donovan Barros.

Enjoy your weekend and pre-Thanksgiving preparations.
PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE.... you are all invited to attend the Bloomfield Clergy Interfaith Thanksgiving program, this year to be held at Seabury at 7pm on Monday. We will be sharing how different faith traditions express thanks to the one God!!

Iris and I will be away over the long Thanksgiving weekend. Coverage has been arranged for emergency situations, and David Nemirow and Dr. Steve Lipman will cover Shabbat services. Do attend if you aren't travelling yourself!

There will be no e-shul next week.... look for a "pre-Hanukkah" edition before Hanukkah begins Wednesday evening, December 1.

Shabbat Shalom...... I hope you will be with your "synagogue family" at some time 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, November 19, NLT 4:07pm EST
Friday, November 26, NLT 4:03pm EST

 
SERVICE TIMES
Friday, Nov. 19, 8:00pm  Saturday, Nov. 20, 9:30AM, 4:00PM Mincha
 
Friday, Nov. 26, 6:15pm  Saturday, Nov. 27, 9:30AM, 4:00PM 
Mincha
 
  
Thanksgiving Day Daily Minyan 9AM and 4:15PM (at Emanuel)
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!!   

Lost and Found
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!

Snowbirds??
Going to Florida or elsewhere? Be sure to let the rabbi and the office know! 
 

 Upcoming  Special Events   - For more info see  Chai-lites!!    
November 22 - Interfaith Thanksgiving Service/ Program 7pm at Seabury


December 1 - Hanukkah begins at  evening
 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 Milner school. Bring in your gently used neckties to either the shul or rabbi's office.
  
Bring in childrens' books in good condition for Donovan Barros' mitzvah project... collection box in the shul lobby.

Make a donation to Foodshare for their Thanksgiving campaign!


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!
A Most Interesting News Articl!e!!!
Is the Reform movement going kosher? "The Sacred Table" suggests that Reform Jews develop a Jewish dietary practice. 

By Sue Fishkoff · November 11, 2010 ... courtesy of JTA

"The Sacred Table" suggests that Reform Jews develop a Jewish dietary practice.  SAN FRANCISCO (JTA) -- Kosher -- it's the first word in the book. And tackling the "k" word head-on is part of what makes the first Reform guide to Jewish dietary practice so significant.

          "The Sacred Table: Creating a Jewish Food Ethic," to be published next month by the Reform rabbinical association, uses an array of essays by Reform rabbis and activists to challenge Reform Jews to develop a conscious dietary practice grounded in Jewish values.

         And it's not shy about suggesting kashrut, both traditional and re-imagined.

"No longer an oxymoron, 'Reform kashrut' has entered the Jewish lexicon, although there is no consensus on what this means exactly," Rabbi Carole Balin, a Jewish history professor at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, writes in the book, which is being published by CCAR Press.

        For a movement whose founding Pittsburgh Platform of 1885 rejected kosher laws along with other traditional Jewish rituals of dress and body as "entirely foreign" to modern sensibilities, the book represents a significant milestone in the development of Reform spirituality and practice.

        It also illustrates the increased attention focused on kashrut across the denominational spectrum since the 2008 Agriprocessors scandal, which shuttered the nation's largest kosher slaughterhouse and spurred a rash of "ethical kosher" initiatives -- from small, humane kosher meat operations to the Conservative movement's Magen Tzedek project, which certifies kosher food products that meet certain ethical standards.

         In Reform circles over the past two years, conversation about kashrut and Jewish values has come from the grass roots, youth groups and the pulpit. It's part of the movement's new readiness to examine once-discarded Jewish rituals for their spiritual potential, and the focus on kashrut comes within the context of heightened interest among Americans generally in the politics and morality of food production and distribution.

       Some Reform leaders, including the book's The thrust of the book clearly favors broadening the definition of kashrut to include related Jewish ethical values, in keeping with longstanding Reform history. "That is essential," Yoffie said. "There are those in our movement who will accept kashrut in the traditional sense, but the great majority will take elements of kashrut in a broader sense. They want to relate it to issues of ethics, community and identity." Still, editor, Rabbi Mary Zamore of Temple B'nai Or in Morristown, N.J., want to play down the trendiness aspect.

         "This is part of a continuum within Reform Judaism," said Zamore, who pushed the project along for 13 years. "It's not liberal Judaism becoming something different; it's that we continue to evolve. Here is a topic which for many Reform Jews was taboo or a non-starter. Now everywhere I go, people are talking about these topics as Reform Jews."

