Tikvat Israel
בקשר
B'kesher Shabbat

December 10-11, 2010

4 Tevet 5771

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Parshat Vayigash
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Candlelighting: 4:30p
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Shabbat Shalom
Mark Your Calendars:
Tikvat Israel's 6th Annual Israeli Film Festival
Jan. 8 & 22, 2011


Saturday, January 8 / 7:45-10:30 pm

A Matter of Size (In Hebrew: Sipur Gadol)

A Matter of SizeFour overweight friends from the Israeli city of Ramle are fed up of dieting and the dieting club they belong to. When Herzl (341 lbs.), the main protagonist, loses his job as a cook and starts working as a dishwasher in a Japanese restaurant in Ramle he discovers the world of Sumo where large people such as himself are honoured and appreciated. Through the restaurant owner Kitano (132 lbs.), a former Sumo coach in Japan, he falls in love with a sport involving "two fatsos in diapers and girly hairdos." Herzl wants Kitano to be their coach but Kitano is reluctant-they first have to earn their spurs.

A Matter of Size is a comedy about a 'coming out' of a different kind--overweight people learning to accept themselves.

 

Winner of 3 Israeli Academy Awards & 8 Film Festival Audience Awards
 

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Saturday, January 22 / 7:45-10:30 pm

Dear Mr. Waldman (In Hebrew: Michtavim L'America)

Dear Mr. WaldmanIn Tel Aviv in the 1960s 10-year-old Hilik knows his goal in life-to make his parents happy and compensate for the grief they both suffered in the Holocaust. The fragile equilibrium of Rivka and Moishe's new, post-war life begins to waver when Moishe convinces himself that Yankele, his son from his first marriage, didn't actually die in Auschwitz, but rather survived to become President Kennedy's assistant, the "Jack Waldman" he sees pictured in a newspaper. When a deluded Moishe writes a letter to Waldman, Hilik takes matters into his own hands.

 

Dear Mr. Waldman, a coming-of-age story written and directed by the son of survivors, beautifully captures the milieu of mid-century Israel and the peculiarities of growing up amid the emotional wreckage of the Holocaust. This film is Rated R.


Both programs include light refreshments and moderated discussion following the film. Admission each night, payable at the door, is $10 per person for TI members and $12 for nonmembers. RSVP to adulted@tikvatisrael.org.


 

Snow Date: Saturday, January 29

 
Upcoming Adult Program

Sunday, Dec. 12
Manny Helzner·    8:00 pm - Music Havura sponsors "Yiddish Music Appreciation 101," with Manny Helzner. After evening minyan. RSVP feliciarblack@msn.com.


Upcoming Family Program

Saturday Evening, Dec. 25
·    6:30 - 9:30 pm - Chinese Food and Movies (A Jewish Tradition). Join the TI community for Dinner from Baltimore's David Chu's Chinese Bistro and then Big Screen Movies for Adults, Teens, Middle Schoolers & Kids. Cost $15 for adults (13 & older); $10 for children (3-13). Make checks payable to the TI Youth Committee. All checks must be received by Monday, Dec. 20. Questions? Call Lynn Berk at (301) 762-7338.


Shabbat Shalom
Kabbalat ShabbatTonight
6:30 pm - Kabbalat Shabbat With Instument (Sanctuary)
7:30 pm - Congregational Dinner welcoming new and prospective members (Social Hall) (Prior Reservations Required)

Shabbat Morning
9:30 am - Congregational Shabbat Service.
11:00 am - Tot Shabbat (Room 14)

Shabbat Afternoon/Eve
4:15 pm - Mincha, Torah Study with Rabbi Gorin and Seudah Shlishit.
5:30 pm - Havdalah


Jewish Book Sale at TI Jan 2
A Judaica book sale -- the largest of its kind in the Greater Washington area -- with an estimated 1,600 titles will take place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 2, at Tikvat Israel.

The used books will cover a wide range of subjects, including Bibles, Talmud and Rabbinic literature, philosophy and theology, American Jewish history, Holocaust studies, Israel and Zionism and Kabbalah and Hasidism. Nearly three-fourths are hard covers, most of them nearly new.

During the first two hours, most books will be priced at $1 to $5 each with additional discounts during the final hours.

Proceeds from the sale will be used to support the shipment of Jewish books to Gautam Buddhist University in India. A faculty member at the university is attempting to develop a course on Jewish history and culture -- which apparently would be the first university-level course of its kind in South Asia -- and is trying to start a section of the library devoted to Jewish studies.

For more information on the book sale, call the synagogue at 301-762-7338.