March-May 2010 - Temple Shalom
Transcription
March-May 2010 - Temple Shalom
Spring 2010 March-April-May Adar-Nisan-Iyar-Sivan, 5770 Volume LI, No. 3 March www.templeshalom.net FRI Congregational Shabbat Dinner 6 PM Erev Shabbat Family Service led by 1st Gr. with TSY Choir; Scout Shabbat 7 PM 8th & 9th Grade Retreat 6 Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM 5 SAT 12 13 FRI SAT 19 FRI 20 SAT Ki Tisa Exodus 30:11-34:35 Shabbat Alive Friday, May 14th 7:30 PM Soulful Shabbat Ruach Service with Shir Shalom & Band 8 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service: Bar Mitzvah of Seth Hagler 10 AM Vayak’heil-P’kudei Exodus 35:1-40:38 Shabbat with Rick Recht Kabbalat Shabbat 6:15 PM Pot Luck Dinner 7 PM Decade Shabbat: 1969-1978 8 PM An extraordinary, inspirational, and moving service experience with one of the most celebrated artists in Jewish Music!! With Shir Shalom, TSY Youth and RuachTeen Choir and Band, and the Shabbat Ruach Band. Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service: B’not Mitvah of Jessica Dine & Anna Leggett 10 AM Vayikra Leviticus 1.1-5:26 Erev Shabbat Services 8 PM 26 27 FRI Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Tzav Leviticus 6:1-8:36 April SAT 2 3 FRI Shabbat Family Services with TSY Choir 7 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Ehol Hamoed Pesach Exodus 33:12-34:26 SAT 9 10 FRI SAT 16 17 FRI SAT Soulful Shabbat Ruach Erev Services: Brotherhood-Sisterhood Shabbat 8 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Sh’mini Leviticus 9:1-11:47 Kabbalat Shabbat 6:15 PM Erev Shabbat Service 8 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Tazaria-M’tzora Leviticus 12:1-15:33 Next Shofar Cut-Off Date Friday, April 30 April (continued) & May services page 2 Temple Shalom’s Annual W o m en ’s Seder Sunday, March 21 6 PM More info on Page 17 YOM HA SHOAH COMMEMORATION SERVICE Sunday,April 11 6–8 PM More info on Page 16 Kabbalat Shabbat Services at Temple Shalom Join us for this early and informal Erev Shabbat service, Congregant-led and family friendly, on the third (or fourth) Friday nights of the month. The service begins at 6:15 PM, (and the congregation’s Yahrtzeit list for the week is read at this service), followed by a pot-luck dairy/vegetarian dinner at 7 PM Kabbalat Shabbat services for the next several months take place on: March 19, 2010, April 16, 2010 and May 28, 2010, beginning at 6:15 PM Tot Services at Temple Shalom Watch for more information on our upcoming Tot Holiday services: Tot Seder Friday night, March 26, 2010 at 6 PM Led by Rabbi Michael Feshbach and Lisa Baydush Tot Shavuot (come in pajamas; bring your favorite stuffed animal, hear the story of the giving of the Torah, and eat ice cream early in the morning!) Saturday morning, May 22, 2010 at 9:30 AM continued from page 1 April 23 24 May Erev Shabbat Service; Post Confirmation Graduation 8 PM FRI SAT 7 8 FRI Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service & B’nai Mitzvah of Lindsay Weiss & Jared Machlin 10 AM SAT FRI 1 SAT Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service: B’not Mitzvah Sophia Cordes & Max Clary 10 AM B’har- B’chukotia Leviticus 25:1-27:34 Acharei Mot-K’doshim Leviticus 16:1-20:27 30 Congregational Shabbat Dinner 6 PM Erev Shabbat Service led by Gr. 3rd 7 PM Matan Siddur Erev Shabbat Services led by Gr. 4th 6:15 PM Congregational Shabbat Dinner 7:15 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service & B’not Mitzvah of Claire Trilling & Lindsay Bergman 10 AM 14 15 50th Anniversary Soulful Ruach Shabbat with Rick Recht FRI SAT Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service: Bnai Mitzvah of Gabriel Schrier & Garrett Kapstein-O’Brien 10 AM B’midbar Numbers 1:1-4:20 Emor Leviticus 21:1-24:23 21 22 Erev Shabbat Services: 10th Grade Graduation 8 PM FRI graphic design, cover design and production: laura-leigh palmer, asap graphics; [email protected] Produced by Temple Shalom Phone: 301–587–2273 Fax: 301–588–9368 8401 Grubb Road Chevy Chase, MD 20815 Page 2 Current and back issues also available online: www. temple shalom .net SAT 28 29 Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Tot Shavuot Service 11 AM Naso Numbers 4:21-7:89 Kabbalat Shabbat Services 6:15 PM Erev Shabbat Services 8 PM Share Your Photos To help complete the site, we need more photos of Temple activities and programs. For now, a photo of the new bimah appears as a placeholder at the lower left of almost every page. Do you have a picture that illustrates a key aspect of Temple life? If so, please send digital photos as email attachments to Susan Zemsky or drop off prints in the Temple office. FRI SAT Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service: Bat Mitzvah of Ruth Jernigan-Goldberg 10 AM B’haalot’cha Numbers 8:1-12:16 They’ll be returned! From the Rabbi The Story of the Storm Message from Rabbi Michael L. Feshbach I hope you are all safe and warm, and with adequate electricity and internet connections, as you sit down to read these words. I am reminded of the Dr. Seuss characters Thing One and Thing Two, as I write, now, in between Storm One and Storm Two. Everyone has their own stories to share, of the Storm of the Century. We watch with uncertainty and disbelief as another monster weather event is said to be barreling down upon us; we prepare as best we can, and wonder what is to come. In the first storm, not only did the synagogue cancel services – an action I had never taken before, and which I had my doubts about doing at first – but many of us faced challenges all our own. Six days after the storm hit we still had not seen a county plow; the only reason we were able to get out at all was because a private truck came through; some of our neighbors on our cul-de-sac knew someone and begged. Without power for 28 hours, waking up in a home that was somewhere in the mid-40’s in temperature, having my father “evacuated” to our home by the Maryland National Guard in a humvee because he had just had surgery, his roads were impassable, and he did not have power, it was all a taste and a hint of hardship. Nothing like what real suffering is like. But a hint, a reminder, of a different kind of life. There were lessons here, as well. Neighbors helping neighbors, digging out and pitching in. What one home lacked, another had, and everyone shared. We learned the benefits of gas: we have a gas range, a gas