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Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
Purim is finally here! This Saturday night we come back for the end of Shabbat... and, after the beautiful Havdalah service, a number of congregants will join together under the direction of Norma Bursack to provide a Purim play or "shpiel" for an extra treat at Purim services. And look forward to the hamantashen!! I invite everyone to buy or bring a box or two of macaroni and cheese to services. The boxes SHAKE WITH A NICE SOUND AND YOU CAN THEN GIVE THE BOX TO ONE OF THE FOOD BANKS VIA THE COLLECTION BINS IN THE SHUL. DO TWO MITZVOT FOR THE PRICE OF ONE!! It has been a difficult week in the world. Terrorism has occurred again in Israel, with the brutal murder of a family in a small town. We all have concern about both the victims of the horrific earthquake in Japan and the unfolding consequences of damage to the nuclear reactors. Did you know that Israel is also on an earthquake fault line? A recent article in the Jerusalem Report, copies available in the chapel, talks about the issue of earthquakes in Israel. A month after Purim, as we know, comes Passover! LAST CALL: We need a minimum number of people to sign up for a Congregational Second night seder -- so please let the office know NOW of your possible interest! Of course, before Purim we have Shabbat. Friday evening, we have a special speaker, Dr. Avi Patt from the University of Hartford. He will be speaking on "Update: Iran's Threat to Israel" on this Shabbbat Zachor, the Shabbat of Remembrance. Although the current news is dealing with the tragedy in Japan and to a lesser extent Libya (which alas is not getting the attention that might otherwise affect the results), the long-term issues between Iran, with its fierce anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism, remain. Professor Patt will bring us current news on this situation. Shabbat morning we will talk about some of the lessons and mitzvot of Purim, to prepare us for the evening Megillah reading. Sunday morning we will read the megillah again if we have a minyan! THAT MEANS IF YOU COME!! Here is an "early notice" that Saturday morning, March 26th, there will be no Shabbat morning services at BHS. The congregation is invited to attend the Bat Mitzvah of Hope Nemirow, granddaughter of David and Maura Nemirow, at Temple Bet Tefilah in East Hartford. Note that their services start at 9am. Directions to the synagogue are available in the office. I have written an updated Passover preparations guide. It will be in the April Chai-lites. If anyone would like to see it in advance, just let me know. I will be attending the annual Rabbinical Assembly convention the last week of March. I hope to learn many things that will be of value to my work here as your rabbi --- as well as seeing colleagues, family, and friends! More about that next week, when there will be a two-week combined issue of the E-shul. We have gone, as you all know, back to Daylight Savings Time -- in a month or so we will be able to resume davenning Mincha at our evening minyan! Look forward to spring and warmer days...... Iris and I have the first crocuses coming up in our front lawn!
Shabbat Shalom....... 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." |
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Shabbat Services & Candle Lighting Times
CANDLE LIGHTING Friday,March 18, NLT 6:40pm DST
SHABBAT SERVICE TIMES
Friday, March 18 8:00pm Saturday, March 19, 9:30AM, 6:45pm Mincha
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Joke of the Week
A man walks into the psychiatrist's office with a cucumber in his nose, a carrot in his left ear, and a banana in his right ear. He says, "what's wrong with me?" The psychiatrist answers, "You're not eating properly!"
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Congregational Announcements
Forming a Havurah
Joel Nueuwirth is interested in forming a havurah of motivated families for doing Jewish things together, such as Shabbat dinners. If you are interested, PLEASE GIVE HIM A CALL AT 860-242-7084.THE ANNUAL SISTERHOOD TAG SALE IS COMINGThe storage room for accepting your donations is now open. Feel free to bring in your donations during synagogue hours!! Yellow Candles.... Yom HaShoah Our Brotherhood will be distributing yellow candles to remember those martyred in the Shoah! Information on obtaining the candles will be distributed soon.
Membership Drive
At our Congregational meeting on Jan. 25, 2011 we voted to stay in our present location while conducting an agressive membership campaign. Every member of Beth Hillel should consider himself/herself a member of the Membership Committee.
If you would like to volunteer to stuff envelopes, make phone calls or talk to prospective members, please e-mail or call Norman Cohen, 860-242-1498, norman0112@comcast.net.
We look forward to hearing from you,
Norman Cohen
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Bloomfield Interfaith Association
The Bloomfield Interfaith Clergy Association held a most successful first meeting last month. Over 20 representatives of various religious institutions and agencies met together . The Bloomfield United Methodist Church will be opening a community soup kitchen soon. Various other community initiatives were discussed. ... including interfaith study.
The next meeting will be held on March 29, at noon at the First Congregational Church, 10 Wintonbury Road. Your attendance is invited.
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Halacha L'Maaseh (practical halacha)......
Is a feature of the weekly Torah Sparks, distributed at Shabbat services each week. Last week's halacha talked about the sprinkling of salt on bread before motzi.
We read in Chapter 2 of Vayikra that all offerings in the Temple should have salt.
