koleinu The Voice of Congregation B`nai Israel
Transcription
koleinu The Voice of Congregation B`nai Israel
koleinu www.bnais.com Founded 1849 The 8th Annual Wine & Food Festival Is May 3 By Dale Kasler Napa. Sonoma. Santa Barbara. Galilee. Galilee? You read correctly – this year the Wine & Food Festival at Congregation B’nai Israel is taking on an Israeli flavor. The eighth annual Wine & Food Festival will pay tribute to Israel’s 60th birthday. This year’s festival is set for Saturday, May 3, from 6 to 9 pm in the B’nai Israel Social Hall. What’s better than spending a Saturday night with a couple hundred of your best friends? The festival is B’nai Israel’s premiere social event – and our single biggest fundraiser. It’s an unsurpassed evening of food, wine, live jazz from the Aaron Garner Trio and our famous silent auction featuring weekend getaways, art, wine baskets, sports tickets and other goodies (Back by popular demand this year, we’re auctioning off premium parking spaces for High Holy Days). There’s also a live raffle and, for the second year in a row, a special pre-festival winetasting party hosted by Scott Harvey Wines, an award-winning St. Helena vintner featuring some of the finest varietals from Napa and Amador counties. In addition to our usual generous wine and food offerings from the best restaurants and wineries, we’ll be offering Israeli food from Aharona Catering (our own Arla Hesterman) and a selection of wines from Israel’s small but growing and much-admired winemaking industry. We’ll also be featuring food from area restaurants and caterers such as Aioli Bodega Espanola, Central Valley Coffee, Cheffery’s, Crepe Escape, Daphne’s Greek Restaurant, Refer-a-Chef and Sterling Hotel. Among the featured wineries committed so far: Herzog, Curtis, Firestone, Madrona, Montevina and Sebastiani. The cost, as usual, is extremely reasonable for an event like this: $36 per person in advance or $40 at the door. Because alcohol is being served, this is an adult-only event; no one under 21 is permitted. The Scott Harvey Winery pre-tasting, which begins at 5 pm, is $75 per person. Seating is limited so please reserve space now. Want to help out? Goods and services are still being sought for the silent auction and raffle, while sponsorships are still available. Please contact event chair Ross Huggins at (916) 451-3772. To buy tickets for the event, reserve space at the pre-tasting, or if you have any questions, please call the B’nai Israel office at (916) 446-4861. Maternity Leave Sermon Schedule Through May April 18 – Prof. Miriam Cherry on “Ethical Dilemmas in Business” April 25 – Haley Panneton on “Living in Israel, an American Student’s Perspective” May 16 – Bill Schwartz on “Honoring our Past, the History of Sacramento Jews” May 23 – (Lag B’Omer) Jason Lindo, topic TBD May 30 – Jay Schenirer on “Jewish Values and Our Youth” The Voice of Congregation B’nai Israel Vol 08, Issue 4 Adar II/Nisan 5768 April 2008 Worship Focus Worship Calendar April Friday, April 4 7:30 pm Sustainable Living Shabbat Saturday, April 5 9:00 am Torah Study 10:30 am Ruach Ha’Am Service (chapel) Friday, April 11 2 nd Shabbes 6:00 pm Tot Shabbat 6:30 pm Shabbat Dinner 7:30 pm Shabbat Services Saturday, April 12 9:00 am Torah Study 10:30 am Shabbat Service Natalie Korengold Bat Mitzvah Friday, April 18 7:30 pm Shabbat Service Rosh Chodesh Schedule April 1: “Celebrating Parents and Children.” Join WBI and BISY women to welcome Rabbi Alfi back to Rosh Chodesh with a baby shower for Avi Judah! We will do some text study and some prayer writing. If you would like, please bring a present for a baby one year or older. All gifts will be donated to The Birthing Project. May 6: “Celebrate Israel and Israeli Women.” Join WBI and the Young Women of Hadassah in celebrating Israel’s 60th birthday. Led by Hadassah members, “Celebration of Israel.” June 3: “The Book of Ruth: Messianism and Female Lineage” Dairy potluck dinner begins at 6:15 pm. Service runs from 6:45-8:30.All women 13 and older are invited.To help set up or clean up, please contact Lynn Belzer at [email protected]. Thanks for lending a hand! Saturday, April 19 9:00 am Torah Study 10:30 am Shabbat Service Drew Mendelson, Torah Reader The Koleinu is “sponsored” by: Friday, April 25 7:30 pm Shabbat Service The Klinenberg family Doris Pittell & Bud Morris Saturday,April 26 Passover Yizkor 9:00 am Torah Study For a donation of only $100, you, too, can help sponsor the Koleinu. If you are interested, please contact our Administrator, Mandy Greene, at 446-4861. 10:30 am Shabbat Service with Yizkor Stacia Levy, Torah Reader Friday, May 2 7:30 pm Shabbat Service Table of Contents Worship Focus ..............................................2 President’s Column........................................3 Brotherhood...................................................3 WBI (Sisterhood)...........................................4 Religious School........................................ 6, 7 CBI Bulletin Board.........................5, 8, 9, 11 Community Bulletin Board...................... 8, 9 Donations..................................................... 10 Anniversaries & Birthdays......................... 14 April Calendar.............................................. 15 Congregation B’nai Israel 3600 Riverside Boulevard Sacramento, CA 95818 Submission Guide There is a 350 word limit on articles for the Koleinu. Deadline for all issues is the first day of the month preceding publication date. Please send your article to koleinu@bnais. com. If you have any questions, contact Stacia Levy, editor of the Koleinu or the CBI office. The opinions expressed in the Koleinu are entirely those of the contributors and do not reflect official policy of CBI. Differing opinions are welcome. Koleinu is published monthly except during July and January. June/July and December/January are combined issues. Timeline: Articles due: First of the month Final draft due for printing: Tenth of the month The Koleinu is mailed via bulk mail and may take two weeks to reach some congregants. 