April 25 - B`nai Jeshurun Congregation

Transcription

April 25 - B`nai Jeshurun Congregation
Shabbat Shalom!
27501 Fairmount Boulevard
Pepper Pike, Ohio 44124
Tel: 216-831-6555 Fax: 216-831-4599
www.bnaijeshurun.org
Condolence/Event Cancellation Tel:
216-831-6556
Welcome to the David J. Moskowitz Sanctuary on behalf of
Rabbi Stephen Weiss, Rabbi Hal Rudin-Luria, Cantor Aaron Shifman,
Education Engagement Rabbi Josh Foster,
Rabbi Emeritus Stanley J. Schachter, Rabbi Emeritus Michael Hecht,
President Jody M. Katzner and Executive Director Jay Ross.
Our Mission is “To ensure the flourishing of Jewish life through educational,
social and Conservative religious experiences in a warm and dynamic community.”
Parashat Tazria-Metzora
g¨r«m§n - gh¦r±z©,
April 24/25, 2015 - 6 Iyar 5775
Hertz Etz Hayim
Verse
Rishon
464
657
Lev. 13:40 - 13:46
Sheni
465
658
13:47 - 13:54
Shlishi
465
658
13:55 - 13:59
Revi’i
470
660
14:1 - 14:5
Chamishi 470
661
14:6 - 14:12
Shishi
471
661
14:13 - 14:20
Shevii
472
662
14:21 - 14:32
Maftir
473
663
14:30 - 14:32
Haftarah 477
676 Kings II 7:3 - 7:20
Thank you to our Torah readers: Michael Milgrom,
Fred Smith, Eve Phythyon, Arnie Feltoon, Jonah
Ross, Rabbi Paula Sass and Sasha Huston. Thank
you to Rabbi Stanley Schachter for chanting the
Haftorah.
DAILY MINYAN
MONDAY - THURSDAY 7:00 am & 7:30 am & 6:00 pm
FRIDAY
7:00 am & 7:30 am & 6:00 pm
SATURDAY
9:00 am & 6:00 pm
SUNDAY & HOLIDAYS 8:00 am & 6:00 pm
Your presence adds to the joy of our service!
SATURDAY
Our Starbucks, Bread & Torah teacher this week is Jerry Isaak-Shapiro.
Thank you to Cindy Brodsky for preparing the refreshments.
Thank you to the women who prepare the Oneg and Kiddush refreshments:
Fay Blumenthal, Carolann Cohen, Ruth Dobres, Joann Eisenberg, Laura
Katzner, Harriet Mann, Paula Schaffer-Polakof, Cheryl Spira, Nancy Tresser
and Pnina Wiesel.
Thank you to our Board member on the bima, Margie Cohen, our greeter,
Michael Loewenstein, and our ushers: David Cohen, Maury Greenstein, Dan
Jacobs, Nelson Pole and Henrik Sperling.
Following the Benediction, please join us for kiddush in Gross Atrium,
Atrium
sponsored by the Officers and Board of Trustees.
We are pleased to welcome
Major Rushdi Bader and Warrant Officer Oren Ben Shetrit
who are part of a delegation of IDF officers visiting Cleveland for
Yom HaZikaron and Yom HaAtzmaut.
Thank you for being with us this morning!
Men’s Club Lunch & Learn
THIS Saturday, April 25 • noon
Led by Rabbi Hal Rudin-Luria, we will be studying and discussing the
Birkat Hamazon. Free and open to all. Seats are still available.
Please join us for two special tributes on Shabbat, May 2:
David Shifrin will be presented with his presidential tallit
during the Shabbat morning service.
Alan Goldweber will be honored for his 37 years of dedicated service to the
synagogue as a teacher, as we celebrate his retirement at
an extended Kiddush in his honor.
Thursday, April 30 • 7 pm
Dip into Judaism with
Schmooze with chocolate &
drinks, help plan our
events for the upcoming
year and learn a little on Chocolate & the Torah with Rabbi Hal. $10 per
person. RSVP to Elyse or Elana ([email protected] or
[email protected]).
Mishpachot/Kulanu Earth Day @ Penitentiary Glen Metropark
Sunday, April 26 • 12:30 pm
Meet us there and enjoy activities including an eco-fair,
live animals, games and crafts. Ride around the
reservation on a real miniature train! Fun for all ages.
