Becoming Neshama
Transcription
Becoming Neshama
TEMPLE BULLETIN A"Publication"of"Temple"Emanuel" A Reform Congregation since 1854 CELEBRATING OUR 159TH ANNIVERSARY Affiliated with the Union for Reform Judaism Rabbi Yael Romer Volume 61 " Cantor Robert Cohen Issue 6, February, 2014 Adar, 5774 FROM THE BIMAH Rabbi Yael Romer Becoming Neshama CARLEBACH, raised an Orthodox Jew, is the daughter of the renowned late Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach z”l. Up until her transformative experience at this year’s convention of Reform Jews (the URJ Bienniel) Neshama considered herself Orthodox, sometimes as one who practiced and lived in-sync with mainstream Orthodoxy and sometimes an Orthodox Jew who challenged mainstream Orthodoxy. continued on page 12 ESHAMA 1 The Temple Bulletin is published by Temple Emanuel 243 Albany Avenue, Kingston, NY 12401 PHONE: (845) 338-4271 FAX: (845) 338-0506 EMAIL: [email protected] WEBSITE:www.templeemanuelkingston.org Rabbi............................................................ Yael Romer Cantor:………………………………….…Robert Cohen Rabbi Emeritus....................................Jonathan Eichhorn President.........................................................Les Kalmus Chairman...........................................................Lou Klein Senior VP....................................................Martin Miller Treasurer.....................................................Linda Sumber VP for House................................................... Joe Cohen Secretary................................................... Ruth Heisman Past President....................................................Ric Lewit Trustees: Pat Brakman, Pamela Fraser Glenn Grubard, Karen Leider, Arnold Zepel, Richard Mahler, Evelyn Rosenthal, Steven Schwartz, Jennifer Schwartz-Berky and Amy Scorca. Mark Trott, Brotherhood liaison. Honorary Trustees...............................Conrad Heisman, Charles Ronder, Michael Zackheim and Eli Basch Religious School Director……..Julie Stein Makowsky Temple Administrator……………Jessica Fillmore Bulletin Editor… .................................Jeffrey Greenberg Calendar Editor………………….…Sherri Wise-Keesler Bulletin Proofreader…………………. ....Ruth Heisman The Temple Bulletin is published ten times each year, excluding July and August. It is distributed for an annual fee to members, free to nonmembers and always available free on-line. Submissions or advertising inquiries should be addressed to the Temple Office. Deadline for submissions is the first day of the month which precedes the month of publication. Late material will be held for the following issue. To Contact Us Please call (845)338-4271. The Temple Office hours: Tuesday through Friday, 10am to 2pm. The Office is closed on Mondays, legal holidays, and some Jewish holidays. Rabbi Romer can be reached in her study at (845) 338-4384, extension 102 She is available for appointments Tuesday through Friday. For emergency contact when the Rabbi is not in her study, you may call her at (914) 466-4184. When calling the Temple, you may dial the following extensions as soon as the main greeting begins: Office, 101 Rabbi, 102 Religious School, 110 Bookkeeper, 103 Contact Bulletin editorial staff by e-mail at [email protected]. We Need Your Feedback. In the very near future we’ll be e-mailing each of you a multiple choice questionnaire about Temple Emanuel. It’s the first part in an on-going attempt to find out some things about our Congregants and what you think about Temple: What you like and dislike; what you’d change and what you’d leave the same. Be brutally honest. We’ll use the information we gather to both improve things here and to reach out to the broader Jewish community in the Hudson River Valley. Following up on the questionnaire will be much more in-depth focus groups. If you’d like to be part one of the groups, please let us know. I can be reached at [email protected] . We want your voice to be heard. 2 CANTOR BANTER Bob Cohen Village Days AVE ANY OF you been Inside Llewyn Davis yet? I really mean have you seen the flick? It was made by the Coen Brothers. So it occurred to me that my headline for this review could be: “The Coens took the “H” out of Cohen and took the Spirit out of the Sixties!” Actually, although they did take the “H” out of my last name, I do like a lot of their films including their most recent film before ILD, “A Serious Man” which featured a beautiful Yiddish folksong running all the way through it. Few folks picked up on it, but I thought it was quite wonderful. And, I am ashamed to say, I haven't seen “The Big Lebowski” yet, though I did see “Oh Brother” where the music, collected by T. Bone Burnet (who also put the music “The Coens took…the Spirit out of the Sixties!” together for ILD) was a brilliant recreation of real old-timey songs. But in that film too, the songs were better than the film. 3 In ILD, T. Burnet once more puts together a brilliant collection of songs reflecting the really folky part of the folk revival of the 1960s. They are, for the most part, beautifully performed by Oscar Isaac. Now, I understand that this was not a documentary of the 1960's folk revival in all its richness as well as its mishugas. But