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

With regrets we say "goodby" to Hanukkah for another year. I hope you had a good holiday, especially enriched with family visits and maybe the best latkes you've ever tasted! There were certainly some delicious ones served at minyan breakfasts. And the sufganiot - jelly donuts served at evening minyanim were yummy as well!

And "the yummy" continues. Friday evening we have an early Shabbat service, with our USY/Kadminah young adults helping with the service. Then we'll be having our next Congregational dinner... if you didn't make a reservation, alas it's too late! 

Shabbat morning I'll be talking about the plight of Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held captive by Hamas for over 4 years. Read Rabbi Michael Gold's Torah commentary at the end of the email for a further explanation. A young man in New Jersey has made publicizing the plight of Gilad Shalit as his "mitzvah project" for his bar mitzvah, abnd I am happy to have us participating in this program of support and solidarity!

The following Shabbat will really be a fantastic weekend. It will be "Cantor Shabbat," with Cantor Michelle Teplitz returning to lead us in tefillah. Her voice inspired us last spring, and we look forward to seeing her again. Then Saturday evening the synagogue is kind enough to be putting together a most special birthday party for me. I am most appreciative of all the efforts that are being made, and I hope you'll share in the music and fun if you are in the area! 

Additional information about all these programs -- and much more -- is in the December Chai-lites, which you should certainly have received by now. If you didn't get your copy, let Lynn know.
  
I will mention again that there are ongoing adult education classes going on at Beth Hillel. Are you interested in studying the prophets? Or how about improving your Hebrew? Call me if these topics interest you... or suggest another! 

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, December 10, NLT 4:00pm EST - The earliest time of the year!!
 

SERVICE TIMES
Friday, Dec. 10, 6:15pm  Saturday, Dec. 11, 9:30AM, 4:00PM Mincha   
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! 
 

 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.
 
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!
 Library News   

THERE ARE LOTS OF GOOD NEW BOOKS TO READ IN OUR SYNAGOGUE LIBRARY.......

Lots of good periodicals and newspapers as well.... Jewish/ Israel/ General.

Do stop by and take a look!!!!!!

Israel News....... 

After Israel's deadly fire, mourning, vows to rebuild and finger pointing..... by  Marcy Oster December 5, 2010  courtesy of JTA

 

JERUSALEM (JTA) -- In the aftermath of the deadliest fire in Israel's history, Israelis this week set to the task of burying the dead, cleaning up and figuring out what exactly went wrong -- and who is to blame.

Even before the blaze in the Carmel Mountains near Haifa came under control Sunday afternoon, Israelis were asking why the country wasn't better prepared for a wildfire of this magnitude. In all, 42 people were killed, about 250 homes were destroyed or severely damaged, 17,000 people were forced to evacuate, more than 12,000 acres were burned and an estimated 5 million trees were lost.

 

"The Carmel disaster highlights the outrageous gaps in Israel's strategic and day-to-day readiness," the editorialists at Haaretz wrote Sunday while echoing a call for a state commission of inquiry to examine who bears responsibility for the failures of the Israeli fire service. "What's better to spend the State of Israel's money on, firefighting aircraft or an F-15 fighter jet?" wrote Eitan Haber, a former Rabin administration official and now a columnist for Ynet.

The damage to the area of the Carmel Forest in northern Israel was estimated at about $75 million, including damage to towns and kibbutzim, destroyed forests and damaged roads. Yemin Orde, an aliyah youth village founded in 1953 that has served as a home and school to thousands of immigrant youths, most recently Ethiopians and Russians, was severely burned. In the artists' village of Ein Hod, 10 houses and an art gallery were destroyed. 

 

On Sunday, the Israeli Cabinet approved a $16.5 million aid package to assist damaged communities, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered that each person whose home suffered severe fire damage be given an immediate aid disbursement of about $700. Calls came from many quarters for the resignation of Interior Minister Eli Yishai, whose ministry is responsible for the state's firefighting forces. Yishai also is accused of refusing fire truck donations from the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews.

 

Yishai said his ministry was not funded well enough to purchase needed equipment -- in 2001, he noted, Ariel Sharon's government voted to eliminate air support for fire fighting -- and told Israel Radio that he was a target because of his Sephardic heritage. Israel has 16 firefighters per 100,000 residents; by contrast, the United States, Japan and Greece have five to seven times that number per capita, The Associated Press reported. In total, Israel has 1,400 firefighters.

 

A 14-year-old resident of the Druze village of Ussfiya was arrested Monday after admitting to starting the fire. The teen reportedly said he was smoking a nargila water pipe and threw a live coal into an open area before returning to school. The arrest was announced hours after two teenage brothers from the same village arrested over the weekend on suspicion of negligence in starting the fire were released from detention by a Haifa court. The teens had been accused of lighting a bonfire near their home that sparked the blaze.

High winds and dry conditions prompted by Israel's parched winter thus far provided fuel for the blaze, which began tearing through northern Israel on Dec. 2. Northern Israel is covered by fields and trees, some natural forests and others planted over the last several decades -- many of them by pioneers during the British Mandate period. Others were planted with donations from Diaspora Jews through the Jewish National Fund.

 

With its green hills, the country's north has a Mediterranean flavor distinct from its more Middle Eastern south, which is covered by desert. After the fire, the Israeli government said it would invest the resources to make the north green again.

 

The fire's rapid spread revealed a strategic weakness that could be exploited by its enemies, Israeli commentators wrote. Meanwhile, numerous figures in the Arab world cited the fire as punishment from God for Israel's treatment of the Palestinians and its occupation of Arab lands. The Palestinian prime minister in the Gaza Strip, Ismail Haniyeh, said the fire was a "strike from Allah." The spiritual leader of the Israeli Orthodox Shas Party, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, also said the fire was divine punishment, attributing the blaze to the sin of lack of observance of the Sabbath.

