May 2009 - Congregation Emanu-El
Transcription
May 2009 - Congregation Emanu-El
Ruach ! May 2009 Michael A. Davis, Rabbi Why Is This Coming Year Different From All Other Years? Anyone who has ever been a Scout or a camper, or has wanted just to start a barbeque or a fireplace knows it’s true. You can have all the wood in the world, all the kindling and tinder you could want; the atmospheric conditions can be just perfect and the hot dogs ready to go. However, without the spark, there is no fire. How long have we said, “Wouldn’t it be nice if the two congregations in town could do more together?” Sure, “East is East and West is West,” but in this case “East” and “West” are also part of one, small, Jewish community. We know it well and recite it like a litany but, like the cold, dry wood waiting for a spark to ignite it, we have done little successfully to make it happen. Now, the spark has been lit and it is up to our community to blow gently on the glowing ember. Our joint Religious School, at the initiative of its dynamic director, is engaging upon a wonderful experiment for the coming year. It is a plan that holds great promise for our children, their parents, the two congregations and our community as a whole. What is this initiative called? It is at present nameless. I’ve been calling it: S.O.S. – Sleep in On Sunday! The plan is to replace our weekly Sunday classes with a once monthly “all day” Shabbat celebration of inter-generational learning and devotion. Details have been discussed with the boards of each congregation and at several community meetings and will be discussed more in coming months. In general, though, this is the plan which WJCS (Wichita Jewish Community School) director Sandy Kramer brought to the WJCS committee and to our Jewish community: --One Shabbat each month during the school year, everyone in the Wichita Jewish community will be able to participate in a very full day at one of the two synagogue buildings. --The day will consist of food (but of course!), a Shabbat Shacharit service, and learning. --The structured learning will take three forms: kids in classrooms, concurrent adult education and intergenerational learning programs. --The adult learning can include everything from text study to modern issues to yoga to entertaining and informative speakers. (Continued on page 2) May Shabbat Services Friday, May 1 Shabbat Evening Family Service, 7:30 pm Saturday, May 2 Shabbat Morning Service, 10:00 am Acharei Mot/Kedoshim-Lev. 16:1-20:27 Zachary Schmaltz Bar Mitzvah (HC) Friday, May 8 Shabbat Evening Service, 8:00 pm Saturday, May 9 Shabbat Morning Service, 10:00 am Emor-Lev. 21:1-24:23 Friday, May 15 Shabbat Evening Service, 8:00 pm Saturday, May 16 Shabbat Morning Service, 10:00 am Behar/Bechukotai-Lev. 25:127:34 Friday, May 22 Shabbat Evening Service, 8:00 pm Zak Grant Bar Mitzvah Saturday, May 23 Shabbat Morning Service, 10:00 am Bamidbar-Num. 1:1-4:20 Zak Grant Bar Mitzvah Friday, May 29 Shabbat Evening Service, 8:00 pm Saturday, May 30 Shabbat Morning Service, 10:00 am 7011 E. Central, Wichita, Kansas 67206 Office: (316) 684-5148 | Email: [email protected] | www.emanuelict.org WJCS - Continued from page 1 --In addition to the WJCS students learning on this once monthly community Shabbat, they will also attend classes on Wednesday afternoon (as they do now) and on another, yet to be determined, day as well. --The shacharit service will be one which Rabbi Wernick and I will put together, sensitive to the needs of both our congregations. It will be the same service in whichever synagogue it is held. Rabbi Wernick and I will share the pulpit. Our students will participate as ability allows. It will be one service for our whole Jewish community. Every year, at the beginning of the school year, I tell parents, teachers and students that a good Jewish education involves a triangle of cooperation among the Religious School, the Congregation and the Jewish Home. What Ms. Kramer has brought to us is the collapsing of this triangle; bringing all three together for one, collective Shabbat each month! But this program is so much more than “S.O.S.” because it is more than an enhanced education for our children. It is an opportunity for our whole community to engage in a bold initiative of celebrating what we share in common, what we all hold dear; of living the values we espouse. What WJCS is guiding us toward is a…WJC5770! Well, that’s what I’ve been calling it, anyway: Wichita Jewish Community (for the year) 5770. Please join the effort. Ask questions, offer suggestions, point out what may have been overlooked and suggest solutions. This is about nothing if it is not about all of us in community. Looking forward to a wonderful