March-May 2012
Transcription
March-May 2012
Spring 2012 March • April • May Adar • Nissan • Iyyar • Sivan 5772 Vol. LIII, No. 3 March www.templeshalom.net FRI Tot Shabbat, 5:30 PM Congregational Shabbat Dinner, 6:15 PM Erev Shabbat Family Services, Grades 2 & 3 Lead/Matan Siddur, 7:30 PM 3 Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and Bar Mitzvah of Gabe Udell, 10 AM 2 SAT T’tzaveh, Exodus 27:20–30:10 Esther 7:1–10; 8:15–17 or Samuel 15:2–34 9 WED 9 10 Purim Dinner, 6 PM Erev Purim Service, Schpiel and Megillah Reading, 7 PM Shir Shalom Music Shabbat, 7:30 PM FRI SAT Shabbat Morning Worship & Study 10 AM Shabbat Service and Bat Mitzvah of Claire Ivers, 10 AM Ki Tisa, Exodus 30:11–34:353 1 Kings 18:1–39 16 17 FRI SAT Brotherhood Dinner, 6 PM Erev Shabbat Piano Services/Brotherhood Shabbat, 7:30 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and Bat Mitzvah of Maia Eskin, 10 AM Vayak’heil-Pekudei, Exodus 35:1–40:38 Ezekiel 36:22–26 23 24 FRI SAT Erev Shabbat Services – Folk Shabbat, Grade 10 Leads, 7:30 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and B’nai Mitzvah of Benjamin Auerbach and Jack Barker, 10 AM Vayikra, Leviticus 1:1–5:26 Ezekiel 45:16–25 25 30 Women’s Seder, 5 PM SUN FRI 31 SAT Tot Seder, 5:30 PM “Pro-Neg” Nosh, 5:30 PM Erev Shabbat Services, 6:15 PM (NOTE EARLIER TIME) Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and Bar Mitzvah of Jonah Gottesman, 10 AM Tzav, Leviticus 6:1–8:367 Malachi 3:4–24 April & May Services page 2 continued from page 1 April SPRING 2012 WORSHIP 6 7 Join us for Temple Shalom’s annual observance of Passover at Home – No Regular Services FRI SAT Yom HaShoah v’haG’vurah (Holocaust Martyrs and Heroes Remembrance Day) Clergy Cook-Off Breakfast, 9 AM Passover Festival Morning Service, 10 AM First Day of Pesach: Songs of Songs is read Exodus 12:37–42; 13:3–10 Isaiah 43:1–15 13 FRI 14 SAT 18 20 21 Passover Concluding Service and Yizkor at Temple Emanuel, 10 AM Luncheon at Temple Emanuel, 12 NOON Shir Shalom Music Shabbat, 7:30 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Sh’mini 1, Leviticus 9:1–10:11 2 Samuel 6:1–23 Erev Yom HaShoah Service w/Ruach Teen Choir, Grades 7 & 10 Participate, 6 PM WED FRI SAT Pesach (Passover) and Shavuot 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, Temple Emanuel and Or Chadash of Damascus. Upcoming services for the holidays, both combined with the other synagogues and on our own, include: Erev Shabbat Services – Piano Shabbat, 7:30 PM Erev Pesach Friday, April 6, 2012 First Night Seder in our homes. Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and B’not Mitzvah of Mikaela Greenwald & Rebecca Leggett, 10 AM Sh’mini 2, Leviticus 10:12–11:47 E2 Samuel 7:1–17 27 28 Wednesday,April 18, 2012, at 7 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 or you have not given our office the names of family members who perished during the Holocaust, please contact Kristin Lake at rabast@templeshalom.net as soon as possible, and we will include your family members in our congregational family list.) This service includes lighting our congregation’s specially designed Holocaust menorah. Watch for details for that night in the days to come. NO SERVICES at Temple Shalom on this particular Friday night!! * May 4 FRI 5 SAT Tot Shabbat, 5:30 PM Congregational Shabbat Dinner, 6:15 PM Erev Shabbat Family Services, 4th Grade Leads/Beit Din, 7:30 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and Bar Mitzvah of Jacob Rains, 10 AM Mot-K’doshim, Leviticus 16:1–20:27 Amos 9:7–151 11 FRI 12 SAT Soulful Shabbat Ruach Services and PostConfirmation Graduation with Teen Band & Choir, 7:30 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and Bat Mitzvah of Jolisa Osborn-Polakoff, 10 AM Emor, Leviticus 21:1–24:23 Ezekiel 44:15–31 18 19 SAT Our now famous enterprise of clergy cooking in the kitchen with a wide variety of different matza-brie recipes, followed by the… * Page 2 * * * * * * * * * * * Seventh Day of Pesach Friday, April 13, 2012, at Temple Emanuel 10101 Connecticut Avenue, Kensington, MD * * * * * * * * * * * The Evening of Shavuot Saturday, May 26, 2012, at Temple Shalom 8401 Grubb Road, Chevy Chase, MD Erev Shavuot Service, 7:30 PM including the reading of the Ten Commandments Dairy Dessert Reception (Blintzes and Cheesecake), 8:30 PM Tikkun Leil Shavuot Study Sessions, 9 – 11 PM * * * * * * * * * * * * The Morning of Shavuot Sunday, May 27, 2012 First Morning of Pesach Festival Service, 10 AM Confirmation Service at Temple Shalom, 10 AM Confirmation Luncheon Reception, following the service. * * * * * * * * * * * * Pesach Concluding Festival Morning and Yizkor Memorial Service, 10 AM 25 FRI 26 SAT Erev Shabbat Services – Piano Shabbat, 7:30 PM B’har-B’chukotai, Leviticus 25:1–27:34 Jeremiah 16:19–17:14 * * * Clergy