Free. Located at 8668 Kirtland Chardon Road,
Kirtland. Contact Risa Roth with questions.
149th Annual Meeting
Sunday, May 3 • 7 pm
Mazal tov to our honorees:
Bernice Rothman
Recipient of The Joseph P. Lomberg Award for
Outstanding Individual Service
Carolann & Martin Cohen, Rifka Claypool, Rachel & Joel Heiser
Recipients of The Rabbi Rudolph M. Rosenthal Award for
Outstanding Family
Alan Goldweber
Recipient of the Paul M. Koret Distinguished Teacher Award
Voting will take place from 9 am - 12:30 pm
CHESED at B’nai Jeshurun
Sunday, May 10 - Mother’s Day • 8 am
Take part in a FAMILY CHESED
opportunity! This year, B’nai Jeshurun will be
taking part in Cleveland’s 12th annual “the
race” at Legacy Village. Sign on to be a part of
Team B’nai Jeshurun when your register for the
run or walk at DoTheRace.com.
$20/adult; $15/child. Cost includes shirt, face
painting, balloon artists, kids’ crafts and a
bounce house. If you can’t participate, you can still make a donation
online under B’nai Jeshurun. Proceeds from this year’s event will
support breast cancer research at University Hospitals Seidman
Cancer Center. For more information, contact Shani Kadis.
BJUSY Mystery Bus Ride
Sunday, May 3 • 2 - 5 pm • departing from Park East
$10 per person • Contact Dana Blocker to register or with questions.
Parashiyot TazriaTazria-Metzora
April 25, 2015 – 6 Iyyar 5775
Annual (Leviticus 12:1 – 15:33): Etz Hayim, p. 649; Hertz p. 460
Triennial (Leviticus 13:40 – 14:32): Etz Hayim p. 657; Hertz p. 464
Haftarah (II Kings 7:3-20): Etz Hayim p. 676; Hertz p. 477
Prepared by Rabbi Adam Rosenbaum, Charleston, SC
We learn that, after giving birth, a mother is in a state of impurity, and
following that time, she is not allowed to touch or be a part of sacred places.
The duration of these ritual statuses is twice as long if she gives birth to a
girl. And if she has a boy, the boy must be circumcised on the eighth day of
his life. The mother becomes pure again after making a proper offering.
The text explores proper procedures for managing an outbreak of a skin
affliction known as tzara-at. An Israelite priest examines such outbreaks and
determines if they are chronic, and if they are causing such ailments as an
infected burn or diseased hair or scalp. He even examines when such an
affliction penetrates fabric or leather. The priest determines whether the
person or object needs to be isolated and/or washed after a certain amount
of time.
The second portion details how a person is purified from tzara’at. The
purification includes ceremonies and offerings carried out by a priest in
addition to the afflicted person washing, shaving, and cleaning his/her
clothes. Offerings differ depending on the afflicted person’s wealth.
We learn that, when the Israelites enter Canaan, tzara’at can potentially
afflict their houses. Depending on the degree of affliction, the houses must
be scraped, or perhaps torn down, while those who enter the house must be
purified.
Men and women with atypical discharges from their sexual organs are
impure; this impurity can spread to someone who touches an afflicted
person or items that an afflicted person has touched. A menstruating
woman also is impure, as is anything or anyone she touches. Disregarding
these laws puts the Tabernacle at risk of defilement, and, as a result, puts
an afflicted person at risk of death.
Theme #1: The Bald and the Beautiful
If a man loses the hair of his head and becomes bald, he is pure. (Leviticus
13:40)
A sensitive topic for many men, baldness does not necessarily have a bad
name in the Torah.
Leviticus interrupts its warning to reassure men that, yes, it’s OK to be bald.
“If a man loses the hair of his head and becomes bald, he is pure.” And it
gets better! God also approves of male-pattern baldness. “If he loses the
hair on the front part of his head and becomes bald at the forehead, he is
pure.” So throw out that Rogaine. God loves a cue ball. -- David Plotz, Good
Book
The cutting of the hair only after this seven-day isolation is a specific feature
of this procedure, and is not explained further. Several Old Testament
stories, such as that of the Nazirite Samson, give us an idea of just how
sacred or power-laden a person’s hair was thought to be and how carefully
one had to deal with it. Perhaps the special significance attaching to hair is
also the reason the woman is expressly mentioned here. -- Erhard S.
