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Rabbi's Ramblings......
Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
Well, the fall holidays are over. We return to a regular calendar -- and a very busy fall programming schedule -- hopefully to interest and involve you. We hope that you will take advantage of the many special programs that are upcoming.
Our Ritual Committtee met the other night and evaluated the High Holy Days. Everyone was very favorably impressed by our guest cantor, Cantor Kenneth Cohen. We hope he will consider returning to be with us next year! We also noted other ways to make the High Holy Day prayer experience even more meaningful.
Although a good deal of Sukkot was rainy, we did have the opportunity to enjoy the synagogue sukkah, and a good number of congregants attended Iris and my "open sukkah" on the Sunday of Hol HaMoed Sukkot.
We ran out of the Israel-America friendship pins that were given out the morning of Yom Kippur. I ordered another 100... they are now here and available for you to pick up at any service.
This Shabbat is a combined "Library Shabbat" and "Scholar in Residence" Shabbat. Hope you will come and listen to our visiting lecturer, Dr. Adolfo Roitman from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. As the flyer indicated, Friday evening he will be speaking on "The Biography of an Argentinean Jew" and on Shabbat morning on "Evil and the Dead Sea Scrolls as seen in the Torah portion." Should be fascinating!
Do make your reservations ASAP for the Shabbat dinner a week from Friday, November 4. We will also meet and hear from one of our two community Israeli Young Emissaries, Inbar Ribenzon.
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
Friday, Oct.ober 28 8 P.M. (CLT 5:31)
Saturday, October 29 9:30 A.M., Mincha, Maariv 5:30 P.M |
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Joke of the Week
A duck walks into a drugstore and says "Gimme some chapstick and put it on my bill." |
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Social Action Updates
Make a donation to MAZON to help the hungry in our communities....
Be aware of those less fortunate than we are!! Carry out the mitzvah of tikkun olam!
A mitzvah we can ALL DO: Visit a friend in a nursing home or assisted living center or who otherwise can't get out! Or bring someone to a service here who couldn't get here on their own!
The Blomfield Department of Social services reports that over 110 bags of food were donated via Project Isaiah! THANKS.... |
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Community Events
Sunday, Nov 6, Herb Keinon speaking at the JCC on "Weighing the Chances for Peace" 9:30am
Sunday, November 13, Reincarnation in Jewish Thought,
Rabbi Atkins presents an introduction to the idea of "Transmigration of Souls," followed by a presentation by Dr. Norton Berkowitz on the idea of "Past Life Regression." including a workshop.... at the JCC.... 10:30am. Reservations to the office
Sunday, November 20, Community Interfaith Thanksgiving Service, LDS Church, 1000 Mountain Road, 7pm.
See the November Chai-lites for more information on each of these activities! |
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Weekly Torah Portion Commentary.....
This week by Rabbi Michael Gold
Last week I began this new cycle with the comment that God created everything, including the entire animal kingdom, and God said that it was good. Then God created human beings, and God said - nothing. Animals fulfill their purpose by their very nature. Humans are given free will; we can fulfill our purpose or ignore our purpose. I want to develop this idea further.
I often like to see animals as living in the world of the circle. To understand this, think of the marvelous Disney movie and musical The Lion King. The first scene shows a baby lion being held up. Elton John's wonderful song The Circle of Life is sung. A generation goes by, and in the last scene a baby lion is held up. A generation has gone and a new generation has come. Nothing really changes. Lions have lived the same for thousands of generations. It is truly the circle of life.
This image is beautifully portrayed in the opening words of the Biblical book Ecclesiastes. "Vanity of vanities, said Kohelet, vanity of vanities; all is vanity. What gains a man from all his labor at which he labors under the sun? One generation passes away, and another generation comes; but the earth abides forever. The sun also rises, and the sun goes down, and hastens to its place where it rises again. (Ecclesiastes 2:5) It is the most cynical book of the Bible, and the Rabbis almost kept it out of the Canon. It seems to teach that life is an endless cycle to which there is no escape. "That which is crooked cannot be made straight." (Ecclesiastes 1:15)
This idea of life being an unending, changeless cycle was part of the ancient pagan world. To the pagans, if you were born a slave then you would die a slave, and your children and grandchildren were also fated to be slaves. If you were born poor you would die poor. It is all part of an endless cycle. This idea is influential even today. Peter, Paul, and Mary sang in one of their most haunting songs, "Take your place on the great Mandela as it moves through your brief moment of time."
To the pagan world, life is an endless cycle. The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, who had little use for Judaism and even less for Christianity, wrote about the importance of an eternal recurrence. Everything that happens will come back and happen again. The symbol of this worldview was the circle.
The Hebrew Bible cut through this pagan view like a ray of light. Life is more like a line than a circle. History has a direction. Abraham is told to leave his home, enter a new land, and build a new life different from the one of his childhood. Moses leads the ancient Israelites from slavery to freedom. Isaiah shares a vision of a Messianic future, a time of peace and prosperity. The future will be better than the present. We can change. The Irish writer Thomas Cahill called this image The Gifts of the Jews in his powerful book.