2 Chadashot Request Not receiving Chadashot? New email address? Please notify the temple so we can update our records: [email protected]. President’s Column/Temple Brotherhood Temple Economics 101 By Jeremy Hollis, Board President First, a very simplistic description regarding one aspect of our capitalistic system. (Simplistic, of course, because I identify with the simple son at the Passover table). In the for-profit business sector, whether we are thinking of the grocery store, or your trusted law firm or Home Depot, those companies that provide goods and services do their best to control expenses and work very had to generate revenues, all resulting, hopefully, in a profit. They take this profit and invest in inventory, grow their staff –hoping to grow more revenue, and maybe give some back to their shareholders. Those that are not successful close their doors and declare failure. Fortunately, we live in a society where there are enough successful businesses so we have places to buy the goods and services we need or crave. In the world of B’nai Israel, the non-profit sector, and further defined as the world of religious organizations, the dynamics are in some ways similar but also significantly different. Our “company” that we know as B’nai Israel, is managed by your Board of Trustees. Our revenue comes from donations, dues, fund-raisers (i.e., think of the upcoming Wine Auction and on-going Spring Spectacular) and, thankfully, the rental income we can generate in renting out our facility. We take this revenue to meet all of our expenses and provide all of you the programs and services (pun intended) that we value so much. B’nai Israel has been an asset to the Jewish community in Sacramento for over 150 years, so we have obviously been doing something right. I don’t mean to imply that we are in any kind of financial crisis, for we are not. The economy is not strong right now and this puts pressure on the revenue side of B’nai Israel’s operations. Your Board continues to work very diligently at controlling expenses. Our expenses include paying for all our staff. We have a mortgage, we pay utilities to heat and cool the buildings, we need supplies for the office and school books and all the other odds and ends that are required to provide a quality environment and operation. Our expenses are required to continue to allow us to provide quality programs and religious services that are at the heart of what B’nai Israel is all about. We do a good job at this side of the equation. For this, our Board and professional staff, particularly Mandy Greene, our administrator, deserve a sincere thank you from all of us. The real purpose of this month’s column is to focus on the revenue side of B’nai Israel. To generate adequate income to meet our expenses, we cannot increase “sales” as if we are Raley’s or Vic’s Ice Cream. Increasing our membership is one obvious way to generate more revenue. Our efforts to that end have been significant and successful. Over the past eighteen months we have reversed a disturbing trend of an annual net loss in members that had been occurring over many years. This positive growth in our membership is a very good thing. B’nai Israel, to stay healthy, both financially as well as spiritually, needs to gain new blood, new families, new participation from its members. Our major source of revenue is dues from you, our members. Each year in the summer months, we all are asked to make our annual pledge for how much we will pay for our dues for the year. We budget based on those pledges. While the bulk of our expenses are essentially fixed (such as salaries, the mortgage) we do have some flexibility to manage our programs if our income is off from our pledges. We are experiencing such an issue as we are now in the final quarter of the 07-08 fiscal year. We need all our members to honor their pledges to the temple. Whether these pledges are made as a dues pledge or at the High Holy Day appeal, or payment for our children to attend religious school, we need these promises to be met. I ask you as a valued member of our B’nai Israel family to honor your financial commitments so we can stay a healthy and vibrant part of the Jewish community in Sacramento. Brotherhood News By Jeff Rabinovitz, Brotherhood President Things have been quiet in the Brotherhood. We had a great time at Pyramid Ale in February and our March Boyz Night Out Dining was just as much fun. Be looking in your inbaskets for April’s Boyz Night Out Dining on April 16. Those of you with B’nai Mitzvah students, please consider the Brotherhood for your catering needs. We have a variety of menus and are reasonably priced. Also, remember that our profits are all used for temple projects of one sort or another, from scholarships to capital campaign contributions. You will be doing a mitzvah by helping us do a mitzvah for your B’nai Mitzvah. Contact Dave Lewis at [email protected]. Hope to see you at a Brotherhood event soon. THE BLOODMOBILE IS COMING TO CONGREGATION B’NAI ISRAEL! Sunday, May 4 Mitzvah Day 8:30 am to 12:30 pm Mobile Coach located in the parking lot For information or an appointment contact TODD MENDELL Call 684-6734 or email [email protected] 3 Women of B’nai Israel Passover--The Celebration of Freedom From Bondage By Deni Deutsch Marshall, WBI President As spring comes, I reflect on Passover and the meaning of freedom. Passover is our celebration of freedom from bondage in Egypt, yet we don’t just remember this on Passover. We remember it every Friday night during Tefilah when we pray together and thank God for bringing us out of slavery in Egypt. I rejoice that we, as American Jews, live in a time and a country that prizes freedom for all of its citizens. Yet at Passover when we say, “Next year in Jerusalem,” I feel comforted that there is a country that Jews can call their own. I don’t really expect that next year we will be in Israel (at least not to live), but knowing that we could be if it were necessary brings a measure of peace to me that I know didn’t exist for my great grandparents, who lived in Europe in the last century. Jews growing up in Israel today cannot understand the thrill that many of us in the Diaspora feel when we go to Israel for the first time. For me it was the little things such as being greeted with “Shalom” in every store, the Shabbat clock on the wall of Jerusalem that announces exactly what time Shabbat begins that week, or the sea of Semitic faces and dark hair on the beach in Tel Aviv. It was the uncanny sense of belonging, albeit in a foreign country. When I sit down at my Passover Seder this April, I will give thanks to be free, to be an American Jew, and free to hold Israel close to my heart as my second home. WBI Spring Events Don’t miss all the exciting WBI events coming this spring! April 1 - WBI welcomes Rabbi Alfi back to Rosh Chodesh with a baby shower for Avi Judah. All gifts will be donated to The Birthing Project. April 5 - WBI presents Women’s Afternoon Out with Wine 101, 4:00 - 6:00 pm in the social hall at B’nai Israel. For more information contact Andrea Rosen at [email protected]. April 6 - WBI holds its yearly planning meeting at Andy Press-Dawson’s home, 10:00 am - 2:00 pm. All members are welcome. Potluck lunch included. April 20 - WBI-sponsored Community Seder – the second night of Passover. (See the enclosed flyer). May 6 - WBI joins with the Young Women of Hadassah to celebrate Israel’s 60th at Rosh Chodesh. May 18 - Artist and WBI member, Merle Serlin leads our annual WBI public art tour (men welcome), 1:00 - 3:00 pm. June 1 - New WBI Board Installation Brunch in the courtyard at B’nai Israel. WBI Art Tour May 18, 1:00 pm May 18 is not a long way off, and we all know how quickly our calendars fill up! This year’s WBI Art Tour will focus on the public art of Del Paso Blvd. We’ll also be visiting the Sacramento Metropolitan Art Commission’s offices (on Del Paso) where we’ll learn something about the public art process. Also planned for the tour-day – we’ll be seeing the maquettes (small-scale models) and then the finished full-size artworks and meeting some of the Del Paso Blvd. artists. So, save the date! Special Passover Gift Shop Hours Visit the Jonas Goldman Judaica Shop, and see all the new items that have arrived in recent weeks – • Passover matzah and Seder plates, Elijah and Miriam cups, matzah and afikomen bags, tablecloths with matching napkins, cards, CDs and tapes, cookbooks and hostess gifts. • Children’s haggadot, plague kits, books, activity books, puzzles, and placemats and cards to color. • Our haggadot include choices of contemporary, traditional, Sephardic, child-oriented and women’s seders. Special Pre-Passover Hours: Sunday, April 13 Tuesday and Thursday, April 15 and 17 Wednesday, April 16 Friday, April 18 9:30 am – 2 pm 1 – 6 pm 1 – 5 pm 11 am – 3 pm First night seder is Saturday night, April 19. If you have questions, or need an appointment, call Carole Kovnick 974 –0875, or Jane Orkand 283-4325. 