grill and a gas-powered hot water heater, so we were fine for coffee and hot chocolate, showers and stove-top cooking. Winter camping lessons from years ago come back into play. We were able to charge cell phones and warm up in a car stuck in the driveway. And we always knew we were better off than many others. Pesach approaches, and with it the three mitzvot (commandments) of the Spring season. For all the fuss and hubbub of the holiday, it really comes down to three things we are supposed to do (or not do). The first mitzvah is to eat matzah, especially on the first night. The second (perhaps the most complicated in definition and execution of all the Jewish commandments) is to not eat chametz (leaven). What is the third mitzvah of the Passover season? We are commanded… to tell the story. From that commandment comes all the rest, the different haggadot, the accretions of the centuries, songs and riddles and cooking and games. For how we tell the tale is a primary reflection on who we are. How do we tell the story of the 2010 storm? Are we grousers or givers? Were we happy or hungry, creative and inventive or crazed and stymied in the face of what insurance companies so unfortunately refer to as “acts of God?” Or were we, as the days wore on, a combination of the two: role models for our families and friends – and still frazzled, frustrated with our limitations, all at the same time. How did we balance the responsibilities of work and home and the burden of juggling and rescheduling with the gift of time together? Did you speak of escaping elsewhere – and forget about the hurricanes and tornadoes, the other natural events that could reach you, even there? If you were to be snowed-in again, who would you want to be with you? And what will we take, from the snow filled days of winter, with us into the rest of our lives? Just a few thoughts, while watching, and waiting, and being thankful for all the things we take for granted… most of the time. Rabbi Michael Feshbach From the President I ’m not really that sorry that this will be my last article in the Shofar as President of Temple Shalom. Writing is not my strong suit. But being President has been a challenging and fulfilling responsibility. I’ve learned a lot about Temple Shalom. When I became President we were coming out of a particularly dark time. I learned we are resilient and strong. When the national and global economy sank, Temple Shalom members showed nothing short of incredible generosity by donating $60,000 to a High Holy Day Appeal so we could continue day to day operations while supporting those who needed help. I have no words that would do justice to the gratitude and awe I feel for your generosity. My Presidency began in a time of great turmoil for our congregation. On Yom Kippur 2008 I said that, “The work of healing our congregation is not just a task for the leadership and staff, but for all of the members of Temple Shalom. The work of healing our congregation is not just lofty ideas, vision and policy making, but also in the day to day presence of members like you in our building making connections through community, prayer, and learning.” Because of you, our community is healing, is growing and I have no doubt that Temple Shalom will continue to be an extraordinary place of prayer, learning and community for many years to come. I thank you for the opportunity to serve you and Temple Shalom, and I’ll see you around. L’Shalom, Betsy Kingery Page 3 Cantor Levine The Jews of Cuba Message from Cantor Lisa L. Levine A poem written in Cuba the morning of the March in Havana, by Lisa Levine I am awakened at 5 this morning By the sound of shouting voices A pair of camel buses (gigantic buses that hold 250 people) I’ve been playing guitar since I was 8 years old and it is part of me. Putting on a song is something that I have always done without thinking, whether it was in camp, at school or in the synagogue. I came to take this simple task for granted. That is, until my first trip to Cuba in 2005 with a humanitarian mission in conjunction with B’nai B’rith International. The people of Cuba, I learned very early on, are open, generous and extremely intelligent. They are starved for contact with the outside world, but especially the Jews. The first time I pulled out my guitar in Cuba was the Friday night at the Sephardic Synagogue. It was an Orthodox style service, where men and women sat separately and a young shaliach named Mauricio led the service. I opened the service with a version of L’cha Dodi that I had written especially for the occasion. The reaction that I received from the Cuban Jews that were present was overwhelming. They literally stared at me in amazement with huge smiles across their faces. Later, after the service, I was asked to lead some z’mirot, Shabbat songs, which I did. When I played Yerushalayim Shel Zahav, our host and president of the Sephardic Center, Dr. Levy, had tears streaming down his face. It was like that everywhere we went in Cuba. They cried and we cried; emotions are not hidden in Cuba. From the concert I sang for the 150 members of the Jewish Community on Saturday afternoon, to the small stops we made at the Jewish communities in Cienfuegos and Santa Clara, my guitar spoke a language that everyone in Cuba could understand. It allowed us to grow close in a very short period of time. I don’t know if it was the songs I sang, the fact that I was a ‘she’ Cantor, as they called me, or my guitar. But it was these simple songs which allowed me to communicate with the Jews in Cuba in a way I had never before experienced in my life. God had surely put me in this place for a reason. In Cuba, people have government assigned houses, or ones they inherited from their parents, grandparents, or great-grandparents. Page 4 Unload children on the street They look up and wave to me As if this is very normal Busloads of school children On their mission with their feet Like a f ire deep inside them They burn for social justice They march in the streets of Havana Hundreds of thousands strong They have cars they inherited from generations ago and keep running somehow. Ration books give them 6 lbs of rice per person in a family per month, and 3 lbs of meat per person per month. Healthcare is free but the hospitals sometimes don’t have running water. Education is free through graduate school, but once you’re done, you take a