Gerstenberger, Leviticus
He is pure of the impurity of nesakin, for he is not judged by the signs of the
head and beard which are places of hair, but rather, by the signs of an
affliction of the skin of the flesh; [that is,] by white hair and healthy flesh and
spreading. -- Rashi on 13:40
Questions for Discussion:
Plotz wryly comments on the topic of baldness, which is sensitive for many
males. He claims that the Torah "approves" of baldness. While many men
are comfortable losing their hair naturally, there also is a lucrative industry
in trying to prevent it. Is this verse an indication of the Torah's preferences in
terms of appearance? Or does our text tell us that physical appearance
really doesn't matter as much as we might think?
Gerstenberger reminds us that, in ancient times, a man's head of hair was
an important symbolic, if not real, measure of manhood. While we might
bristle at the notion that the hair has some sort of power today, there were
times when such thoughts were taken seriously. Do we tend to
misunderstand what makes a person powerful or worthwhile? When do we
lose our way by paying attention to personal traits that really don't matter?
Rashi claims that it is not baldness itself that purifies the man
with tzara'at, but it is the absence of smaller, particular signs on the scalp
that would indicate a continuation of the malady. Often, we look at other
people and only bother to look at the surface of their identities, rather than
digging deeper to discover who they really are. What are the dangers of
doing so? And how do we combat this tendency?
Theme #2: From Hair to Eternity
On the seventh day [after being diagnosed with tzara'at] he shall shave off
all his hair -- of head, beard, and eyebrows. When he has shaved off all his
hair, and bathes in water; then he shall be pure. (Leviticus 14:9)
When someone with a skin affliction is purified, it is expected that nothing
come between his skin and the water that can make him pure again.
The three principal transgressions punished with tzara’at are haughtiness,
evil gossip and an envious eye. Hence, in order to become clean again, the
leper must symbolically cleanse himself of these three sins. He must shave
all the hair off his head because he was haughty and wanted to be “at the
head” of everything. Next, he must shave off his beard because it failed to
guard the mouth, which it surrounds, from uttering evil gossip. Finally, he
must shave his eyebrows which failed to keep his eye from envy. -- K’lei Yakar
The “sin of the house” had to be expiated, and the ritual was the same as
for the purification of the leper. -- Roland de Vaux, Ancient Israel
The rabbis explain that this redundancy is for the purpose of qualifying the
generalization, that is, all of his hair but not that of his private parts. They
are right, but the reason is just the opposite: the repetition is indeed a
euphemism for the private parts, but its purpose is to make certain that they
are included. -- Jacob Milgrom, Leviticus 1-16
Questions for Discussion:
K'lei Yakar claims that it is no accident that the hair is shaved from the
head, beard and eyebrows of the man withtzara'at, as these body parts
each symbolize ways that these parts of the body contribute to wrongdoing.
Thus, the affected person is given bodily reminders of how sin is committed
and how it can be prevented in the future. In what cases do bodily reminders help keep us focused? When might they distract us?
De Vaux reminds us that, when a house is inflicted with tzara'at, the purification rituals are identical to that of an individual with the same malady. Are
the comparisons between a home and person's body apt? Is it fair to say
that the way we treat our houses is similar (or should be similar) to the way
we treat our bodies?
Milgrom notes that while hair on the head is shaved off of the man with
tzara'at, so is his pubic hair, even though this is not mentioned specifically.
Is this meant to make a particular point about sexual indiscretion? Do the
sins that the K'lei Yakar associates with parts of the head pale in comparison to sins that can be committed with one's private parts?
Dedicate a Paver!
You can still dedicate a paver in the
rejuvenated Linden Family Courtyard!
Make your dedication by April 30 to be installed Spring 2015.
Courtyard pavers provide a lasting way to:
• Honor a family member or friend
• Pay tribute to a loved one
• Recognize a special event, wedding, Bar/Bat Mitzvah or
milestone birthday
Contact Kim Cole with questions, to order, or to learn about other
opportunities within the Courtyard on the synagogue website.
Kitchen Orientation • Sunday, May 3 • 11 am
Have you ever thought about helping in our kitchen? To ensure our
integrity both with kashrut and for health reasons, please come to our
training session. This is for those who need to be trained and as a
refresher for those who have already been trained. Everyone should be
familiar with the workings of the kitchen, where things are kept and
what rules need to be followed. If you have questions or concerns that
you would like addressed at the orientation, please contact our Catering
Chair, Dr. Paula Schaffer-Polakof ([email protected]) or Paula Botkin
([email protected]) in the synagogue office. If May 3rd
does not work for you to be trained, please let us know. Please RSVP to
the synagogue office.