Cook Off: Matza-Brei, Have It Your Way, 9 AM FRI Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and B’not Mitzvah of Paul Vasquez & Carlos Giron, 10 AM * * * * * 3100 Military Rd, NW, Washington, DC Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Shabbat Service and Bar Mitzvah of Noah Dalbey, 10 AM Tazria-M’tzora, Leviticus 12:1–15:33 2 Kings 7:3–20 * The First Morning of Passover Saturday, April 7, 2012, at Temple Sinai Erev Shabbat Services – Folk Shabbat, 7:30 PM FRI SAT * * * “Last Matza” (for Reform Jews) Luncheon following the service at around 12 NOON 27 SUN Congregational Shabbat Dinner, 6:15 PM Erev Shabbat Services – Folk Shabbat and 10th Grade Graduation, 7:30 PM Graduation Vows, 9 PM Shabbat Morning Worship & Study, 10 AM Tot Shavuot Services, 5:30 PM Erev Shavuot Services, 7:30 PM Shavuot Dairy Dessert Reception, 9 PM Tikkun Liel Shavuot, 9:30 PM graphic design, cover design and production: laura-leigh palmer, asap graphics; laura.leigh@asapgraphics.com B’midbar, Numbers 1:1–4:20 Hosea 2:1–22 editor Cheryl McGowan,Temple Shalom cmcgowan@templeshalom.net Shavuot/Confirmation Services, 10 AM Produced by Temple Shalom Phone: 301–587–2273 Current and back issues also available online: www. temple shalom .net From the Rabbi “Everybody Must Get Stoned” A Report from a Front Line of the Culture Wars in Israel Message from Rabbi Michael L. Feshbach When Bob Dylan wrote the lyrics many years ago that “everybody must get stoned,” I am certain that he did not have Bet Shemesh in mind. I’m actually not sure what he meant at all, but I am fairly sure that the song is not about physical intimidation, harassment and assault. I write these words towards the end of the winter week of my spreadout sabbatical in Jerusalem. This year has been a challenging and deeply troubling one in the Jewish state. While security measures and circumstances have brought about a blessed and hopefully long-lasting reduction in terrorist attacks, internal Israeli issues and Jewish extremism have roared to the fore. From the massive social protest movements last summer (that made front-page headlines here for many weeks before they broke through for any coverage by the American press), to desecration of mosques and even attacks on IDF soldiers by extremist West Bank settlers waging a private war called “price tag,” to the combined exultation and anguish over the return of Gilad Shalit and the high cost it took to seal that deal, we are a long way, today, from the easy pride and idealized vision of what was in any event a probably mythical past. At the same time, a slew of seemingly anti-democratic legislation has come before (but not passed!) the Knesset, seeking to limit the rights of NGOs, minorities, the media, and anyone who would dare speak out against governmental policy. Into all this now comes the painful—shameful—issue of gender segregation and oppression of women in Israel. At least, that’s what I thought the terrible images coming from a place called Bet Shemesh were about. It turns out that even these images are more complicated than I could have imagined. For those not following this news closely, some background. Over the past several months, long-simmering issues regarding the role of women in Israeli society have been covered in the press as never before. Charedi (ultra-Orthodox) communities have instituted gendersegregated (public) buses, and, while the Supreme Court has insisted that using such buses is legal only if totally voluntary, there have been many reported cases of vicious verbal and even physical assaults by Charedi men on women who would not move to the back of the bus (can you believe you are reading such words?). A Charedi neighborhood in Jerusalem attempted to divide a public street in half during Sukkot, mandating that women walk on only one side. A minister of the government giving an award to a female physician refused to attend the ceremony unless the awardee agreed not to speak, lest he be forced to hear a woman’s voice. (In the end, the awardee herself refused to attend.) Charedi and even National Religious (a group comparable to the term “modern Orthodox” in North America) soldiers have demanded to be excused from cultural events, otherwise mandatory for their units, at which women would sing. Last week, while I was here, a woman working her job for the government putting up signs and distributing information was attacked in a Charedi neighborhood just for being there. And in a city called Bet Shemesh, in an incident that was caught on camera and then went viral on YouTube, an eight-yearold, modestly dressed Orthodox girl named Na’ama Margolese was repeatedly attacked on her short walk to school, called a prostitute and a non-Jew and many other unprintable names ostensibly because she dressed a little