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Rabbi's Ramblings......
Shalom Congregants and Friends.....
Iris and I had a most enjoyable last Shabbat in Needham celebrating, with friends, the bar mitzvah of their son. It was good to see friends and have a few days "off"... now Passover preparations are in their final days!
The complete schedule of Passover service times is below; hope to see you if you are in the area.
Enjoy your sederim and, please, spend some time thinking of the meanings and messages of the holiday; not just enjoying the food! I have a number of relevant and informative handouts for your perusal; pick them up at any service.
May it be a peaceful holiday in Israel and around the world....
Remember the office closes at 12 noon tomorrow (Friday)
Looking ahead, please put on your calendar the annual Foodshare "Walk for Hunger".... Sunday, May 6. More information forthcoming!
Shabbat Shalom and Hag HaPesach Sameach v'kasher......
Rabbi Gary and Iris Atkins
Why belong to a synagogue?........ to help you
"To Learn, Live, and Love Jewishly...." |
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The B eth Hillel Synagogue Mission Statement.....
Beth Hillel Synagogue takes its mission statement very seriously:
"Beth Hillel is an egalitarian Conservative synagogue rooted in the ancient traditions of the Torah while growing to meet the changes and challenges of our world. Its core are the many people of different ages and backgrounds who have chosen to make it their spiritual home, joining together for prayer, learning, and celebration. The many branches of Beth Hillel's community provide support to its congregants, reaching out to each other and welcoming our neighbors as together we learn from the past and teach for the future." |
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Shabbat / Holiday Candle Lighting Times
Friday, April 6 -- 7:02P.M.
Saturday, April 7 -- not earlier than 8:02P.M. |
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Passover Service Times
TAANIT BECHORIM SHAHARIT & SIYYUM - FRIDAY APR 6, 6:45AM
FIRST NIGHT MAARIV FRIDAY APR 6, 5:00PM
FIRST DAY (ALSO SHABBAT) SHAHARIT SATURDAY APR 7, 9:30AM
FIRST DAY (ALSO SHABBAT) MINCHA SATURDAY APR 7, 5:00PM
SECOND DAY SHAHARIT SUNDAY APR 8, 9:30AM
HOL HAMOED WEEKDAY MINYAN TIMES -
EACH MORNING 7AM, EVENING MINYAN, 7:30PM
SEVENTH DAY MAARIV THURSDAY EVENING, APR 12, 7:30PM
FRIDAY MORNING APRIL 13, 9:30AM
EIGHTH DAY/ (ALSO SHABBAT) EVENING FRIDAY, APR 13, 8PM
EIGHTH DAY (ALSO SHABBAT) SHAHARIT SATURDAY APR 14, 9:30AM
YIZKOR APPROXIMATELY 11:15AM
END OF PESACH MINCHA/MAARIV SERVICE SATURDAY APR 14, 7:15PM
PASSOVER OVER APPROXIMATELY 8:15PM |
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Humor for the Week
A Czech man went to an eye doctor to have his vision checked. The eye chart said: CVKPMYWXFCZ. The doctor asked, "Can you read that?" The man said, "Can I read it? I dated her once!" |
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Israel Tour this Summer???
Rabbi Richard Plavin of BSBI in Manchester is leading a group tour to Israel this summer. Might you be interested? Give him a call / check out the website...
Ask yourself these questions: "Has it been too many years since you'walked the streets of Jerusalem? "
"You've seen the length and breadth of the land. Now see it in depth."
The website for the trip is
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Torah Commentary of the Week
This week's commentary was written by Rabbi Matthew Berkowitz of the Jewish Theological Seminary......
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Defining Pesah, Defining Ourselves
What is the meaning of the word pesah (peh-samekh-het), and how does it illuminate our observance of the seder ritual? Exegetical sources yield three rich interpretations.
