Sam Glaser
Issue No. 29
November 2011

Happy Turkey Day! 

  

pilgrimIt's been freezing here in LA...last night it got down below 50 degrees - break out the sweatshirts! This last weekend I had the pleasure of leading a Shabbaton at a wonderful Orange County shul, Congregation Bnai Israel in Tustin. They opted to make me part of every minyan, for every age group, nearly all day, culminating in a 2.5 hour havdalah concert where the packed house sang along throughout the whole show. A perfect storm in the Jewish entertainment world. I dragged my fifteen year old son along for some quality time during this weekend adventure and before my gig on Sunday we hit Irvine's K-1 Speedway. All that built up aggression from driving LA freeways paid off: by the time I had completed my 42nd lap in the 50 mph mini formula one go-karts I had the number one time on the curvy course and sent a dozen kids into the barriers.

 

I'm gearing up for an exciting Chanukah tour in a dozen cities in the US and Canada next month.  Last minute Chanukah parties planned? There's still a few nights open! Sieze the date!  I'm excited for the Reform Biennial where 5000 Jews will be rallying in DC and the Aish Partner's Conference where 1000 more will be moving and shaking in Stamford, CT. I'm convinced that together we can change the world.

  

Please enjoy my new Thanksgiving essay on the interconnectedness of the American and Jewish experience.  As always, there are some great new videos to check out, a free mp3 of the Fatherhood opening track and suggestions of great tzedakah opportunities.  May you fill everyday with gratitude during Thanksgiving and all year. Stay in touch! 

On the Road Again!

Now serving ultimate weekends of Jewish celebration!  Give your community Jewish peak experiences!  Make it a fundraiser and use our know-how to help you make the event a win-win, profitable smash hit. Save by booking shows when Sam is in your area: discounts of up to 50% and travel expenses are waived...in the near future that will be in the vicinity of:  

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Click here for the concert options and click here for the full schedule; dates are added weekly. 
 
Get FATHERHOOD!
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Sample Now Available!
Fatherhood2

 

Get the new Fatherhood CD while it's hot! Two years in the making, it features fifteen moving songs with lush production featuring my amazing LA-based musicians. My friends, this is how you show support for independent artists!  Take a chance!  Fatherhood is a great gift for all the dads (and moms) you know and please note that a portion of proceeds will benefit the American Diabetes Association.   

 

Here are some fresh reviews:

 

"Sam, you did it again.  The music is gorgeous.  So many layers and sensitive touches.  A total emotional journey.  Wow.  I'm blown away and so are my kids, who have requested it every day since it hit the stereo."  -Burt Schwartz

 

"Sam, Fatherhood is incredible.  We Are America is my favorite.  You have caught the resilient, diverse and irrepressible spirit of America. This song should be heard by everyone and should be played at Ground Zero, The Pentagon and White House. Yosher Koach!"    

-Gay Pascal Griffith

                                     

"Fatherhood is absolutely beautiful and touching.  Your God-given talent never ceases to amaze me.  I've already given copies to friends and family and received so much positive feedback.  You can hear how much work went into this project...thanks for the gift."  -Malka Baran

 

"I sat in my car and sobbed today.  I was already home, parked in the driveway and I just sat there, music blaring while I cried my eyes out. Anyone with a son or daughter will see their own lives in every number. This CD should ship with Kleenex."  -Leah Buehler

 

Get Your Free mp3!

mp3Father's Day is the opening track on Sam's new Fatherhood CD.  Shouldn't every day be Father's Day?  Crank it up loud!

The United States of Israel

 

by Sam Glaser

 

America IsraelAs Thanksgiving rolls around, I've been reflecting on just why it is that turkey and Thanksgiving are both called hodu in Hebrew, and what comes to mind is how much we Jews in America have to be grateful for and how our destinies are intertwined. Thanks to the wisdom of fathers of the constitution, Jews were given a sanctuary in the West where they could flourish in freedom. As a people, we are living proof of the power of free markets, access to education and social mobility. My grandpa came to this country as a penniless teenager from a "one-horse town" in Transylvania. In the very next generation his three sons rose to prominence: a graduate from Harvard Law, a garment industry tycoon and an attorney/opera impresario. As remarkable as our family saga is, we are certainly not alone.  This past year on my concert tour I enjoyed an eye-opening view of the depth of this symbiotic relationship between the Land of the Free and the People of the Book.

