High Holy Days 5776/2015 Important Information
Transcription
High Holy Days 5776/2015 Important Information
OUR PAST, PRESENT & FUTURE PENINSULA TEMPLE BETH EL HOLY DAYS T HIGH 5776 / 2015 BE Peninsula Temple Beth El Information and Schedule of Services Selichot Saturday, September 5 Study, Reflection, Prayer 7:00 pm Erev Rosh Hashanah Sunday, September 13 Early Service 5:30 pm Late Service 8:30 pm First Day Rosh Hashanah Monday, September 14 Tree of Life Service (Families with K-5th graders) 8:00 am Adult Service 10:30 am Young Children’s Service (Preschoolers) 4:00 pm Second Day Rosh Hashanah Tuesday, September 15 Morning Service 10:30 am Tashlich and Erev Shabbat Shuvah Family Picnic Tashlich and Erev Shabbat Shuvah Service Friday, September 18 5:30 pm at Leo J. Ryan Park, Foster City 6:30 pm at Leo J. Ryan Park, Foster City Kol NidreTuesday, September 22 Early Service 5:30 pm Late Service 8:30 pm Yom Kippur Wednesday, September 23 Tree of Life Service (Families with K-5th graders) 8:00 am Adult Service 10:30 am Yom Kippur Teaching with Rabbi Steven Mason 1:30 pm Teen-led Afternoon Service 3:00 pm Young Children’s Service (Preschoolers) 4:00 pm Contemplative Service 4:45 pm Yizkor and Neilah Service 5:45 pm (Doors Open at 5:30 pm) Peninsula Temple Beth El 1700 Alameda de las Pulgas, San Mateo, CA 94403 Phone: 650.341.7701 Fax: 650.570.7183 email: [email protected] www.ptbe.org 2 YOUR JOURNEY THROUGH THE HIGH HOLY DAYS AT PTBE Evening Services Erev Rosh Hashanah and Kol Nidre — 5:30 pm and 8:30 pm There will be two services offered for each evening. We welcome in the High Holy Days with inspirational liturgy and moving melodies. Both services will feature our High Holy Days Ensemble. Morning Services New this year! Tree of Life Service — A Multi-Generational Service — 8:00 am on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Our new Tree of Life service will feature the music of Elana Jagoda Kaye and the High Holy Days Ensemble. This family-focused service will cater to our K-5th grade children’s attention span, lasting no longer than one-and-a-half hours, but will still include the important and meaningful liturgy of the High Holy Days that gets our adult minds thinking and our hearts moving. This service will capture the attention of adults and children alike with participatory Torah reading and a sermon-story that will reach congregants of all ages. Child Care Adult Morning Service — 10:30 am on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur The late morning service offers adults and teen members an opportunity to worship in a setting conducive to personal and spiritual introspection. The service includes meaningful liturgy, music, Torah, haftarah and a sermon for the High Holy Days. will be provided during both morning services for children 3 months of age to preschool. See page 7 for details. Second day morning service — 10:30 am Join us for an intimate second-day celebration of the new year. Afternoon Services and Learning Teen-Led Yom Kippur Afternoon Service ― 3:00 pm This contemporary-style, family-friendly service, skillfully conducted by our teens and members of our high school youth group, SMRTY (San Mateo Reform Temple Youth), includes creative readings, Torah Service, the Haftarah of Jonah, music, and an engaging lesson. Young Children’s Service Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur ― 4:00 pm This service is filled with songs and stories designed for families with preschoolers. The Rosh Hashanah service includes a children’s activity and a holiday snack. On Yom Kippur, singer-storyteller Ira Levin will present a special holiday story. These services are open to the community. Contemplative Yom Kippur Afternoon Service ― 4:45 pm Everyone is encouraged to participate in the Yom Kippur afternoon service. Through song and creative liturgy, this unique worship experience will allow us to deepen our prayers and continue opening our hearts to the sanctity of this sacred day. Yom Kippur Yizkor and Neilah Service – 5:45 pm (Doors open at 5:30 pm) Our afternoon memorial is a moving way to remember our loved ones. Yizkor will be followed by Neilah, our concluding service. Yom Kippur Afternoon Teaching Don’t Rely on Miracles ― 1:30 pm Recently retired Rabbi Steven Mason, and father of Rabbi Sara Mason-Barkin, will base his afternoon teaching on three short Talmudic texts, Don’t Rely on Miracles. PREPARING FOR THE HIGH HOLY DAYS Preparing for the High Holy Days Meet the New Machzor: A High