The most common definition of pesah is "passing over," "skipping over," or "springing over." Numerous classical commentators, including the 11th-century exegete Rabbi Shlomo Yitzhaki (Rashi, 1040-1105, France) have explained the Hebrew pesah as "pass over," based on Exodus 12:13. But Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch (1808-1888, Germany) argues that pesah (peh-samekh-het) is related to the word pesiah (peh-samekh-'ayin), meaning "to step." The word reflects God's deliberate and thoughtful action of "stepping haltingly over Israelite homes," noting carefully which homes belonged to Israelites and which to Egyptians. Similarly, the Israelites are enjoined to take an active and deliberate role in their redemption: to slaughter the Paschal Lamb, gather hyssop, and smear the blood of the lamb on the doorpost. They must participate in their own salvation. Redemption will not come solely from the work of God. Hirsch spells this out: "Israel was to make itself deserving that the destruction that befell the Egyptian houses should pass over their heads." They were to eat and enjoy their Pesah offering with conscious acknowledgment of God's role, and a confidence "that the danger which hovered over their heads also, would not affect them." Hence, at its most basic level, pesah suggests partnership between human beings and God. Redemption crystallizes through the acts of humans and God together.
A second and even more compelling definition of pesah reveals itself elsewhere in Tanakh. Isaiah 31:5 teaches, "Like the birds that fly, even so will the Lord of Hosts shield Jerusalem, shielding and saving, protecting (pasoah) and rescuing." According to this reading, as the Angel of Death is unleashed, it is insufficient for God to merely "pass over" the Israelite homes. God actively protects every Israelite home from the threat of annihilation.
This interpretation dovetails well with one of the traditional names given to seder evening, leyl shimurim (the night of protection). Like a vigilant guard surveying the perimeter of a home, God watches over the Israelites, observing and shielding.
A third and final reading of pesah is offered in the commentary of Abraham Ibn Ezra (1080-1164, Spain) and also mentioned by Rashi on Exodus 12:13: v'hamalti, or "I will have mercy." Ibn Ezra (Exod. 12:27) adds, "because God had compassion on the first born Israelite males as a result of the blood of the lamb, the lamb is rightfully called 'pesah' (Paschal) [as it symbolizes God's mercy]." Such an interpretation is reinforced when one turns to the Akkadian cognate pasahu, which means "to soothe, placate, or be soothed."
According to this understanding, mercy and compassion are the most compelling and elemental messages emanating from the Israelite experience in Egypt; we are obligated to remember that we were strangers in a foreign land. God's acts of mercy and compassion on the eve of departure model the only appropriate response to oppression.
Partnership, protection, and compassion are at the heart of the Pesah celebration. May these qualities not only infuse our seder ritual, but also our daily lives. |
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Beth Hillel Synagogue Library
SPECIAL ARTICLES TO READ:
* CONGREGATON B'NAI KABUL
* BABY, YOU CAN DRIVE MY ELECTRIC CAR
Lots of new books and videos......
Read contemporary newspapers and magazines,.......
For example... Commentary/ BAR, The Jewish Week, The Forward, Consumer Reports, Moment, and others..... |
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Social Action News
* Foodshare needs volunteers to pick up donated food. Contact them
at 286-9999....
* Now available for your perusal, the 2012 version of the Volunteer Guide for Hartford Non-profits... find how you can best do Tikkun Olam in the Community
* May 6 - Foodshare Walk for Hunger - WALK OR DONATE! |
Upcoming Synagogue Events
** April 16, 23, 30 Spring Adult Ed - Monday evenings after minyan.
The Idea of The Messiah: How/ When/ Who/ Why.....
* April 12, Free TRY -OUT Yoga Session, Thursday, April 12, 11:30-12:30 at BHS. Call Joel Neuwirth at 860-242-7084 to register!
* APRIL 18 - GAME NIGHT - Register now! Call office if you need another copy of the flyer or send your check to Barbara Leslie, 103 Oliver Way, Bloomfield.
* May 19 - Annual Synagogue FUNDRAISER.... SATURDAY NIGHT... Save the date! |
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Report from Israel.....