 

Last Purim it was my daughter Sarah's turn to join me on a business trip. My travels took me to Philly for a few shows in Mainline and Yardley and I made sure we had a full day to do fun stuff in between. The natural thing to do in the city of brotherly love is to run the Rocky Steps,

SamSarahPhillyvisit Independence Hall and for us kosher consumers, hit the vegan dim sum place downtown. One thing that I didn't expect was to be embraced by the Jewish angle everywhere we turned. Sure, the Liberty Bell quotes our Torah, "Proclaim liberty throughout all the land..." but the full realization of our contribution was apparent after visiting the two most prominent tourist traps in the center of town. One is the hi-tech Constitution Center where Jewish ideology is credited in guiding the vision of our founding fathers. They were deeply religious men that took their cues from the bible and even considered making Hebrew the national tongue. Some of the tourists, upon seeing my kippah stated: "we love the Jewish people" or "we stand with Israel." Of course the Jews that stopped us said, "oh, do you know 'so and so' from Sherman Oaks?" We saw exhibits that listed prominent Jews in government, building the economy and marching for civil rights. I could see the pride in Sarah's fifth-grade eyes as she looked for clues of her heritage in this beautifully realized testimony to our grand American democratic experiment.

 

Sarah4PresidentAcross the street is the spanking new National Museum of American Jewish History. It's a stunning 100,000 square foot, five story, state-of-the-art nachas factory for members of the tribe. We began the historical journey on the fourth floor in the mid-1600's and emerged a few hours later in the present day where we pondered Irving Berlin's piano, Spielberg's films and Sandy Koufax's mitt. I think this multimedia exploration of Jewish accomplishment should be mandatory viewing for all Americans; anti-Semitic bias fades in the light of contributions we've made or the degree in which Judaism has informed this country's values. My Reform friends shared our enthusiasm at the intense degree of Jewish pride furnished by the experience. My Orthodox friends shuddered in horror at the $100 million plus bill that otherwise could have financed Philly Jewish day schools for perpetuity.

 

Fast forward from Purim to Yom Ha-ki-Purim. I had the great thrill of introducing my family to the wonder of Washington DC during my new gig leading High Holidays at Temple Emanuel in Virginia Beach. Rosh Hashana weekend coincided with the annual VB end of summer Neptune Festival. Our mile long walk to shul along the beach boardwalk took us through a busy art festival with live rock and roll on every third block. Hundreds of food stands beckoned with treif delights. My daughter remarked, "so much food and nothing's kosher?" Sure enough, at the end of grub row was the Sabra booth where handsome young Israelis danced around while distributing free chumus and pita chips! Halleluyah!

 

With a week to wander Virginia before Yom Kippur I guided my family on a historic journey to Colonial Williamsburg and then continued north through Richmond up to our friend's home in Potomac. For kids from LA where "really old stuff" is from the 1960's, visiting these 1700's neighborhoods was quite a treat. Well in advance of the trip I worked hard to assemble an overflowing itinerary and booked the various sights with the help of my congressman, Henry Waxman. He was able to secure for us tours of the galleries of Senate and Congress and the Supreme Court, plus a "never tell me the odds" moment: we won the lottery to obtain the rare ticket into the White House where we enjoyed a personal tour from the resident military officers and we met the Obama's dog, Bo! Following that, my best buddy Chuck's brother, who is a captain in the Navy, welcomed us for a two-hour insider view of the Pentagon.

 

One cannot visit DC and not hit the requisite monuments: we marveled at the Lincoln, Jefferson, Washington, WWII and Vietnam memorials and witnessed the beautiful new Martin Luther King statue the week of it's public unveiling. Yes, we got to know the underground Metro very well. Finally, we powered the museums: Holocaust, National Gallery, American Art, Portrait Gallery, National Sculpture Garden, Natural History and last but not least, 

our favorite, the Spy Museum! We went bowling, shopped in trendy Georgetown, visited Chinatown and the historic 6th and I synagogue, hiked to the spectacular Great Falls National Park and somehow did all this in four whirlwind days.