job that the government assigns you. Doctors make less than $35 a month. Basics are provided, but extras are rare. There is no one starving, but children beg for soap on the street. The buildings in old Havana where our hotel was, are dilapidated and in need of repair. But the tourist destinations, now the biggest industry in Cuba, are well maintained. The architecture is extraordinary. Our tour guide Vivien, explained a lot about the life in Cuba, and while the people are seemingly very happy from the outside, they are very critical of their own country. Still, Fidel Castro is their hero, and when he calls, they answer. Everywhere you go in Cuba, there is music. Dominoes is the national game. Baseball is their passion. The highlight of my first trip to Cuba was when I was given the opportunity to sing some songs with the Jewish children during Sunday School at the Patronato, the Jewish At the call of their hero All else is forgotten Like lambs herded by their shepherd Equality for all. The gift that we are given Is the chance to witness history The reality of Cuba Is so different than we thought Like a f ire deep inside them They burn for social justice For the sake of their people’s honor They answer Fidel’s call. They chant: Long live Fidel Castro Utopia for all, We march for social justice Cuba triumphara! Cantor Levine Community Center. They sat attentively singing whatever I threw at them with enthusiasm and fervor. They knew a lot more Hebrew songs than I imagined, and again, through music we grew close in a short period of time. The smiles on their faces will stay with me for the rest of my life. Since then I have returned to work with them again. The second time I performed a concert and handed out copies of the CD I recorded especially for them to every family. My mission to help continued recently when I traveled to Cuba on my third trip, again sponsored by B’nai B’rith International during the days of Chanukah. There were so many highlights. The Sephardic synagogue hosted me in concert on the first Shabbat of Chanukah followed by dinner for the entire community of about 200 people. It was exhilarating to lead everyone in Chanukah and familiar Ladino songs where everyone was clapping and singing. No microphone and a 95 degree room did not deter our enthusiasm. Festivities continued on Sunday morning during the religious school celebration at the Patronato Jewish Community Center where the size of the school has almost quadrupled since I was there two years ago. After that celebration we moved on to the Orthodox Synagogue, Adat Israel, where on the rooftop enclosed air conditioned terrace, this time with a microphone, I performed my final concert of the weekend, again to over 200 people. As I sang the children and several adults got up and started Israeli dancing. I kept the music going for as long as possible, not wanting to break the joy and celebration. At the end of our trip, Steve Yoselevich our B’nai B’rith leader, presented me with a token of the Congregation’s esteem for my performance: a beautiful original oil painting done by a Cuban artist given to me by the President Jacob Berezniak. I was deeply moved and honored and will treasure that gift forever. There were other highlights in Santa Clara and Cienfuegos, the outlying regions in which Jews struggle to keep the flame alive: The new synagogue in Santa Clara and David Tacher leading a Holocaust Memorial Service at their cemetery …Claudia Barliya, a beautiful girl nine years of age who sang Jerusalem of Gold and played Hatikva for us on her violin…lighting of Chanukah candles at the home of Rebeca Langus Rodrigues, President of the synagogue in Cienfuegos. All stand out as memorable events on the trip and important stops as we distributed gifts from B’nai B’rith International. Together, because of all of YOUR donations, we were able to bring more than 800 lbs of goods to the Jews of Cuba, basics that they desperately need. It is impossible to take anything for granted after visiting Cuba. The Jews still living in Cuba are heroes of the greatest proportion: they are keeping the Jewish community alive. It is our sacred task to continue this partnership by helping them to improve their lives in any way we can. I could talk about the people and Jewish community of Cuba for days, but words are not sufficient to express my love for this community and the wonderful people I have established relationships with over the years. At the end of the trip I gave the guitar I carried down with me to Juan David Rodriguez, a Jewish young man and son of my friend Ana Maria. I expect that when I return to Cuba the next time, I will hear that guitar playing the story of the Jews of Cuba: a story of survival, of rebirth and reconnection with the Jewish community of the world. I hope that some of you will join me! Yours in song, Cantor Lisa Yoga Shalom A Jewish Worship Experience for Body, Mind and Spirit Created by Cantor Lisa Levine with Yoga Instructor Carol Krucoff Services are held in the Temple Shalom Chapel This hour and fifteen minute worship service combines elements of a classical Hatha Yoga class with four traditional parts of the Jewish worship service including Birchot Hashachar (Introductory Prayers), Shema uvirchoteha (Shema and its Blessings) T’filah (Intermediary Blessings) and Concluding Prayers (Adoration, Kaddish, Healing).The entire practice is accompanied by sacred music—some of which are Cantor Lisa’s original compositions. Bring your mat or towel and a bottle of water and join us for a life changing worship experience. Saturday March 27 & May 22 10 -11:15 AM Page 5 Soulful MLK Shabbat Ruach Service • Book Club Temple Shalom Book Club 2009-2010 The much delayed February 7 book club meeting has been rescheduled for Sunday, March 7 at 9 AM. We will be discussing “The Man in the Sharkskin Suit” by Lucette Lagnado, a memoir about Jewish family life in and out of Egypt. The remaining books and meetings are — April 11, 9-10:30 AM A Hatred for Tulips by Richard Lourie: The Dutch boy who betrayed Anne Frank tells his story 60 years later. It raises many questions including whose suffering is more important and how much hunger can cancel out human compassion. This astute novel is about moral responsibility and the illusion of truth. Book club members may also enrich this discussion by reading the companion novel,The Boy Who Loved Anne