PJ Library® Shabbat with the East Coast Custard Truck
Friday, May 15 • 6:15 pm • Abraham Family Courtyard
Come join Rabbi Hal and Rabbi Foster for preShavuot activities, Shabbat stories, songs and fun.
For families with kids birth through 2nd grade; older
siblings welcome. $5 per family provides ice cream
for all! Register and pay on the BJC website.
Shabbat Rocks!
Friday, May 15 • 7 pm
We hope you’ll join us at our popular musical
Friday evening service. Shabbat Rocks!
combines the flowing poetry of Psalms with a
live band playing some of today’s hottest Jewish
music. This unique liturgical experience will
make your heart sing, your hands clap and
your feet dance. Listen to and download tracks
from our website. Future dates: June 19, July 17, August 21
Join Hazak
Wednesday, June 17
Hazak and Park Synagogue Senior Adults will attend
the matinee performance of “Brigadoon” including
transportation and lunch at the Broken Rocks Café in
downtown Wooster.
Hazak members $80; Guests $85. Pre-paid reservations due by May 1.
For further information contact Betty Fishman (216-591-9550 or
[email protected]).
MISHABERACH
VALERIE KARBELING
JAYDEN BARBER
MOSHE BARUCH BEN RIVKA
DOVID BEN STANLEY
DARYN BROWN
BEN-TZION PESACH BEN YETTA
YITZHAK MICHAEL BEN DINAH
AVRAM DAVID BEN DINAH
FRUMA BAT JANETTE
MALKAH BAT MORDECHAI
YISRAEL BEN MEIRA
MATANA DVORAH BAT SARAH
BAYLA RIVKA BAT HANA LEAH
CHAYA BAT VARDA
ZELIG BEN DOROTHY
DAVID BEN MICHAEL HAKOHEN
LIBA RUCHEL BAT BAYLAH
DINA RIVKA BAT LEAH
GITTEL CHANA BAT ESTHER
MASHA TSIRIL BAT BASHA
TZIPORAH BAT YENTA
SHANDEL BRACHA BAT ESTHER
DYLAN CHAIM BEN PESIA HINDA
AVIGAYIL BAT HADAR MIRIAM
LEAH BAT YEHELET
YEHELET SEVIA BAT BRINA
AVRAHAM BEN MALKA
YITZHAK MORDECHAI BEN
SARAH RACHEL
YAKOV BEN MIRIAM
RONI BEN RACHEL
TOVA ELKA BAT RAISEL MALKA
TOVA BAT SARAH GITTEL
YISRAEL BEN FRIEDA
MICHAL VERED TOVA BAT SARAH GILA
LEAH BAT RAIZEL
YONIT ABRA BAT HAYA
YEHUDA SHLEMA BEN ZLOTI
HAYA TZIPPORAH BAT ITTA
YOHANANA BAT HAYA YITTA
DANYA MICHEL BAT CARI
YAKOV ELIYAHU BEN GALIA
ZUCHA LAYB BEN BRACHA BRANDEL
DONNA ROSEN
TZURI BEN SARAH
MASHA BAT HEINCHA
ZEV TZVI BEN SARAH MALKA
AHUVA RAYA BAT KALYA
HADAR MIRIAM BAT ESTHER
AVRUM REUVAIN BEN NAOMI
YISROEL MOISHE BEN HENDEL
DAVID BEN SHMUEL
SARAH GILA BAT LEAH
SHAINA LIEBE BAT CHAVA MIRYAM
SHIFRA BAT GITEL
SHMUEL BEN OSNAT
RACHEL BAT SARA
MIMI DORF
BONNIE POLSTER
PEREL BAT YENTA
MOSHE BEN ZELDA
YAKOV BEN SARA
SURA TOBA BAT JOSEF ZWI
ZALMAN SHMUEL DOV BEN
RUVENA SHIFRA
BRACHA BAT SIMA
YEHUDA BEN ESTHER
KETURAH BAT SARAH
SARAH BAT ESTHER
MICHLI BAT CHAYA LEAH
MESHELEM BEN RACHEL
ZLATEH BAT MACHLA
KASEEL YEHUDAH BEN SARA
HANA RUCHEL BAT FAIGEL
MEIR BEN SHLOIMO HA'LEVI
MORDECHAI DOVID BEN LEAH
MAYER BEN HELEN