Holy Day Workshop Thursdays, August 6, 13, 20, 27, and September 3, 7:30 pm Gates of Repentance, our High Holy Days machzor (prayerbook), has guided our community through the High Holy Days for many decades, but we must continuously renew our connection to these sacred days. The new machzor from the Reform Movement, Mishkan HaNefesh, gives our community a wealth of resources for finding new meaning. Through updated translations and poetry, as well as easily accessible transliteration, Mishkan HaNefesh will breathe new life into our services for the High Holy Days. Don’t let the changes in the machzor take you by surprise! Your clergy want you to hold it, read it, and study it, as you prepare yourselves spiritually for the Days of Awe. Please join us during the month of Elul to learn about some changes you’ll see, including: new opportunities for blowing the shofar, more inclusive liturgical language and readings that help us contemplate the nature of sin and repentance. Whether you’re a High Holy Days expert or it’s your first one, we hope you will take advantage of the chance to dive deep into our High Holy Days worship, and ask questions about our new guide for the High Holy Days. Our new machzorim have been generously donated by the Rosenblum Springer family. Shofar Blowing Workshop with Rabbi Dennis Eisner Wednesdays, August 12, 19, and 26, 7:30 pm Learn how to blow the shofar, the calls and its history. Those with enough hot air will be invited to join in the final blast of the shofar, the T’kiah G’dolah, at the end of Yom Kippur. For sanitary reasons, please bring your own shofar. Our Gift Shop has a wide selection of shofarot to choose from. Meditation to Prepare for the High Holy Days Monday, August 24, 7:00 pm Or HaLev, the Center for Jewish Spirituality at PTBE, holds weekly meditations. This year’s cycle begins during the month of Elul. Prepare yourself for the High Holy Days through contemplative Jewish chanting and meditation. The Rabbis Roundtable – The Meaning of Repentance Wednesday, September 2, 7:00 pm at Wornick Jewish Day School T’shuvah (repentance) is the personal and communal spiritual task of the High Holy Days. We are invited to assess our deeds, to ask for and give forgiveness, and to make amends where possible. Join the senior rabbis of the Peninsula, who will discuss texts on repentance and share their beliefs about sin, forgiveness, and the human condition. No charge. Pre-registration is required. For more information about the program, go to www.pjcc.org or call 212-7522. Held at the Wornick School Ulam Gadol, 800 Foster City Blvd., Foster City. Selichot – Spiritual Preparation for the Days of Awe Saturday, September 5, 7:00 pm Selichot is the marker that our High Holy Days have begun, but if our spiritual preparation has not . . . it is not too late to begin! See page 5 for details. Bake Honey Cake with Jill Goldring Friday, September 11, 12:00 – 2:00 pm Prepare for a sweet new year by baking your own honey cake. Learn to bake honey cake with Jill using honey from her own apiary while schmoozing with each other. Space is limited. RSVP [email protected]. 3 4 SERMON SCHEDULE AND BOOK OF REMEMBRANCE Sermon Schedule for the High Holy Days Erev Rosh Hashanah, Early Service Erev Rosh Hashanah, Late Service Rosh Hashanah, Tree of Life Service Rosh Hashanah, Adult Service Rosh Hashanah Young Children’s Service Second Day Rosh Hashanah Kol Nidre, Early Service Kol Nidre, Late Service Yom Kippur, Tree of Life Service Yom Kippur Morning, Adult Service Yom Kippur Young Children’s Service Yizkor/Neilah Service Rabbi Callie Schulman Rabbi Sara Mason-Barkin Rabbi Lisa Kingston Rabbi Dennis Eisner Rabbi Sara Mason-Barkin Rabbi Lisa Kingston Rabbi Lisa Kingston Rabbi Callie Schulman Rabbi Sara Mason-Barkin Rabbi Dennis Eisner Singer-storyteller, Ira Levin Rabbi Sara Mason-Barkin Remembering Your Loved Ones Zich-ro-no (male) / Zich-ro-na (female) liv-ra-cha. May his/her memory abide among us for a blessing. The Days of Awe give us the opportunity to remember our departed loved ones by inscribing their names in our annual Yom Kippur Book of Remembrance. If you have not sent in your card you may use this form. Please return by September 1. Name of Departed: __________________________________________________________________________ Relationship: __________________________of __________________________________________________ Name of Departed: __________________________________________________________________________ Relationship: __________________________ of __________________________________________________ Enclosed is a contribution of $ ________ as an offering to the temple in memory of our beloved departed whose name(s) are to be printed in the Book of Remembrance. You may also email your entry to [email protected]. We will be happy to bill your temple account. SELICHOT, TASHLICH, AND MITZVOT Selichot – Opening Our High Holy Days Repair Kit Selichot Saturday, September 5, 7:00 pm Join us for a special evening of learning, personal reflection, and prayer as we mark the beginning of our Days of Awe. Our special guest teacher, Adam Siegel, Spiritual Counselor and Chaplain at Beit T’shuvah, will bring us his unique perspective on the brokenness of the human condition, what our mistakes teach us, and the healing potential we all have ahead. By leading us through a personal reflection exercise (our High Holy Days Repair Kit), Adam will guide us toward a fresh new year, beginning with positive intentions. Elana Jagoda Kaye and the rabbis will continue the reflection process through music and prayer, as we transform our Sanctuary and Torah scrolls for the upcoming holidays. It is an evening not to be missed! Tashlich, Picnic, and Erev Shabbat Shuvah Service Tashlich and Erev Shabbat Shuvah Service, Leo J. Ryan Park, Foster City Friday, September 18, 5:30 pm Family Picnic, 6:30 pm service Tashlich, meaning to cast away, is a time for us to symbolically free ourselves of our sins by casting them into a body of water. Enjoy a beautiful Shabbat with your community. Bring your picnic dinner and meet on the banks of the Foster City Lagoon. Experience the emotional and symbolic casting away of our sins as we prepare to start the new year with a clean slate. A brief Erev Shabbat Shuvah Service will follow the Tashlich service. Bring a chair or blanket and meet at the lagoon off of Hillsdale Boulevard, at the Northern end of the park. You can park on Hillsdale Boulevard or across the street at the shopping center. Start the Year Off Right – Do a Mitzvah! Yom Kippur Food Drive for SSH Our PTBE Sunday Sandwich Hevre (SSH) is a group of volunteers (ages 5 to 95) who meet and make sack lunches for families in need. These lunches are distributed through Samaritan House twice a month. Your generosity supports the sacred work of Peninsula Temple Beth El. Your GIVE ONCE packet will be mailed at the end of the month. Please watch for it. We hope you can support GIVE ONCE. Pledge today and pay by May. On Erev Rosh Hashanah and Rosh Hashanah morning, please pick up grocery bags to return on Yom Kippur filled with specifically needed items: cookies, individual fruit cups, juice boxes, plastic sandwich bags (ziploc), brown paper lunch bags (ideal size measures about 6” x 4” at the bottom _ not the smallest type), and paper grocery or shopping bags. 5 6 SUKKOT AND SIMCHAT TORAH Sukkot (September 28 – October 5) Sukkot, a Hebrew word meaning booths, refers to the Jewish festival of giving thanks for the fall harvest, as well as the commemoration of the forty years of Jewish wandering in the desert after Sinai. One tradition is to build a sukkah and live or dine in it during the holiday. You are invited to fulfill the mitzvah by bringing your lunch or dinner and eating in the temple’s sukkah on the patio. You may also shake the lulav and etrog. Contact the temple office and we will be happy to provide these for your use while at the temple. Interfaith Friendship Committee Sukkot Dinner Sunday, September 27, 5:00 pm We welcome our interfaith partners for an evening in our sukkah. Rabbi Callie Schulman will lead a program followed by a potluck dinner. This family-friendly event will include members from several local faith houses. Watch for details to RSVP. Beth El Women Sukkah Social Thursday, October 1, 7:00 pm Join BEW to schmooze and enjoy wine and cheese in the sukkah. Feel free to bring something to share, including drinks, food, or friends. Contact [email protected] with questions or to RSVP. Yad b’Yad Sukkot Gathering and New Baby Welcome Saturday, October 3, 9:00 am Join other families with children ages 6 and younger for a Shabbat morning under the sukkah. Enjoy crafts, snacks, and playtime with friends. At this event we extend a special welcome to families with babies born in the last year to our Yad b’Yad community. Community shabbat dinner in the sukkah ― WELCOMING OUR NEW MEMBERS Friday, October 2, 5:30 pm Enjoy a festive meal in the sukkah. You