Frank by Ellen Feldman and The Diary of Anne Frank. May 16, 10-11:30 AM (Note the different time) The Jew of Home Depot by Max Apple A collection of 13 delightful short stories that often star Jews.The disparate characters celebrate serendipity and the daily collision of cultures that makes up contemporary American life. Page 6 From the Religious School Lisa Pressman Director of Education Jewish Journeys I have found that you never know when spiritual moments will come about. Sometimes they are in classroom when a child says something so profound, like the kindergartener who told me that if we write a letter to God, it would open with the words, “Baruch Ata Adonai.” It blew me away. There was the high school student (from another city) who had gone through a very difficult year and wrote to tell me that she was going to take advanced classes in Judaism because working with the children in the school had made her realize how important Judaism was to her life. And then there was last week, while having my nails done, I chatted with the woman next to me. When she found out I was in religious education she told me that she had changed her major in college from government to religion because she needed to find out what was really important in life. We are all seekers and travelers through life, trying to better understand our journey. As the Director of Education, when asked what is my vision (my journey outline) for our school, I say, “I want to connect our families to their Jewish roots and traditions… connecting Jews to Judaism.” Just look at a sampling of what we have done this year and what we are hoping to do in the future. Jewish Ethics and Values Our adolescent students tell us there is no difference between Jewish values and American values. Of course American values are from the Bible and the first group to create a new system of justice and law and to value the rights of the individual was the Jewish people. We teach Jewish values and we are taught that one does not only learn, but one must “do.” So, we created a Beit Din, legal court, run by Scott Kravetz and our students, to oversee all Tzedakah – righteous giving – programs. The kids are making decisions and actively getting involved. The Confirmation class, led by Andy Mark, created a Nothing But Nets all school program to buy malaria nets that will simply and inexpensively combat the spread of malaria. Students bring Tzedakah money each week. All the funds in January and February went to Haiti Relief. Our second grade visits the elderly in the Hebrew Home to brighten their day and our third graders study the commandments. Jewish History and Culture How do we learn about our roots? Why are we called a “people?” We must learn about those who come before us. In the early grades, Pre-K to 2, students explore rituals that are particular to Judaism: Shabbat rituals and holidays. Our children hear the stories of the Bible and are introduced to its characters that we call our fathers and mothers. We talk about how their stories are like our lives today. We explore Israel and learn about that special “Jewish” place. The conversations are more sophisticated in grade 4 life cycle and grade 5 Tanach (Bible) and Israel, and grade 6 Jewish immigration and the American Jewish story, and grade 7 Holocaust and anti-Semitism. We are constantly re-telling our stories and passing them along to the next generation — L’dor v’dor — from generation to generation. Hebrew We learn stories from the past 4,000 years and we connect with an ancient language. We pass on traditions like Bar and Bat Mitzvah and we hope to enter adulthood with the ability to connect with other Jews through the language of the liturgical service. What are the songs, what is the order and meaning of the prayers, how do we participate in the service? How do we decode the scrawl we call the alef-bet? So much to learn. Grade 3 Hebrew — New for 2010–2011 — 5771 We want to begin mid-week Hebrew this coming year in grade 3. Our younger students find it easier to acquire language, and beginning midweek Hebrew study one year earlier will help them be more successful. We extended our Hebrew studies in grades Pre-K to 2 beginning last year so children would feel more comfortable with Hebrew. Since MCPS has moved their entrance to kindergarten date from December to September, we have younger students becoming Bar/Bat Mitzvah. Eventually, very few 8th graders will become Bar/Bat Mitzvah but older 6th graders will be celebrating the event. By moving to 3rd grade Hebrew, we will have four solid years of Hebrew in grades 3-6 and no Hebrew in grade 7 – or possibly an optional class for those younger students who want to bridge the gap between their 6th grade class and the time when they begin study with their Bar/Bat Mitzvah tutor. Families with students in grades K-3 will be receiving a letter shortly. We look forward to your feedback. We want to hear your opinion! Upper Grades Our upper grades, 8-12, have a unique program. Students in our CHAI School, grades 8-9, are able to fashion their own Jewish journey by selecting Jewish educational opportunities from a variety of organizations. Students can work with children in our religious school, be in the teen band and choir, attend classes in our building or take part in programs sponsored by other community organizations. For our adolescents, who are striving to make meaning in their lives, connecting with an affinity group is very important. We search for opportunities that will help them find a meaningful place for Judaism in their lives. Tenth graders work with Rabbi Feshbach to reach a higher level of understanding as do our 11th and 12th graders. I never know when a spiritual moment will happen or when a child or an adult will find new meaning from one of our programs. As we enter the last few months of the school year, I hope you and your children will find something that will enrich your personal Jewish journey. Lisa Pressman Director of Education P.S.Want to know more about what is going on in the Temple Shalom Religious School? Go to www.templeshalom.net and click on Religious Education. Page 7 Adult Ed • Mitzvah Day Life Long Learning at Temple Shalom Adult Eduction Offerings March 2010 Upcoming Offerings Wednesday evenings, March 17 & 24,April 7, 14 & 21, 2010; 7:30 – 9 PM “Israel 101: People and Politics, Land and Culture,” Rabbi Michael