as the first important feature film about that era, I was hoping to experience some of the wonderful talents of the young folks (among them, in a very small role, me – not quite an extra)--the way they/we worked together, the way the songs we sang were received by the audiences, from the tiny coves of Greenwich Village to Hootenanny-wide concerts in various venues. Actually the opening of the film proves very timely for me. I will be teaching a course at Lifespring, at the Woodstock Jewish Congregation, called: “The Folk Revival & The American Immigrant Songbook,” surveying in song and story the 1960s. We’ll include songs from Israel, Eastern Europe as well as from the various mountain ranges and valleys of our own USA. This music was almost my entire music education, aside from piano lessons begun at 8 years of age. It enriched both my knowledge of our country and the world, and also human nature, in love, out of love, in struggle and in victory, in grief and in glory, including the tiny bit I knew about my people and our religion at that time in my life. In the film the focus is on the main character, who once had served in the Merchant Marine and now, because of some bureaucratic weirdness, cannot return after his failure as a folksinger. He is a kind of lackadaisical depressive, a wandering-within-himselfwanderer. The actor's singing and guitar playing are very well done. The women he knows or crashes with (including his sister), however, are totally un-nice to him. Although, considering his mindless meandering, one cannot fully blame them. The film does have some Jewishacting older folks who try to be supportive of his life and career, but seem clueless about the world he is in, as is he. My friend, colleague, and fellow member of the New World Singers back in the day, Happy Traum, remarks in a Facebook review he wrote that this was really a more innocent time then the C Bros would have you think. I think he is right. Although God knows the 20th century was already the parent of monstrous offspring, we younguns in the 60's were still more naive and dreamy than one can say of young folks now who live 4 mostly in cyberspace and seem to know everything instantly, if not sooner, and don't seem to believe in much of anything. I must say that after about three quarters of the movie, I found myself getting bored and restless and in the need of something. Action? A roaring crowd, a folk group, a turn toward success? Llweyn's buddy, with whom he sang, is now dead and he is determined to go it alone. The overweight jazz play druggie played by John Goodman is funny but like – who he? And why is Llweyn in his car with his even weirder driver. The film ends (this is not a spoiler) with an actor playing Bob Dylan singing in a coffeehouse his song based on an old Irish folk song, Fare Thee Well. Actually, we (The New World Singers) used to invite Dylan up on stage to sing this song with us at Gerde's Folk City in Greenwich Village. It's soaring melody and his lyrical wandering lyrics still move me when I think of them, and when I sing them myself. As Happy puts it, Dylan's appearance (and subsequent fantastic success) was the end for many of us folkies in the same playing field. I always used to say that it was like being a playwright in the time of Shakespeare. Oy vey! The film also completely ignores the causes we championed with our songs: civil rights, peace, unions. Sure, for some it was just about “me,” but for many of us it was about a fairer, brighter day reflected in the songs we sang and the places we sang them. By the way, in case you are wondering “what kinda name is 'Llewyn,” it’s Welsh and since my wife, Patricia, has Welsh ancestry, I was very open to fall in love with this film. Sad to say, it was like a stray cat who continues on her way despite your attempts to pet it. Which brings me to the absolutely best part of this flic – the cat (which a friend tells me was actually played by 4 cats!). To which I will add, my father said his name in Russia was (are you ready?) Katz-Cohen – but not Katz-Coen. And don’t get me started on my DNA and whether I am a descendent of Israelite priests. I'm in enough trouble as is! Fare Thee Well (Traditional) If I had wings like Noah's dove I'd fly the river to the one I love Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well I had a man who was long and tall Moved his body like a cannon ball Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well 5 Remember one evening, it was drizzlin' rain And in my heart, I felt an achin' pain Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well Muddy river runs muddy 'n' wild You can't care the bloody for my unborn child Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well Once I wore my apron low Been a-keep' you away from my door Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well Number nine train ain' done no harm Number nine train take my poor baby home Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well Now, my apron is up to my chin You pass my door but you never come in Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well Fastest man I ever saw Skid Missouri on the way to Arkansas Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well Join