will have the opportunity to meet and mingle with new members and shake the lulav and etrog. Erev Shabbat services will begin at 6:30 p.m. Cost: Adults $18; children/seniors $12. Registration is due by September 25. You may send in your check or we will be happy to bill your account. RSVP [email protected] Yizkor – Simchat Torah/ Shemini Atzeret Monday, October 5, 8:30 am The Jewish calendar provides four occasions during the year when special memorial services are held: Yom Kippur, Shemini Atzeret (the last day of Sukkot), the last day of Passover, and Shavuot. It is appropriate to honor the memory of our loved ones by attending these special memorial services. Simchat Torah The Great Simchat Torah Debate: What’s the Best Book of the Torah? We need YOUR Vote! Sunday, October 4, 7:00 pm Simchat Torah means to rejoice with our Torah, so this evening is all about celebrating the fun and excitement of Torah learning! Your clergy will take you through a year-long cycle of Torah study in one evening by each presenting their argument for the most important text from the most important Book of Moses. But we need YOU to decide which book will win. If you like a good spirited debate, have an opinion (or three) on what is the essence of our tradition, or have a favorite text that you want to throw in the ring ― join us for a great celebration of Torah! CHILD CARE AND TICKET INFORMATION Important Ticket Information TICKETS ARE NON-TRANSFERABLE Each adult member of the synagogue in good standing, as indicated by our records, is sent a High Holy Days ticket which must be shown at the entrance. “In good standing” means that all financial obligations for the 2014-2015 fiscal year have been paid in full and you have made your first payment for the 2015-2016 fiscal year. If you pay monthly, this means that you have paid the first month; if you pay quarterly, this means that you have paid the first quarter. Tickets will be issued for all children 26 years and under. If you are a single adult member, you will receive an additional guest ticket at no charge. YOUR TICKETS ARE ENCLOSED IN THIS PACKET For quicker entry, be sure to have your ticket with you. Due to space limitations and out of respect for our members and their families, we do not sell High Holy Days tickets to non-members. Additional High Holy Days tickets at $180 per ticket for children over the age of 26, unaffiliated parents, and other relatives are available to members who request them. Please call the temple office or email [email protected]. We will bill your temple account. If you will be traveling during the High Holy Days or will be hosting out-of-town guest(s) affiliated with a synagogue in their home city, please call the temple office or email [email protected] as soon as possible to request reciprocal High Holy Days ticket(s) at no charge. The reciprocal process takes a minimum of five days to complete. Please know that the temple’s ticket policy for High Holy Days services is necessitated by the limited number of seats available. By adhering to this policy, we ensure that there will be enough seats to accommodate our temple members and their families during these Days of Awe. Tickets are for temple members and are intended only for the person whose name is on the ticket. For your safety and the safety of your family, we will be checking your tickets closely. Child Care For Children 3 Months to Pre-K Only Enjoy your early morning service with your school-age children. Child care will be provided only for infants through preschool during both morning services on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Registration by September 1 is required for both sessions. Walk-ins will not be accepted. Space is not guaranteed for registrations received after this date. Space is limited. Email [email protected] for reservations. Your temple account will be billed. • Registration fee: $18/child per session • Drop off: 30 minutes before start of service • Pick up: at the end of service Please provide for all of your child’s needs, including diapers, filled bottles, snacks, and drinks. Children will be divided into groups according to age. Class lists and room assignments will be posted in the upper hallway of the school wing and on classroom doors. Please include a brief description of your child’s special care requirements in your child’s diaper bag and/or discuss them with the teachers in the classroom upon arrival. Space is limited; please reserve early. 