differently than the extremist ultra-Orthodox (although, as I said, it turns out this particular incident is more complicated than it seems). She is traumatized and for a while was afraid of any Charedi Jew. No, this isn’t Iran or Saudi Arabia, and it is important to remember how many wacky proposals and disturbing ideas are put out there in our own country. The voices of extremists are heard everywhere, but they do not represent the whole picture and should not be allowed to do so. But a community of decency and progressive values will remain that way only if extremism is met with a vigorous response—with information, education, and engagement, not by anger, alienation, or absence. My cohort of rabbis at the Shalom Hartman Institute returned yesterday from an educational encounter in Bet Shemesh. We met with a woman who is active at the National Religious Orthodox school that Na’ama Margolese attends, with a modern Orthodox man who is working for inner-neighborhood civility, and with a Charedi woman working towards the same end. We met with Na’ama Margolese’s mother and with a Charedi rabbi from the extremist Toldot Aharon sect, who sounded slick and friendly and who said that everyone would get along with one simple solution: that the modern Orthodox school move somewhere else. And, it turns out, that is the point. This incident of harassment is as much a turf war as it is about “modesty” or the role of women. It is a clash of neighborhood lines, where an expanding Charedi community does not want to be anywhere near the National Religious community, whose lifestyle is even more threatening to their isolated way of life than that of secular Jews… because their children could envision becoming modern Orthodox, whereas the secular world is simply beyond their imagination. And it turns out that much of the extremist reaction in many of the incidents here is a result of real fear… fear of the encroaching modern world, of Charedi women going to college in increasing numbers as a result of poverty flowing from large families headed by men who avoid paid work in favor of full-time Torah study, fear of the wall of isolation crumbling as information, technology and circumstance make preserving an ancient way of life increasingly difficult. I am filled with admiration for the mainstream Orthodox families under fire in their very homes, where signs appear telling them to dress even more discretely or watch television where it can not be seen out of the window. They live under real threat. But I am also fascinated by the fact—and the way—that the mainstream Orthodox are fighting back, using Facebook as an organizing tool (in one instance, to rally a flash mob of dancing women in the main square of Bet Shemesh—you can see the video of that event continued on page 5 Page 3 From the Cantor Message from Cantor Lisa L. Levine Dear Friends, I am writing this article on a cold, sunny winter day. The promise of spring is reflected only in the seed catalogues that are beginning to arrive at our home. But by the time you are reading these words, the crocuses will be popping through the soil and Purim and Passover will be upon us. So much is happening this spring at Temple Shalom that I can hardly keep up with it all! First and foremost is The Gershwin Songbook and Rhapsody In Blue on Sunday March 18th at 4 PM. If you already became a sponsor or purchased your tickets, then they will be waiting for you at the door. If you haven’t done so, please put the date on your calendar and plan on attending. Bring your family because they will love the music. You may not know that our accompanist, Andrew Stewart, is an accomplished Broadway and concert pianist and, along with Paul Carroll, will play a four-handed rendition of one of Gershwin’s most famous compositions. It will be a lovely spring afternoon program followed by wine and cheese. Also on tap for spring is our Purim Shpiel, written by Josh Milton and performed by Temple Shalom staff and friends: “My Fair Esther” on Wednesday, March 7th at 7 PM. This hilarious program is also a family affair, so make sure to dress up in costume. Because I feel strongly that our young people be exposed to the best and brightest, the end-of-the-school-year concert has now become a tradition. This year it will feature Jewish music superstar Sam Glazer on Sunday, May 20th at 11 AM. Sam plays piano and is a one-man dynamo. The concert will be followed by our highly anticipated and beloved Brotherhood picnic! Finally, mark your calendars for the one and only Julie Silver, Artist-in-Residence Weekend, Friday and Saturday, June 1st and 2nd. The concert weekend is sponsored by the Bederson/Druin Family. Julie is the premier singer/songwriter/spiritualist of the Reform Movement, and her music and spirit will fill you with