Rabbi's Ramblings...... 

 

Shalom Congregants and Friends.....    

 

This past Monday evening, about 150 individuals from the Bloomfield community gathered in our sanctuary for an Interfaith service of remembrance for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. There was a most meaningful program (sorry that it ran a little long). I hope everyone who was there, both from the congregation and the community, found it to be worthwhile. It was an unusual experience to pass a collection plate in the synagogue ---  we received donations of several hundred dollars for Foodshare and the Bloomfield Social Services Food Bank. If you didn't attend the service, but would like to see a copy of the program, just stop by my office... and you can look at my tropical fish tank as well.

 

This Shabbat, both Friday evening and Saturday morning, we will be returning to Torah study. The Torah portion brings up questions of both theology and history as we continue the Moses versus Pharaoh narrative. Hopefully the weather will not cause any disruption of services, but that's TBD! If there is snow on Saturday, check to see whether services will still take place.

 

As I wrote last week, we are continuing our "baby steps" towards becoming connected on Facebook and using social networking media. David Nemirow, Joel Neuwirth, Lynn Kaplan and I all attended a workshop given by Constant Contact on developing and effectively using our website, email, and social networking. You will see updates and modifications to our website and the e-shul in coming weeks.

 

Photos of the beautiful synagogue on St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, are now on the bulletin board outside my office. You'll feel warmer just by looking!

 

PLEASE be sure to plan to attend the special congregational meeting on Sunday, January 29.... and to sign up for the TuBishevat seder on Thursday, February 9!! And enjoy the days getting a little longer, as sunset gets a minute or so later each day.

 

 Shabbat Shalom u'm'vorach......

 

...... Rabbi Gary and Iris Atkins

Why belong to  a synagogue?........ to help you

 "To Learn, Live, and Love Jewishly...."

 
 Services & Candle Lighting Times

   

Friday, January 20,  8:00P.M.. (CLT 4:30 EST) 

Saturday, January 21, 9:30 A.M.; Mincha, Maariv 4:30 P.M

Humor for of the Week  
 
Never say anything bad about a man until you've walked a mile in his shoes.... By then he's a mile away, you've got his shoes, and you can say whatever you want to!
Torah Commentary of the Week  
by Rabbi Robert J. Eisen, Congregation Anshei Israel
Tucson, AZ
 

For all the years that I have served congregations as a Rabbi (and they are getting to be more than I have not!) I have never been asked: "How much wine to do I have to drink in each cup in order to fulfill my obligation of drinking the four cups at a Passover Seder?"! However, I have been asked, more times than I can remember: "Why should I drink four cups of wine?" ... "Why should I care how much is in each cup?"!

 

It is common knowledge that we are to drink four cups of wine at a Passover Seder. Each cup is meant to represent one of the four promises of redemption found across two verses from our PARSHA, PARSHAT VA'ERA (Exodus 6:6-7):
 

* V'HOTZEITI: I will bring you out from under the burdens of Egypt
* V'HITZALTI: I will deliver you form their servitude
* V'GA'ALTI: I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and great judgments
* V'LAKHACHTI: I will take you to Me for a people and I will become God for you

 

Why we should care to drink each cup ... or be concerned with regard to how much wine might be in each one ... is a different story all together. The - The Festival of MATZOT (of The Unleavened Bread). However, taking the same Hebrew letters and chareasoning behind the drinking of four cups of wine is easily explained in "Rabbi - speak" as: "Because God told us to" ... "It is written that way!" The concern for the exactitude with which the command is to be fulfilled teaches us "Why".

 

Of the many names by which this holiday is known, one of the most common is HAG HaMATZOT nging the vowels around a bit (and remember that the original text does not include the vowels), that same name can be read as HAG HaMITZVOT - The Festival of Commandments (which, for those who try to observe this Festival in all of its detail, certainly does capture the essence of what we often seem to experience!).


 But, why are all these MITZVOT so important? Why all the detail?
Were the text from Exodus 6:6-7 to stand alone ... were it to be understood as the basis for the drinking of four cups of wine without any regard for how much we were to drink ... it would be teaching us that what we do does not matter as much as what God does - that our redemption is to be anticipated as an act of grace by God, and God alone. However, our tradition is fairly clear: we will be redeemed only to the extent that we are a factor in the equation ... that we act to redeem ourselves ... that we are worthy of God's love and concern. And so the emphasis on the MITZVOT, the details of our behavior (e.g. how much wine needs to be in each of the cups in order that we might fulfill our obligation) reminds us that we have work to do ... that God depends on us as much as we depend on God - that we are partners in the continuing process of creation that we hope and pray will one day soon be complete.
 

Redemption is something that we would all like to experience speedily and in our day. Will drinking four cups of wine, each containing a specific and exact amount, serve as the "key to the kingdom", or some sort of magical formula that will transform the world (our lives!) into what we have been promised it (we!) can be? Well, a promised made is a promise that will be kept (that is the essence of the Covenant). We know what needs to be done. The exactitude of the MITZVOT teaches us how we can.
 