tomorrow with our community. -Rabbi Michael Davis Please join us on Erev Shavuot as we celebrate a Service of Confirmation for The Confirmation Class 5769 Macy Amsden Adam Black Hannah Cartwright Ben Davis Kevin Kramer Kelly Redler Misha Yakubovich Erev Shavuot – Thursday, May 28, 2009 Congregation Emanu-El -- 7:00 p.m. Reception following ceremony Shavuot Services Thursday, May 28: Erev Shavuot Service and Confirmation – 7:00 p.m. Friday, May 29: Shavuot Service – 10:00 a.m. From the President As I write this letter it is Erev Pesach. At the Veterans Hospital I work WITH an Egyptian pain management doctor. He is a colleague. Had it not been for Moshe Rabenu, I would be working FOR him at probably a very different job. We often talk about Kosher food. What is Kosher to us is Hallal to a Muslim. It is not vice versa. We talk about what we have in common, and there is much. During this wonderful festival of freedom, all of us who are free and all of us who yearn to be free have that in common. We build on what we have in common and then venture into what we can do to have more in common. Although we attend Seder once or twice a year, every meal can be a celebration of our freedom. As you read this, soon it will be Memorial Day. For some it is the start of long weekend, or the start of summer, or it is wheat harvest time if Adonai has ‘caused the wind to blow and bring the rains.’ But Memorial Day is another chance for us to celebrate our freedom and honor those who gave all in defense of our freedom. My father–in-law was part of the greatest generation. He went off to the south Pacific and came home safely four years later, but many did not come home. At the VA, the sign says ‘Freedom is not free.’ This month please give thanks again for your freedom, and thank a veteran. This past month has been very busy! The house chair, Peter Berman, lead a crew (recruited by Mark Levy) of Mark Levy, Peter Grant, Mark Ross, Charlie Gaynor, Cyndie Ponder and me to empty the basement of accumulated materials. This is in preparation for water sealing, etc the basement so it is fit for use and a safe shelter for the children if needed during a storm emergency. Thank you to those hardy men who trudged up and down the steps to fill a 20 yard dumpster. Ruach! Issue 132 Published monthly by Congregation Emanu-El Wichita, Kansas Tel: (316) 684-5148 Fax: (316) 684-5140 President: Don Hirschman Rabbi: Michael A. Davis Thank you to Claudia Blackburn and the Ritual Committee for all you did for our communal Seder. We had a large, wonderful gathering. I know some of you celebrated Passover the night before with your family, and I hope you will also come to our communal seder with your Temple family. “Next year we can all be together.” Thanks to the Rabbi who retold the story of OUR escape from Egypt. Thanks to Les Padzensky, Scott Redler and all who helped cook the feast. One of the dangers in naming names to thank is leaving someone out. I apologize to you. The community religious school will be ending its year later this month. Thank you to all of you who help make this a fine school for our future! Neither rain nor snow, nor summer vacation will stop our Erev Shabbat Services. This July, as always, we will conduct services. Would you please make an extra effort to come Friday nights in July? The Ritual Committee will find the volunteers who will devote time to prepare a service for you. Please come and celebrate Shabbat with us! During May, as I wrote you last month, I will spend a week at ‘Rabbi Camp.’ Camp Warwick is the camp our Rabbi attended as a camper. I hope to share with you about camp in next month’s Ruach. Please read all about it next month. Shalom! Hebrew Short Course: Long – Aroch Short– Katzar Empty– Rek Full – Maleh High - Gavoha Low – Namooch Easy – Kal Hard– Kasheh Inside – Beefnim Outside – Bachootz -Don Hirschman Ruach! Editor: Judy Eichhorn Ruach! June-July Issue Deadline: May 15, 2009 Please e-mail all information to: [email protected] or send it to Congregation Emanu-El. Sisterhood News Brotherhood News May is here and hopefully the cold weather is gone for awhile. The rains we had helped my lawn and my garden. The Brotherhood, of course, is out there doing their work as always, mostly behind the scenes. Leah and her family at the Sisterhood Donor th On April 19 Sisterhood had a successful Donor at the Olive Tree honoring Leah Barnhard for all the years she has provided leadership to Congregation Emanu-El and Sisterhood. A lovely High Tea and Lunch was enjoyed by all. Over 41 families contributed monies to send six of our Religious School children to summer camp. Thank you one and all for your contributions to this major function of Sisterhood!!! These