4 Hillel at Davis and Sacramento Sunday, May 18, 2008 at The ARC Ballroom at UC Davis Please join us as we pay tribute to Sam and Bobbie Len and Larry and Norma Rappaport Hillel’s “Most Honorable Menschen” Co-sponsored by UC Davis Jewish Alumni Association CBI Bulletin Board Record Your Personal Story By JoAnn Solov An exciting project will offer people in our community a chance to record their personal stories and become part of American history through StoryCorps. StoryCorps is creating an oral history of the United States using stories of everyday people. Capital Public Radio is bringing this unique opportunity to Sacramento and it is locally sponsored by the Sacramento Public Library. StoryCorps’ mobile recording studio, housed in an Airstream trailer, will be at the Central Library, April 14-May 11. Participants’ stories will be recorded and permanently stored at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., and in our Central Library, and selected recordings are aired on NPR. The StoryCorps recording sessions invite people to participate in pairs, oftentimes friends and family, as one interviews the other. A trained facilitator guides the participants through the interview. At the end of the 40-minute session, participants receive a compact disc of the interview. The collection will eventually grow into an oral history of America and Sacramento. To make a StoryCorps recording reservation, please telephone (800) 850-4406 beginning April 3. Check It Out! By Bonnie Penix We are delighted to see so many congregants in the Sosnick Library on Sunday mornings! Children are hearing storybooks read and borrowing books to share at home. Adults are checking out books, DVDs, working on laptops, and, of course, savoring Café B’nai’s coffee and pastries. If you haven’t been in the library recently, now is the time to stop by. We have much to offer. Please take advantage of this wonderful resource. Plus, your patronage of Café B’nai helps keep our library vital. See you at Sosnick! Rosh Chodesh Cultural Exchange By JoAnn Solov On January 15, over 75 Jewish and Muslim women joined together for the first Rosh Chodesh Cultural Exchange. It was a huge success, with a sumptuous vegetarian potluck that defied description. Six panelists shared their experiences, focusing on the role of faith in their lives and women’s rituals in their respective religions. Sarah Tisdale, a 19-year-old convert to Islam, spoke in depth of her journey and how the Muslim faith has impacted her life over the past six years. Dorothy Landsberg shared the Birkat Hamishpacha, or Family Blessing, that has been an important prayer in her life, passed through the generations, to her children and grandchildren. Durriya Syed, a native of Pakistan and currently an intern in the Senate, spoke of 9/11 and how it changed her world view. “I realized right then and there that I had to market the Muslim people. We’re here to stay. Let’s make a good statement...Women carry religion.” Other panelists included Geilan Toppozada, Claire Conlon and Deni Deutsch-Marshall. Rabbi Alfi, great with child, presided over the Rosh Chodesh exchange. She welcomed our guests and expressed her hope that this would be the beginning of an interfaith dialogue between Congregation B’nai Israel and SALAM, Sacramento Area League of Associated Muslims. Feedback from the evening was wonderful, rippling as far away as the Mondavi Center. A Jewish friend was ushering at the Itzak Perlman concert and overheard a conversation about our event. She spoke with the woman who said with great emotion, “If women all over the world could share a meal and an evening like that together, they could solve a lot of the world’s problems.” Did You Know? . . . that Jews comprise a mere 1/4 of 1% (13) million of the world population (6 billion). . . . that two of the greatest & most influential thinkers dominating the 20th century were Jewish: Einstein and Freud. Yom HaShoah: Remembering Sunday, April 27 10:00 - 10:45 am Congregant, Judie Panneton, will share her personal story of growing up as a child of a survivor. Ensemble Katan Youth Choir will perform. Sponsored by CBI Brotherhood and Religious School 5 Education From the Educator By Sunny E. Romer, RJE Passover is about telling stories—specifically our people’s journey—the story of the Exodus. But, for each of us, our own stories, our own journey, is part of that bigger JOURNEY. Passover is the right time to tell our stories. The Haggadah transforms parents into storytellers. It is your task as parents to bring your children into contact with your family’s roots. Rabbi David Hartman of the Shalom Hartman Institute has said, “Parents should not determine their children’s future, but they must open for them their past.” In retelling the Exodus each year, we learn to commemorate our own personal times of crisis and our own path to a better life. This is our personal family journey and our people’s journey. A Personal Journey…from Europe to Sacramento On Sunday, April 27, 10:00 am – 10:45 am, CBI is holding a special memorial service and discussion commemorating Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Memorial Day). For so many of our students, the Holocaust is simply something that very happened long ago. It is important that each year we take the time to remember those who we lost so that we can actively fight discrimination and hatred wherever it is in our world today. As with our retelling of the Exodus journey each year at Passover, so too, must we continue to tell the personal stories of the Holocaust. Congregant Judie Panneton will share her family’s story and Ensemble Katan and other congregants will participate in our memorial service and program. This program is for our families with children in 4th grade and above as well as the rest of our congregation. We strongly encourage parents to stay with their children during this program. Mitzvah Day This year the CBI annual Mitzvah Day is on Sunday, May 4. There will be a number of adult mitzvah projects available for parents and other