       "The Sacred Table" opens with a discussion of the historical Reform approach to kashrut and includes an overview of traditional kosher laws -- a first for an official Reform publication, according to Zamore. It also includes chapters on each of the Jewish values that proponents of ethical kashrut embrace as they seek to broaden the traditional definition of the Jewish diet, from the ban on "tzaar baalei chayim," or cruelty to animals, to preventing "oshek," or oppression of workers. It includes the results of a 2005 survey that showed increasing numbers of Reform synagogues, clergy and lay leaders are keeping kosher, partially or entirely. And it ends with a guide that Reform congregations can use to develop their own communal dietary practice, which may or may not include kashrut.

        Rabbi Eric Yoffie, president of the Union for Reform Judaism and a longtime advocate of bringing more Jewish ritual into Reform practice, says he was pleasantly surprised to see the book's forthright approach.

         In the summer of 2009, while putting together his keynote speech for the movement's biennial conference, Yoffie said he planned to suggest kashrut as a model for Reform dietary practice. But after running his speech by key Reform lay leaders, the rabbi told JTA, he heard so much pushback that he dropped the "k" word from the final initiative. Called "Just Table, Green Table," the Reform platform for developing consciously Jewish food choices "is not about kashrut," Yoffie told biennial delegates as he unveiled the project last December.

         Yoffie later told JTA that he "wanted people to be open to the idea of Jewish sacred eating, and didn't want to touch an emotional chord that would prevent them from hearing that message." Now, a year later, he says he finds it "fascinating" that the Reform rabbinical leadership has seized the reins.

         "Our rabbinical body is coming out and unabashedly embracing the word kashrut, saying this is how we're framing the discussion and we want people to struggle with it," Yoffie said. Kashrut itself is offered as a recommended practice, however adapted. That does not sit well with some Reform leaders, whose voices also appear in the book, however briefly.

         One is Rabbi Joel Abraham of Temple Sholom in Scotch Plains, N.J., who writes that he does not keep kosher, opposing its power to separate Jews from non-Jews. He explains his position as a "moral choice based on my definition of Reform Judaism," and says he feels marginalized at Reform events that serve only kosher food. They may think they're being inclusive, Abraham writes, but in fact such meals exclude him and his beliefs.

         Jewish ethical values about treating workers and animals well, and respecting the environment and one's own body, are all important to Reform as well as other Jews, he says. "But we don't need to graft them onto kashrut," he said, acknowledging however that he is in a shrinking minority among Reform rabbis.

           Balin, who teaches a course on food for rabbinic and cantorial students, says she doesn't know any who adhere to the tenets of Classical Reform. Jewish dietary practice and the politics and morality of food choices, she said, "are very much on the minds of these future Reform leaders."

Israel News........... the Drought in Israel

 

I just read that the chief rabbis have declared a day of fasting and prayer in Israel because of a dearth of rain so far this year. Outside the realm of the chief rabbinate, however, there are "grassroots" attempts at prayer as well. I found the article below most meaningful.....

 

Praying hard to make the rain fall

By ARIEH O'SULLIVAN THE MEDIA LINE 
11/14/2010 01:07

 

Rabbis, imams and priests gather to pray for the end of seven-year drought in a valley near Jerusalem.

It's been said that everyone talks about the weather, but no one does anything about it.

Well, seven years of drought in the Holy Land has been so bad that it has brought together Muslim, Christian and Jewish clerics to offer prayers for rain.

The rainy season should have begun over a month ago, but the skies remain blue on this November afternoon. These devout men believe that now more than ever is the time for divine intervention.

At a spring named Ein Heniya in the Valley of the Ghosts that separates Jerusalem from the Bethlehem hills, the clerics gathered on Thursday afternoon for an unusual prayer session. They decided to put aside their differences and, as followers of one God, united their prayers for the muchneeded rain.

"Look up, it's dry, dry," said Rabbi Menachem Froman, an Orthodox rabbi from the Tekoa settlement near Bethlehem, who has close ties with Palestinian religious leaders.

"Before anything else, to live we need rain. If there isn't any rain, there won't be any Jews or Muslims or Christians here."

"According to our traditions, the Jewish and the Islam, rain is due to the deeds of man, and if we make any step of peace between us, perhaps that will open the treasures of the skies and rain will fall," Froman told The Media Line.

The spring is located a few hundred meters from an IDF checkpoint, and is sort of a no-man's land. But its location on the fringes of Israel and the Palestinian Authority have allowed it to serve more as an everyman's land, where Jews and Arabs can gather away from the watchful eyes of the security forces.

Still, there were some who tried to turn the prayer into a political event. A Palestinian man from the nearby village of Walaje began yelling that he was being oppressed and occupied when two curious border policemen stopped by to see what all the fuss was about.

After a quick word with one of the rabbis, the policemen left and the prayers began.

"I came here with my Jewish and Muslim brothers to pray that God has mercy on us and bestows blessings and rain on this holy land," Rev. Issa Elias Musleh, spokesman for the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem, told The Media Line.

"God willing, our prayers will reach God, who will grant us all our wishes - for he is capable for changing all things. I hope everyone who supports peace will take this union of clerics into consideration," Musleh said.