Jewish summer opportunities for our young people are so meaningful towards developing their Jewish identities. Next month we’ll provide a list of everyone who contributed. For our musical entertainment for the Donor, Laura Black arranged a lovely musical program with children from our Religious School including: Deena Eichhorn, Olivier Scholl, Abbie and Ellie Rieber, Ben and Hannah Cartwright, Lance Ponder and Adam Black. Thank you kids so very much!! And thank you to their accompanists, Laura Black, Helen Griffin and Dominique Corbeil!! Thank you to the Donor committee: Pam Fruhauf, Mallory Medvene, Sunny Levy, Sandy Diel, Annabelle O’Neil and all the callers, and to Gloria Durmaskin and Lorraine Foley for all your help. Leah's Mom, Betty, her sister, Sandy, and kids, Rachel and Adam came in from out of town to join us in honoring Leah. Leah has been very much a "go to" person, volunteering endless hours, while her children were growing up in Wichita, and while teaching economics on the high school and college level. She even got her Doctorate in Business Administration while juggling all her Wichita commitments -- volunteer and professional. What a role model you have been to us all, Leah!!! Mazel Tov to you and your sweet family in being our Sisterhood Honoree for 2009!!! On Friday night, May 8th, Sisterhood plans to have a Shabbat Service and Installation at the Temple. A lovely and meaningful Women and Children Service is being typed as this Ruach is going to press. We will be calling women to ask if they and/or their children would like to participate in the service. If you don't hear from us and would like to participate with reading/singing in English/Hebrew, please call Doris Weller by May 2nd, 682-3524. Thank You. - Doris Weller, Sisterhood Co-President In April, Peter Berman had a task at hand and it was the Brotherhood to the rescue, or at least helping out. The Temple basement needed to be cleaned out and clean out we did. Those hearty souls that participated in this endeavor were: Peter Berman, Mark Levy, Mark Ross, Charlie Gaynor, Don Hirschman, Cyndie Ponder and myself. The Brotherhood has voted to honor senior members of the Brotherhood by giving them honorary lifetime memberships. This is in recognition of their long-time dedication to the ideals and goals of Brotherhood. The names of our distinguished Brotherhood members are: Norman Durmaskin, Bob Friedman, Bob Gelman, Leonard Goldstein, Joe Klebanoff, Dan Morgen, and Harry Weinstein. The Red Cross Blood Drive that was scheduled on Mitzvah Day had to be cancelled due to inclement weather. I am sure it will be rescheduled sometime in the fall. It is a mitzvah to give of yourself and giving blood is a life saving mitzvah so if you were planning on giving blood on Mitzvah Day, just go to the Red Cross and give on your own. The Brotherhood is preparing to offer, once again, a couple of scholarships to OurTown (formerly Camp Anytown). This is for high schoolers and is done through Diversity Kansas and will take place in June of this year. The Brotherhood has offered scholarships in the past and many high school students from the Jewish community have participated. More information is available in this issue of the Ruach or you can contact Mark Ross at 263-3226. As always, the Brotherhood Board meets on the 1st Wednesday of the month at 7:30 at the Temple and any Brotherhood member is welcome to stop by. See you next month. Shalom – Peace be with you - Peter Grant, Brotherhood On Saturday, May 23rd, 2009, Zak Grant, the son of Peter and Carol Grant, will be called to the Torah as a Bar Mitzvah at 10:00 a.m. at Congregation Emanu-El. Zak is a seventh grader at Robinson Middle School and he is in the Pre-IB program. Zak participates on Robinson’s National Academic League team. He also enjoys playing piano and is looking towards learning to play the guitar in the future. Zak Grant In Zak’s spare time, he likes to work in the garden, swim at the Y, play games, instant message with friends from his computer, play with and teach tricks to his cat, Kharma, and ride his bicycle. Family and friends will be coming from Nebraska, Oklahoma, Michigan, Kentucky, Washington and Oregon to celebrate with Zak. Peter and Carol, along with his brother Max, invite the entire Wichita Jewish community to help them celebrate this special event with their family. Sisterhood Gift Shop SALE! SALE! SALE! SUNDAYS ONLY. LOOK! NEW ARRIVALS! JUDAIC INVITATIONS NOW AVAILABLE CHECK IT OUT! CONTACT JULIE FOR SPECIAL HELP [email protected] 733-7553 - Julie Fruhauf Sisterhood Women and Children Shabbat and Sisterhood Installation Friday Night, May 8th 8:00 pm Contributions If you wish to make a contribution to one of the