inspiration. She will work with our choirs to present a program on Friday and then give a home concert Saturday night. Watch the Shofar and emails for more details! Just as I’m planting seeds in my garden, so too are we continually planting seeds of identity and connection to our temple family and Am Yisrael through song and prayer. May all the seeds we sow be nurtured and watered by our dedication and love for our children and support of our Mishkan, our holy place! Artist Weekend With: Singer/Songwriter Julie Silver Friday, June 1st 7:30 PM Temple Shalom FREE Saturday June 2nd 7:30 PM House Concert at the home of the Bederson/Druin Family (Proceeds to benefit the Temple Shalom Music Fund) Tickets: $36 for Adults $18 for Kids Light buffet throughout. (FREE Shuttle to run from Temple Shalom) Yours in song, Cantor Lisa P.S. My heartfelt thanks for the outpouring of cards, emails, calls and donations in memory of my brother, Danny Lipco. Your support has given me and my family great comfort. Dana Bederson joins Cantor Levine at the dedication of the Debbie Friedman School of Sacred Music in New York City on December 7, 2011. Page 4 From the Rabbi (cont.) • High Holy Day Schedule from page 3 Everybody Must Get Stoned (continued) on You Tube)… and I note that the moderate/modern Orthodox community of Bet Shemesh consists very largely of Anglo immigrants. These Jews from English-speaking countries are drawing a line in the sand, bringing values they learned in democratic and progressive countries to stand firm, to not run away, to fight for their homes and their lives. Extremism in any form calls for a response. We are at the moment locked in a global struggle against all kinds of extremism. One of the gifts of our own country to the rest of the world is the possibility and promise that different kinds of people really can learn to live together. It may have taken us a long time to learn this here, there may be a long way to go (some of the stories our Emeritus Rabbi, Bruce Kahn, tells from his work at the Equal Rights Center are certainly shocking), and we must assert constant vigilance to make sure we do not slip back to where we once were. But I am proud that, in part, American values and American-style activism are being deployed now to make Israel live up to what it should be. The outcome of this struggle is neither pre-determined nor clear. What Israel needs now is…you. To learn, to come, to care…and not to run away. Sometimes we face a moment—a person making an ethnic slur, telling an inappropriate joke, engaging in offensive behavior—and we know we have to act. So. OK. That is the world in which we find ourselves. Let’s roll up our sleeves. Let’s make it better. Michael L. Feshbach Rabbi Help Build our Website! To help complete a new Temple Shalom facilities website page, we are seeking photos of our Social Hall and Chapel decorated for Bar and Bat Mitzvahs and other celebratory events. Please snap a few pix of your decorated party or reception space before the crowd arrives, then send your digital photos as e-mail attachments to Cheryl in the admin office at cmcgowan@templeshalom.net. Or drop off prints in the Temple office. They’ll be returned A NEW SHAPE FOR THE NEW YEAR Restructuring High Holy Day Services at Temple Shalom Friends: The Gregorian New Year is recently behind us, and the Jewish new year and the fall High Holy Days will be here before we know it. Responding to trends of recent years and with the desire to come together as a single community, after consultation with the Board of Trustees and exploration with other constituencies in the congregation, we are announcing a major change in the structure of High Holy Day services at Temple Shalom, at least for the coming year. In essence and with some exceptions, we are moving away from “double” sequential services, and towards a single service for most of the High Holy Days. Practically speaking, there will be no more “early” and “late” tickets, and the major services will begin at what most of us consider a much more reasonable time: 8 PM for the evening services and 10 AM for the morning services. We will continue to offer two differently styled services on Erev Rosh Hashanah, and we will continue with the very successful simultaneous downstairs Youth Service during the morning services on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. We also will continue our long-standing tradition of opening afternoon family services to the community. While some details have yet to be worked out, and there are, of course, both anticipated and unexpected implications to any major change, here is a schedule outline for the coming Days of Awe: High Holy Day Schedule 2012 (5773) Selichot Saturday, September 8, 2012 Coffeehouse: Gerard Edery, 8–10 PM Havdalah and