 

I'm reporting this travelogue to my dear readers not so you pity my exhausted children, but to highlight the Jewish presence in our nation's capitol. One obvious landmark is the National Museum of the Holocaust, perhaps the most compelling testimony to the horror of Nazism on the planet. My point is that this museum isn't hidden in a JCC. It's one of the nineteen official Smithsonian museums and 90% of the attendees are not Jewish. Not only are we Jews free to pursue our faith in this country, but also on that imposing central mall, we occupy a place of honor, geographically and spiritually. The Smithsonian art galleries feature Chagall and Modigliani right up there with the Monets and Renoirs. We watched senators in action and my kids marveled that the two representatives from our state are proud Jewish women. By chance (is it ever really chance?) during our half hour in the Congressional gallery, the bill on the floor was an attempt by LA big business to do away with Clean Air Act provisions and was being challenged by our MOT, Congressman Waxman. Even the Spy Museum had a healthy helping of tales of the Mossad and sadly, displays describing Jonathan Pollard and Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. A few blocks from the Lincoln Memorial lies perhaps the most important Jewish site of all: Eli's Restaurant, a glatt kosher eatery where we rested our tired feet and feasted every night before heading back to Potomac on the Metro.

 

These two centuries have witnessed the Jewish people leading unprecedented gilded lives in the Golden Medina. We have struggled for acceptance, marched for tolerance and enjoyed breakthroughs in every field. The Jews are perhaps the best evidence for the potential of the cherished American value of freedom. Given the chance, the Jews manage to excel in every vocation, from Broadway to boxing, garments to gambling, physics to physique.  Jews represent .01% of the global population and 20% of the Nobel prizes, including five laureates in 2011 alone. For the past century, Jewish Hollywood has defined the American Dream and exported that mythology to a world hungry for hope.

 

It is my prayer that we baffle the demographers that preach our demise with a Jewish renaissance in our beloved home away from Homeland. The answer for us Jews is simple. Affiliate, propagate, reach out, focus on one mitzvah at time, and have fun in the process. No need to reinvent the wheel. The Jewish People have the answer for survival and the United States, by adopting our mission statement, will God-willing continue to share our mission as a light unto nations. Have a happy Thanksgiving.

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Sam at the Piano

Sam with Kids

Sam with the Orchestra
New Videos for November
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Chanukah Anthem by Sam Glaser & Kol Zimra
Chanukah Anthem by Sam Glaser & Kol Zimra, Live at the White House!
Sam Glaser * Yisrael
Sam Glaser * Yisrael
From the CD Across the River
A new video by Edward Villa

Sam Glaser � We Are America

Sam Glaser � We Are America

From the new CD Fatherhood 


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This 28 song double album squeezed on one CD breathes new life into these classic "Greatest Hits of the Jewish People."  Get it TODAY!

 

"I am listening to this CD again and again.  Thank you for putting so many of my favorite songs from throughout my life in one place. It's a tremendous amount of music on one recording and a great gift to the Jewish People."  

-Jackie Land,Partnership for Jewish Life and Learning

 

"Listening to SWS2 is like coming home.  Sam's rich melodic voice on the songs we know and love feels so comfortable and familiar.  From singing in the kitchen, in the car and at school, we love The Songs We Sing!" -Lisa Soble Siegmann, Jewish Family Education Director

 

"As a Reform Cantor who has lived in Israel, I can hear the bridge built of voices of all Jews together regardless of religious backgrounds, and bonding us with our brethren in Israel.  Keep up the great work that you do so well!"

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Tzedakah of the Month!

Jewish Big Brothers

   

Welcome to Jewish Big Brothers Big Sisters of Los Angeles. Founded in 1915, JBB's mission is to assist underserved children, primarily from disadvantaged, single-parent homes, to achieve their true potential by providing "Excellence in Mentoring" through a myriad of programs and services. 

 

I had the great opportunity to be a Big Brother for 8 years...some of the greatest memories of my life and a decade later we're still best friends. JBB needs financial support and most importantly, big brothers and sisters to fill the needs of the many children on the waiting list.

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