7 8 HIGH HOLY DAYS 5776/2015 IMPORTANT INFORMATION High Holy Days 5776/2015 Important Information We ask that you read this important information carefully to provide you, our members, with the best worship experience. 1. Access into the Temple Building: For security and your ease, we will all enter from a single entry point in the front of the building. For the safety of our community and for the speediest entry, please show us your ticket upon entering. We will assist all of our members who need help using our ramp. 2. Tickets: Please Note: All members in good standing and their family members (26 years or younger) will receive a ticket for services. Tickets are non-transferable. “In good standing” means that all financial obligations for the 2014-2015 fiscal year have been paid in full and you have made your first payment for the 2015-2016 fiscal year. If you pay monthly, this means that you have paid the first month; if you pay quarterly, this means that you have paid the first quarter. If you forget your ticket, please check in at the ticket table and a replacement ticket will be issued. If you did not receive the correct number of tickets in this packet, please notify the temple office immediately. 3. Our Two Morning Services: Please join us for the one service that will best meet your needs. To meet the needs of our growing community there will be two morning services on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. The Tree of Life Service (8:00 a.m.) is a multi-generational service designed for families with school-age children. The later service serves adults and families with teens. By offering these two worship times, we will have enough room for all of our members to worship more comfortably, enhancing our experience as well. We strongly encourage families with school-age children to select the early morning service. Please note: there will not be child care for school-age children. 4. Security: Our community’s safety is of primary concern. The side doors in Fellowship Hall will be used only for exiting from services. 5. Please silence all pagers and cell phones when you enter the temple and refrain from texting. 6. Parking: Our entire front parking lot will be reserved for handicapped parking. Please request a temple permit by contacting the temple office at 650.341.7701, even if you have a State-issued permit. Space is limited. Entrance will be through the front of the temple only. On Erev Rosh Hashanah and Kol Nidre you will be able to park in the lot next door. On Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur you will not be able to park next door. 7. Children’s Play Areas and Child Care: Out of respect for these High Holy Days, the playground areas will be closed. We ask that noise be kept to a minimum to protect the sanctity of the day. Please see our website, www.ptbe.org/worship-at-ptbe, for tips for praying with kids. A child care program is available for three months through preschool only during the morning services on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Pre-registration is required and must be received in the temple office by September 1 to guarantee space. Walk-ins will not be accepted. Please email [email protected] to reserve your space. 8. Saving Seats and Additional Seating Areas: This has been a very delicate issue for us all. We understand that you want to be seated with your family and friends during services, but saving a large number of seats is exclusionary to those members who arrive early. Our ushers, who are themselves members of our temple community, need your support and understanding about this issue. We will try to accommodate you, but seating a member who is already here must take priority. 9. Book of Remembrance: If you have placed names of your loved ones in the Book of Remembrance, it will be available to be picked up in the foyer prior to the Yizkor Service on Yom Kippur afternoon. If you would like the name of your loved one listed, please send in the form on page 5 by September 1. L’shanah tova u’metukah – Best wishes for a good and sweet year! Your PTBE Clergy, Staff, and Board of Trustees Dennis J. Eisner, Senior Rabbi Sara Mason-Barkin, Associate Rabbi/Educator Lisa Kingston, Associate Rabbi/Educator Callie Schulman, Associate Rabbi/Educator Elana Jagoda Kaye, Cantorial Soloist Saul Kaye, Music Director Kaity Chan, Interim ECE Co-Director Tamir Frankel, Interim ECE Co-Director Eric M. Stone, Executive Director Jill Goldring, President, Board of Trustees