L. Feshbach, Lisa Pressman and others This course is an introduction to Israel, from ancient origins and Biblical roots to its modern politics. Topics may include: History and Historiography (the question of what is the Bible, what is Biblical history, and how we use – and misuse – the Bible and archeology in understanding our own identity); Geography of Israel; Zionism and the roots of the Modern State; the threat from Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran (security Doctrines in the face of long-range missiles); Parties and Politics (how the Israeli government works); Unity and Diversity (Israeli culture as seen through the lens of Ashkenazim and Sephardim, Secular and Religious, Russians and Ethiopians, Arabs and Religious Minorities); Israel and the Palestinians; Sights and Sounds (Music and Poetry, Food and Festivals). This course is important for everyone, but is especially appropriate for those planning a trip to Israel. $36 for Temple Shalom members; $45 for all others. To register, contact Lauren Harrison at 301-587-2273. or [email protected]. Learning at Leisure World Adult Eduction Offerings April 2010 Wednesday mornings,April 7, 14, 21 and 28, 2010; 10:30 AM – 12 NOON “Choices: New Views of God in Modern Jewish Thought From Mordecai Kaplan to Martin Buber to Abraham Joshua Heschel” with Rabbi Michael L. Feshbach We live at a time in which our views about God and religious questions differ widely from one another, and we may think that our own beliefs place us outside the bounds, or beyond the pale of Jewish tradition. In fact, though, Jewish thinkers have expressed a startlingly wide range of views about God over the past century — ranging from the notion that god is (just?) an idea, to intensely intimate and personal portraits of the divine. Using an approach developed by Rabbi Eugene Borrowitz to place these modern writes on a spectrum from rationalists to non-rational, we will explore the views of thinkers as different as Mordecai Kaplan and Abraham Joshua Hescehl. With our discussion will come the opportunity to see that in all likelihood, your are not alone in your own views, whatever they might be. To register, contact Lucky Malamut at 301-598-2833. or rabbi Michael Feshbach, at 301-587-2273 or [email protected] Page 8 TIKKUN OLam Temple Shalom's First Ever GREEN MITZVAH DAY Sunday, April 25, 1:15– 4 PM Activities will include: Planting Recycling Catalog reduction Area clean-up More details coming your way in March Sponsored by the Tikkun Olam Committee of Temple Shalom For more information contact: Liz Dayan, [email protected] Juliet Mellow, [email protected] or Pamela Fields, [email protected] Adult Ed The Foundation for Jewish Studies Distinguished Scholar Series presents: Are the Jewish Holidays Late this Year? Judaism and the Lessons of Modern Biblical Scholarship with Professor James Kugel Thursday evening March 18, 2010 7:30 PM at and cosponsored by Temple Shalom 8401 Grubb Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815 Free and open to the public; Light refreshments to follow. Professor James Kugel is Director of the Institute for the History of the Jewish Bible, Bar Ilan University. Foundation for Jewish Studies Lunch and Learn Program Above and Beyond: The Origin of Ethics and Piety Out of the Pages of the Jewish Legal Tradition Rabbi Michael Feshbach, Temple Shalom, Chevy Chase, MD Judaism functions, in the main, as a tradition of law. But from the very beginning — in our Biblical origins, on the pages of the Talmud, and in the insights of medieval and early modern writers, there have been hints of a meta-halakha, something “above and beyond” the law. You can be a “scoundrel within the lines of the law.” But we are, on the other hand, sometimes supposed to do something beyond a legal Some of the most familiar holidays in the Jewish calendar look very different in the light of Biblical research. What is more, the Dead Sea Scrolls have revealed that, compared with the “Jewish calendar” we use today, Jews in late biblical times used an entirely different calendar — one in which the holidays were never “late this year.” What are Jews today to make of these findings? requirement “for the sake of peace.” Bachya ibn Pakuda wrote about In 2007 James Kugel’s latest book, How to Read the Bible was given the Everett Family Foundation Jewish Book of the Year Award by the Jewish Book Council. Rabbi Feshbach describes this work as the single best introduction to the Hebrew Bible he has seen in many years, balancing, better than any other such effort, a modern historical, archeological, literary and textual approach, on the one hand, with a traditional, spiritually sensitive and religiously meaningful orientation, on the other. would consider the hidden heart of Jewish life. Such a delicate balance is reflected in Dr. Kugel’s own life: a traditionally observant Jew in his personal life, he teaches the academic and non-fundamentalist approach of modern Biblical studies in his professional work. James L. Kugel is chair of the Institute for the History of the Jewish Bible at Bar Ilan University in Israel and the Harry M. Starr Professor Emeritus of Classical and Modern Hebrew Literature at Harvard University. He is the author and editor of 15 books and numerous articles on the Bible and its early commentators, focusing on the Second Temple period. In 2001, his book, the Bible As It Was won the Grawemeyer Award in religion. The prize “recognizes outstanding and creative works that promote understanding of the relationship between human beings and the divine.” the “duties of the heart.” And Israel Salanter founded a “musar” movement based on ethics and the inculcation of certain attitudes, rather than actions. Come explore the ethics and piety that go “beyond the bounds” of stricture and statute, a peek at what some Wednesday afternoons, May 5, 12, 26 and June 2, 2010, 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM At the Jewish Community Center of Greater Washington, 6125 Montrose Road, Rockville, MD, 20852 $35 for members of the FJS; $45 for all others. To register or for more information please contact the Foundation for Jewish Studies, at www.foundjs.org or 301-770-4787. Mail in registration should be sent to: The Foundation for Jewish Studies 6101 Montrose Rd., Suite 206, Rockville, MD 20852 Page 9 March 2010 2 3 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 