Selichot Service, 10–11 PM Erev Rosh Hashanah Sunday, September 16, 2012 Community Family-Style Service, 6:15 PM Erev Rosh Hashanah Service, 8 PM Rosh Hashanah Monday, September 17, 2012 Rosh Hashanah Morning Service, 10 AM–12:30 PM Rosh Hashanah Children’s [and possibly Teen] Services and Activities, 10 AM–12 NOON Rosh Hashanah Community Family Service, 2–3 PM Tashlich, 3– 4 PM Second Day Rosh Hashanah Tuesday, September 18, 2012 Second Day RH Morning Service, 10 AM – 12 NOON Erev Yom Kippur/Kol Nidrei Tuesday, September 25, 2012 Erev Yom Kippur/Kol Nidrei Service, 8–10 PM Yom Kippur Wednesday, September 26, 2012 Yom Kippur Morning Service, 10 AM–12:30 PM Yom Kippur Children’s [and possibly Teen] Services and Activities, 10 AM–12 NOON Guided and/or Individual Study and Meditation, 1–2 PM Yom Kippur Community Family Service, 2–3 PM Yom Kippur Afternoon Opportunities for Adults, 2–3:30 PM Healing Service, 3:30–4 PM Yom Kippur Afternoon Mincha Service, Yizkor Memorial and Ne’ilah Concluding Service, 4:30–7 PM Mini Break-Fast, 7 PM And, just for your advance information, the dates of the other fall holidays, with service details to follow: Erev Sukkot Sunday, September 30, 2012 Sukkot Monday, October 1, 2012 Erev Simchat Torah (Reform) Sunday, October 7, 2012 Simchat Torah/Shmini Atzeret Monday, October 8, 2012 Page 5 From the Religious School URJ Biennial Rabbi Rachel Ackerman Director of Education I still remember my first weekend at a North American Federation for Temple Youth (NFTY) event. That’s probably because it was last September! I was not a NFTY kid growing up, although I was involved with my synagogue youth group. Going to the NFTY leadership training retreat in September opened my eyes to the power of teen leadership. Between what I observed and conversations with the TaSTY (Temple Shalom Temple Youth) board, I have learned: 1. Teens crave ritual. Everything about NFTY events is ritualized, from what happens during meals, to the hand motions during birkat hamazon (grace after meals). From the shtick incorporated into services, to the cheers they shout. I have learned from our TaSTY board members that services can actually be fun! 2. Teens take leadership seriously. All NFTY programs are planned by, led by, and taught by teens. They consult youth advisors, clergy, education directors, and other adults, but ultimately the transmission of Jewish tradition is from peer to peer, not from adult to child. They make Torah (study), avodah (worship), and gimilut chasadim (acts of loving kindness) a priority. Youth group is powerful because it’s teens learning from and teaching one another. As one of our teens said, “You get to do fun stuff that your board plans for you. People [our own] age pick stuff so it’s more fun than if an elderly person like a Page 6 rabbi picks stuff.” We “elderly” folks appreciate this leadership model. 3. Youth need a space to call their own. The power of youth group is the opportunity to manage life’s ups and downs with the support of adults, but driven by youth in their own way in their own time in their own space. In the larger world, youth answer to adults 90% of the time. As part of youth group, they answer to one another. 4. Youth group creates a safe environment of universal acceptance. Similar to the effect of Jewish camping, youth group provides an atmosphere where “coolness” and “geekiness” are redefined, where ability and disability are both embraced and supported, where the silos of cafeteria cliques are broken down and everyone has an opportunity to engage in a dramatically different way than they do inside the walls of school. Youth group also provides an opportunity to express one’s insecurities and fears in a place free of judgment. Our teens note the brit kehillah (covenant of community) that they sign and read at every event. 5. Youth group makes our Jewish institutions fun places to be and expands the reach of Judaism. As one of our board members said about Temple Shalom, “[Youth group] makes coming here so much more enjoyable.” Also, while an incredible amount of learning goes on, the social aspect is significant. One teen noted, “You’re not just going to the Temple to do work.” Furthermore, it encourages youth to realize that Judaism exists and can be practiced beyond the synagogue walls. One teen notes, “If your Jewish life is only at the Temple, it will get boring. NFTY enhances what being a Jewish teen means.” A wealth of opportunity exists for our 7th12th graders to engage with youth groups on a synagogue, regional, and even national level. For those who have loved our religious Shabbatonim and retreats, NFTY gives an photo by Benjamin Feshbach A universal “Yes” resounded from several thousand URJ Biennial participants in support of the Campaign for Youth Engagement. The Reform