The table is compared to the altar. Salt is also a preservative, and thus a symbol of eternal covenant between God and the Jewish people.
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Social Action Updates
DONATIONS OF FOOD ARE GREATLY NEEDED FOR THE KOSHER AND REGULAR FOOD BANKS!! PLEASE DONATE AT THE SYNAGOGUE NOW!!
Opening April 2 - Bloomfield Soup Kitchen.... Hosted at Bloomfield United Methodist Church
Participate in the "SNAP" lprogram against hunger.... contact Lenny Swade for more information, 860-688-4351
Coming.... May 1... Foodshare annual "Walk for Hunger." Sign up to join the team at:
http:/site.foodshare.org/goto/bethhillel
Be aware of those less fortunate than we are!! Carry out the mitzvah of tikkun olam!
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Upcoming Synagogue and Community Events
MOVING FORWARD: A PROGRAM FOR JEWISH SINGLES 65 +
FIRST MEETING MARCH 24TH, 2PM AT CONGREGATION BETH ISRAEL.
INFO ON THE RABBI'S BULLETIN BOARD
STARTING MARCH 26, THE 15TH ANNUAL HARTFORD FILM FESTIVAL!!
SUNDAY, APR. 3 - NORTH ATLANTIC REGION, WOMEN'S LEAGUE FOR CONSERVATIVE JUDAISM REUNION LUNCHEON 1PM in STURBRIDGE, MASS. CONTACT BEV GANS FOR MORE INFORMATION.
APRIL 9, 8:30PM - A MUSICAL EVENING TO SUPPORT THE UPCOMING ISRAELI HIGH SCHOOL ROBOTICS TEAMS ATTENDING THE ANNUAL TRINITY COLLEGE COMPETITION. CONCERT AT EMANUEL SYNAGOGUE. DETAILS ON BULLETIN BOARD.
APR. 21, 4:30PM INTERFAITH SEDER SPONSORED BY JFACT (AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS) AT STATE CAPITOL. CALL JFACT FOR RESERVATIONS. MORE INFO ON BULLETIN BOARD
APRIL - MAY 2011: NEW SERIES OF COURSES AT THE HARTFORD AREA "BEIT MIDRASH." INFO ON CLASSES ON THE RABBI'S BULLETIN BOARD
SAVE THE DATE: BHS MAJOR FUNDRAISER: SUNDAY EVENING, MAY 15, COMEDY EVENING!! DETAILS TO FOLLOW......
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Israel News..... Beyond Tanks
Military technology continues its long, bloody march into the future. But technologies are only as powerful as the ideas and moralities behind them.
Israel in the past has fought large-scale conventional wars in which infantry and tanks have squared off. It has also faced down terrorists who cross borders to blow up buses or hide themselves among civilians. The next wave is called hybrid warfare, blending (in the words of the military theorist Frank Hoffman) "the lethality of state conflict with the fanatical and protracted fervor of irregular warfare." Forces intermingle and engagements bleed into one another, while TV cameras, bloggers, and human-rights activists stand watching and waiting for states-the element they can identify-to act.
The Israeli military was bloodied in the 2006 war against Hizballah, when irregular forces employed strong defenses in and around inhabited areas, together with powerful battlefield weapons like anti-tank missiles that accounted for 40 percent of Israeli combat casualties and missiles launched deep into Israel itself with the aim of killing and terrorizing civilians. When air attack failed to wipe out Hizballah missile installations, Israeli ground troops were called in; poorly trained and equipped, they seized and lost the same ground repeatedly. Although Israel won the war in quantitative terms, the perception was otherwise, as media-savvy Hizballah spokesmen took journalists to see only what they wanted them to see.
In the next war, Israeli military planners expect their country to be bombarded by thousands of short- and long-range missiles, Hizballah units to penetrate deep into northern Israel, and some Israeli Arab communities to give them shelter and to participate in terror. Just as enemy tactics will be different, so, thanks to Israeli technology and preparedness, will be the response. In late February, for example, Israel's new "Trophy" system was put to the test on the Gaza border. A missile fired at a tank was detected by the tank's radar system, and a computer fired off a spray of smaller projectiles that stopped the attack.
In the meantime, however, the legal and moral approach to war remains encrusted in outmoded ideas and institutions. Conventional wars have the marginal advantage of basic rules, encoded however imperfectly in the Geneva Conventions whose primary elements date back to the immediate aftermath of World War II. These now tie the hands of states that take them seriously. What happens when one side makes no distinction between combatants and civilians, when its fighters slip back and forth among roles in order to achieve cover and entice attacks that will kill its own civilians and thus arouse the horror and pity of credulous humanitarians, and when ammunition dumps are placed inside homes and schools to the same end? Israel has faced some of these issues before, most recently in Gaza, as has the U.S. in Iraq and now Afghanistan. For its troubles, Israel was rewarded with the Goldstone report from the United Nations, predisposed to examine only the accusations of Hamas and to find them justified.