Temple funds, please make your check payable to: Congregation Emanu-El _______ Fund, and mail it to the Temple office. Please mark your envelope in the lower left-hand corner with the name of the fund to which your donation should be directed. Building Fund (Send information to the Temple) Thank you to everyone who generously contributed to the Temple in honor of our 52nd wedding anniversary!! A Most Happy Birthday to: Alana Friedman, Leah Barnhard, Sonya Davis, Arlene Hershorn, Harry Weinstein. Mazel Tov on your Special Anniversary: Gloria and Howard Pitler, Keila and Mark Ross. Doris and Larry Weller Caring Committee Fund (Send information to the Temple) Cemetery Endowment Fund (Bob Friedman – 682-7961) In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Betty Benignus Yahrzeit contribution in memory of Julius Horwitz. Charlotte and Bob Friedman Foundation Fund (David Moses – 634-2551) Happy Birthday to Alana Friedman, Leah Barnhard, Ted Leben, Harry Weinstein and Leonard Ropfogel. Betty Paige Flower Fund (Send information to the Temple) General Fund In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Beth and Steve Brown In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Bev Collin In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Michael and Nancy Jones In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Jolene Sanditen-Stephens In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Gary and Barbara Teller In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Stephen and Tiffany Zacker In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Dallas Wiping Materials In memory of Ivonne Goldstein. Ed and Betty Sherman In honor and remembrance of Ivonne Goldstein. Jon and Valerie Stendelbach Library Fund (Sarah Feiertag – 634-2836) Rabbi's Discretionary Fund (Send information to the Temple) In the spirit of Pesach. Andrew Knight (Send information to the Temple) Simcha Fund In memory of Sara Levich. Alana Friedman Youth Fund Donation. Sharon and Kent Olmstead Len Goldstein's New Address: 7373 E. 29th St. N., #E223 Wichita, KS 67226 (Kim Gollin – 733-5640) (Send information to the Temple) The Congregation Emanu-El community extends our heartfelt condolences to Phil Black on the loss of his mother. Ritual Committee Zak Grant will be called to the Torah on May 23rd at 10:00 a.m. Please join the Grant family to celebrate Zak becoming a bar mitzvah. The Confirmation Class will lead services on Erev Shavuot, Thursday, May 28th at 7:00 p.m. Please join them for this special service. Rabbi Davis did a nice job of leading about 120 of us through the second night Passover Seder on April 9th. A special thanks to Les Padzensky and Scott Redler for preparing a scrumptious meal and to Leah and Barney Barnhard for making the delicious soup. Many thanks to the Brotherhood for setting up the tables and to Cyndie Ponder, Mallory Medvene, Jana Hirschman, Sally Wilson and her daughters, Iris Davis, Doris Weller and Jene Fisher for cooking, setting up and serving. Thank you all for supporting this special holiday. There will be a Sisterhood Service on Friday, May 8. - Claudia Blackburn, Ritual Committee Chair Congregation Emanu-El Committee Chairs - 2009 Family Committee Please join the Family Committee and the WJCS for Ice Cream on Sunday, May 17th at 11:00 a.m. at the Hebrew Congregation. All families are welcome! Ice cream, toppings, and fun and games will be provided. - Dana Solomon, Family Committee Chair Adult Education: Ellie Shore Caring: Cyndie Ponder Family: Dana Solomon, Membership: Gloria Durmanskin Nominating: Leah Barnhard Ritual: Claudia Blackburn Ways & Means/Finance: Scott Wagner Caring Committee We hope everyone had a good Passover. Many people enjoyed the Second Seder at the Temple, thanks to the leadership of Claudia Blackburn, her committee and Rabbi Davis. Thank you to all who helped make the Seder the wonderful success it was!!! We know during March and April, Congregants have had surgeries, hospitalizations, been in and out of rehab and have not been feeling their best, or their lab results have created some challenges. Please be sure the Rabbi and Caring Committee members are notified if and when our help is needed. Our thoughts are with everyone, and their families, older and younger, who have health concerns. - Doris Weller and Cyndie Ponder, Caring Committee Chairs Check It Out! News from the Congregation Emanu-El Library For Adult Readers: A book to consider: This year the National Book Critics Circle awarded its prize for autobiography to My Father’s Paradise: A Son’s Search for His Jewish Past in Kurdish Iraq, by Arial Sabar. Sabar’s father was born and raised in Zahko, Iraq, a remote village where Aramaic survived as the