By the way ... for those who are interested ... the minimum amount of wine which needs to be in each of the four cups is a REVI'IT - somewhere between (depending on which HALAKHIC authority one follows) 3.3 and 5.2 fluid ounces. 

Social Action Updates    
 

 Donate to an AREA FOOD BANK. THE NEED IS GREAT!

 

Loaves and Fishes

Our next day to volunteer / serve will be February 2.... call the office to let us know you're willing to help!

  

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!
Beth Hillel Synagogue Library    

Lots of new books and videos......  

 Read contemporary newspapers and magazines!!
 

Upcoming Synagogue Events    

* Lunch and Learn: Thursday, January 26, 11am

* Special Congregational meeting, Sunday, January 29, 11am

* Sunday, February 5 - World Wide Wrap and

         Brotherhood meeting 9am

* Thursday, February 9, TuBishevat Seder - together with BTS --    
Here at Beth Hillel -- 7pm  ......... assistance in planning  needed 

Community Events...   

Information evening..... Sunday, January 22....Beth Shalom - B'nai Israel "Trip to Israel" lead by Rabbi Richard and Lisa Plavin... July 2012. Informational meeting at the Manchester synagogue... call 643-9563 for information. 

 

2nd Annual International Day of Remembrance of the Holocaust program.

January 29, 11:30am Emanuel Synagogue

 

Beit Midrash Institute of Adult Jewish Studies

New term starting January 30 - Good community Adult Education!

News from Israel...    back to the political....

 

 

Who's Really Killing Those 'Nuclear Scientists' in Tehran?

By Michael Ledeen

 

They run the banks, the press, all Western governments, the universities, the spooks (most everywhere).  And if you can't find any evidence for it, well, that shows how diabolical the Jews are, right?

 

I'm talking about the latest assassination in Tehran, in which a young chemist, who worked in the acquisitions department of the Iranian nuclear project at Natanz, was killed by a "sticky bomb" attached to his car in the middle of rush hour traffic.

None of those writing about this event has any evidence for their theories, but many of them are quite confident that the Israelis did it.  The Times of London, which presents a mixture of circumstantial evidence and some "information" from "a source," at least has the honesty to say what all these self-proclaimed experts should say:  "...said a source who released details, impossible to verify, to the Sunday Times."

 

An unnamed source provides information that cannot be verified.  But the journalists write it, and the paper prints it.

 

Before getting into the details, let me caveat this whole thing:  I don't know who did it, and neither does anybody else writing about it.  The Iranian regime, which usually claims to know everything about everything, has so far accused the Brits, the Americans, the MEK, and the Israelis.

 

However, I think that I do know this:  If the Israelis (or the Americans, or the Brits) are actually capable of operating at will in the midst of the virtual military occupation in Tehran,  we do not have to worry about the Iranian nukes, because if the Israelis, the Brits or the Americans can do that, they can do anything they want to.

 

Tehran is an armed camp.  There are security forces, check points, men with weapons and cell phones, and countless informers, all over the place.  If a citizen makes a phone call that is the least bit suspect to the regime, that citizen is located, on average, in less than half an hour, and sometimes in a few minutes.  Several Iranian officials and scientists involved in the nuclear project have been blown up in the last two years, and the killers have always gotten clean away.  Indeed, the latest assassins killed their man just a few feet from the headquarters buildings of the Intelligence Ministry [1].  That's quite an accomplishment.  If agents of a foreign intelligence service are doing it, they're better than Tom Cruise's fictional operatives in the Mission: Impossible movies.

 

But it might be CIA, Mossad or MI6, despite the daunting security situation in Tehran.  Maybe they ARE better than anything Hollywood can imagine.  What would be the motive?  Here, the "experts" are pretty much unanimous:  the motive is to disrupt the Iranian nuclear weapons program.  Over the years, plenty of non-Western nuclear physicists have turned up dead, some in the Middle East, some in our part of the world (France, for example).

 

And here the picture gets a bit foggier, because the Iranian victims don't really fit that picture. My friend Potkin Azarmehr, a thoughtful British-Iranian who blogs in London, has been writing [2] about these events for years, and he makes a lot of sense (to repeat, I don't know who did it and neither does Potkin.  He's just thinking out loud).  He points out a few details about the four targets of bombing attacks in Tehran prior to the latest assassination:

