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| Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
It's been a very active week here at Beth Hillel Synagogue: Last Shabbat we held our Religious School Recognition Shabbat and honored Paula Baram for her 33 years of teaching in our religious school. We kvelled with our two graduates, Joe Howell and Jamie Waldo, and wished all the students well for the future. Sunday evening we had our "comedy night" major fundraiser. No joke will ever touch everyone's funnybone, but I thought the two major comedians were pretty good! Then Wednesday evening we had our Library Committee's spring "Author on the Road" program, and we heard Mark Jacobson tell how a chance encounter with a lampshade has changed his life.
This Shabbat is our annual Scholar in Residence Shabbat, sponsored by both our Adult Education Committee and our Israel Affairs Committee. You should have seen the flyers: Our guest scholar, Rahel Musleah, is a 7th generation Jew from Calcutta, now living in New York, who will tell us of the history of this fascinating community and how most of it, in the last 60 years, has since made aliyah. There will be presentations at services Friday evening and Shabat morning, plus a a special luncheon (make your RSVP now!) talk as well!!
We could all use a break from the dreary weather this past week. Why not spend some quality time at shul..... and the many activities going on in the synagogue, Jewish and general communities!
We are now moving into "graduation season." I invite everyone who has a simcha in their family to share the news with the office and myself, so we can share in your celebration as well!
Yes, see you around our Very Special Synagogue! Stay involved! Get involved! And look forward to Memorial Day weekend coming up!
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, May 20, 7:48pm DST
SHABBAT SERVICE TIMES
Friday, May 20 -- 8:00pm Saturday, May 21, 9:30am,
7:45pm Mincha/ Maariv/ Havdalah
There are congregants who need a ride to Friday evening services... if you want to help someone attend our worship... as well as doing a mitzvah, call Rabbi Atkins. |
Joke of the Week
Mother Teresa died and went to heaven. God met her and asked if she was hungry. Mother Teresa said, "I could eat," so God opened a can of tuna and some rye bread and they shared it. As she ate, Mother Teresa looked down into hell and saw the people there eating huge steaks, lobsters, expensive wine, and flaming desserts. Mother Teresa said, "I'm really glad to be in heaven, God, but why do we just eat tuna and rye bread while down in hell they're eating like kings?" God said, "Well, for just two people, why bother to cook?" |
Library News -- Book of the Week
Rosie and the Mole...
The doctors at the Brit Kodesh conference the begining of the month had a good laugh, in the midst of serious study, when I told them about this book... which explains a bris in a way understandable to an older sibling. It deals, in a good way, with questions of sibling rivalry as well as concern about what might be happening to little brother.
A nice read for general interest or especially if the situation is coming up in your family! |
CPA Action Alert:
Urge Congress to Remember Jewish Chaplains
The men and women serving in America's armed forces are supported by brave military chaplains of many faiths, who-at great personal risk and peril-provide spiritual and emotional support to soldiers defending our freedom. These heroes who are sometimes killed or injured in the line of duty deserve our nation's utmost respect. Chaplains Hill in Arlington National Cemetery appropriately memorializes the names of 242 chaplains who perished while on active duty, but astonishingly, none of the 13 Jewish chaplains who have died while serving are honored on Chaplains Hill
As part of Jewish American Heritage Month we are urging Members of Congress to support H.R. 1627 in the House of Representatives and S. Con. Res. 4 in the Senate, which establishes a memorial honoring the Jewish chaplains who perished while serving on active military duty. Private funds for this memorial have already been raised, but Congress must act to designate the space.
In the House, through the urging of Representative Anthony Weiner (D-NY), Chairman Jeff Miller (R-FL) included the text of the Jewish chaplains resolution as part of H. R. 1627, a larger bill issuing guidelines for memorials at Arlington. The bill is expected to be voted on in the House on May 23rd.
The Senate Veterans Affairs Committee is similarly working on a larger bill regarding memorials at Arlington, and this committee also intends to include the Jewish chaplains resolution as part of this bill. The Senate is still collecting co-sponsors for S.Con.Res. 4, the Jewish chaplains resolution.
