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

Like it or not, 2011 is here! I hope, if you made any "New Year's Resolutions," you are determined enough to realize them! Iris and I had a wonderful time with grandson Jacob just before New Year's.... now we return to a regular routine and the many activities of an active/ empowering synagogue and congregation.

We have a number of exciting events coming up this month -- although it doesn't seem as though the weather will be cooperating for now! We have to make plans well in advance when a special Shabbat activity is scheduled. As of Thursday afternoon, it seems that we will have significant snowfall starting Friday afternoon.... and that it may or may not be safe to come to services Shabbat evening. We have thus canceled  -- and will be rescheduling -- the visit of Gary Jones, the regional director of ADL. Whether or not services themselves need to be canceled will be decided and announced on Friday. This coming Friday evening, January 14, Shabbat we have Aaron Rozovsky, a young man in the Army National Guard talking about how his military experiences have developed his Jewish sensitivities.

There will be a TuBishevat Seder on Friday night January 21st. Members of Congregation P'nai Or and Rabbi Andrea Cohen-Keiner will be joining us for the seder. Make your reservations now, as per the January Chai-lites!

One of my new year's resolutions around the synagogue is to offer more Adult Education oppportunities for synagogue members. We will be organizing study sessions on the alternate Thursdays when there are no shmoozes, and our minyanaires will be developing a Friday morning study group after their breakfast on Friday mornings. We'll be "fine tuning" the plans for these programs in the coming days -- so "stayed tuned" for additional information.

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, January  7, NLT 4:16pm EST 
Friday, January 14, NLT 4:24pm EST 
  
SHABBAT SERVICE TIMES
Friday, Jan. 7, 8:00pm  Saturday, Jan. 8, 9:30AM, 4:00PM Mincha  / Sisterhood Havdalah
Friday, Jan. 14, 8:00pm  Sat., Jan. 15, 2011 9:30AM, 4:15PM Mincha / Saturday Sundaes

Congregational Announcements 

Special Congregatonal Meeting

There will be a special Congregational Meeting on Tuesday evening, January 18, to share updated information on future plans  for the congregation and  to vote  on these plans.  You will be receiving a letter shortly from Norman Hecht, Congregational  President.
 Social Action Updates    

COMING MONDAY, JANUARY 17, THE SHEMA TOUR WITH TEMPLE BETH HILLEL. DETAILS TBA!!

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3,.... BETH HILLEL TURN FOR THE "LOAVES and FISHES" SOUP KITCHEN

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.... Jewish/ Israel/ General.... Jerusalem Post and Jerusalem Report. The Forward, The Jewish Week..... Consumers Reports.....

Lots of great new books as well!!

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

Book of the week.....
The Cairo Genizah 
by Rabbi Mark Glickman

A fascinating history of this find of lost Judaica, written with a light touch. Solomon Schechter "made his reputation" as a result of his bringing news of the genizah -- as well as thousands of documents -- to England. The genizah was a literal "treasue trove" of information about Jewish life in the middle ages.

Israel News....... 

ISRAEL'S SECRET WAR
By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN
 

The big question in the Middle East these days is: Who has time on their side?

As Iran races to develop its nuclear bomb-making capacity, we have always assumed that time was on the Ayatollah's side.  The Iranian strategy of delay and obfuscation in its negotiations with the West seems to have succeeded in buying Teheran the time it needs for its spinning Centrifuges to produce enough highly enriched uranium for a bomb.  The possibility that Iran may acquire advanced anti-aircraft systems from Russia - even though the Kremlin denies it - seems to make the military option of an air strike on Iranian nuclear plants harder and harder for Israel.

But on the West Bank and Gaza, time has always seemed to be on Israel's side.  Time to build settlements, time to expand those already there, and - most important - time to wait out Obama's four year term in office all work for Netanyahu.

Then the worm turned!  The Stuxnet worm, a Windows-specific computer worm that spies on and reprograms industrial systems.  Iran has acknowledged that its nuclear program - the target of the worm - has been damaged significantly.  In fact, some speculate that the worm may take a year for Iran to work through.  But, since this is the most important use of cyber warfare thus far in history, nobody can really know its full impact.

When one considers the worm in the context of a cruder form of secret war - the targeted assassination of three Iranian nuclear scientists in recent weeks, the agents of the Mossad may have been very busy!  And effective!  Who knows?


And the United States has finally gotten focused on real sanctions against Iran.  Doing what Bush should have done but didn't, Obama and Hillary (yes - words of praise) have gotten the international community to sanction Iran where it hurts by undermining their capacity to produce oil, reducing their access to gasoline, and curtailing their ability to borrow money.

When we worked for Netanyahu as he approached his election as prime minister last year, we were both deeply impressed by his understanding of the danger an Iranian nuclear weapon would pose to Israel.  "It is 1938," were his prophetic first words when we met in a Manhattan hotel to begin our work.  1938.  The war, the holocaust, the slaughter of the Jews seemed to be approaching.

That's why Bibi's seeming willingness to play the clock has been puzzling.  By waltzing Hillary and Obama around the dance floor of Middle East negotiations, an on-again, off-again settlement building policy, and making noises about peace without actually giving anything up, he appears to be playing for time. And, given Obama's and Hillary's inexperience and incompetence in first demanding a settlement freeze and then deciding it had been a mistake to do so,  Netanyahu is dancing rings around the pair.  

But wasn't time on Iran's side?  Maybe not.
    