  • The first was an academic with no apparent connection to the nuclear project.  He was a political activist who supported the Green Movement, the main group in opposition to the regime.  He attended international meetings, and was a member of a group that included Israelis.  He was blown up by a significant quantity of explosives, not a sticky bomb.  The explosives were planted in or on a motorcycle parked outside the victim's house;
  • The second was apolitical, was also a theoretical physicist, and belonged to the same international scientific organization (including Israelis) as the first.  He was killed by a sticky bomb;
  • On the very same day, another physicist was attacked.  He was also a political activist, a regime supporter, and a member of the revolutionary guards.  Unlike the first two, he was certainly an active participant in the nuclear program, as shown by the fact that his name was on official sanctions lists.  The news stories spoke of a bomb, but the photographs of the crime scene don't show evidence of an explosion (they do show some bullet holes in his car).  There's another big difference:  he wasn't killed.  Shortly after the event, he was promoted to head the nuclear program.  To which Potkin asks a good question:

If these assassinations were the work of highly sophisticated Western/Israeli sent hit squads, how is it that a theoretical research physicist not on the sanctions list is eliminated so efficiently but the more obvious target who is clearly connected to the nuclear program and is on the sanctions list, is not even hurt.

Potkin suspects the first guy was killed by the regime, and the second attack was staged so that the regime could blame foreign espionage agents.

The fourth case was the oddest of all, a university student who was gunned down in front of his house, where he'd just returned after collecting his young daughter from kindergarten.  He wasn't a nuclear anything, he was studying electrical engineering,. working for a Master's degree.  There is an Iranian nuclear physicist with a similar name (and his picture was published all over the Iranian press), but that man - who might well have been a logical victim for anyone targeting key people in the nuclear project - was out of the country.  The victim was not a shadowy figure, he had a Facebook page on which he spoke warmly of a well-known dissident singer.

 

Was it a case of mistaken identity?  Did Mossad, CIA or MI6 confuse the two names?  There are such events in the long history of clandestine actions, after all.  Let's just call it an open question.  A mystery.  Whatever it was, It hardly fits the picture of a diabolically knowledgeable and omnipotent Israeli intelligence service.

The latest victim was a chemist, not a physicist, and his main connection to the nuclear program was administrative, not technical:  he worked in the purchasing office for the Natanz operation.  He was important enough to have been interviewed by IAEA inspectors, and after his death, Iranian leaders alleged that the IAEA people had passed on classified information to the assassins.  But this isn't very convincing;  administrative officers are a dime a dozen, after all.  Blow up one, you get a dozen applicants for the position.  More mysteries.

 

Nonetheless, scads of writers are quite sure that the Jews did it.  The latest smelly fish [3] from this well known stew comes from Foreign Policy magazine, a popular and often useful source of "expert" thinking about foreign policy and national security.  It's called "false flag," written by Mark Perry, whose world view is not very charitable toward Israel, which the story accuses of having recruited Balouchis several years ago under false pretenses - claiming that Mossad agents were Americans.

 

The Israelis almost never comment on intelligence matters, but in this case they issued a very strong denial, calling it "absolute nonsense."  There's even more nonsense, which Mr. Perry and his Foreign Policy editors happily passed on to their readers.  In the midst of this story, the author quotes a "recently retired (American) intelligence officer:  "We don't do bang and boom...and we don't do political assassinations."

 

I wonder if Foreign Policy editors ever heard of the Predator program, the fleet of CIA-run drones that kill Taliban and al Qaeda throughout the Middle East, or, for that matter, the very political assassination of Osama bin Laden.

One might suspect that this  story is the work of CIA disinformers, hard at work to deny, and even undermine, what most reliable reporters have described as a very close and productive relationship between the intelligence and military communities of the United States and Israel.  Or maybe it's just another intelligence failure, of which there has been no shortage in recent years.

Where does that leave us?  Let's go back to basics:  who could operate in the midst of the armed camp that is Tehran, and might also have a motive for killing these five unfortunate souls?  There's a lot of killing in Iran, and the overwhelming majority of murders are carried out by the regime, and the victims are Iranian citizens from all walks of life.  From this standpoint, the regime is the most likely perpetrator. Regime killers could also operate freely throughout the capital, and that also "explains" why there were never calls for information about the assassins.  Why ask, when you know their identities, and approved the operation?

 

What about motive?  Look at the last case.  What does the regime say about the victim?  That he spoke to IAEA investigators (I'm told that the conversation took place outside Iran).  The regime doesn't like that at all, they are very suspicious of their own people (and rightly so!), put very stringent limitations on foreign travel, and monitor the communications of everyone involved in important activities like weapons programs.  In the padded cell of paranoiacs around the supreme leader, strong suspicion of disloyalty is probably enough to get a person on one hit list or another, and the regime has every reason to "send a message" to others involved in such activities:  one false step and you're dead.

 

Again, I don't know who did it, but the rush to judgment by so many pundits smacks of political passion rather than cool analysis.  And I'm struck by the uncritical expertise that would have us believe the Jews can do anything, even operate at will in the center of their most formidable enemy's capital city.  That one's right out of the old antisemitic scrolls:  whenever anything happens - anytime, anywhere - that upsets you, just blame the Jews.  They can do anything, anywhere.

If only it were true.  I'd be flying my private jet to my little island off the coast of Sicily...