Contact your Representative and Senators today and support the Jewish American chaplains in our armed forces. |
Congregational Announcements
Annual Meeting - Thursday evening, May 26 Election of Officers/ Vote on the proposed new constitution. Be sure to come - be sure that you can vote!! |
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Social Action Updates
There are congregants who need a ride to Friday evening services... if you want to help someone attend our worship... as well as doing a mitzvah, call Rabbi Atkins.
DONATIONS OF FOOD ARE GREATLY NEEDED FOR THE KOSHER AND REGULAR FOOD BANKS!! PLEASE DONATE AT THE SYNAGOGUE NOW!!
It opened April 2 - Bloomfield Soup Kitchen.... Hosted at Bloomfield United Methodist Church
Be aware of those less fortunate than we are!! Carry out the mitzvah of tikkun olam!
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Upcoming Synagogue & (Selected) Community Events
MAY 20-21 SCHOLAR IN RESIDENCE SHABBAT; RACHEL MUSLEAH, THE JEWS OF INDIA
MAY 22 - CELEBRATE ISRAEL'S 63rd BIRTHDAY - MANDELL JCC/ 2pm
JUNE 3 - SISTERHOOD SHABBAT/ SIMCHA SHABBAT
JUNE 7 - TIKKUN L'AYL SHAVUOT AT BETH AHM
JUNE 8-9 SHAVUOT SERVICES - YIKZOR JUNE 9
JUNE 10 - Dr. JOE OLZAKI speaking on "RETURNING CULTURE TO RWANDA - ONE CHOIR AT A TIME"
JUNE 17 - INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS AND VOLUNTEER RECOGNITION SHABBAT |
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Israel News
Op-Ed: Entebbe and bin Laden raids underscore U.S.-Israel alliance
By Michael Oren · May 12, 2011
WASHINGTON (JTA) -- Nearly 35 years ago, on July 4, 1976, the streets of America were aglow. The nation was celebrating the bicentennial -- the 200th anniversary of its independence. In Israel, too, the streets were radiant. Israel Defense Forces commandos had rescued some 100 hostages held captive by Palestinian terrorists at Uganda's Entebbe Airport.
This was one of history's most audacious raids, combining precision intelligence and operations well inside hostile territory. The commandos had only minutes to penetrate a heavily guarded building, complete their mission and return safely to base.
Entebbe revolutionized the very concept of special forces operations. The raid is studied at U.S. service academies and command colleges. It deeply influenced the thinking of American commanders such as Vice Adm. William McRaven.
A veteran Navy SEAL and head of Joint Special Operations command, McRaven is a longtime friend of Israel who visited our country many times and worked closely with our special forces. His classic book, "Case Studies in Special Operations Warfare," contains an entire chapter on the Entebbe raid. It was Bill McRaven who commanded the stunning raid against Osama bin Laden.
Israelis exuberantly praised the operation. We shared the pain that Americans had suffered at bin Laden's hands. We, too, have known that pain. America's success in ridding the world of bin Laden's scourge was our victory, too.
Elsewhere in the Middle East, however, the reaction was radically different. The Iranian regime claimed that America had exploited bin Laden as a pretext for invading Afghanistan and had eliminated him in order to prevent him from leaking valuable intelligence.
Hamas, in the Gaza Strip, condemned the operation as "another example of America's desire to spill Arab blood" and hailed bin Laden as a "holy warrior" and a "martyr."
The contrast between Israel's response to the operation and that of many of our neighbors underscores the essence of the U.S.-Israeli alliance. Your enemies are our enemies. Those who seek to kill Americans also threaten us. Your security is our security, just as our security is yours.
Just as American commanders once studied Entebbe, Israeli officers will now study the raid on bin Laden. We will learn from the similarities between the two operations, but also from their differences. Israel sought to rescue the victims of terrorism, while America sought justice for past victims and security against further terrorism in the future.
Thankfully, no American troops were killed in bin Laden's compound. But at Entebbe one Israeli soldier did fall -- the commander, Yoni Netanyahu.
Yoni was the older brother of Israel's prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. In a recent CNN interview, the prime minister said that Yoni's death profoundly impacted him.
"I think of my brother," he said, "I think of our children; I think of the Palestinian children. We could have a better world ... a world of peace."