us on this special evening when we will be sharing the aromatic experience of select pure essential oils from plants, trees and fruits that since Biblical times have uplifted the human spirit and opened the heart to joy. This event is NOT ADVISED if you are allergic to fragrances A scented journey to joy ROSH CHODESH Adar Thursday February 6 7:30-9:30PM Temple Emanuel 243 Albany Ave, Kingston Info: Cathy Gins 845-876-7644 6 RELIGIOUS SCHOOL Julie Stein-Makowsky The Kibbutznik AST MONTH WE celebrated Tu B’Shevat – the Jewish holiday in which we take the time to acknowledge trees. We call it the birthday of the trees. I have always found that I have a hard time connecting to this holiday and celebration. Yes, I appreciate trees. I actually really love certain trees and I adore the fruit and nuts that they yield. Tu B’Shevat usually falls in the winter cold when all the trees on my property are bare and hibernating. But of course this is not the case in many other parts of the world. Years ago (and I means years) I took a year off from college and I went to work on a Kibbutz HaOgen in Israel. On the Kibbutz I had a number of jobs (I was there 10 ½ months.) I cleaned vegetables in the kitchens for the midday meal; I picked oranges, grapefruit, avocados and cotton. I worked in the laundry and at times I even worked the midnight shift in the plastics factory on the Kibbutz. One of the most distinct memories I have from that transformative year was the way the trees bloomed around January and February. Suddenly we were harvesting fruits like crazy! At the end of February there were so many strawberries delivered from another Kibbutz that we ate ourselves sick! I think that was the first year that I really understood about Tu B’Shevat. So many of our Jewish celebrations and rituals are connected to the land of Israel. As a Jewish Educator I am always thinking about how to share these connections with our students without them actually experiencing 7 the origins of the connections. Though we work very hard to engage our students and create hands-on and interactive ways for them to live our holidays and celebrations we are still working in a vacuum. The only way to give them a fully integrated understanding on why and how of Jewish practice is through spending time in Israel. A number of years ago our family was fortunate to be in Israel for an amazing 10 days to celebrate my daughter Talia’s joint Bar and Bat Mitzvah with my nephew, Avi. It was a dream come true for me to be able to do this not just with my husband and my children but with a number of other family members, some of whom had never been to Israel before. The trip fell during the celebration of Passover and that just made it even more special. When Talia became a Bat Mitzvah I had already spent many years preparing students and working families through the B’nai Mtizvah process. Much to my dismay the real message of that day in a Jewish child’s life is often obscured by the lavish celebrations and attention to the party details. Celebrating a child’s Bar or Bat Mitzvahs in Israel is chock full of very special memories. The message of becoming part of the global Jewish community through this ritual is heard loud and clear. This coming December (I know that seems like a million years from now) Rabbi Romer will be leading our community on a trip to Israel. With the Rabbi and her Educational Guide it promises to be a trip filled with learning experiences. As plans come together it looks like there will be a focus on the Golan Heights with even an option to visit Petra in Jordan. Rabbi Romer hopes to celebrate one or more Bar or Bat Mitzvah while on the trip. What a wonderful gift this could be to your child – to raise them up as a Bar or Bat Mitzvah in the land of Israel. I am hoping to join this community trip and I want to invite you to join as well. The trip is tentatively schedule for December 25th – January 3rd. Please keep your eyes open for 8 more details as plans become more solidified. Glickman, written, produced and directed by James L. Freedman and executive produced by Martin Scorsese, tells the triumphant story of Marty Glickman, who was denied the chance to participate for the U.S. in the 1936 Berlin Olympics. He went on to become one of the most revered and influential sportscasters in history. A multi-sport athlete with blistering speed, the Jewish Glickman was a teammate of Jesse Owens on the 1936 U.S. Olympic track team, but politics and antiSemitism robbed him of the chance to win gold in the 400meter relay – an event held in front of Adolf Hitler in Berlin. From The Bros Glickman n Tuesday, March 25th at 7:00PM, Brotherhood, in association with The Rosendale Theater Collective is proud to present “Glickman” at the Rosendale Theater, 330 Main Street, Rosendale. Following the 83 minute documentary, we’ve assembled an expert panel of sports professionals, followed by a Q&A moderated by WDST’s Doug Grunther. Marty would go on to become a legendary sports announcer on the East Coast –- and as the first voice of the NBA invented such classic basketball terms as “the key,” “the midcourt stripe,” and “swish!” In a Hall of Fame career that spanned over fifty years, Marty would paint his “words