Animals live in the world of the circle. Humans live in the world of the line, with a vision that we can make the world a better place. That is God's task for us humans. May we prove worthy of that task. |
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Beth Hillel Synagogue Library
Lots of new books and videos......
Read contemporary newspapers and magazines!!
New for this year: The Revised Edition of the Encyclopedia Judaica!
Donated to our Library by the Bloomfield Prosser Library.....
Coming October 28-29
Annual Library / Scholar-in-Residence Shabbat ......
Guest Speaker ..... Dr. Alfredo Roitman of the Hebrew University |
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Upcoming Synagogue Events
Brotherhood Meeting ... Gourmet Breakfast and speaker, Sunday, October 30 .... after morning minyan
Honoring our Veteran's Shabbat Service, November 11... Oneg sponsored by JWV Post 45
Lunch and Learn study, Thursday, November 3 and 17, 11am
Shmooze and Lunch, Thursday, November 10, 11am
Fall Adult Education Classes, Monday evenings November 7, 14, 21.....
after minyan... "Fascinating Women in the Bible." |
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News from Israel...
A beautiful love letter
TEL AVIV (JTA) --
After being named Israel's minister for economic affairs to the United States, Eli Groner was required by U.S. law to revoke his U.S. citizenship. The following is the statement he submitted to the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv upon his renunciation.
Because I love America, it is with hesitant hands and a heavy heart that I am writing this note. I never expected to request revocation of my citizenship, and while I certainly understand the circumstances requiring me to do so, it is important for me to share with you why I have decided to take this step.
The United States has a perfectly sensible law that does not allow for diplomats from foreign countries serving in the U.S. to hold U.S. citizenship. The fact that this is eminently reasonable doesn't make this any less difficult.
Much of who I am is based on my childhood in the U.S.; as a 4th-generation American growing up in quintessential Small-Town America, the values inculcated in me in school and at home were American. Many of those values are shared by Israel, which I believe to be the destined homeland for Jewish people of all nations. As Israel builds its place among the nations, it has much to learn not only from its Jewish and biblical roots, but also from the ideological foundations which built the United States of America - the greatest country of the past 240 years.
Every week in synagogue, Jews around the world read a portion of the Bible. Last week, we read the Ten Commandments. One of the many lessons of these commandments is that the Jewish nation left Egypt not simply to survive, but rather with a greater purpose of building a just and moral society. Now, some 3,300 years after the revelation at Sinai and 63 years after the establishment of the State of Israel -- two of the most momentous occasions in Jewish history -- the guidance from Sinai is all the more relevant. In this spirit, a very small piece of what Israel needs to do is to continually strengthen its economic foundations. Like other dimensions required in building the State of Israel, I consider this to be my generation's holy work; therefore, when I was asked by Israel's Finance Minister to serve as the country's Minister of Economic Affairs to Washington, the decision to accept was easy. That doesn't make my decision any less painful.
I will never forget the horrific terrorist attacks of 9/11, which took place roughly two miles from my classroom where I was beginning my graduate school studies. At the time, there was significant uncertainty as to how the United States would react. A very close, very educated friend of mine told me that day -- as we walked uptown amidst the rubble in the traffic-less streets of one of the greatest cities on earth -- that America didn't have the stomach to deal with the terrorists the way they needed to be dealt with. He said that America had gotten too complacent. Fortunately for mankind, my good friend was wrong, as President George W. Bush announced to the world that America would not rest until the people responsible would be dealt with - a promise eventually fulfilled by President Barack Obama.
When I saw President Bush's proclamation that day, I thought that here is a man who understands that the price of liberty is, indeed, eternal vigilance. I thought of that moment five years later when my professional career in the world of management consulting took me to one of the world's leading investment banks. I was commuting from my home in a Jerusalem suburb to London's Canary Wharf each week to work on what the bulge bracket bank defined as its number one strategic objective for that year. Three months into the six-month project, I was drafted by my reserve unit for the Second Lebanese War. While many of my international colleagues and clients thought I had lost my mind, the decision for me to leave that project to go assist in destroying terrorist cells in Lebanese villages was an easy one. It was exceptionally frightening, yet easy. For I grew up in America, and I had been taught that personal commitments must be made to ensure a land of the free and a home for the brave.
One can love two countries just as one loves two parents. Today, I voluntarily give up my citizenship, but I do not give up my values; indeed, in giving up my citizenship to help further the economic development and strength of Israel in a diplomatic role, I believe I am living those values I was educated to cherish. During my 10 years of schooling in wonderful Upstate New York, I pledged allegiance to the flag of the United States each and every day. And today, more than ever and despite the renunciation of my citizenship, I remain committed to the Republic for which it stands.
God bless America; land that I love. |
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