The vision of a better world was in the minds of both Americans and Israelis on that Fourth of July in 1976. Not surprisingly, Israelis immediately associated Entebbe with the bicentennial. Cartoons appeared in the Israeli press showing a battle-soiled Israeli soldier standing beside the Statue of Liberty. Together they held aloft the torch of freedom.
Beyond their conceptual and tactical similarities, further even than the ways both will influence future special ops, the Entebbe and bin Laden raids reveal the fundamental bonds between Israel and America.
We share the commitment to defending our citizens from dangers both near and far. We share the determination to defend our democracies from those who seek to destroy them. We know that freedom is not inherently free, that it comes at a cost and must always be protected, sometimes at considerable risk.
Shortly before his death, Yoni Netanyahu wrote of his belief in "the eternity of the striving for freedom and the idea of freedom in Israel." That same belief permeates the American people.
Israel and America: We stand together against common threats, we strive together for common ideals, for security and peace. Together we uphold the biblical injunction "justice, justice, you shall pursue."
(Michael B. Oren is Israel's ambassador to the United States.) |
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Weekly Torah Portion Commentary -
Courtesy of Rabbi Michael Gold
"You shall eat old grain long stored, and you shall have to clear out the old to make room for the new." (Leviticus 26:10)
I recently spoke with my older son about buying some new electronic toy that is on the market. He urged me not to bother. The moment I buy this particular device, it will become dated; a newer version will come out soon. It reminds me of a wonderful television commercial from the electronics store Best Buy (I have a weakness for this store.) A man is shown carrying a big, fancy television into his home. As he walks in the door, a sign flashes that a newer fancier version is available. How quickly the new grows old! We all want the newest, latest version of everything. We buy an i-phone or an i-pad, then line up as the newer one comes on the market. For years I lived just fine without a Tivo. Then my son gave us an older one he owned. Now I can record television shows. It is a great toy. But I soon discovered that if I want to do certain things, I need to buy a newer version. The need for something new keeps the electronics industry in business. It also keeps the fashion industry, the toy industry, the auto industry, and numerous other enterprises going. There is a hint of this need for something new in this week's portion. The Torah speaks about blessings and curses. Among the blessings is the image of old grain being cleared out of the storage silos, with plenty of new grain to take its place. New grain is a sign of plenty and a chance to thank God. There is even a whole area of Jewish law often ignored except by the most pious that deals with yashan v'hadash - "old and new." Until the counting of the Omer on the second day of Passover, one is permitted to eat only old grain that took root and was harvested before the festival. Only with the Omer can new grain be eaten. You can see signs in bakeries in New York that serve the Orthodox community, "Everything baked with old grain." This human need for something new affects Jewish life. The old ways of conducting services just seem tired. Why not try something new? I remember someone telling me, "Rabbi, I went to this synagogue and they had this beautiful new ritual on Saturday night. They used a candle, spices, and wine, made a circle and sang. Why can't we do something new and creative like that?" I told her that what she saw was havdalah, a ritual Jews have been doing for thousands of years. We do it in our synagogue each week. One of the most famous sayings about old and new came from the charismatic Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, the Chief Rabbi of Palestine before the founding of the state of Israel. Kook was a mystic and a lover of the young, often secular pioneers who settled the land. When challenged about the newness of secular Zionism, he famously said, "The old shall be made new, and the new shall be made holy." Our job is not to reject the old in favor of the new. Rather it is to take what is old and renew it, make it meaningful and relevant once more. This is true for rituals and traditions as well as ideas. And as for those things that are truly new, our job is to make them holy. We have all these new electronic gadgets. Can they be used to pull a community together and to serve God? Can worship services be broadcast on the internet so shut-ins can participate? Can daily kaddish services be Skyped so that travelers can tune in and say kaddish? Can religious school classes be taught in a virtual school? I once had a conversation with a Chabad rabbi who had set up a synagogue in an isolated town far from Jewish life. I asked him, how do you educate your children here? He answered me in a way that seemed far from the strict Orthodox life he lived - "Our children take all their classes on the internet." Whenever we take out the Torah, we pray the words written by the prophet Jeremiah -Hadesh Yamenu Kekedem "Renew us as the days of old." The old can be made new again, and the new can become holy.
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