congregants. Parents— In religious school, each of our classes has already chosen a “class mitzvah project.” From our youngest students and their parents in Pre-Kindergarten who will be planting flowers to our 7th graders who will be learning how solar cookers can actually help the environment and then sending some of their fundraising proceeds to purchase solar cooking kits to be sent to the Darfur region of the Sudan where refugees are in desperate need of a safe method of cooking, our students will be helping to make the world a better place. Some parent assistance will be needed in several of the classes and teachers will be in touch with parents to let them know. We will begin with Tefillah at 9:30 am. We’ll learn some mitzvah vocabulary as we work and we’ll be “doing Jewish” by doing mitzvah making. YACHAD Special Yachad Information Meeting on Sunday, April 13, for all 7th graders (and older) and their parents. Come to Tefillah at 9:30 am and stay for the meeting with the Yachad Co-Directors, Amina Harris and Ricki Lobel, at 10:00 am in the Multi-Purpose Room. Students and parents will learn about the Yachad supplementary community high school program (for incoming 8th – 12th graders). If there are any other students in grades 8 – 11 considering Yachad for next year, please plan to attend this informative meeting as well. Yachad, our Sacramento community Jewish high school program is just completing its fourth successful year. It is a powerful experience to walk the Federation campus on Wednesday nights as over 125 Sacramento area Jewish high school students come together to study and manage to find moments to socialize. CBI has 45 students attending in grades 8 through 12! The Yachad graduation ceremony takes place on Wednesday, May 21 here at CBI. We hope that the community will attend and celebrate with our Yachad graduates. Our students and Special Needs We want all of our children to have the best Jewish education possible. In whatever way we can, we want to meet the needs of our special needs students. A number of our special-needs students are mainstreamed and doing quite well in both our Judaica and our Hebrew classes. A few of our students have teen student assistants who work with them in the classroom; this can be especially helpful in our Hebrew classes. For some students, we have adapted our Hebrew/Prayer program to better meet their needs. In our Hebrew classes each Hebrew teacher makes efforts to focus on the learning needs of these students vis-à-vis learning to decode Hebrew and read our prayers. Our teachers are always willing to meet individually with parents to set up an appropriate learning program. If there are students whose needs are not being met, please feel free at any time to contact the teacher and me to set up a meeting to work out an individualized education plan for your child. Should we have families or know of families in the community who would prefer a separate special needs class for their children, I would appreciate hearing from them. We have considered separate classes in the past and are certainly willing to for the future. Lastly, if there are any special needs teachers who might be interested in working with a class or with individual special needs students here at the temple, please contact me. Todah Rabbah! Thank You to Paul Ortega, Ellen Barney, Edye Swidler and Tracy Cady for their help with the Cookie Dough Religious School Scholarship Fundraiser. Everyone will enjoy yummy cookies and know that they have helped replenish our Religious School Scholarship Fund---a win-win for us all. Donations are always welcome and may be made directly to this fund. Thank you all who participated. continued on page 7 6 Education continued from page 6 Pesach Possibilities Try something different at your Seder this year---with or without children. Act out the scenes. A few props and items for costuming— loose togas (a sheet works well), scarves, sandals, etc. Follow the scrip in the haggadah to figure out your scenes (tableaus) and make up your lines! Mastering the historical facts of the Exodus from Egypt is not the main educational purpose of the Passover Seder. The primary focus is the emotional identification with the dramatic story of liberation and deliverance from slavery to freedom. Check out the temple gift shop for wonderful haggadot that are jam-packed with ideas. Take the Matzah Challenge! Passover lasts 8 days (7 days on the Reform calendar). Make a big deal out of “keeping Pesach” all week. Make meeting the matzah-only challenge into a major accomplishment. Educator Joel Grishaver reminds us that the great Bet Hillel (House of Hillel) thought that Jewish ritual and ordinary life are “confluent”—they flow together. Most of the time you can work your Jewish stuff into your ordinary life. So, pack you and your children’s lunch—with matzah sandwiches. If you manage to get through a whole week and no bread (hametz) has crossed your lips—you have succeeded with the Matzah Challenge—and proved the House of Hillel right! April Dates to Remember Baked By the Sun! Sunday Religious School - 9:30 am-12:30 pm April 6, 13, 27, Tuesday Hebrew - 4:00-6 pm April 1, 8, 15, 29 K’tonton Sunday, April 13, 27 10:00 am - 12 noon By Dave Brubaker Gee, it’s hot enough to fry an egg on the sidewalk! Yep, Sacramento has long, HOT summer days, and sometimes it really feels like we could fry eggs on the sidewalk. Tell you what, let’s try to sun-cook eggs at Mitzvah Day, May 4, 2008. I’ll bring my solar cooker, eggs and other stuff. You bring happiness and helping hands. Together, we’ll cook the eggs by the sun. On Mitzvah Day, the Sustainable Living Committee will demonstrate cooking by the power of the sun for the 7th grade religious school class and any adults who want to tag along with them. We’ll cook food using cardboard-and-aluminum-foil solar cookers. We’ll provide information about solar cookers, recipes for solar cooking, and plans for making solar cookers. Those who want can even make a solar cooker that day. CBI will provide materials for the 7th graders. (For adults who want to make a solar cooker, please bring the materials listed below.) At the end of the day, we’ll “auction off ” a solar cooker (and experienced solar cooking help) to the loudest 7th grade family-and-friends group that agrees to host a neighborhood solar cooking party this summer. Folks and families who want to build their own solar cookers later or try to cook a meal at home using borrowed solar cookers can sign up with the Sustainable Living Committee on Mitzvah Day. • • • • • • So, come to Mitzvah Day and: Taste solar-cooked cookies, cheese melts, and other delectables Make or help make a solar cooker Help prepare food for solar cooking Get copies of solar cooking recipes to try at home Plan a neighborhood “solar party” Sign up for an experienced solar cooker chef to help your family make its own solar cooker or cook its first meal using their new solar cooker. • • • • • Solar Cooker Materials to Bring: Piece of cardboard about 3’ by 4’, flat Oven roasting bag, large turkey size 3 spring-loaded clothes pins Black metal cooking pot, about half gallon size of any shape with a flat bottom Wear old clothes, ‘cause we’ll be using glue and paint See you on Mitzvah Day. Education Committee Thursday, April 17 - 7:00 pm ECE Songfest Saturday, April 5 4 - 5:30 pm 5th Grade Family Education Day Sunday, April 6 9:30 am - 12:30 pm CBI Mitzvah Day Sunday, May 4 9:30 am - 12:30 pm ECE Songfest Saturday, April 5 4 - 5:30 pm Hosted by Elizabeth Landsberg, Gordon Dean & family To RSVP and for information, contact Ellen at 446-4861 or [email protected] Staff Needed for CBI’s Camp Shelanu 2008 The following positions may still be available: Senior Camp Counselors (must be at least 18 with camp experience); Specialists in music, arts & crafts, drama, or sports & nature; Junior Camp Counselors (must be entering 11th or 12th grade and have experience working with kids); Counselors-in-training (must be entering 9th or 10th grade with strong interest in working with kids). Child Care Worker: Must be at least 16 and available to work from 7:30 am – 9 am and from 4 pm to 6 pm, M-F; should have experience and ability to lead age-appropriate day care activities. For more information, contact Sunny Romer, sunnyromer@ bnais.com. 7 CBI/Community Bulletin Board Effective Use of the Census Jewish Genealogical Society of Sacramento It’s a Mitzvah to Shop Sunday, April 13, 2008, 10 am By Ted London Thank you to all of you who have shopped online with Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble.com, FTD.com and Officemax.com. By visiting the B’nai Israel website first, and using the links on our Tzedakah page, these merchants have been paying CBI 4 to 8 percent of what you spend on their website. You can either go to bnais.com and click on “Tzedakah” or go straight to http:// www.bnais.com/tzedakah.cfm. It is amazing what our members have bought just from Amazon: books, CDs, DVDs, kitchen appliances, clothes, sneakers, electronics (iPod, camera, MP3 Player), even dog treats. With so much available for purchase online, supporting B’nai Israel has never been easier. Again, thank you to everyone who has participated. Let’s continue to particpate. If you have questions about the program, please email ted.london@ cgi.com. Sacramento Mission to New Orleans Glenda Lloyd, a Sacramento genealogist, will present tips on using census data to help research your family tree. The “backbone of American genealogy,” census information puts your family in a specific location every 10 years from 1790 to 1930. State and local censuses can lead you to land, immigration and naturalization records. Glenda is a fourth generation Californian who served as the first president of Root Cellar/Sacramento Genealogical Society. She teaches genealogy through adult education classes in the San Juan School District and has also presented programs for many local genealogy societies as well as for Family History Day at the State Archives. All are welcome to attend the Sunday, April 13, 10 am meeting at the Albert Einstein Residence Center, 1935 Wright St., Sacramento. It’s also an opportunity to make use of the group’s extensive genealogy library. For more information about the Jewish Genealogical Society of Sacramento, visit www.jgss.org, e-mail the JGSS at jgs_ [email protected] or leave a message at 916-486-0906 ext. 361. Shalom School Gala “Seeing is Believing” Sunday, April 13 5:00 pm We are Going!!! The Sacramento Jewish Federation’s mission to New Orleans On April 28 thru May 1 is a GO!!! In celebration of Shalom School’s first year at its new campus, the Gala, which will be held at the Shalom School campus, will honor Dr. Joan Gusinow and Jerry Pollack for their tireless commitment to the school’s students, families and staff. There will be Kosher cuisine from all over the world, theme bars with signature drinks, live and silent auctions. Ticket price is $150. For information, call Lynette Otis at Shalom School, 485-4151. Seder Reading (COEJL) Call the Federation office to RSVP as space is limited 486-0906 [email protected] www.jewishsac.org FIND OUT HOW YOU CAN “REPAIR THE WORLD” 8 By Elizabeth Landsberg This is the Lechem Oni, Simple Bread that our ancestors ate when they were slaves in Mitzrayim. Let all who are hungry come and eat. Let all who are in need celebrate Pesach with us. This year, we are still alienated from the land and its living communities. Next year may we be more connected to our people’s homeland, Israel, and to the natural world that is homeland to us all. This year, we are still slaves, tied to materialistic and destructive consumption patterns. Next year, may we and all the peoples of the earth be redeemed by having enough to satisfy our needs without consuming beyond what the earth can sustain. CBI/Community Bulletin Board Yom HaShoah 2008 Reform Family Experience: An Adventure Beyond the Air Conditioned Bus August 13-23, 2008 With Israel’s 60th anniversary around the corner, ARZA is providing a wonderful new way to see Israel. The Reform Family Experience offers a unique, subsidized Israel experience for return visitors and new travelers. Co-sponsored by ARZA, the Israeli Reform Movement and the Jewish Agency for Israel, the program is designed for individuals, couples or families and provides a taste of Reform Jewish life and an insider’s view of Israel. Stay in kibbutz housing, get an insight into Ulpan and other aspects of kibbutz: • Hiking, kayaking, and wine-tasting in the Golan with Israeli families • Take part in Tikun Olam in Tel Aviv-Yafo • Explore the new in Old Jerusalem, with the Anita Saltz Center. • Be a part of the solution: Eco-Zionism at Reform Kibbutz Lotan • Dialogue with Jews and Arabs at the Leo Baeck Center in Haifa • Enjoy Bedouin hospitality and hear about their challenges • Celebrate Shabbat with Israeli Reform congregations Cost is $920 and includes apartment-style living, half board, buses, entrance and activity fees. Airfare not included. A group flight will be arranged. For more details contact Liran Gazit, Aliyah Shlicha, at lgazit@ arza.org 212-339-6069. Visit the ARZA website www.arza.org to download application forms and get more information. By Susan Hayward This year’s observance is Wednesday, April 30, 7:00-8:30 pm, at Mosaic Law Congregation, 2300 Sierra Blvd., Sacramento. The host congregation is Bet Haverim. The event is free. Refreshments, under Kashrut supervision, will be served following the program. Alexander Groth is one of the youngest survivors to be able to give testimony about the Holocaust and will be the featured speaker at Yom HaShoah 2008. Groth is now Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of California, Davis. For his book, Holocaust Voices, published in 2003, he interviewed 250 Holocaust survivors. Yom HaShoah will begin with a candlelighting ceremony in which all Sacramento area survivors, Holocaust era refugees, children, and grandchildren of survivors are invited to participate. If you’d like to take part, please