Movement has affirmed as a community that youth, as the bearers of Jewish tradition, need to be our priority as a national movement and as individual synagogue communities. What this looks like is individual to each community, but certain elements contribute to deep Jewish connections and formative Jewish experiences: Jewish camp, teen trips to Israel, friends from religious school, and youth group engagement. Temple Shalom’s own Stephen Sacks addresses the Biennial as its new Board chair opportunity to experience more of these in a youth-driven setting. For those who may not have entire weekends to devote to NFTY, TaSTY offers numerous social, social action, religious and cultural events throughout the year, from laser tag to cooking for local food pantries. Within these informal educational settings, lifelong Jewish friendships are built, Jewish learning is acquired, and what is learned inside the classroom is reinforced in the “real” world. Our youth learn and understand that being Jewish goes far beyond book learning, services, and Shabbat dinner. I’d like to put forth a challenge that every one of our 7th–12th graders attend at least four youth group events during the course of each year—at least one of which is TaSTY and at least one of which is a regional NFTY event—whether a Shabbat service, an evening out eating pizza and playing ping pong, or a weekend-long retreat. These experiences will form and shape our 7th–12th graders. (If cost is an issue, please do not hesitate to contact the religious school office or the clergy.) At the URJ Biennial, we unanimously supported the Campaign for Youth Engagement. Now it is upon us to ensure that our youth have opportunities to be engaged. Rabbi Rachel Ackerman Director Religious Education From the President • 2012 Religious Activities • Israel 2012! FROM THE PRESIDENT What a wonderful experience it was to attend the Union for Reform Judaism Biennial in December. Approximately 100 Temple Shalom volunteers assisted guests in the various venues and throughout the convention center. Their consistent presence sure made our Temple shine. My thanks to all the volunteers who gave of their time. Many of us stood on line for hours to get into the venue and listen to President Obama. It was an amazing experience to see the President and listen to a very dynamic speech. Our new Union for Reform Judaism president, Rabbi Jacobs, gave a great motivational speech regarding youth engagement. It is Rabbi Jacobs’s hope that our young people will continue on past Confirmation. Approximately 80 percent have no affiliation with their Temple after Confirmation. It is incumbent upon us to encourage our children and grandchildren to continue their Jewish education and identity. One of our Temple’s most attended services of the year is the annual Martin Luther King Shabbat. Many thanks to Cantor Levine and all the voices of our choirs and the music of the Ruach Bands. How wonderful it is to see the warmth and friendship that transpires each Shabbat with congregants greeting each other, sharing the meaning of Shabbat and engaging in conversation at the Oneg. How fortunate we are at Temple Shalom to have such a wonderful senior staff who consistently provide us with warmth and spiritual guidance each Shabbat. Our Shabbat worship has many variations and, if you are not a regular attendee at services, check the weekly email for information on services Friday night. This Shofar covers a period including Passover, so I would like to wish all a wonderful Pesach. Myles R. Levin President 2012 Religious School Activities Friday, Feb. 24 Grade 6 Shabbat La’Nefesh Sunday, Feb. 26 Grade 1 Jewish Family Education-Synagogue Friday, March 2 Grades 2 & 3 Lead the Shabbat Family Service Sunday, March 4 Purim Carvival 9:30 AM–12:30 PM Friday, March 9–Sunday, March 11 Grades 8 & 9 Retreat Sunday, March 11 Grade 7 Jewish Family Education-Holocaust Museum Trip Friday, March 23 Grade 10 Leads the Shabbat Family Service Sunday, March 25 Grade 4 Jewish Family Education-Weddings Sunday,April 1–Monday,April 9 NO SCHOOL-Spring Break Friday,April 13–Sunday,April 15 Grade 10 Retreat Saturday, May 20 Sam Glaser in Concert Page 7 Funraiser • Renaissance Group • Bookclub SAVE THE DATE TEMPLE SHALOM GALA “FUNRAISER” SATURDAY MAY 12, 2012 7 PM Put it on your calendar, enter it into Outlook, tell your cell phone, write it on the back of your hand, but please—do whatever that you have to do—to SAVE THE DATE because you will not want to miss the annual Temple Shalom Gala “Funraiser” to be held on SATURDAY, MAY 12 AT 7 PM. Plans are being made for an evening of music and dancing, food and drink, and fun-filled auctions and raffles. (Why? To raise some muchneeded gelt for our synagogue!) If you have Nationals box seats, a beach house