BARBARA ROSENBLUM
NOACH YA’ARI BEN SARAH
YEHUDIT BAT SARAH
ADIRA BAT RUCHEL
RIVKA BAT CHAVA
HANA BAT SARAH
DAVID BEN MIRIAM
GERSHON BEN RITA
PINCUS BEN SHAYNA HAYA
KIM BAILES
MOSHE CHAIM BEN EMILY
RACHEL HAVIVA BAT RUT
PINHAS SIMCHA BEN PNINA
ADIN RONEN BEN SARAH GILA
PINCHAS BEN LEAH
MINAH MINDEL BAT PESAH MALKA
MASAHIRO UENO
RACHAV BAT RUT
CHANNA EETA BAT FIVAL
SUSAN NORVAL
SARA CHAYA BAT DEVORAH
SHIMALA ALTA BAT LEAH YOSEF
TOM LAMARCA
ROCHEL CHAYAH BAT DVORAH
ELIAHU BEN NAOMI
PINCHAS BEN RUCHEL
BRACHA HANNA BAT SARAH
TZVI BEN ESTHER
LOMENIA GAMBLE
HENDEL LIEBE BAT RIVA
RUT BAT ELKEH
BARUCH ELIEZER BEN ADDIE
SIMCHA MELECH BEN SORA
ILANA BAT LEAH
PEREL SARAH BAT DVORAH
SIMCHA TZOFIA BAT HAYA ELANA
ASHER REUVEN BEN LILA
HAROLD TICTIN
ZLATE FEIGE BAT CHAYA
AVRAHAM BEN CHAIM HA'LEVI
KATHY BICKART
HENDEL LIBA BAT RIVA
LAZAR CHAIM BEN ZEHAVA
RAANAN BARAK BEN
SHULAMIT ESTHER
EPHRIAM JONATON BEN RUT LEAH
SAM ABRAMSON
REIZEL DAVIDA BAT SHAINDEL ROCHEL
LYNN NIELSEN
DANIEL BEN LEAH
SHULAMIT ESTHER BAT SIMA LEAH
GITTEL PESSI BAT 'HANNAH LEAH
DAVID PERKINS
May He who blessed our ancestors
and is the source of all healing bless
and heal those who are ill. May the
Holy One Praised Be He mercifully
restore them to vigor and lift the
burden of anxiety from their loved
ones and friends.
On this (Sabbath, Festival, Judgment
or Penitence) day we pray that they be
spared further pain. May God grant
them health of body and health of
spirit and mind. May we speedily be
privileged to greet their return to good
health by welcoming them once again
into our midst. Let us say: Amen.
Anyone wanting to add a name to the
list should contact Diane Shalom
(216-831-6555 ext. 104 or
[email protected]) by
Thursday afternoon at the latest for
inclusion in that Shabbat’s program.
We will also pause during the prayer
for people to recite additional names.
The Book Club
Sunday, May 3 • 2 pm • BJC
My Father’s Paradise: A Son’s Search for His Family’s Past
by Ariel Sabar
In a remote corner of the world, forgotten for nearly 3,000
years, lived an enclave of Kurdish Jews so isolated that they
still spoke Aramaic, the language of Jesus. Mostly illiterate,
they were self-made mystics, gifted storytellers and humble
peddlers who dwelt in harmony with their Muslim and Christian neighbors
in the mountains of northern Iraq. To these descendants of the Lost Tribes
of Israel, Yona Sabar was born. Presented by Men’s Club.
Wine & Cheese Oneg
Friday, May 15
service at 7 pm; oneg immediately following
Come and see for yourself all the music, fun and
dancing that takes place at Shabbat Rocks!
Then, stay and schmooze with your friends at a special oneg. RSVP to
Elyse or Elana ([email protected] or [email protected]).