contact Ralph Propper at 916-454-0362. Once again, Yom HaShoah includes all area rabbis and cantors, as well as a performance by Ben Glovinsky. Glovinsky, a member of the music faculty at CSUS, is the principal oboist for the Camellia Symphony. He and his accompanist will play a movement from Czech composer Pavel Haas’ “Suite for Oboe and Piano.” Under the direction of Dolores Allen, the combined choirs from Congregations B’nai Israel and Beth Shalom will sing “Arvoles Llorax” and “Zog Nit Keynmol” (“Song of the Partisans”). In addition, Bernard A. Goldberg will read some of his poems. The community-wide Yom HaShoah commemoration is sponsored by JCRC and the Jewish Federation with the support of the Sacramento Association of Rabbis. For more information, contact Muriel Brounstein at 916-351-1736. A Sustainable Seder Camp Shelanu Is Coming... By Elizabeth Landsberg Every year at Passover we tell the story of the Israelites’ liberation from slavery. We tell it not in the synagogue as a service but at the dinner table with our family and friends or in the social hall with our congregational family. There are prescribed rituals of what we eat and when, with each food symbolizing something about the story of Exodus. This wonderful Jewish holiday where we use food as an integral part of the seder helps us focus on the importance of and meaning of food. Passover is sometimes called the “Festival of Matzah” and matzah which is often called the bread of affliction more literally means the “poor person’s bread.” The Coalition on Judaism and the Environment (COEJL) Passover materials points out that we have transformed matzah from the bread of affliction to the bread of liberation and asks how can simple food transform us. One way is to eat organic, locally grown food – farmers’ markets are a great source. This brings us closer to the food we eat and to the farmers who grow it. Local food which hasn’t traveled thousands of miles to get to our table has lower energy costs. When we eat organic food grown with sustainable agricultural practices, we reduce the use of fertilizers and pesticides. By Sunny Romer The kids are asking “When can I come back to Camp Shelanu?” The answer is…”Soon!” At Camp Shelanu, your child will make chaverim (friends), will have kef (fun), and will become part of the ruach of camp. Don’t delay, sign up your child now! Old and new Camp Shelanu campers will find the typical fun camp activities: daily morning ruach song session, swimming, arts & crafts, friendship circles, big kids overnights, drama activities, nature games, and Friday Shabbat celebrations. But, this summer, we have even more special activities planned. During our Teva (Nature) session, we’ll be taking hikes with our Sierra Club specialist, Tony Laughton, and we’ll be cooking our lunches on the solar cookers that our older campers will construct! Our CBI grounds will become a major archeological site during “We Dig Israel”—who knows what treasures will be uncovered! The Tzofim Israeli Caravan will share fabulous fun Israeli music and dance with our campers during Tarbut, Art & Culture week. I spoke with Nadav Yogev, our very own Israeli Summer Shaliach (Guide) who promised to teach Krav Maga to our campers and will make sure that each child is a winner at our Maccabiah (Olympic-style fun and games). Could there be more? Come check it out! Now, you have a taste of what’s happening at Camp Shelanu this summer. All that is missing is you! Sign up now at www.bnais.com. Spaces available in our k’farim (camper villages) for those entering Kindergarten through 8th grade. If you are entering 9th or 10th grade, sign up to be a Counselor-in-Training. We look forward to greeting you at camp! 9 We Gratefully Acknowledge Our Contributors... Rabbi Alfi’s Discretionary Fund In honor of the birth of Avi Hammel Jeff, Michael and Michelle Aran Barbara and Bruce Berg Ralph Greene Bobbie and Sam Len Deborah Ramirez Mary Slavit Ralph Greene and Deborah Ramirez In appreciation of the kindness of Lilli and Millard Tonkin Karun and Judah Grossman In honor of the naming of their daughter, Lilah Joyce Berger Miller In memory of David Tochterman Cantor’s Discretionary Fund Jacquie and Bob Harris In memory of David Tochterman Bonnie Kaplan In memory of Bernice McFarland Agatha Singer In memory of Murray Miller Capital Campaign Fund Radine Harrison In honor of the birth of her granddaughter, Chloé Oberst Linda and Ron Tochterman In honor of the birth of Avi Hammel Caring Community Fund Pat and Maury Macht In memory of Naomi Macht Flower Fund Ann and Rudy Michaels In honor of Darrell Steinberg being chosen as the President Pro Tem of the California Senate In memory of David Tochterman Israel Youth Fund Muriel and Sandy Simon In honor of the birth of Avi Hammel Jewish Film Festival Fund Women Feed the Hungry Fund Music Fund Anne Finder Levine Beloved mother of Jeff, Beth and Richard Finder Beloved grandmother and great grandmother Agatha Singer In memory of Murray Miller Opper Courtyard Fund Sharon and Sam Anapolsky In memory of David Tochterman Speedy recovery to Doris Blum Phyllis Goldstein and Chuck Lyons In memory of Sy Opper and Caroline Smith Corrine and Jon Merksamer In memory of Caroline Smith and Sy Opper General Fund Varda and Irving Rabin In memory of Caroline Smith and Sy Opper Louise and Michael Caplan In memory of David Tochterman Cissie Goldstein In memory of David Tochterman Gayle and Jerry Merksamer In memory of David Tochterman Jeff, Mark and Scott Setzer In memory of David Tochterman Judy Emick-Leatherwood and Blair Leatherwood In honor of Poshi Mikalson’s contributions to the Sosnick Library and the expansion of the vido library Sandra Bear Maxine Boshes Lisa Brodkey and Rob Wiener Sharon Cohen Susan and Bob Dresser Davina and Barbara Dubnick Paula Dunning Anne and Hal Eisenberg Connie Georgiu Molly and Bernard Goldberg Sybil and Fredi Jakob Ann Kanter Farla Kaufman and Neil Dubrovsky Sandra Lee Bonnie Penix Melissa McElheney Sondra and Ronald Meyer Carol and John Noon Sunny Romer Renee and Michael Schaffer Sandra and Lloyd Shaffer Sharon Sugerman Gay and Paul Tanner Marian Thacher Janet Ulmer Raquel and Irving Perluss In memory of David Tochterman Susan and Bill Appelbaum In memory of David Tochterman Sosnick Library Fund Oscar Bloom Fund Susanne Sommer In honor of the birth of Avi Hammel Price Campership Fund Rona and Frank Harper In honor of the birth of Avi Hammel Rosh Chodesh Fund Beryl Michaels and John Bach In honor of the birth of Avi Hammel 10 Betty and Jack Reuben In memory of Anne Levine Yahrzeit Fund Vida and Gordon Adelman In memory of Kim Adelman Illene Carroll The yahrzeits of Mildred Lippman, Mary Mason, Nellie Samoville The Bridge Group #2 The Saturday Night Bridge Group Bevery and Art Zimmerman In memory of David Tochterman Youth Scholarship Fund Chazzan Carl K. Naluai, Jr. In memory of Carl K. Naluai, Sr. and Margaret Naluai Sue and Harvey Weinstein In honor of the birth of Avi Hammel We Mourn Our Losses David Tochterman Beloved husband of Lois