rental, or some schmattas that someone would love to buy, please contact Seth Maiman, Fundraiser Chair, at sethemaiman@aol.com about donating items for the silent auction. See you May 12 Bring your dancing shoes ... and your credit cards! Page 2012 Book Club Selections & Discussion Dates Temple Shalom Book Club usual meeting time will be 9:15 AM to 10:45 AM, except the last day, May 20, 2012, when we meet from 10–11:30 AM during the Unisession. Sunday, March 25, 2012 Safe Passage by Ida Cook: The true story of two young women who were interested in coming to America to see great opera stars perform and who ended up rescuing refugees from Europe at the start of the Holocaust. They were recognized by Yad Vashem as Righteous Among Nations. Sunday, May 20, 2012 Septembers of Shiraz by Dalia Sofer: An exploration of the lives of Jews in other places, this novel depicts a wealthy father who is separated from his Jewish family in Iran shortly after the revolution. His wife and daughter struggle to survive while searching for him, and his son struggles to make it in Brooklyn. It raises philosophical questions including those of allegiance to country vs. religion and the role of masters vs. servants. Brotherhood • Women’s Seder MESSAGE FROM BROTHERHOOD Brotherhood ended 2011 with a couple of enjoyable events. On Sunday, December 18, as part of the Religious School’s Hanukah celebration, we hosted the 4th through 7th grades in a demonstration on how to fry The Brotherhood held its first Latke Fry on December 18, 2011. Students in the 4th through 7th grades grated potatoes, chopped onions, beat eggs, and mixed potato pancake batter. Special thanks to the day’s volunteers: Maurice Axelrad, Bernie Blumenthal, Bob Goodman, Bonnie Green, Lynn Kanowith, Dan Lahn, Seth Maiman, Jeffrey Steger, and Peter Wolk latkes. The students in each class rotated through three stations where they scrubbed and grated potatoes, peeled and sliced onions, mixed in eggs, salt and flour, delivered their mixture to the kitchen for frying, and received a pre-warmed latke with sour cream and apple sauce. It was a great success enjoyed by all with but a single casualty: one cut finger. Then on Saturday, December 24, with Renaissance and Sisterhood, we co-sponsored the annual dinner and movie night, when a large crowd enjoyed a traditional Chinese meal and an Israeli movie. even order wines in advance of pick-up by contacting Harvey Berger at 301-680-0052. Finally, please save the dates for these Brotherhood events later in the year: Our 2012 program began with our February 5 brunch, when our own Dr. Eric Cline presented a fascinating talk on “Recent Archeological Discoveries at Megiddo and Tel Kabri in Israel.” Our next event was something new—a Family Bowling Evening on February 26 at the Gaithersburg Bowl America, followed a few weeks later by the Brotherhood Shabbat dinner and service on Friday, March 16. More about these diverse and entertaining activities in the next Shofar! • April 15, Sunday Brunch featuring political commentator Mark Plotkin Look forward to our annual sale of fine wines for Passover, which will be held at the Temple on March 18, 25 and 28. You can And remember, everyone is welcome to attend our meetings the first Wednesday of each month, with a deli meal at 6:30 PM followed by a brief business meeting. Please join us and bring your fresh ideas and suggestions. Maurice Axelrad, Brotherhood President • May 6, our annual pre-Mother’s Day Brunch featuring Natasha Barrett, host of “Let’s Talk Live” on NewsChannel 8 and reporter for WJLA-TV • May 9, our expanded co-ed Poker/Game Night • May 20, our annual picnic Rabbi Feshbach speaks on “Israel in our Hearts and Mind: What Does Israel Mean to Us?” at the Temple Brotherhood’s first Sunday brunch of the new Jewish year on November 13, 2011. Page Adult Education • Beit Din Beit Din Completes Winter Clothing Drive One of the leading historians of Reform Judaism is coming to Temple Shalom Being a Jew in Nazi Germany: Nazi Oppression and the Jewish Response Temple Shalom 7:30 – 9 pm Speaker: HUC-JIR Professor Dr. Michael Meyer How did the Jews of Germany respond to the rise of Hitler, which put an end to their dreams of political equality in a liberal state and cultural integration into a civilized society? This lecture will deal with the radically changed circumstances and the remarkable moral resistance that rabbis and laity displayed in the face of ever increasing oppression. Michael A. Meyer was born in Berlin and grew up in Los Angeles, where he received his B.A. (with highest honors) from UCLA. His doctorate is from Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. Program supported by Gary and Bernice Lebbin as part of a series on German-Jewish Cultural Heritage Co-sponsored by the Foundation