eye” pictures for the New York Knicks, Giants and Jets –- as well as help create HBO Sports and mentor a who’s who of sportscasters. The film interweaves fascinating archival footage with a wide mix of interviews including sportscasters, athletes, actors and family members such as Marv Albert, Bob Costas, Larry King, 9 Bill Bradley, Jim Brown, Frank Gifford, Jerry Stiller, and N.Y. Giants co-owner John Mara. $18 in advance and $25.00 at the door. Doors open at 6:30. Due to a limited number of seats, please make your reservations early as this event will sell out quickly. Sisterhood Pat Brakman Sunny FLA ’m writing from Florida, not missing the cold but the warmth of our community and looking forward to Spring and all the upcoming Sisterhood and Temple events. By the time you read this, our Annual Trivia night will be history and congrats to the winning team and their able competitors. While here we of course visited the local temple (in our golf cart). This is a new congregation and, just like Temple Emanuel, bustling with activity. January is designated Florida Jewish History Month. Maybe this is why so many of our "kin" arrive here this month. Jews have been a significant part of the development of Florida since 1763, the first year Jews were able to live as Jews in Florida. Prior to that, since Florida was owned by Spain, it was "for Catholics only". When The Treaty of Paris was signed, Florida was turned over to England and religious freedom began. When Florida was declared a state in 1875, fewer than 100 Jews lived there. But right after that the Jewish community began to flourish. A synagogue was built in Pensacola in 1786 and by 1900, six congregations had been registered in the State. Today, there are over 300 congregations contributing to the quality of life for all Floridians. Sisterhood here is very active and is a warm friendly group of women. I did not get to participate in any of their events but hope to on my next visit. Our own Sisterhood is busy as you may remember from my last article. On February 6th, Rosh Chodesh returns. Watch your email for full details. March is bursting: We have a dance party on Saturday March 1. Sisterhood Shabbat is Friday March 21; the Spring rummage sale is Sunday, March 30-31 and April 6th is the Women’s Seder. In May we will be hosting the WRJ District Area Day, welcoming women from Temples from throughout the district. In June we officially end our year with the paid up dinner. I anticipate seeing you at any or all these events and welcome your 10 input and assistance in making them successful. Soon these two "Snowflakes" will fly North and we look forward to being back home and rejoining all the activity at Temple Emanuel. PURIM at TEMPLE EMANUEL A Jewish Opportunity to Let Down Your Hair and Be Wild! Sunday, March 16: A Free, Family-Friendly Purim Celebration 10:00AM—Purim Service 10:30AM—Megillah Reading 11:00AM—Shpiel 12:00PM—Carnival & Costume Parade Purim Carnival -Youth Group led - booths, games, prizes! 243 Albany Ave, Kingston 845-338-4271 www.templeemanuelkingston.org 11 continued from page 1 But until San Diego, Neshama found her home as an Orthodox Jew. Over the years, Neshama has been blessed by the support and comfort of friends and colleagues in the Conservative Movement. But up until this fall, Neshama admits that she had little to no meaningful contact with Reform Jews prior to her accepting a singing/teaching engagement in San Diego. As you have been hearing, from Dr. Martin Miller and Pat Brakman, the URJ Biennial was a powerful, informative experience. But no one could have planned or expected the public affirmation that Neshama Carlebach made in front of five thousand Reform Jews. From the Bimah, Neshama declared that she “was making Aliyah to the Reform movement.” Reverberations were heard and felt throughout the Jewish press and throughout the Jewish world. Neshama Carlebach had become a Reform Jew. NESHAMA CARLEBACH DESCRIBES WHAT she coined as “a brand new- yet deeply familiar experience. She found in Reform Judaism all the best values and practices of the Judaism that she cherishes: -Loving and cherishing Shabbat -Loving Jewish rituals in an open hearted, expansively spiritual way -Engaging in the message of the Torah to make all of humanity deeper- more empathetic, loving and capable of kindness. -Interfaith engagement that recognizes the true unity for all God’s children -An egalitarian community where women and men participate as equals in Torah study -An egalitarian community where women and men participate as equals in the joy of Judaism; the ability to delight, dance and engage. -The implicit mandate that Tikkun Olam is bound up with being a Jew. -A recognition and commitment that being a Jew means a commitment to global healing. -A recognition and commitment to find our place as Jews in the modern world. I am deeply moved by Neshama Carlebach’s Reform insights, because they serve as a reminder, challenge and inspiration to me as “Reverberations were heard and felt throughout the Jewish press and throughout the Jewish world. Neshama Carlebach had become a Reform Jew.” a Reform Rabbi and to you my Congregants. Neshama found that Reform Judaism supports the values that she is able to