language of daily life. “If [the book] were only about his father's life, it would be a remarkable enough story about the psychic costs of immigration. . . [but it’s] also a moving story about the near-death of an ancient language and the tiny flicker of life that remains in it” (The Washington Post). This book is not in our library, but is available at the Wichita Public Library. Books about Anne Frank, for young adults: Note: As with all Holocaust materials, books about Anne Frank may contain disturbing material. The age or grade ranges provided refer to reading levels, not to the impact the content may have. The following are new to our library, thanks to our friends, Drs. Barbara and Gary Bleeker. A Friend Called Anne, by Jacqueline Van Maarsen, retold for children by Carol Ann Lee. Jacqueline van Maarsen, Anne Frank’s closest school friend, tells of their friendship and life in Amsterdam. Van Maarsen, who survived because her mother convinced the Gestapo that they were Catholic, only learned of Anne’s fate after the war. “This absorbing book vividly portrays life in occupied Amsterdam and throws interesting sidelights on Anne Frank's story” (Booklist). Ages 9-12. Anne Frank and the Children of the Holocaust, by Carol Ann Lee. Lee’s book broadens the story of Anne and her family, and places it in context with those of other Jewish children suffering under Hitler. Includes photos and a bibliography. Age 6 and up - one reviewer feels that “readers both older and younger than the target audience will find it valuable as well” (Booklist). Anne Frank: A Hidden Life, by Mirjam Pressler. Pressler, an expert on Anne Frank, describes the family’s life, and discusses Anne as a developing young woman and a writer. "While the tragically short life of Anne Frank has elsewhere been carefully documented and inventively researched, this astonishing biography succeeds in delivering fresh and provocative insights" (Publishers Weekly). Ages 12 and up. Searching for Anne Frank: Letters from Amsterdam to Iowa, by Susan Goldman Rubin. While the title is somewhat misleading - Juanita Wagner of Danville, Iowa exchanged only two letters with Anne Frank - the author uses their brief connection to compare the two lives. Alternating chapters, and numerous photographs, tell of the war years in Iowa and those in Amsterdam. “[A] compelling read that highlights the reality of war at home and abroad” (School Library Journal). Grades 5 - 8. -Ellie Shore ON THE SUNNY SIDE Pearl and Ron Kopita spent spring break with their children and grandchildren in Austin, Texas. They spent most of the week finalizing the construction plans for their new home, which will be located near both of their children. Ron and Pearl are looking forward to beginning their retirement in their new home in early August. Ron concludes ten years at WSU as Vice President for Campus Life and University Relations and 42 years working in higher education. Aaron Merriman, son of Margot Kelman and Dick Merriman made it to the final round of the Kansas Geographic Bee held in Abilene on April 3rd! Aaron, a 6th grader at Andover Central Middle School, was the winner in his school. He then took a qualifying test for eligibility for the state competition. Of the 98 students from Kansas in the competition, Aaron came in seventh place. Margot and Dick are very proud of him!! Ellie Shore had a showing of her work at Frank & Margaret from March 22 to March 31. Ellie, aka Venus de Carton, recycles cardboard to make furniture and decorative objects. She really appreciated having so many Congregation Emanu-El friends come to the opening reception. Ellie said, “No plans yet for another show, but I'm up to my ears in cardboard and happily working on new pieces.” On April 4th, Lance Ponder, son of Cyndie and Wynn Ponder, received a "1" rating at Wichita's Regional Music Festival for his solo saxophone performance of "Saraband and Allegro" by Jean Marie Leclair. Temple member, Laura Black, accompanied him on the piano. This qualifies Lance to compete in the State Festival later this spring. On April 11, he also played at Mead's Corner Coffeehouse during a jazz jam hosted by Friends University student Tat Hidano. Nancy Jarus spent a great weekend with her daughter, Karen and her granddaughter, Maya, recently. (Also with Libby, their dog.) All had a good time. Evy Gregg enjoyed a week in mid -March in Corpus Christi visiting her step-dad, Abe Blum. Abe celebrated his 95th birthday in March and many family members came to help him celebrate. Evy and Harold traveled to Denver, Colorado to celebrate second Seder with her brother and sister-in-law, Stan and Cindy Rosenberg, and family. Their son, Matt, from Philadelphia also came for the