Anapolsky Beloved father of Bruce and Keith Tochterman Beloved stepfather of Missy, Lou, Marlene, Mark and Sue Anapolsky Beloved father-in-law of Loril Tochterman Beloved grandfather of Rachel, Ari, Spencer and Tyler Tochterman Beloved stepgrandfather of Adam, Amber, Jason, Joshua and Matthew Anapolsky Price Campership Fund & Women Feed the Hungry Donations to Price Campership Fund and Women Feed the Hungry (formerly Committee of the Concerned) should be made out to WBI and sent to: Dana Hirschel (Treasurer) 9041 Paso Robles Way Elk Grove, CA 95758 CBI Bulletin Board Spring Spectacular It was previously known as March Madness, but this year, we’ve changed the name to “Spring Spectacular” to more closely reflect the range of times when events occur. Events will be scheduled from mid-March through June, 2008. We will have a variety of events, all of which will support B’nai Israel. If you are interested in hosting a fundraising event for Spring Spectacular, please contact Julie Steinberg at julieja_us@ yahoo.com. Dates are going quickly, so let her know right away. March 29, 7--10 pm, Bowling and Dessert Party This event is hosted by Tom & Melissa McElheney, to be held at Land Park Lanes, beginning at 7 pm. For only $36 ($70 per couple), you will get to wear a bowling shirt provided by Tom, get professional tips from Tom and you will meet and bowl with friendly Temple members, try to win prizes and eat some great desserts provided by Melissa. There will be prizes for last place, most strikes, most creative bowling, best dressed, most gutter balls, and most improved. For reservations, call Melissa, 737-0317. April 5, 7--10 pm, Movie Night This Spring Spectacular event (formerly March Madness), is hosted by Brenda and Bill Schwartz at their home, beginning at 7 pm. The cost is only $25 per person. Additional details will be forthcoming. For information or reservations, call Brenda, 682-2146. April 6, 3--5 pm, Mother-Daughter High Tea This Spring Spectacular event is a traditional English High Tea, hosted by Elise Rose and Eileen Jacobowitz, at the home of Elise Rose in the Pocket Area. There will be a number of teas for sampling and a variety of tasty treats, both sweet and savory. Fine hats and other teaappropriate attire is encouraged, though not required. Bring your favorite tea cup, your fine manners, and an appetite for good drink, food and conversation. Suggested ages - 6 to 106. Space is limited so reserve your spot soon! To RSVP, contact Elise at 428-0499, [email protected] or Eileen Jacobowitz, 444-1907, [email protected]. April 12, 6--9 pm, Jewish “Apples to Apples” and Dinner This Spring Spectacular event is at the home of Twila Morris and Dale Kasler. If you’ve played “Apples to Apples,” you know how players have to find similarities between unlike words. Imagine how much fun it will be with the hot-off-the-press Jewish version. Never played? Don’t worry; it’s easy and fun. We’ll serve dinner at 6 pm and start the game at around 7 pm. There’s a limit of 12 adults (age 13 and over), although you can also bring your kids - we’ll have DVD’s and Twister for the youngsters. For reservations, call Dale or Twila: 492-2815. April 13, 1--3 pm, Tie Dye Event Bring your own 100% cotton items to tie dye (max 2 per person). We’ll provide snacks. This will be held at the temple, right after the Pizza Sale. For reservations, contact Terri, 295-9593 or Bina, 452-7164. April 27, Fine Dining at the Sterling Hotel Spend a spectacular event at the Sterling Hotel. Chef Jim Turknett will prepare a superb dinner menu. Watch for additional details. May 1, 1--3 pm, Book Reading with Brian Landsberg This spring spectacular event will be at the home of Brian and Dorothy Landsberg, and will include beer, wine and a buffet dinner. Door prize of autographed copy of book: Free at Last to Vote: The Alabama Origins of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. This insightful insider’s account of three voting-rights suits - and portraits of the judges, plaintiffs, defendants and lawyers in them - includes telling details that only a participant could provide. For reservations, call Dorothy Landsberg, 457-6961. May 4, 1--3 pm, Make Your Own Havdallah Set Susan Aguilar and Julie Steinberg are hosting this event, where you can make your very own Havdallah set. This event will be held in the temple social hall from 1 to 3 pm. More information TBD. May 10, 6--9 pm, Charaders of the Lost Ark II The event is back by popular demand, and will be held at the Land Park home of the Jacobowitz/Wiesenthal family. It will include a Cinco de Mayo-theme dinner and charades. There will be Wii for the kids. For reservations, call Eileen, 444-1907 or Lisa at 451-6430. May 17, 7--10 pm, Eat, Drink & Be Merry Enjoy an elegant and fun progressive dinner in the Land Park area. After cocktails and hors d’oeurvres at one home, we’ll move to a second house for dinner, and then to a third for dessert. Great company and great food! For reservations and information, contact Jennifer, 442-1240, or [email protected]. June 14 Spring Spectacular - Sephardic Dinner Watch Chadashot and our website, www.bnais.com for more information. June 21, Chocolate Havdallah Hosted by Rabbi Mona Alfi & Dr. Glenn Hammel. Watch for the Chadashot and our website, www.bnais.com for more information. 11 Healing List Notification Family Shalom In order to manage the Healing (Mi Shebeirach) list more effectively, you may include a name on the Mi Shebeirach list. Simply call Sandora Di Fiore at the temple office to have a name included. Temple’s lay leadership, in consultation with our clergy, have decided that names will remain on the list for four weeks unless you notify us otherwise. NCJW domestic abuse support line: 916-204-8777 JFS Ride Paratransit Service for elderly and disabled: 484-4400, ext. 421. Memorial Plaques Our Hineini Committee is offering to assist people with rides to CBI. If you need a ride to Shabbat services or other programs, please contact the temple office at 446-4861, or Jackie Fields at 285-0857 or [email protected]. Memorial plaques for the lobby are a nice way to memorialize your loved ones, and to support the temple at the same time. Cost is only $475. For information, please call our administrator, Mandy Greene, at 446-4861. Life-Cycle Emergency? When you are in crisis, our goal is to get you the support you need, when you need it. If you have a life-cycle emergency to report during business hours, it is best to contact Sandora Di Fiore at the temple office, 916-446-4861. If you need to reach our clergy for an emergency after normal business hours, you should call our administrator, Mandy Greene, on his cell phone, 916-752-7787. What’s New on the Website? Whether you are planning a visit to B’nai Israel, if you’re studying for a Bar or Bat Mitzvah, or if you just want to hear the melodies we use when chanting the prayers, you will find our website helpful.Go to bnais.com/worship-resources.cfm to hear the designated prayer. Also, the Koleinu is now online. Go to bnais.com, then scroll down and follow the link. 12 Please support our advertisers! 