endorse and live. Neshama describes in her address- that there were too many times in her Jewish past that she found herself in Mitzraim, trapped in the narrow spaces of a mindset that was narrow and oppressive when she desired expansiveness and inclusivity. Neshama is a practicing Jew who found her way to the expansive possibilities of Reform Judaism. We, active members of Temple Emanuel, already have that affiliation. But what will our practice consist of? 12 I want to urge you to review Neshama’s address (http://www.jta.org/2014/01/03/lifereligion/neshama-carlebach-sets-recordstraight-about-her-embrace-of-reform). I want to encourage you to focus on the values of Reform Judaism Neshama experienced and articulated. Renew, refresh and reinvigorate your commitment, not only to your Judaism, not only to your Temple, but to your Jewish practice that illuminates and actualizes the very best values that your Judaism offers. -Purim festivities and celebration -Women’s Seder -Rosh Chodesh -Second Night Klezmer Seder at Temple -Yom Ha-shoah Seder - Involvement in New & Renewed Social Action Projects -Sabbath teaching and bike ride with a Survivor -Temple Emanuel’s 160th Festivities -Temple Emanuel’s first Shabbaton The possibilities are endless: Your engagement is what brings Judaism to light and to life. -Sabbath at Temple TOOTT SHHAABB A BB T BBA AT st Join us February 1 , Our toddler service is celebrated monthly on Saturday mornings from 9:00-9:30am, followed by a healthy Kiddush. An extraordinary way to connect your young child to Judaism & your Temple community. We look forward to singing, dancing & story telling with you!!! Upcoming Tot Shabbat dates in 2014: February 1, March 1, April 12, May 24, June 14 13 A Voice From the Pews Dr. Martin Miller Judaism Is Not A Product: A Report From the Biennial OME WEEKS AGO , I ate Shabbat dinner with 4,999 other people, and that included Pat Brakman, our Sisterhood president. All of us had something in common. Earlier, we had waited anxiously for more than 30 minutes to get into a huge auditorium. It wasn’t for appetizers or entertainment. It was for Kabbalat Shabbat services. This was a very diverse crowd: all ages, all sorts of backgrounds and orientations. Many of the people there looked something like my Ashkenazic relatives. Many others looked like my wife Sara’s AngloSaxon and Celtic relatives. One, a rabbi at one of New York City’s largest synagogues, resembles her Korean mother, a Buddhist who happened to be at the services. Funny, they all looked Jewish. That’s who we are, the way we are these days. We were all at the Biennial convention of the Union for Reform Judaism, this congregation’s parent organization, in San Diego. Parenthetically, let me mention that I love the URJ. Some of you may not know that we are delinquent in our URJ dues, because it has not been seen as a “Judaism as experienced in our synagogues but also elsewhere in our lives needs to shift dramatically…” high enough priority item in our budget, yielding to items that our leadership see as essential to keep us afloat. But it is in our interests to maintain a proper affiliation with that organization, and we should be willing to pay for that goal. Our congregation’s leadership as well as the general membership have a lot to gain, much to learn by staying connected and further, doing as I did: attending a biennial 14 meeting. We might want to think of it as a Jewish analog to what Muslims do, fulfilling a religious injunction by visiting Mecca to walk around the sacred Kaaba. But at a URJ Biennial, Jews do what Jews do: pray, study, learn, meet and schmooze with other Reform Jews from all of the country and elsewhere in the world, and then head for home stimulated and enriched. This year’s biennial provided all of that, and I’d like to share some of what I gained. There was quite a lot of interest to me, and as I see it, to our congregation, during the four day event. But here is my most direct concern. There was much urgency reflected in sessions at the Biennial about the reluctance of young Jewish adults, so-called Jewish millennials, to affiliate with congregations in their midst. Results of a recent major Pew Research study show that such millennials are often assertive about their willingness to identify as Jews, and to ascribe to what they understand to be Jewish values, but they are likely to say that they don’t believe that their needs for a truly meaningful Jewish life can be met through synagogue affiliation. A good deal of discussion was focused on how that issue can be joined. After all, millennials would represent a substantial portion of our future community. And we believe that we should be able to help meet the needs of such young men and women for a Jewish life that is meaningful in their own terms. The discussion at workshops I attended often lead to a larger topic, one that is potentially transformative for Jews, especially progressive Jews, everywhere. This was the idea that Judaism as experienced in our synagogues but also elsewhere in our lives needs to shift dramatically--from one that is transactional to a well-articulated and carefully cultivated relational Judaism. transactional Judaism? It should be easily recognized. We