4:30 PM Hebrew School 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 9 10 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 4:30 PM Hebrew School 6:30 PM Hebrew School 4 12 NOON Reading The Writings: The Book of Proverbs 5 FRIDAY 6 SUNDAY 7:30 PM Board of Trustees Meeting 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal 5 PM NFTY MAR The Vent 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service: Bar Mitzvah of Seth Hagler 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 7 7:30 PM Adult Ed: Israel 101: People and Politics, Land and Culture 13 SATURDAY 6 PM 8th & 9th Grade Retreat 12 NOON NO Reading The Writings 18 THURSDAY 8 PM Soulful Shabbat Ruach Service with Shir Shalom & Band 6 PM Congregational Shabbat Dinner SATURDAY 6:30 PM Hebrew School 12 6 PM 8th & 9th Grade Retreat 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 4:30 PM Hebrew School 11 FRIDAY 7 PM Erev Shabbat Family Services led by Grade 1st With TSY Choir; Scout Shabbat 17 WEDNESDAY 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal THURSDAY 9 AM Renaissance Program Terra Cotta Warriors – National Geographic Society 4:30 PM Hebrew School 6:30 PM Brotherhood Meeting 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal TUESDAY 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 4:30 PM Hebrew School 6:30 PM Hebrew School THURSDAY 16 4:30 PM Hebrew School 12 NOON Reading the Writings: The Book of Proverbs 7:30 PM FJS Distinguished Scholar Series: Professor James Kugel 19 FRIDAY 6:15 PM Kabbalat Shabbat Services 7 PM Pot Luck Dinner 8 PM Erev Shabbat Services; Decade Shabbat 1969-1978 14 8:45 AM Religious School Early Session 8:45 AM Brotherhood Passover Wine Sale Starts 9:30 AM Brotherhood Brunch & Wine Sale 8:45 AM Religious School Early Session 10 AM Brotherhood Brunch with Melanie Struder – “Volunteers for Israel” 8:45 AM Grade 1st Family Education 10 AM Grade 2nd Hebrew Home 10 AM Shabbat Service and B’not Mitzvah of Jessica Dine and Anna Leggett 10:45 AM TSY Youth Choir 10:45 AM Beit Din 4 PM Youth Group Chocolate Seder 11:15 AM Religious School Late Session 11:15 AM Religious School Late Session 4:30 PM Post Confirmation Class 12:30 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Choir 11:15 AM Grade 1st – Family Education 1 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Band 12:30 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Choir 1:15 PM K – 6th Graders – Shalom Science Program 6 PM Chai School 8:45 AM Religious School Early Session 6 PM Confirmation Class 8:45 AM Grade 4 – Family Education 6 PM Religious School Evening Session 6 PM Religious School Evening Session 10:45 AM TSY Youth Choir NO Classes Grade 7-8-9 6:30 PM Brotherhood: Preparing Kids For College 10:45 AM Beit Din SUNDAY 6 PM Confirmation Class 20 SATURDAY 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 21 SUNDAY 8:45 AM Brotherhood Passover Wine Sale Ends 11:15 AM Religious School Late Session 11:15 AM Grade 4 – Family Education Temple Shalom Photo Album Confirmation Reunion Page 10 COMMITTEE CHAIRS Friday, March 19 “Decade Shabbat” honoring those who joined 1969–1978 Saturday,April 17 Gala Anniversary Celebration Friday, June 11 “Decade Shabbat” honoring those who joined 1959–1968; Soulful Shabbat Ruach with Rick Recht 12:30 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Choir 1 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Band 27 SATURDAY 6 PM Chai School 10 AM Shabbat Service 6 PM Religious School Evening Session 23 24 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 6:30 PM Hebrew School 29 30 Brotherhood Capital Projects Herb Jacobowitz Bob Krauss Mark Ross Cemetery Marta Tanenhaus College Outreach Barbara Shulman Communications Finance Committee TBD Marc Feinberg Kenneth Kramer Ed Beeman Historian/Parliamentarian Sandy Kamisar House & Grounds Mike Gurevich Joan Kalin Leadership Anne Feinberg 6 PM NO Chai School Legal Counsel Marc Feinberg Membership Allison Druin Wilma Braun Beryl Tretter First Seder Mitzvah Corps TUESDAY First Day of Passover – OFFICE CLOSED Music 9 AM Clergy Cook Off – Breakfast 10 AM Passover Festival Morning Service 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal Lori Weinstein Nominating Andrea Mark Religious Education Jeffrey Steger 4:30 PM NO Hebrew School 25 12 NOON Reading the Writings: The Book of Proverbs 7:30 PM Executive Committee Meeting 26 FRIDAY Rita Klein MONDAY 7:30 PM Adult Ed: Israel 101: People and Politics, Land and Culture THURSDAY B’nai Mitzvah Coordinator 8:45 PM NO Religious School 4:30 PM Hebrew School 4:30 PM Hebrew School Joan Kalin JCC Delegate 28 SUNDAY 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service ARZA Founders 10 AM Yoga Shalom Barbara Saragovitz Steve Hirschfeld 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 6 PM Confirmation 6 PM Women’s Seder Adult Education 6 PM Tot Seder Renaissance Committee 31 WEDNESDAY 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 4:30 PM NO Hebrew School – Spring Break Sisterhood Francine Simons Special Funds Lisa Rozman Karen Safer Harvey Berger Tikkun Olam Larry Katzman Worship Marty Shargel 8 PM Erev Shabbat Services led by Gr. 10 Youth Committee Seth Maiman Page 11 April 2010 2 3 4 FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 7 PM Shabbat Family Services with TSY Choirs 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 13 14 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 4:30 PM Religious School 6 PM NO Chai School or Evening Classes 6:30 PM Religious School 7:30 PM Israel 101: People and Politics, Land and Culture 10:30 AM Festival Morning Service at Temple Sinai OFFICE CLOSED FOR PASSOVER 6 7 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY NO Hebrew School 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service NO Hebrew School 7:30 PM Adult Ed. Israel 101: People and Politics, Land and Culture SUNDAY Reading the Writings:The Book of Proverbs SUNDAY 7 PM Pot Luck Dinner 9:30 AM Grade 4 – Cemetery Trip 8 PM Erev Shabbat Services 10:45 AM TSY Youth Choir 10:45 AM Beit Din 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 11:15 AM Religious School Late Session 6 PM GALA 50th Anniversary Celebration 12:30 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Choir 1 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Band 2 PM Tikkun Olam – Green Mitzvah Day 8:45 AM Religious School Early Session 2:30 PM Brotherhood: Natural History Museum – IMAX Theatre 11:15 AM Religious School Late Session 6 PM Chai School 12:30 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Choir 6 PM Religious School Evening Session 6 PM Grade 10 Retreat 6 PM Confirmation 6 PM Religious School Evening Session 10 11 SUNDAY 27 28 TUESDAY 6 PM Chai School 6 PM Congregational Shabbat Dinner SATURDAY 2:30 PM Debbie Levy Book Signing Event 10:45 AM Beit Din 2 PM Pre-Confirmation Meeting Grade 9 8 PM Soulful Shabbat Ruach Erev Shabbat Services; Brotherhood-Sisterhood Shabbat 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 8:45 AM Religious School Early Session 8:45 AM Grade 5 – Family Education WEDNESDAY 6 PM Post Confirmation Class 20 21 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 8:45 AM Religious School Early Session 9 AM Renaissance Program: Woodlawn Plantation – Alexandria, VA 6:15 PM Kabbalat Shabbat Services 1 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Band 9 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 25 NOON 7:30 PM Board of Trustees Meeting FRIDAY NOON Reading the Writings: The Book of Proverbs 10:45 AM Youth Choir 8 8 PM Chavurah Shabbat; Post Confirmation Graduation 24 SATURDAY 18 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal THURSDAY FRIDAY 17 SATURDAY 6:30 PM Brotherhood Meeting 6:30 PM Confirmation 23 10 AM Shabbat Service: B’nai Mitzvah of Lindsay Weiss and Jared Machlin 16 FRIDAY 10:30 AM Choices: New Views of God In Modern Jewish Thought (at Leisure World) 7:30 PM Executive Committee Meeting 15 THURSDAY NOON Reading the Writings: The Book of Proverbs 5 PM NFTY MAR Spring Kallah 8:45 AM NO Religious School Passover – Seventh Day THURSDAY 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 10:30 AM Choices: New Views of God in Modern Jewish Thought (at Leisure World) 5 MONDAY 22 4:30 PM Religious School 4:30 PM Hebrew School 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 10:30 AM Choices: New Views of God in Modern Jewish Thought (at Leisure World) 4:30 PM Hebrew School 4:30 PM Hebrew School 6:30 PM Hebrew School 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 10:30 AM Choices: New Views of God in Modern Jewish Thought (at Leisure World) 29 THURSDAY 9 AM Adult Ed: Book Club Meeting NOON Reading The Writings: The Book of Proverbs 4:30 PM Hebrew School 9 AM Youth Committee Meeting 6:30 PM Hebrew School 10:45 AM Beit Din 10:45 AM Youth Choir 7:30 PM Israel 101: People and Politics, Land and Culture 11:15 AM Religious School Late Session 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal 11:15 AM Grade 5 – Family Education 6 PM Erev Yom HaShoah Service & Program Page 12 30 FRIDAY 6:15 PM Matan Siddur Erev Shabbat Services, led by Grade 4 May 2010 Next Shofar Cut-Off Date Friday, April 30 9 SUNDAY 18 8:45 AM Religious School Early Session TUESDAY 8:45 AM Tzedakah Fair 8:30 PM Shavuot Dairy Dessert Reception 9 AM Youth Committee Meeting 9 PM Tikkun Leil Shavuot 10:45 AM Beit Din 10:45 AM Youth Choir 19 WEDNESDAY 11:15 AM Religious School Late Session 1 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Band 1 6 PM Chai School 6 PM Confirmation Class 10 AM Shabbat Service: B’not Mitzvah of Claire Trilling & Lindsay Bergman 6 PM Religious School Evening Session 2 SUNDAY 11 TUESDAY 8:45 AM Grade 3 – Family Ed. Early Session 8:45 AM Religious School Early Session 10 AM Pre-Mother’s Day Brotherhood Jazz Brunch 12 WEDNESDAY 6:30 PM Religious School 6 PM Confirmation 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal 4:30 PM Hebrew School 4:30 PM Hebrew School 6:30 PM Brotherhood Meeting 8 PM Erev Shabbat Services: 10th Grade Graduation 22 SATURDAY 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 23 SUNDAY 12 NOON Reading the Writings: The Book of Proverbs 26 27 28 WEDNESDAY 14 FRIDAY THURSDAY 8 PM 50th Anniversary Soulful Ruach Shabbat with Rick Recht 15 SATURDAY 6:30 PM Religious School 7:30 PM Shir Shalom Choir Rehearsal THURSDAY FRIDAY 7 FRIDAY 7:30 PM Executive Committee Meeting 6:15 PM Kabbalat Shabbat Services 10 AM Shabbat Service and B’nai Mitzvah Gabriel Schrier and Garrett KapsteinO’Brien 8 PM Erev Shabbat Services 8:45 AM Last day of Sunday school and picnic 10 AM Adult Ed. Book Club Meeting 29 7 PM Erev Shabbat Service led by Grade 3 10:45 AM Beit Din 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service: Bat Mitzvah of Ruth Jernigan-Goldberg 31 MONDAY 6 PM Congregational Shabbat Dinner 10 AM Unisession & Picnic – Last Day Memorial Day OFFICE CLOSED 1:30 PM Confirmation Rehearsal 8 SATURDAY 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 7 PM Pot Luck Dinner 16 SUNDAY 10 AM Confirmation 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study SATURDAY 12 NOON Reading The Writings: The Book of Proverbs 9:30 AM Tot Shavuot Service 10 AM Yoga Shalom 6:30 PM Confirmation 6 6:30 PM Confirmation Dinner 12:30 PM Reception 7:30 PM Board of Trustees Meeting 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service FRIDAY 13 THURSDAY 12:30 PM Foundation for Jewish Studies – Lunch & Learn taught by Rabbi Feshbach 21 6:30 PM Confirmation Class 6 PM Chai School 6 PM Religious School Evening Session 9 AM Renaissance Program – Baltimore Pops – Strathmore Hall 4:30 PM Religious School LAST DAY 11:15 AM Religious School Late Session WEDNESDAY 7 AM Wednesday Morning Minyan Service 12:30 PM Foundation for Jewish Studies, Lunch & Learn Taught by Rabbi Feshbach 11:15 AM Grade 3 – Family Ed. Late Session 4 5 4:30 PM Religious School LAST DAY 6 PM Teacher Appreciation Dinner 10:45 AM Beit Din TUESDAY 20 THURSDAY 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study Shavuot [OFFICE CLOSED] 10:30 AM Shavuot Morning Community Services (at Temple Emanuel) 12:30 PM Chai School Ruach Teen Choir SATURDAY 7:30 PM Erev Shavuot Service 6 PM Chai School 10 AM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service: B’nai Mitzvah of Sophia Cordes & Max Clary Page 13 Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot Upcoming Festival Services Our tradition of joint Festival morning services with other area Reform congregations continues this spring, as we celebrate Passover and Shavuot with Temple Sinai and Temple Emanuel. Upcoming services for the holidays, both combined with the other synagogues and on our own, include: The First Morning of Passover Tuesday, March 30, 2010 at Temple Shalom Clergy Cook Off: Matza-Brei, Have It Your Way, 9 AM Our now