Perhaps what Bibi is doing - we have had no contact with him since his election - is influenced by the progress he sees in undermining Iran's nuclear program on the one hand and in keeping Obama to a single term on the other.

Netanyahu watches American politics very, very closely.  He probably understands that Obama is inimical to Israel's interests and likely fully grasps his pro-Arab tendencies.  But he also realizes the magnitude of the defeat inflicted upon the president in the midterm elections and sees the probability of his replacement by a staunch Republican friend of Israel in the offing.

So between the worm and the Tea Party, he may figure that time is on his side, after all.    

And it may be!


Weekly Torah Portion Commentary  -

Courtesy of Rabbi  Eliezer B. Diamond, Rabbi Judah A. Nadich Associate Professor of Talmud and Rabbinics at JTS.


Everyone knows that four children are mentioned in the Passover Haggadah and that one of them is the evil child. Probably fewer of us are aware that the question attributed to this child is a biblical verse found in this week's Torah portion, "What do you mean by this rite (avodah)?" (Exod. 12:26). The verse in context is as follows:

And when you enter the land that the Lord will give you as He has promised, you shall observe this rite. And when your children ask you, "What do you mean by this rite?" you shall say, "It is the passover sacrifice to the Lord, because He passed over the houses of the Israelites in Egypt when He smote the Egyptians, but saved our houses." (Exod. 12:25-27)

It has been noted quite often that there is nothing inherently evil in the question being asked. Why, then, is this question attributed to the evil child? Of course, the authors of the Haggadah address this question itself. "'You-and not him," say the Haggadah's authors; "He has removed himself from the community." Later traditional commentaries provide even more ingenious (and less convincing) evidence that this question is that of an evil child. Some modern scholars opine, on the other hand, that the creator of the midrash of the four children needed biblical pegs on which to hang his creation, and that he chose his verses arbitrarily.

What interests me is a corollary of the Haggadah's exegetical efforts. Regardless of the way in which it intends to link the verse in Exodus with the evil child, by doing so it gives that question some legitimacy; at the very least, by identifying the evil child's question with one recorded in the Torah it implies that the question ought to be taken with utmost seriousness.

To do this, however, we must understand the intent of the question. Here we are helped, I believe, by the Jerusalem Talmud. In a passage parallel to, but significantly different from the one in our Haggadah, we find the evil child's

question formulated and expanded upon as follows: "What does the evil child say? '"What do you mean by this rite (avodah)?" [That is to say] what is this burden which you place upon us each year?'"

What is the connection between the verse and the evil child's question/complaint? The Jerusalem Talmud apparently is playing on the ambiguous word avodah, which can mean both rite (prayer, for example, is called avodat ha-lev, "service of the heart") and servitude. In the mouth of the evil child, according to the Jerusalem Talmud, the verse becomes a sharp critique of the entire Exodus experience. The child says, in effect: "You claim that God, through the agency of Moses, took us out of bondage. But this is a lie! We have simply exchanged one bondage for another. Before, our master was Pharaoh, forcing us to make bricks and build pyramids. Now our master is God, who rules over every aspect of our existence from morning until night. This very Passover celebration is part of the servitude foisted upon us. What is there to celebrate?"

A good question indeed, especially for ourselves and our children who live in a society in which autonomy and freedom are watchwords. A good question especially for us as members of a halakhic movement, a movement that affirms the authority of Torah and our religious obligation to study and live by its teachings. Do we not subscribe to a form of servitude, one in conflict with the norms and values of American culture-and, more fundamentally, which contradicts our celebration of liberation?

In a sense, the Torah itself is aware of this difficulty and addresses this challenge. Throughout the description of the ten plagues, the Torah goes to great length to describe Pharaoh's behavior. One of the functions served by this description is to contrast Pharaoh with God. Pharaoh is a destroyer of the Israelite family. First, he exhausts the men by forcing them to engage in backbreaking labor. Later, after Moses's first unsuccessful plea to him, Pharaoh in effect plays a cruel joke on the Israelites: he responds to the reports that their labor is difficult by refusing to give them straw any longer, thereby making their difficult task impossible. Finally, even this is not enough for Pharaoh; all the male children of Israel must be destroyed. The Israelite family, and therefore the Israelite nation, will no longer exist.

God understands Pharaoh's plan, and therefore His first commandment to the Israelites involves lifting Israel out of bondage by restoring the dignity and integrity of the Israelite family. God gives the Israelites a calendar, telling them from when to count the first month. That is to say, He returns the meaningfulness of time to them. A slave has no control over time; his time is not his own. The commandment of, "This month shall mark for you the beginning of months" (Exod. 12:1) restores to the Israelites the gift of time. The Passover ceremony itself restores family in at least two senses. First, the paschal lamb is to be eaten by the household. Second, the bond between parent and child is strengthened as one generation tells the story of the Exodus to the next.

    

It can be said, therefore, that the Torah takes the evil child's question seriously and that it responds in a thoughtful fashion. Structures and authority are not inherently bad, says the Torah. The question is: who is commanding, and why? Pharaoh is the archetype of self-centered, destructive authority. Living in the 21st century, we need no one to tell us where such tyranny may lead. If we confuse all authority with the authority of tyranny, however, we are immeasurably impoverished thereby. God's voice, as embodied in Torah, also speaks to us in the voice of authority; but the intended goal is diametrically opposed to that of tyranny. This authority wishes to awaken in us the forces of good, of conscience. It calls upon us to serve God so that we may find all that is good within ourselves. Indeed, only by doing so can we, when faced with tyranny, find the strength to withstand it.