pay a certain amount of money in our dues and fees, and that buys us a package we have virtually negotiated and transacted: tickets for the High Holidays, B’nai Mitzvah preparation for our preteens, assurance that our life-cycle celebrations and crises will be met appropriately by our clergy. Yes, of course these services are possible because of the generosity of so many, but the basis for them is set into motion with what is effectively a contract between a family and the synagogue organization. And like many other contracts, they reach an expiration date, for instance just after a HAT IS 15 youngster’s Bar or Bat Mitzvah. The product has been delivered. And that’s all there is to it. Jewish learning and living (for instance, how we observe Shabbat). In contrast, relational Judaism is modeled on the brit, the covenant, a permanent agreement provided by HaShem to Abraham and all of his descendants. We are all included. The kinds of relationships that need to be involved, and the principles of relational engagement, can be found in a very good book, nearly a manual, called Relational Judaism, by Dr. Ron Wolfson, much talked about at the Biennial. Fifth is between you and your Jewish community, both sacred and secular. Sixth is between you and Jewish people, wherever Jews are found, anywhere in the world. Seventh is between you and the State of Israel. Eighth is between you and the whole world, Jewish and non-Jewish. Transformation to a relational Judaism is a project for every Jewish community to undertake, because no matter how far along one might be (and we’re not so bad here at Temple Emanuel) there is room for more. It will take commitment and time to bring it about. We would all be the better for it. A good beginning would be for our members, including our leadership, to read the book. Wolfson talks about nine levels of relationship, each worthy of substantial discussion. The first is the relationship between you and yourself--a strong Jewish identity-without which none of the other levels could happen. Second is between you and your family. Third is between you and your friends. Fourth is, between you and Finally, ninth is between you and God, whether you believe or not, given only a willingness to wrestle in your heart with what for many of us is recognized as the divine presence. But bear in mind that it is the first level, the quality and nature of self-relating--full acceptance and understanding of oneself in Jewish terms--that is fundamental to the effectiveness of other relationships. Wolfson also describes twelve principles of relational engagement, tools that sharpen relationships. Some of those are already a part of our congregation’s canon, and we may even be ahead of the curve with them. We are a congregation disposed towards relational Judaism, because of the leadership of our rabbi, and we should be proud of that disposition. 16 One of the principles Wolfson calls “Personal Encounters.” One is Shabbat dinner exchanges, where families invite each other, as some of our families are doing, on the first Shabbat of each month. And we know how our rabbi is there for us when we are sick or in the midst of a life-cycle crisis. For “Telling Stories,” another of Wolfson’s principles, we can certainly improve. People want to tell their life stories, and they want audiences ready to hear them. We need to listen to the narratives of others’ lives, and to provide the mechanisms to make that possible. We should consider creating a video archive where our families are prompted to tell their stories, and make those records fully accessible to our members. A third principle, “Learning Together and Doing Together,” is moving along at our Temple. I have personally enjoyed that at both ends of the learning table. TURNING AGAIN TO THE URJ Biennial, there were other fine sessions there that I managed to attend. Apart from the moving worship services, plenary sessions were fascinating, including a conversation with URJ President Rick Jacobs that turned out to be a one-sided talk by Benjamin Netanyahu, skyped in from Israel, and a largely nostalgic session on the civil rights frequent reminders of the significant roles played by URJ social activist leaders in that effort. I sat in on a terrific lecture on the history and relevance of the synagogue by Rabbi Larry Hoffman, who reminded his audience that the real basis for Reform Judaism, at its origins, was and is to assure dignity for all, which is a fulfillment of the Will of God. But my personal favorite at the Biennial was a session led by Rabbi Shefa Gold on Hebrew chanting. We spent the better part of two hours getting a better understanding of this wonderful spiritual art form, where tiny texts are carried forward in mystical melodies, repeated over and over until you are lost in the glorious moment. We do some chanting here at Temple Emanuel, and it would be great if we did even more. The next URJ Biennial will take place in November of 2016, in Orlando, Florida. Let’s work to see that significant numbers of our leadership and as many members as possible will be there. All of us, our congregation and the URJ itself, will be well served by such participation. (Ed. Note: Marty will be back next month with more thoughts on the implications of the Pew Report and how some of its lessons might be applied here at Temple Emanuel.) 