What’s Coming Up
Tuesdays 10:30 am Torah Study with Susan Wyner
Thursdays 12:10 pm Lunch & Learn @Commerce Park IV (Chagrin/Green)
Fridays 10:15 am Kinder Shabbat & Open Playroom
Saturdays 9:00 am Starbucks, Bread & Torah
———————–————————–————–————————————————-—————————
Saturday, April 25 - School Shabbaton @ Camp Wise
9:00 am Service
10:30 am Shabbat b’Yachad Family Service
10:30 am Shabbat Shelanu
12:00 pm Men’s Club Lunch & Learn
Sunday, April 26 - School Shabbaton @ Camp Wise
10:00 am Shtetl Program
11:30 am Sisterhood Torah Fund Luncheon @ BJC
12:30 pm Mishpachot/Kulanu Earth Day @ Penitentiary Glen
Wednesday, April 29
9:45 am Someone Special & Me
Thursday, April 30
7:00 pm Atid @ The Melting Pot Legacy Village
Friday, May 1
7:00 pm Service; Birthday Shabbat; Zamir Choir
Saturday, May 2
9:00 am Service
9:45 am Open Tent Minyan
4:30 pm Isaac Kantarovich Bar Mitzvah
Sunday, May 3
9:00 am - 12:30 pm Annual Meeting Voting
11:00 am Kitchen Orientation
2:00 pm The Book Club @ BJC
2:00 - 5:00 pm Preston’s Hope Grand Re-Opening (JCC); $15 pp
7:00 pm Annual Meeting
Wednesday, May 6
9:45 am Someone Special & Me
7:00 pm Confirmation Class Night
7:30 pm Jewish Genealogy Society Meeting @ Menorah Park with
Sean Martin, WRHS, Working with Yiddish Sources
Thursday, May 7 - Lag B’Omer
Friday, May 8
7:00 pm Service; Baccalaureate for high school seniors
8:00 pm Oneg followed by Irwin Kula talk
Condolences to:
The family of our member, Julius “Julie” Abrams
Kevin Trangle & family on the death of his father, Allen Trangle
Yahrzeits: April 25 - May 1, 2015
Bertha Adelstein
Charlotte Seidman Amster
Sam Apfel
Sam Auerbach
Irving Sonny Bain
Victor Isador Baskin
Elvira Benjamin
Salomon Benzaquen
Jack J. Berlin
Sabina Berman
Anna Bernstein
Rachel Blake
Robert Bloch
Esther Bloom
Sarah Bloomfield
Beatrice Borwick
Helen Bromson
William H. Bruder
Miriam Cohen
Maxwell W. Cohen
Jack Cohen
Hilda Dattelbaum
Ann S. Desatnik
Mildred Diamond
Emanuel Donsky
Chana Drucker
David Drucker
Harry Einbund
Samuel Eisner
Mollye Ellis
Esther Entis
Ruth Fine Farber
Sarah Feiner
Sophie Feldman
Lester Feltoon
Bernice Ellen Fetterman
Rebecca Finkelstein
Simon S. Fishel
Abe Fried
Henry Fried
Herbert Friedman
Rae Fuldauer
Pola Galun
Rose Garaway
Bertha Geller
Clara Gerson
Rose Goldstein
Selma Goldstein
Adolph Greenbaum
Rosella Haberman
Gerhardt Hochstadt
Anne Hoffman
Minnie G. Jacobs
Malvina Jaulusz
Rebecca Kaminsky
Milton Kess
Melvin Krasnow
Mania Krooshkov
Harry Laderman
Joseph Lawton
Rose Leiter
Sam L. Levin
Sylvia Lodish
Dr. William Loeb
Lily Markman
Lillian R. Milefsky
Dr. Maurice Moss
Mark Newman
Adolph Newman
Betty Oppenheim
Marvin Perlberg
Marvin Peskin
Fannie G. Rickman
Charles Rolnik
Evelyn F. Rose
Paul Scher
Rose June Schnall
Richard E. Schneider
Rae Schwartz
Anna B. Schwartz
Henry Schwartz
Max M. Shapiro
Sadie Sharowsky
Paul Siegel
Anne Sieman
Eva Silver
William Simalevitz
Emily V. Sisser
Jenny Smith
Harry Spanner
Joseph Teitelman
Morris Traeger
Rose Unger
Jetty Wasserman
Milton Wasserman
Marilyn Weiss
Sol Weiss
Frida Weisz
Ron Wiesel
Elvira Wintner
Robert E. Worth
Sarah Ziskind
If you would like a name read from this week’s yahrzeit list and have not
already informed the office, please notify one of the ushers.
It is customary to make a donation to the Aliyah Fund when
honored with an aliyah. Thank you for your support.
We welcome your children in the Main Sanctuary!
Please turn off your beepers and cellular phones
before entering the synagogue on Shabbat.