Modern state armies like those of Israel and the United States place a premium on protecting their own forces as well as civilians and non-combatants on the other side. Their rules of engagement are complex and restrictive, allowing for lethal force only under defined circumstances. Operational decisions are pre-processed through phalanxes of lawyers, sometimes thousands of miles away. But since the legal and moral cover this provides has been insufficient to prevent all mistakes, the human-rights community has been encouraged to bring lawsuit after lawsuit demanding perfection. By contrast, Hizballah and the Taliban, by virtue of their belief that they answer to higher authority, operate under no such legal strictures. Human Rights Watch can issue all the reports it likes.
Is there a technological fix? Systems like Trophy, designed to protect tank crews, have the larger purpose of protecting Western combatants from having to play by the rules of hybrid warfare, which are set by the utterly ruthless. The West is frequently charged with favoring technology over humanity, but in truth the opposite is the case. Technology has a dual moral purpose: saving warriors' lives, and allowing them to fight with greater discretion. The alternative is the Russian method so well displayed in Chechnya, where a modern army laid waste to both cities and countryside, slaughtering combatants and civilians alike.
But technology cannot yet fight house to house, or clearly distinguish a hostage-taker from a hostage. Only trained soldiers can do that, and some of them will die in the process of making such distinctions. Tanks themselves were first introduced during the Battle of the Somme in 1916, where on the first day more than 19,000 British soldiers had been killed. And even when the tanks appeared a few weeks later, they only enabled the British to advance a total of 3.2 kilometers, and the war went on for another two years.
In brief, neither technology nor morality is sufficient to transcend the violent essence of warfare. Nor have decades of lawyers and philosophers fared any better; to the contrary, much too often, their work appears to have empowered the violent and the immoral. Until something fundamental changes, new technologies in the hands of the humane must be cautiously celebrated. But even so armed, Israel faces the prospect of a next war that promises to be singularly costly.
Alex Joffe is a research scholar with the Institute for Jewish and Community Research. Read his feature on "the politics of Purim" here.
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Weekly Torah Portion Commentary -
Courtesy of Rabbi Michael Gold
Rabbi David Cooper, a kabbalist and story teller, tells the story of Yosele the Holy Miser. Yosele was the richest man in town. And yet the people of the community knew never to go to him for donations. Beggars were routinely turned away at his door and the community leaders knew that he would not support the community institutions. He died utterly alone. The town people were so upset they wrote on his stone, Yosele the Miser. After Yosele died, beggars and poor people began showing up at the home of the rabbi. "Every Friday someone left me money for Shabbat. Now they have stopped." "When my daughter was married, someone left me money for the wedding feast. Now my second daughter is getting married, and there is no money." "Someone always gave money secretly so that everyone had wine for Passover. Now there is no money." Hearing these stories, the rabbi realized that Yosele had been secretly giving out money all these years. No one knew until after his death. He arranged to change the writing on his stone - Yosele the Holy Miser. One of the highest levels of giving tzedakah (charity) according to Maimonides is to give it in secret, so that no one knows the donor. Some of the highest mitzvot (commandments) are those that are done secretly and privately, without public fanfare. Performing a mitzvah is a way of serving God, not serving our public reputation. On a regular basis I run into people who have taken on a project to improve the world, often in secret. This week's portion speaks about the ancient sacrifices. Each morning the priest had to remove his sacred clothing, put on ordinary linen clothing, and carry the ashes out from the previous day's sacrifices. There was no glory and no drama. It was a very private ritual. In fact, Rashi comments that the priest needed special encouragement to perform this ritual. But without removing the ashes, the altar would soon become unusable. I often comment when we read this portion about those who work quietly behind the scenes, allowing those of us in the public eye to do our jobs. Some of the most important commandments are performed secretly and privately. This brings me to the book of Esther and the celebration of Purim. The very name Esther comes from a Hebrew root s-t-r meaning secret or hidden. When the Torah speaks about God hiding God's face, it uses the phrase hester panim from the same root. Much of the theme of Purim is about hiding one's self; this is the basis of the custom of wearing masks and costumes on this most festive day. Esther was a secret Jew. Conversos - Jews who were forced to convert out during the Inquisition but who secretly maintained Jewish practices - often identify with Esther. She was able to keep her Jewish background secret from her husband, King Ahasverous, and his evil Prime Minister Haman. From her place of secrecy, Esther became the heroine who saved the Jewish people. Some see Esther as an assimilated Jew who did not practice her faith until she was forced to confront the enemies of the Jewish people. Others see her as a hidden Jew who did practice her faith, but only in secret. Jewish tradition is filled with mitzvoth. Some are public and some are private. Some are obvious and some are hidden. Often the hidden mitzvoth are the ones that are most important. Jewish legend says that there are thirty-six righteous people (lamed-vavniks) who in their own private way are playing an essential role in perfecting the world. Without these holy thirty-six people the world could not exist. Perhaps that should be our goal in life - to try to be one of the righteous thirty-six.
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