celebration. It was a quick few days, but a very special few days of being together for the holiday. Jene Fisher skipped town to spend Passover in Kansas City with her oldest daughter Brandi and her family. This was Brandi's first time to host a Seder. Brandi learned a few basics from mom like making matzah ball soup from scratch (this included buying her first whole chicken and asking her butcher to cut and skin it), how to use her Cuisinart food processor for almost everything, and stuffing her first turkey. Even mom learned some new dishes from daughter. Together they discovered the joys of sharing the work of preparing for Pesach and the rewards of plenty of yummy food and leftovers! Before leaving Kansas City, Jene visited Betty Paige and had a wonderful time reminiscing with her about past good times in Wichita with friends and Temple life. Sunny Levy spent several days in Corpus Christi visiting family during spring break. “It was so nice to be able to spend quality time with my parents, children, siblings, niece, and nephew. The weather there was beautiful and all the flowers were blooming.” A miracle cannot prove that which is impossible; it is useful only as a confirmation of what is possible. – Maimonides - Sunny Levy May Yahrzeits (continued) TO BE READ ON MAY 29, 2009 Name of Deceased Family Ben Lampl Sarah M. Shlechter Jacob Strouse Rose Krenkel Mildred Staub Lillian Kamenesky Finkstein Harland Lewin Selia Mondshine Ida Rosenthal Rose Yabrof Yahrzeit Dates May 29 May 29 May 29 May 30 May 30 June 1 June 1 June 1 June 3 June 4 Joyce Freedman, Ted Shlechter Edith Silberski Sue Shefman Dee Abels Marian Chuzy Beverly Sullivan Thank you to Sisterhood April Chairperson, Karen Padzensky, and the following members for hosting an April Oneg Shabbat: April 3 Ipek Snyder & Alana Friedman April 10 Ellie Shore, Jana Hirschman & Karen Padzensky April 17 Lorraine Foley & Marian Klebanoff April 24 Nancy Jarus & Karen Padzensky Sally Wilson 1826 Anita Wichita, KS 67217 (316) 260-9062 Sally has two daughters, Mary and Mandy Wilson, and has been an active Sisterhood member for several years. - - - - - - - - - - - - - -#- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -#- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - #- - - - - - - - - - SIMCHA GREETINGS: June Birthdays and Anniversaries ___ 2 ___ 4 ___ 5 ___ 8 ___ ___ ___ ___12 ___ ___13 ___ ___14 ___ ___15 Judy Eichhorn (B) Norman Durmaskin (B) Charlotte Friedman (B) Sylvia and Carl Galler (A) Lauren and Sam Lentz (A) Richard and Shirley Smith (A) Judy and Larry Frank (A) Mary Kaplan (B) Pam and Bill Jones (A) Seth Merrell (B) Dale Marcus (B) Joanne and Stan Kaplan (A) Daniel and Dana Solomon (A) Susan and Herb Kadison (A) ___16 ___ ___ ___18 ___ ___ ___ ___19 ___20 ___21 ___ ___22 ___ ___ Kristin Conrad (B) Grigory Shatkhan (B) Warren and Pam Shaffer (A) Michael Dozier (B) Jill and Tom Docking (A) Jeff Greenberg (B) Dan Schwartz (B) Becky Fraktman (B) Aileen Leben (B) Rebecca Armstrong-Gaynor (B) Andra Bannister (B) Mark Luterman (B) Lou Medvene (B) Joanna and Grant Weikal (A) ___24 ___ ___25 ___ ___26 ___ ___27 ___ ___28 ___ ___29 ___ ___30 ___ Matthew Conrad (B) Sheldon Kamen (B) Clarisse and George Clark (A) Sande and Mark Luterman (A) Martin Perline (B) Toba Schnyder (B) Sue Levich (B) Richard Matassarin (B) Rita Funschelle (B) Elly and Sandy Fitzig (A) Debra and Joel Fromer (A) Peter Berman (B) Joanne Kaplan (B) William LeVine (B) Your name as you wish it to appear on the Simcha Greeting: ________________ _____________________________Amount enclosed ($1.00 each) ___________ Payable to: Temple Sisterhood Send to: Kim Gollin, 936 Cedarwood Ct., Andover, KS 67002 Congregation Emanu-El Brotherhood 2009 SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION To Sponsored by (Formerly National Conference for Community and Justice (NCCJ)) http://www.diversitykansas.org/youth_hs_ourtown.htm 2009 OurTown Youth Leadership Institute A youth Leadership and Diversity Institute running June 1-6 at Butler Community College OurTown Youth Leadership and Diversity Program for Students Currently in High School* OurTown is an exciting, weeklong, residential summer program that helps young people, just like you, to identify sources of, and identify solutions to, prejudice and discrimination in our communities. Participating in OurTown instills an increased sense of self-worth, develops leadership potential, and fosters relationships between diverse students of various backgrounds from throughout Kansas. • • • • • OurTown brings together high school age teens (delegates) from many different ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds from around the state of Kansas. Learn about the effects of