17 TEMPLE EMANUEL BROTHERHOOD PRESENTS A FILM BY JAMES L. FREEDMAN 1 2 4 7 2 PROUD SUPPORTER O F T H E RO S E N DA L E THEATER COLLECTIVE 1 2 4 7 2 $18 Donation Q&A WITH OUR EXPERT PANEL $18 Donation TUESDAY MARCH 25, DOORS OPEN AT 6:30 20 Contributions In memory of Hannah Feldman Marvin Feldman General Fund SCRIP Brotherhood Sisterhood Mah Jong Group In honor of all the Bingo volunteers and for Bulletin Expenses Yolande “Yo” Jones In honor of Mary and Sid Bolin Alan and Gail Levy For Framing Les and Barbara Kalmus In honor of Rabbi Romer’s Dedication and Leadership Steven Rosenberg and Debi Duke Yahrzeit Fund In memory of Harry Haimowitz Deborah Brenner In memory of Sarah Haimowitz Deborah Brenner In memory of Irving and Bess Chatanow Gerald and Lynette Chatanow In memory of Moses Singer Toby Eisman In memory of Marion Durkin Ewald and Kathryn Koerner In memory of Harry Leifer Howard Leifer and Ellen Leifer In memory of Esther Maidenbaum Aryeh Maidenbaum and Diana Rubin In memory of Arthur and Paula Forst Bruce and Ruth Wally In memory of Nathan Wilder Ben and Karen Wilder In memory of Dr Maurice Zackheim Michael and Doris Zackheim Menches’ Brick Fundraiser Jeffrey and Carmel Gold Richard Lewit and Alison Guss Wayne and Joanne Miller Frederick and Joan Quaderer Capital Campaign Louis and Mary Jane Klein Richard Lewit and Alison Guss Dr. Steven Schwartz and Jill Horn Eli and Susan Basch ! 19 !Annual Appeal Eli and Susan Basch Kenneth and Selma Bitz Rabbi Jonathan and Suzanne Eichhorn Rhoda Gellen David and Susan Goldin Steven and Karen Grossman Marsha and Jerry Hamburg Martin and Anita Kantor Mr. Levy Richard Mahler Roland Barbara Michaels Aryeh Maidenbaum and Diana Rubin Errol and Estelle Nadler Debra Pemstein and Dean Vallas Frederick and Joan Quaderer David and Evelyn Rosenthal Fonda Rothblatt Steven Schwartz and Jill Horn Donald and Karen Signor Lillie Singer Robin Lynn Waxenberg Jay and Joyce Bender Werbalowsky High Holiday Appeal Alan and Gail Levy Amy Scorca Neil and Lucinda Segal Matthew Lortie and Linda Brandon Rabbi’s Discretionary Fund Eli and Susan Basch Neil Satinsky Fund In Memory of Lauren & Neal Satinsky Kitty Satinsky Refua Sh’lema Asa Quinn Markiewicz Ben Wilder Priscilla Gideon Richard Mahler Larry Reer Joy Gross Leonard Zimet Karen Wilder Mark Trott Massie Mehl Jordan Corvin Anniversaries Les and Barbara Kalmus Richard and Barbara Moscowitz Aryeh Maidenbaum and Diana Rubin Ralph and Sondra Giordano Condolences Temple Emanuel stands with Michele and Barry Entner, Alex and Emily, on the loss of Myrna Sherman z”l, Michele’s beloved mother, who passed away December 12. May Her Memory Be For A Blessing. 20 In The Spirit Services Weekly Kabbalat Shabbat Services – Friday evenings at 7:30pm. ! The 1st Friday of each month, services begin early at 6pm, on the 1st Friday there will be a “symbolic” Kiddush at Temple. Families will be encouraged to develop a “tradition” of sharing a Sabbath meal immediately following services. Musical Shabbat is held on the 3rd Friday of each month at 7:30pm. Shabbat Service with Zemer Choir participation is held on the 4th Friday of each month at 7:30pm. Saturday Morning Services – Every Saturday after Labor Day through the end of June, at 10 am. Torah Study is integrated into the service. Special activities for children and teens. Rhinebeck/Red Hook Services & Celebrations- select holidays throughout the year including Second Day of Rosh Hashannah, Sukkot, Tu B'Shevat, & Lag B' Omer, held in the Rhinebeck/Redhook area. All are welcome. Rhinebeck Meditative Prayer And Torah Study Held weekly on Thursday mornings, in Rhinebeck, September through June, led by Rabbi Yael Romer. Meditation beginning at 8:45am followed at 9:15am with Weekly Torah Study. Welcome your day with a morning ritual that prepares you to receive the day’s blessings with fullness, centering, & breath. Exploring our Jewish traditions, this morning ritual will integrate meditation & study as part of an alternative morning practice. Explore your Jewish journey with a progressive egalitarian approach and learn about what our Congregation has to offer. For directions, contact the main office.! ! Tot Shabbat Tot Shabbat is celebrated monthly, on Saturday mornings from 9 – 9:30 am, followed by a Kids’ Kiddush. This is an extraordinary way to connect your young child to Judaism and the Temple community and helping you to connect with other young families. We look forward to singing, dancing, & storytelling with you! 21 Healing Prayers During each service, we offer all who are present to join in a communal healing prayer. This prayer supports healing of body & soul – a lifelong journey for those in need of spiritual fortitude, as well as for individuals or loved ones challenged with illness. We welcome you to connect with Jewish ritual and our community in our quest for meaning & strength. Adult Ed. with the Rabbi Conversion Course & Private Conversion Tutorials! Available by request, Rabbi Romer conducts a Judaism study group and Conversion Course and also offers private tutorials. Contact the Rabbi in her study, 845-338-4271 x 102 for