13 Milestones, etc. Birthdays Anniversaries 1 Roberta Fassler-Katz, Corey Goodstein, Anne Jacobson, Steven Tincher 2 Alysha Crawford, Ema Gluckmann, Evalyn Horowitz 3 Steve Block, Max Cady, Matthew Cohan, Melanie Marshall 4 Loril Tochterman 5 Norman Davis, Ross Kaplan, Lindsay Nathanson, Marcia Steinberg 7 Jonathan Cristy, Hannahle Spitze, Julia Stewart 8 Robert Cauvy, Mitzi Davis, Katie Kronick, Erika Sommer, Mia Whitfield 9Alisa Chatham Sakowitz, Marlene Chernev, Mark Elinghouse, Linda Henderson 10 Sandi Schoenman, Stuart Steinberg, Dani Wiesenthal 11 Zoe Grossman, Dorothy S. Landsberg, Mark Levy, Jason Pemstein, Marshall Serlin 12 Henry Cauvy 13 Carol Abelson, Jacob Markarczyk, Kent Newton, Abbey Smith, Sarah Smith 14 Janet Goldsmith, Zachary Jacobs, Michelle Kaplan, Emily Lane, Ron Ulmer, Sasha Wallin 15 David Mizzi, Arline Sanders, William Small, Elsa Solis, Victor Zweig 16 Susan Bales, Katherine Jacobs, Dr. Stanley Leff, 17 Leon Greenberg 18 Judie Fertig-Panneton, Mary Gevercer, Peter Michaels, Philip Swedlow, Shelley Troshinsky 20 Jonah Gevercer, Joan Goldberg Madeline Halseth, Paul Silber, Macy Sondheim, Michele Waldinger, Kent Wong 21 Paula Dunning, Erin Taylor 22 Aubree Josephs, Katia Kasower, Greg Roth, Sandy Simons, Nathaniel Spitze 24 Melissa McElheney, Terry Allen, Nita Davidson, Ellie Pylman 25 Jack Dapkewicz,Jacob Frankel, Isabel Jacobson, Betty Levy 26 Katherine Huggins, Jessica Lewis, Caryn Mizzi, Claire Stoecklein 27 Lea Bargad, Ginger Bichs, Shelley Buckholtz, Jo Kasler, Doris Pittell, Lynne Terleski-Katz, Ron Tochterman 28 Neil Dubrovsky, Kara Linton, Ronni Riemer, Pearl Rosenthal 29 Dick Bernheimer, Barbara Klusky, Jeff Leibenhaut, Mary Ann Misenhimer, Twila Morris, Alan Steinberg 30 Gabriella Hertz Laxer, Jean Ismail, Carlos Miranda 1 2 3 5 6 8 11 12 13 17 18 20 23 24 25 26 29 30 Dave Felderstein and Daniel Hoody Marla Haskell Newton and Dale Newton Ema Gluckmann and Edward Chancellor Susan and Joel Harris Linda and Ray Santistevan Laurie and Robert Wood Cheryl and Fran Bremson Marcia and Mandy Greene, Miriam and Philip Stillman Rona and Frank Harper Carol and David Abelson Karun and Judah Grossman Ann and Rudy Michaels, Jennie and Matt Silver Karen and Chris Churchill Mitzi and Norman Davis Dorit Hertz and Teven Laxer Eileen and Howard Sarasohn Twila Morris and Dale Kasler Ann and Michael Rothschild Mary Ann Misenhimer and Alex Kelter Laura and Louis Koretsky Rabbi Mona Alfi and Glenn Hammel Pat and Maury Macht . . . to Alisa and Robert Sakowitz on the birth of Leo Barrett on February 8. . . . to Sharon Gerber, featured on the Personal Style page of the March issue of “Sacramento Magazine.” Her work helping to raise funds for area nonprofits is most commendable. . . .Also, in that issue of the Sacramento Magazine in the Snapshots section, see Adam and Warren Anapolsky as they helped to raise funds for the Shriners Hospitals for Children. . . . Terra Mikalson (Sosnick Library assistant) has been awarded a merit-based, full-tuition, 4-year Trustee Scholarship to Mills College in Oakland. Just 10 of these awards are given per year. . . . to Blair Leatherwood, one of “A Few Good Men,” seen recently on stage at Sacramento City College. Send your Mazel Tov information to us for publication in the Koleinu so we can share your news. 14 6 4:30 BISY Sephardic Seder 9:30 Religious School 10:00 K’tonton 10:00 Yom HaShoah program 11:00 RNJ Committee 27 6:00 Congregational Seder NO RELIGIOUS SCHOOL 28 21 20 9:30 Religious School 10:00 Chometz Drive and Mini-Mitzvah Day 10:00 K’tonton 10:00 Grade 6 BM Parents Workshop #2 2nd Seder 7 14 MONDAY 13 9:30 Religious School 10:00 Family Ed., Grade 5 10:15 Seder Cheder 10:00 WBI Planning Meeting SUNDAY 22 15 8 7:00 Israeli Dancing 4:00 Hebrew School 7:00 Israeli Dancing 29 9 16 6:45 Yachad 7:00 Yom HaShoah Community Program (off-site) 30 6:30 Confirmation Class 6:45 Yachad 7:15 Choir rehearsal 23 6:30 Confirmation Class 6:45 Yachad 7:00 Dinner w/The Boyz (off-site) 7:15 Choir rehearsal 6:30 Confirmation Class 6:45 Yachad 7:15 Choir rehearsal 6:30 Confirmation Class 6:45 Yachad 7:15 Choir rehearsal 25 18 Yom HaShoah May 2 7:30 Shabbat Service 7:30 Shabbat Service 6:00 Tot Shabbat 6:30 Shabbat dinner 7:30 Shabbat Services 2nd Shabbes 4 11 7:30 Sustainable Living Shabbat FRIDAY 6:15 Board of Trustees 7:00 Mental Health Family 7:30 Shabbat Service Support Group May 1 Erev Yom HaShoah 24 6:15 Executive Committee 17 7:00 Bereavement Support Group 10 7:00 Mental Health Group 6:15 Board of Trustees THURSDAY 3 19 26 6:00 Wine & Food Festival 9:00 Torah Study 10:30 Ruach Ha’Am Maxine Boshes Torah Reader May 3 9:00 Torah Study 10:30 Shabbat Service with Yizkor Stacia Levy Torah Reader Passover Yizkor 9:00 Torah Study 10:30 Shabbat Service Drew Mendelson Torah Reader 1st Seder 5 12 7:00 Satureday Night at the Movies 10:30 Shabbat Service Natalie Korengold Bat Mitzvah 9:00 Torah Study 4:00 ECE Songfest 4:00 WBI Afternoon Out 9:00 Torah Study 10:30 Ruach Ha’Am Michael Hersher Torah Reader SATURDAY Adar II/Nisan 5768 April 2008 WEDNESDAY 1 2 NO HEBREW SCHOOL 4:00 Hebrew School 7:00 RS Committee 7:00 Israeli Dancing 7:00 Israeli Dancing 4:00 Hebrew School 4:00 Hebrew School 6:15 Rosh Chodesh 7:00 Israeli Dancing off-site TUESDAY CBI Calendar of Events Congregation B’nai Israel 2nd Shabbes Friday, April 11 6:00 pm Tot Shabbat 6:30 pm Shabbat Dinner 7:30 pm Shabbat Service Catering by Aharona Catering The delicious menu is: Romaine salad with mozzarella, pear tomatoes and fresh basil; eggplant parmesan; curly noodles with Alfredo sauce; sautéd zucchini with corn and peppers; and garlic bread. Adults $12, if reserved by Wednesday, April 9. After Wednesday, meals are $2 extra. Complimentary kids meals for children 12 and under. Your payment is your reservation. Please mail your payment to: 3600 Riverside Blvd., Sacramento CA 95818. “Koleinu” Our Voice Phone.......916.446.4861 Fax.........916.446.2875 www.bnais.com Rabbi Mona Alfi, [email protected] Rabbi Emeritus Lester A. Frazin Chazzan Carl K. Naluai, Jr., [email protected] Sunny Romer, Director of Education, [email protected] Mandy Greene, Administrator, [email protected] Poshi Mikalson, Librarian, [email protected] ____________________ President, Jeremy Hollis, [email protected] VP Administration, Jay Schenirer, [email protected] VP Education, Farla Kaufman, [email protected] VP Facilities, Dick Nathanson, [email protected] VP Finance, Steve Goldberg, [email protected] VP Membership, Steven Tincher, [email protected] CFO, Barbara Ullman, [email protected] Secretary, Barbara Brecher, [email protected] Past-President, Dale Kasler, [email protected] _______________________ “KOLEINU” STAFF Editors, Stacia Levy, [email protected] Bonnie Penix, [email protected] Layout Design, Jeanette Freidberg, [email protected] Congregation B’nai Israel 3600 Riverside Boulevard Sacramento, CA 95818 Time Dated Material NON-PROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT No. 311 Sacramento, CA