prejudice and discrimination on individuals in our society OurTown delegates share their many different ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds. Gain a better understanding of your culture and that of others. Develop respect and awareness of differences. OurTown teaches that one should take action against discrimination. Develop skills to interact successfully with others and resolve conflicts effectively. Learn to accept responsibility for actions, decisions, and make positive changes in your community. Express your creativity through conversations, talent, and cultural presentations. Enjoy planned and informal recreational activities and make new friends. OurTown is a very important program that every Jewish high school age teen should have the opportunity to attend. OurTown is an awesome program and to insure its existence, we need to support it to truly make a better world. The Brotherhood of Congregation Emanu-El has established a $375 scholarship to provide tuition and application fee assistance for a Jewish teen from the Jewish community to attend OurTown 2009. To be eligible for this scholarship, you must: • • • • Be a recognized and active teenage member of the Wichita Jewish community. An active teenage member is one who attends and participates in services at their congregation, helps the Jewish community through their volunteerism in Jewish sponsored service projects, and performs other acts of tikkun olam. (Note: Jewish applicants living outside the Wichita area who are active within the Wichita Jewish community are also eligible.) Complete the Scholarship Application Form. (Incomplete applications will not be considered.) Provide a short two or three paragraph essay on: 1) Why I want to attend OurTown 2009, 2) Why it’s important to take action against discrimination, and 3) Why it’s important to share my Jewish background with others of different ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds. Meet the age and other OurTown 2009 requirements as of the program’s start date. *(You are eligible to attend OurTown 2009 if you will be entering High School grades 10-12 at the start of the new school year.) For OurTown registration or OurTown information, contact Linda Linstrot at DIVERSITY KANSAS, 264-0356 ([email protected]). Deadline for submitting your scholarship application to Brotherhood is Monday, May 10th. If winning applicant has already enrolled, Brotherhood will reimburse the $350 tuition cost and $25 application fee. Decision of Brotherhood is final. All applications and essays remain property of Brotherhood. Brotherhood reserves the right to publish essay(s). Congregation Emanu-El Temple Brotherhood SCHOLARSHIP APPLICATION FORM OurTown Kansas 2009 – High School Leadership Institute (Please Type or Print) Applicant’s Name (First, Middle Initial, Last): ________________________________________ Parent’s Name(s): _________________________________________________________________ Home Mailing Address (w/ Zip Code): ______________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ Home Phone Number (w/ Area Code): ______________________________________________ Complete Cell phone number (if available): __________________________________________ Parent’s e-mail address (if available): _______________________________________________ Applicant’s e-mail address (if different from Parent’s): _________________________________ (Please Type or Print Essay and attach here.) Essay Topic (please include all 3 major points): 1) Why I want to attend OurTown 2009, 2) Why it’s important to take action against discrimination, and 3) Why it’s important to share my Jewish background with others of different ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds. RETURN COMPLETED APPLICATION AND ESSAY TO: Congregation Emanu-El c/o Brotherhood Scholarship Chairman – Mark Ross 7011 E. Central Ave. Wichita, KS 67206-1920 Or E-mail your Application and Essay to Mr. Ross at [email protected] In either case, call Mr. Ross at 263-3226 (h) or 214-1464 (cell) to let him know your application and essay are on their way! Promptness is important. Deadline for submitting your scholarship application is Sunday, May 10th. Deadline for OurTown 2009 enrollment applications to DIVERSITY KANSAS is May 15th. OurTown 2009 starts on Monday, June 1st. Wichita Jewish Community School It sure is hard to believe that we are coming to the end of the school year. It seems to have completely flown by! What a great group of children, parents, and teachers I have had the pleasure of working with this past year. I want to thank the teachers and staff for their hard work and dedication to the children. Their love of Judaism and the spirit they exude each week