famous enterprise of clergy cooking in the kitchen with a wide variety of different matza-brie recipes, followed by the Festival Service for the First Morning of Pesach, 10:30 AM Seventh Day of Pesach Monday, April 5, 2010 at Temple Sinai, 3100 Military Rd, NW Pesach Concluding Festival Morning and Yizkor Memorial Service, 10:30 AM “Last Matza” (for Reform Jews) Luncheon following the service at around 12 NOON The Evening of Shavuot Yom HaShoah v’haG’vurah (Holocaust Martyrs’ and Heroes Remembrance Day) Sunday night April 11, 2010 beginning at 6 PM We come together for a service with participation from our Seventh and Tenth Grade classes, including the annual recitation of the names of loved ones lost during the Shoah by members of our congregation. (If you are new to the congregation Tuesday, May 18, 2010 or you have not given our office the including the reading of the Ten Commandments contact Lauren Harrison at lharri- (Temple Shalom only) Erev Shavuot Service, 7:30 PM Dairy Dessert Reception (Blintzes and Cheesecake), 8:30 PM Tikkun Leil Shavuot Study Sessions, 9 – 11 PM (details to follow) The Morning of Shavuot names of family members who perished during the Holocaust, please [email protected] as soon as possible, and we will include your family members in our congregational family list) This service includes lighting our con- Wednesday, May 19, 2010 gregation’s specially designed Holocaust Shavuot Morning and Yizkor Memorial Service, 10:30 AM And watch for details of the rest of the at Temple Emanuel, 10101 Connecticut Avenue Kiddush Luncheon to follow the service at around 12 NOON Page 14 Join us for Temple Shalom’s annual observance of Menorah. “program” for that night in the days to come. Brotherhood Calendar • Women’s Seder • Renaissance Group RENAISSANCE GROUP Temple Shalom Brotherhood Event Calendar 2010 Brunch with Melanie Strudler – Volunteers for Israel March 7, 2010 at 10 AM Reservations: [email protected] Passover Wine – March 14 and 21 during Sunday School Choosing a College for Your Child – Shirley Levin March 14, 2010 at 6:30 to 8:30 PM Sisterhood/Brotherhood Shabbat and Dinner April 9, 2010, Everyone is welcome, details to follow The Temple Shalom Renaissance Group began the 2009-10 season in September, with a visit to Tudor Place, a beautiful historic home in Georgetown. We were fortunate to have our own Alice Goodman, a docent at the home, as our tour guide. In October, we held our traditional dessert social an annual meeting at the Temple. Eric Cline, noted archaeologist and Temple member, was our speaker. He updated us on his most recent findings in Israel and shared plans for future explorations. In December we joined forces with the Temple Brotherhood and Sisterhood to show the film, Yentl. The group enjoyed a Chinese dinner before the movie screening. Plans for early 2010 include dining out at Baci, an Italian restaurant and wine bar in Rockville and the upcoming performance of Gilbert & Sullivan’s The Grand Duke, at the F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre in Rockville on Sunday, February 28 2 PM . I hope you will be able to join us for these upcoming events. For further information, call Francine Simons, at 301-838-9530, or e-mail: [email protected]. Spring Events Tuesday, March 16, 2010 Pre-Mother’s Day JAZZ Brunch May 2, 2010 at 10 AM Reservations: [email protected] See the famous Terra Cotta Warriors at the National Geographic Society in Washington, DC. We will meet at the museum at 10:30. Further details appear in a flyer elsewhere in the Shofar and in the Temple flyer mailing. Sunday,April 25, 2010 Visit the Woodlawn Plantation and Pope-Leighey House in Alexandria, VA. Complete details regarding time and cost will be available soon. Temple Shalom’s Annual…. Women’s Seder Sunday, March 21, 6 PM Join us for cocktails at 5:30 PM Come experience an interactive Haggadah led by Cantor Lisa and Lisa Pressman Traditional seder plate foods and blessings Mediterranean Style Dinner All Welcome! Bring a sister, cousin, aunt, mother, grandmother or neighbor (Sisterhood membership not required) $25 per person (payable to Temple Shalom Sisterhood) Mail to: Linda Gurevich, 506 Copley Lane, Silver Spring, MD 20904 [email protected] or 301 236-9410 Sponsored by the WRJ Sisterhood of Temple Shalom Thursday, May 20, 2010 Join us for a tribute to Irving Berlin, a Baltimore Pops concert at Strathmore Hall. The concert begins at 8 PM. Tickets will be $35 per person. Sunday, June 13, 2010 A gala cocktail buffet in the party room at the Overlook, Leisure World, at 5 PM Please Join Us For A Gala Celebration In Honor of the 50th Anniversary Of Temple Shalom Saturday, April 17, 2010 Invitations to Follow Page 15 Page17 Brotherhood Brunches Sunday, March 7, 2010 “Volunteers for Israel” with Melanie Strudler, Volunteers for Israel On Sunday mornings throughout the year, the Temple Shalom Brotherhood continues its tradition of old-style cooking and cutting-edge conversation. The brunches are open to all; 10 AM – 12 NOON, only $5 person. More inside Photo Album More photos on pages 10 and 11 Temple Shalom www.templeshalom.net Phone: 301–587–2273 • Fax: 301–588–9368 8401 Grubb Road • Chevy Chase, MD 20815 Temple Shalom Trustees Marc Blumenstein, Jordin Cohen, Allison Druin, Marc Feinberg, Steve Hirschfeld, Royal Hutchinson, Linda Kushner, Susan Medick, Barbara Miller, Earl Simons, Richard Udell, Stefanie Weldon, Linda Gurevich, Rita Klein, Richard Weitzner Voting Auxiliary Members Andrea Mark, Immediate Past President; Herb Jatobowitz, Bob Krauss, Brotherhood; Erica Horne, Sara Kushner, TaSTY Co-Presidents, Lisa Rozman & Karen Safer, Sisterhood Auxiliary Members Ex Officio (Non-Voting) Rabbi Michael Feshbach Cantor Lisa Levine Susan Goutos Zemsky, Executive Director Sandy Kamisar, URJ Executive Board Member Stephen Sacks, URJ Counsel Ed Beeman, Founder’s Representative Marc Feinberg, Temple Counsel Board of Trustees Executive Committee Betsy Kingery, President Myles Levin, Executive Vice President Scott Schreiber, Vice President Caryn Anthony, Vice President Margo Gottesman, Secretary Mark Ross, Treasurer Bob Krauss, Financial Secretary Andrea Mark, Immediate Past President Clergy & Staff Senior Rabbi Michael L. Feshbach Cantor Lisa L. Levine Rabbi Emeritus Bruce E. Kahn Cantor Emeritus Saul Rogolsky Susan Goutos Zemsky, Executive Director Lisa Pressman, Director of Education