details. Hebrew Trope Held most Wednesdays, from 12:30 to 1:30 pm, September through June. Talmud Pirke Avot Taught by Dr. Martin Miller Held from 11:15am to 12:15pm, most Wednesdays, September through June Adult B’nai Mitzvah Course: For information and to set up an appointment, call the Rabbi in her study, 845-338-4271 x 102. Lunch with the Rabbi - Join Rabbi Romer and guests, on most first Tuesday of every month, October through June, from noon to 1:30, for food for the body and food for the soul. This is an opportunity to share a hot meal, warm adult community, and dialogue with Rabbi Romer and stimulating adult learning in each meeting.! Kabbalah from Rabbi Nachman of Braslov – Teaching Zohar Starting in the fall, on the 2nd & 4th Thursdays of the month from 5:30PM to 7PM. Students of this special class will be asked to purchase course material in advance. Intro to Judaism – Held once a month on the 2nd or 3rd Saturday of the month, October through June from 1:30 to 3PM. The class will build on the previously covered material, but drop-in students will be welcomed and encouraged.! Conversational Hebrew – led by Rabbi Yael Romer, this advanced group will be covering a lot of material, and students must purchase the course materials before the class begins. Held on Wednesdays during the school year, from 5 to 6:30PM, registration required. 22 Temple Emanuel’s Sisterhood (WRJ) is celebrating our 10th Annual Passover WOMEN’S SEDER Sunday, April 6th, 2014/5774 5:00pm – Shmooze 5:15pm – Seder 6:30pm - Dinner Bring a friend and a dish to share to our pot-luck vegetarian/dairy dinner without “chametz” (bread products). 845-338-4271 ext 131 243 Albany Ave, Kingston www.templeemanuelkingston.org Second Night Seder At TEMPLE EMANUEL APRIL 15 TH This year with a Taste of Klezmer! Seating at 4:45PM Seder begins at 5:00PM Reservations: 845-338-4271 ext 136 243 Albany Avenue, Kingston www.templeemanuelkingston.org A Special Invitation to you, from Rabbi Yael Romer... You are invited to: Lunch with the Rabbi, February 4th A study & group discussion led by Rabbi Yael Romer, following a free hot catered lunch at noon. e l a S e g a m Rum 4 1 / 0 3 / 3 : e t a D Rummage Sale on Sunday, March 30 from 10am to 3pm Drop off hours the week before from 10am to 2pm on: Tuesday, March 25 through Friday, March 28 Bag Sale: Monday, March 31 from 10am to 2pm Sponsored by Temple Emanuel’s Sisterhood 243 Albany Avenue in Kingston 845-338-4271 x 101 ! February 2014 Adar/Adar 5774 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 1 Adar Parashat Terumah Rosh Chodesh Adar 9-9:30AM Tot Shabbat 9:30AM-12:30PM Religious School 10AM Shabbat Morning service 2 2 Adar 3 3 Adar 4 4 Adar 5 5 Adar 6 6 Adar 7 7 Adar 8 8 Adar Parashat Tetzaveh 9 9 Adar 10:30AM-1PM Mah Jongg 10:30-11:30AM Tone with Sloane – Beginner 12-1:30PM Lunch with Rabbi Romer 12-1PM Tone with Sloane – Intermediate 7:15PM Membership Committee Meeting 12:30–1:30PM Hebrew Trope 5PM Bingo 5-6:30PM Conversational Hebrew 6:45-8:30PM Confirmation class 8:45AM Rhinebeck Meditation & Torah study with Rabbi Romer 12-1PM Tone with Sloane – Intermediate 7-10PM Rosh Chodesh Adar 7PM Zemer Rehearsal 5-6PM Monthly Young Family Snacks & Crafts 6-7PM Early Kabbalat Shabbat Service 10 11 12 13 14 10 Adar 11 Adar 12 Adar 13 Adar Ta’anit Esther 10:30AM-1PM Mah Jongg 16 16 Adar 17 17 Adar 10:30-11:30AM Tone with Sloane – Beginner 11:30AM-12PM Tone with Sloane bonus Abs 12-1PM Tone with Sloane – Intermediate 7PM Ritual Committee Meeting 12:30–1:30PM Hebrew Trope 5PM Bingo 5-6:30PM Conversational Hebrew 6:45-8:30PM Confirmation class 18 19 18 Adar 19 Adar 8:45AM Rhinebeck Meditation & Torah study with Rabbi Romer 5:30-7PM Kabbalah Class 7PM Zemer Rehearsal 7PM Finance Meeting 20 20 Adar 14 Adar Purim Katan Valentine’s Day 23 Adar 10AM Shabbat Morning service 21 22 22 Adar Parashat Vayakhel 21 Adar 10:30-11:30AM Tone with Sloane – Beginner 12-1PM Tone with Sloane – Intermediate 12:30–1:30PM Hebrew Trope 5PM Bingo 5-6:30PM Conversational Hebrew 6:45-8:30PM Confirmation class 8:45AM Rhinebeck Meditation & Torah study with Rabbi Romer 12-1PM Tone with Sloane – Intermediate 6-7PM Caring Community Meeting 7PM TE Board Meeting 7PM Zemer Rehearsal 7:30PM Musical Shabbat 10:30AM-1PM Mah Jongg 7PM Sisterhood Meeting 24 25 26 27 28 24 Adar 10:30AM-1PM Mah Jongg 25 Adar 10:30-11:30AM Tone with Sloane – Beginner 12-1PM Tone with Sloane – Intermediate 26 Adar 12:30–1:30PM Hebrew Trope 5PM Bingo 5-6:30PM Conversational Hebrew 6:45-8:30PM Confirmation class 27 Adar 8:45AM Rhinebeck Meditation & Torah study with Rabbi Romer 12-1PM Tone with Sloane – Intermediate 5:3-7PM Kabbalah 7PM Zemer Rehearsal 15 15 Adar Parashat Ki Tisa Shushan Purim 7:30PM Kabbalat Shabbat Service President’s Day 23 9:30AM-12:30PM Religious School 10AM Shabbat Morning service 9:30AM-12:30PM Religious School 10AM Shabbat Morning service 12:30PM Social Action Training Day 28 Adar 7:30PM Kabbalat Shabbat Service with Zemer Particpation TEMPLE EMANUEL 243 Albany Avenue Kingston, New York 12401 ! Return Service Requested Bulletin Ad Rates (1X, 5X, 10X) 1/8 pg (3.5w x 2h) $25/$22/$20 ¼ pg (3.5w x 4.5h) Or (7.5w x 2h) $60/$50/$40 ½ pg (7.5w x 4.5h) $75/$65/$60 Full pg (7.5w x 9.5h) $125/$100/$75