After declarations of unity, the three groups broke off to pray separately. About 20 Jews gathered around a dry pool, where they recited the special prayer for rain. It is required to fast for the day, if one recited this prayer.

Musleh stepped on a large boulder closer to the spring and began his Christian prayer, his followers nearby.

The Muslims, watching curiously at the Israelis praying - perhaps seeing this Jewish worship for the first time - took to higher ground. When the Jewish prayers were over, they lined up in two rows behind an imam and began their salat al-matar, or rain prayer.

"God likes unity, and when people make unity on the earth it is very good, and Allah likes this kind of life. Allah wants people not to quarrel with each other because of religion.

Because Allah sent religion to make peace, not to make war," Sheikh Abdel Najib, mufti of the Bethlehem area, told The Media Line. "We hope that God will be happy."
 
 

Amid the throng of local and international television crews and journalists, American tourist Micah Rosenblatt watched, enthralled.

"I wanted to be part of something where everyone is coming together for a common cause, because we all love this land and we are all a part of it, and so we want to work together to, like, bring some goodness here, you know," said Rosenblatt, a Jewish man from Florida who is staying in Tekoa.

Looking up at the cloudless sky, he wondered: "Who knows? Maybe the prayers will change something.

You never know. You never know what can happen," he said.

Froman said God was looking down from above.

"I believe that if God sees his children working together, the heavens will open and not only will rain come down, but so will peace," Froman said.

Weekly Torah Portion Commentary  - Courtesy of Rabbi Michael Gold...

 

Living With Gratitude: What is religion trying to do in the world?

 

  Shakespeare in Romeo and Juliet may have said, "What's in a name?  That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet."  But in Jewish tradition names make a difference.   In this week's portion Jacob receives a new name: Israel.  He wrestles all night with a being - some say a man, some say an angel, and some say his own conscience.  Jacob is injured, but he holds on to his adversary and demands a blessing.  His name becomes Israel, which means "wrestles with God."
       The Jewish people are known as the people Israel, the people who wrestle with God.  Jewish tradition is filled with people who refuse to passively accept God's decrees, but rather actively confront God.  Abraham the father of the people Israel bargains with God to try to save the cities of Sodom and Gemorrah.  Job calls God to trial after enduring every kind of suffering.  On the High Holidays I have often told various versions of the story of Moshe the Innkeeper, who stood before God on Yom Kippur with two lists.  He prayed, "O God, this shorter list contains my sins against you this past year.  This longer list contains your sins against the Jewish people this past year.  If You forgive me for my sins, I will forgive You for Yours."  Only a people who believe in wrestling with God could invent such a story.
       Most of us think of religion as passivity in the face of divine decrees.  Religion teaches serenity and acceptance.  In fact Islam, which shares many ideas with Judaism, literally means "surrender."  One surrenders one's self to God's will.  Often these ideas are tied in with a powerful belief that the reward is in the next world.  One can more easily accept adversity in this world if one will be rewarded in the next.  The idea that religion is about wrestling with God seems radical. 
       I learned about these ideas long ago when I was writing my first book on the Jewish view towards infertility and adoption.  For my wife and myself, the pursuit of having a family was a struggle and we would not rest until we succeeded.  I interviewed a couple I knew who were deeply religious Christians, also struggling with infertility.  But their attitude was so different from ours.  The woman told me with great serenity, "We would love to have a child.  But so far it has not happened.  I suppose God simply has a different plan for us.  We will follow God's plan."  I do not think that I have ever met a Jewish couple who would react that way.
       Our tradition is built on the idea that we are partners with God in perfecting this world.  (I will deal with this issue in greater detail this Sunday in my Rap with the Rabbi when I speak about - what does it mean to be human?)  God does not want silent partners nor passive partners.  God wants partners who are willing to struggle and try to make this world a better place.  I used that argument in my book on infertility to say that God allows whatever medical procedures are reasonable to help a couple create a baby.  With this argument, I disagreed with many in the Christian community, particularly the Catholic Church, who said such medical techniques were "unnatural."
       To wrestle with God means to be a bit unsatisfied with the world as it is.  It means admitting that God made a world which is tov meod "very good" but not yet perfect.  It means constantly struggling.  When people approach me about converting to Judaism, I often tell them that becoming a Jew is like marrying into a loud, fractious family.  It is a family where people like to complain, where there is always a little bit of dissatisfaction.  If the potential convert could fit into such a family, they are welcome to join the Jewish people.  But if their view of religion is passivity, serenity, and acceptance of whatever God throws their way, conversion is probably not a good idea.
       We are Israel, the people who wrestle with God.  And when we wrestle with God according to the Talmud, God sits on the holy throne laughing and saying, "My children have defeated me."  (Baba Metzia 59b)