is contagious! I also want to thank the Rabbis and Education Committee for their support and their dedication to seeing that we continue to strive to provide the best Jewish education for our children. Our last day of Religious School is Sunday, May 17. We will be having an end of the year assembly to which parents are invited. The students are excited to present what they have been working on this year. After, we will enjoy some fun and games together before we break for the summer. The whole school will meet that day at Hebrew Congregation. Look for more details in the newsletter next month regarding our new programming plans for the 2009-10 school year. I am excited to share this with all of you. It’s fresh, innovative, and will appeal to members of the community at large. I really see this as the “community” part of the Wichita Jewish Community School. As always, I welcome your input and would love to hear from any of you. Feel free to call either congregation to leave me a message or email me at [email protected] May dates to remember: May 13- Last day of Wednesday Hebrew School May 17- Last day of Religious School - Sandy Kramer, WJCS Director Hadassah As my first year as President of the Wichita Chapter of Hadassah comes to an end, I want to thank the wonderful women in this community for their service, donations and dedication to the work of Hadassah. This is truly a group effort and the teamwork has been fantastic. Not to leave out the men in our mission, I want to thank our associate members for their help with Hadassah programs this past year: Jerry Marcus and Dr. Brian Michael, and our new associate, Rabbi Wernick. We have finished our “100 Days, 100,000 Donors” fundraising campaign, and I thank all of you who made donations. If you would still like to make a contribution, please let me know and I will let you know how to do it by check, credit card or online at our Haddasah.org website. It’s been a tough year, the cut-backs have been severe, but Hadassah has maintained the highest rating possible from Charity Navigator, who rates charities on their fundraising efforts. Ninetytwo cents of every dollar goes directly to programs here in the U.S. and Israel. Our book club has one more book on the agenda for this year: Coming Together, Coming Apart. The meeting will be at the home of Ellie Shore on June 15th at 7:30. Please call Kelly Fein if you would like to participate. We thank Kelly for all her hard work managing the book club (and being our Treasurer!) this past year. We are looking forward to a June installation of our new board for the 2009-2010 year. If you would like to participate in planning any of our programs, please call Judy Frank and let her know what you would like to do. All help is greatly appreciated! I am very excited that we will be presenting our Leadership Award at our installation, to recognize an outstanding volunteer in our Chapter from this past year. It will be a surprise, so watch your mailbox for information about the installation – you won’t want to miss it! Don’t forget, you can make your mother, daughter, sister or friend a member of Hadassah for Mother’s Day. And Father’s Day is on the horizon, so make that man in your life an Associate of Hadassah. Call Royce Wolff or Doris Weller for more information on membership. Thank you all for your continued support. - Tiffany Zacker, Hadassah President May 2009 Iyar/Sivan 5769 Sunday Monday 3 4 11:00 am Hadassah/HC Film Class – Reel Jewish Learning: Viewing Jewish Experience Through Film – “Left Luggage” (HC) 2:00 pm Youth Group meeting Office Closed 10 11 Tuesday 5 12 Office Closed Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 7:30 pm Shabbat Evening Family Service 9:00 am Zachary Schmaltz Bar Mitzvah (HC) 10:00 am Shabbat Morning Service 6 7 8 9 12:00 CE Bible Study 7:30 pm CE Brotherhood 7:00 pm MKJF Board Meeting (CE) 8:00 pm Shabbat Evening Service and CE Sisterhood Installation 10:00 am Shabbat Morning Service 13 14 15 16 8:00 pm Shabbat Evening Service 10:00 am Shabbat Morning Service 22 23 8:00 pm Shabbat Evening Service Zak Grant Bar Mitzvah 10:00 am Shabbat Morning Service Zak Grant Bar Mitzvah 12:00 CE Bible Study Last Day Wednesday Hebrew School Mother’s Day 17 18 Last Day WJCS and Family Committee Ice Cream party at 11:00 am at HC Office Closed 24 25 Office Closed Memorial Day 31 6:30 pm MKJF Yachad dinner (Thai Tradition) 19 20 21 12:00 CE Bible Study 6:30 pm CE Ritual Committee 7:30 pm CE Board 26 27 28 29 30 12:00 CE Bible Study 7:30 pm WJCS Committee Meeting (CE) 7:00 pm Erev Shavuot Service and CE Confirmation Office closed 10:00 am Morning Shavuot Service 8:00 pm Shabbat Evening Service 10:00 am Shabbat Morning Service Erev Shavuot Shavuot