MEDICAL MARIJUANA IN ISRAEL
Israel has one of the most progressive medical marijuana programs in the world. For thousands of Israelis suffering cancer, MS, Crohn's and chronic pain, pot provides vital relief.
While Americans petition state senators to legalize medical marijuana, and the Dutch simply go to an Amsterdam café to self-medicate, thousands of Israelis are enrolled in a regulated medical marijuana program. As talk-show veteran Montel Williams recently saw for himself, Israel is one of the most progressive countries in the world to "legalize it." Israel's inroads into legalizing cannabis for pain relief and managing terminal illness rest on the seminal research of Prof. Raphael Mechoulam of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem's Center for Research on Pain. Back in 1964, working from bags of hashish seized by the local police, Mechoulam isolated the active compound from cannabis, THC. He came to be a trusted consultant on the topic to governments and individuals -- even to a US senator who was worried about his child's use of pot at jazz clubs -- and urged that derivative compounds called cannabinoids be legalized for medical purposes in Israel. Prof. Raphael Mechoulam is the world's leader in research into the medical uses of cannabis. mechoulam's work has inspired generations of research teams around the world to look to marijuana for alleviating medical conditions from chemo-induced nausea to chronic pain. His work led to the discovery of ananamides, naturally occurring THC-like materials in the brain. Mechoulam was recently awarded the Rothschild Prize in physical and chemical sciences in recognition of his contributions. With the help of his efforts, Israel started to develop policies so that medical marijuana can be accessed by those who need it most. Mechoulam's lab was one of the stops on a recent tour of Israel's medical marijuana researchers by US celeb Montel Williams, who told reporters that the United States could learn a few things from Israel's approach. Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) in 1999, Williams advocates for research and education on new directions in treatment, including medical marijuana, through his MS Foundation. Williams says that medical marijuana helps ease his neuropathic pain and he's working to legalize it in the United States. Mechoulam acknowledges that Israel's approach is probably the most advanced in the world, considering the numbers of patients taking medical marijuana in a supervised way. "At present, about six or seven thousand people get it for various reasons, for [chronic] pain and for cancer, as it's helping the symptoms of cancer by lowering the amount of opiates patients have to take," Mechoulam tells ISRAEL21c. That number is expected to rise to about 40,000 by 2016. "People who are in great pain who are taking opiates aren't really functional anymore. Taking THC as a medical marijuana, or in its pure form, means that the opiates can be lowered, and then this person will have a better way of life," he says. The Health Ministry slowly began the program in 1994, but it really got going in 2002 under the direction of Dr. Yehuda Baruch from Abarbanel Hospital, a psychiatric facility in Bat Yam. Patients of all ages may apply for approval through their own medical doctor or through the Sheba Medical Center, and must pass a rigorous screening process. Those eligible include cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy; cancer patients with final-stage tumors; patients enrolled in an Israeli HIV center; and people under treatment for chronic pain, Crohn's or ulcerative colitis, MS and post-traumatic stress disorder. When properly dispensed under medical supervision, medical cannabis has a very low rate of abuse, says Mechoulam. Still working as a researcher, Mechoulam is asked periodically to test the levels of THC in pot grown by licensed Israelis. And while he's happy with the country's progress, he says more research needs to be done on standardizing the dosages and incorporating missing elements in the medical strain used in Israel. "Basically Israel is moving in the right direction. [THC] has to be better quantified, and cannabidial, a potent anti-inflammatory agent, needs to be present in the doses used in Israel," he says. Cannabidial alleviates possible undesirable side-effects of THC. These room-to-grow tips not withstanding, "Israel is one of the leading cannibinoid centers of research in the world. There are about two dozen groups working on it and people come from all around the world to see what we do," Mechoulam concludes. |
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Community Events...
* Sunday, April 22, Community Yom HaShoah Memorial Service
Beth El Temple, 7pm (Mincha 6:30).
If you have a name you would like to have read, contact Sheri Gaudet at the JCC with the information. (sgaudet@mandelljcc.org)
* Tuesday, April 24..... Community Yom HaZikaron Memorial Service, JCC |
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