 

During the height of the blaze, Israeli's chief Sephardic rabbi, Shlomo Amar, led thousands in prayer at the Western Wall. Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi Yona Metzger called on Israelis to give charity and read Psalms to bring about the fire's end.

 

For its part, the Israeli government issued a rare call for international assistance. Among the countries that responded were Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Cyprus, Greece, Germany, Russia, France, Switzerland, Britain, Spain and the United States. The Palestinian Authority also sent 21 firefighters and four fire trucks to help battle the blaze; Israeli media reported that the trucks were a gift to the Palestinians from the European Union.

 

Thirty-five firefighting airplanes came to Israel. New York sent a 747 loaded with Fire Troll 931, a fire retardant chemical, in a shipment organized by the Fire Depart.ment of New York City and the office of the city's mayor, Michael Bloomberg. Israel also rented the American Evergreen Boeing 747 Super Tanker, one of the most advanced firefighting planes in the world, loaded with 80,000 liters of water and fire retardant. It arrived early Sunday morning and had an immediate effect on helping douse the flames.

 

The deadliest incident came in the fire's early hours when a bus carrying about three dozen cadets from the Israeli prisons service on their way to evacuate a prison threatened by the blaze became trapped between burning trees. Nearly all those aboard perished, and the bus was left a scorched shell. Two firefighters who rushed to rescue the guards and a 16-year-old volunteer, Elad Riven, also were killed. All of the bodies were identified, some using DNA technology, by Saturday night, and funerals began being held while the blaze was still raging.

 

"No one sent you, no one called for you, no one but your wonderful and brave conscience," Israeli President Shimon Peres said during a eulogy at the funeral for Riven on Sunday. The "disaster taught us that all of us -- Jews, Arabs, Druze and other peoples -- share the same fate."

A day after the blaze was brought under control, the fire's death toll rose by one with the death of Haifa Police Chief Ahuva Tomer, who was burned over most of her body while trying to assist the prison guard cadets.

 

Jewish communities in Denver and Winnipeg, Canada, also mourned the death of one of the bus passengers, Rabbi Uriel Malka, 32, who was working as a chaplain in the Israeli Prisons Service. Malka, a father of five, worked as a Jewish Agency emissary for two years in Denver and then served as principal of the Ohr Hatorah Day School in Winnipeg. Malka had narrowly escaped death during combat in the Second Lebanon War.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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

 

Continuing the discussion of Gilad Shalit mentioned above...... "REDEEMING CAPTIVES" 


     On June 25 2006 Gilad Shalit, a young Israeli soldier was captured by Hamas terrorists who crossed the border into Israel.  For almost four and a half years he has been held in prison in the Gaza Strip.  Negotiations with Hamas for his release including diplomatic efforts have been unsuccessful. Hamas is demanding the release of over a thousand Palestinian prisoners, many of them convicted of terrorist acts against Israel.  Many Israelis favor setting free the Palestinian prisoners to win the release of this one man. Others believe setting terrorists free is too large a price for Israeli to pay.  So the standoff continues and Shalit languishes in prison.

       This is a modern example of one of the central commandments in Jewish tradition - pidyon shivuim, redeeming captives.  Unfortunately, throughout Jewish history bandits have often captured Jews and held them for ransom, knowing that the community felt an obligation to redeem them.  Redeeming captives was such a high priority in the Jewish community that it took precedence even over feeding the poor. There was a particular obligation to redeem female captives who might be sexually abused.  In fact, among the obligations a husband has towards his wife is the requirement to redeem her should she be held hostage.  Although this is not written explicitly in the ketubah (marriage document), it is an obligation that is assumed to be binding.

       This week's portion actually contains the first Biblical case of the obligation to redeem a captive. Benjamin is being held in Egypt.  His brothers have a choice of leaving him behind or of coming forward and trying to redeem him.  Judah delivers a passionate speech for the release of Benjamin.  "For how can I go back to my father unless the boy is with me?  Let me not be witness to the woe that would overtake my father."  (Genesis 44:34)  In describing Benjamin's father, Judah certainly expresses the pain to the family when someone is held captive.  One can scarcely imagine the pain felt today by Gilad Shalit's parents.

       Should Israel release all the prisoners to win Shalit's freedom?  Is there a limit to releasing captives?   Would not paying the ransom encourage further kidnappings and unreasonable demands?  The Talmud actually discusses this question.  "They must not ransom captives for more than their value for the sake of tikkun olam - repairing the world, nor can they help in the escape of captives for the sake of tikkun olam - repairing the world." (Gittin 4:6)  Paying too much for a ransom will encourage more kidnappings.  And helping captives escape will lead to the mistreatment of other captives.

       Thus we see an impossible dilemma.  Do what is necessary to win release of the captive and it could lead to more captives.  But not taking action would cause terrible suffering to the captive and his or her family.  It was a dilemma in medieval times when the great Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg refused to allow the community to ransom him from prison.  And it is a terrible dilemma for Israel today.  We can only pray that compassion will rule and Shalit will be released.

       Sadly, we live in a world where many people have no compunctions about kidnapping other people, whether for political reasons or for money.  Kidnapping has become a day-to-day blight in parts of Latin America.  The rich are targets and many have established elaborate security to protect themselves and their families. But these evils will continue as long as people see other people not as worthy of dignity but as a means to an end.

       The Torah teaches that every human being is created in the image of God.  Every human being is worthy of dignity.  To hold innocent people prisoner against their will is an egregious transgression of human dignity. That is why ransoming captives is at the center of the Jewish conception of the world.  Hamas knew that Israel will do what is necessary to redeem a captive.  That is the tragedy of Shalit's situation.