for Jewish Studies. photos by Leslie Rubin Thursday, March 29, 2012 by Beit Din members As you can see in the above picture, we had a great response to our winter clothing drive! We really appreciate your donations!!! The purpose of the clothing drive was to help local kids in need of warm clothing for the winter. It was important to do this so that those children who received the clothing will know that others thought about them and their situation. Tzedakah—the obligation to help those who need help Some of the Jewish values that were demonstrated through this collection are: We hope you will donate to our drives in the future. Gemilut chasadim—acts of loving kindness V’ahavta l’reyecha kamocha—Love your neighbor as yourself “Whoever saves a single soul…, it is as if that person had saved a complete world”—Talmud, Sanhedrin 37a Tikkun Olam—repair of the world Thanks to everyone who contributed so generously to the Beit Din winter clothing drive! Page 1 TIKKUN OLAM Eighteenth Annual Mitzvah Day More than 220 members of the Temple Shalom family gathered for the 18th annual Mitzvah Day on Sunday, November 6. After breakfast and a dvar torah with Rabbi Feshbach, participants headed off to perform tikkun olam in our community and at the Temple. Norma and Steve Fenves did yeoman’s work once again, mostly behind the scenes, organizing the brunch and many other Mitzvah Day logistics. Thank you to Sarah Leavitt for setting up the online registration process and to the rest of the steering committee for their countless hours planning and organizing all aspects of Mitzvah Day: Jean Carlson, Cliff Schwartz, Diane Cline, Tami Mark, Linda Gurevich and Laura Fenves. In addition, thank you to Rabbi Feshbach for providing inspiration. Temple staff Susan Zemsky and Cheryl McGowan were also 100% supportive and helpful. TSY and Ruach Teen Choirs with Cantor Lisa at Brighton Gardens Mitzvah Day benefited from a group of energetic and passionate Team Leaders as well: Tami Mark (Brookside Gardens), Sandra Roland and Richard Udell (Jones Mill Creek Bed Cleanup), Sarah Posner and Jenny Brilliant (Martha’s Table),Jennifer Goodman and Katherine Freedman (A Wider Circle), Juliet Mellow and Barry Molar (Star Gazing Farm), Debbie Duel and Margo Gottesman (Washington Animal Rescue League), Robin Koralek and Sharon Bisk (Project LINUS), Virginia Kling and Maddy Wilks (Thoughtful Treasures), Diane Cline (Operation Welcome Home), Betsy Kingery (Bikes for the World); Mike Gurevich (Temple Maintenance) and Linda Gurevich (Library Cleanup). Check out the Temple website to see the Mitzvah Day slideshow! —Janice Pliner Mitzvah Day yielded a trunkload of casseroles for S.O.M.E. Page 1 IN MEMORIAM NEWL Y ESTABLISHED PERPETUAL MEMORIALS E D WA R D A R T H U R BEEMAN Husband of Jean Beeman and father of Barbara, Cynthia, J u di a n d R o b e r t HAL BRUNO H u s b a n d o f M a rg a r e t B r u no and father of Harold and D a n n y B r un o JOSEPH HENRY CARO F a t h e r o f S h e l l e y, E d it h and Len Caro “They rest from their labors, and their good works do follow them…” Page 12 COMMITTEE CHAIRS Adult Education Steve Hirschfeld ARZA Joan Kalin B’nai Mitzvah Rita Klein Brotherhood Maurice Axelrad Lynn Kanowith Capital Projects Mark Ross Cemetery TBD Chavurah Rick Meyers College Outreach Communications Finance Barbara Shulman TBD Marc Feinberg Kenneth Kramer Founders Jean Beeman Historian/Parliamentarian Sandra Kamisar House/Grounds Mike Gurevich JCC Delegate Joan Kalin Leadership Anne Feinberg Legal Counsel Marc Feinberg Membership Leslie Rubin Linda Aldoory Mitzvah Corps Music Nominating Outreach Religious Education Renaissance Sisterhood Wilma Braun Lori Weinstein Betsy Kingery TBD Jeffrey Steger Lynn Kanowith Karen Safer Linda Gurevich Special Funds Harvey Berger Tikkun Olam Josh Silver Worship Marty Shargel Youth Bonnie Green Page 13 Temple Shalom www.templeshalom.net Phone: 301–587–2273 • Fax: 301–588–9368 8401 Grubb Road • Chevy Chase, MD 20815 Clergy & Staff Senior Rabbi Michael L. Feshbach Cantor Lisa L. Levine Rabbi Rachel Ackerman, Director of Education Susan Goutos Zemsky, Executive Director Rabbi Emeritus Bruce E. Kahn Cantor Emeritus Saul Rogolsky Cheryl McGowan, Executive Assistant Kristin Lake, Clergy Assistant Lois Simpson, Bookkeeper Jossie Lerner, Office Assistant Board ofTrustees Executive Committee Myles Levin, President Harvey Berger, Exec.Vice President Allison Druin,Vice President Caryn Anthony,Vice President Margo Gottesman,Vice President Mark Ross,Treasurer Robert Krauss, Financial Secretary Marilyn Ripin, Secretary Lynn Kanowith, Financial Secretary (in training) Trustees Jordin Cohen, Steve Hirschfeld, Royal Hutchinson, Rita Klein, Kenneth Kramer, Peg MacKnight, Seth Maiman, Barbara Miller, Michael Richards, Leslie Rubin, Marty Shargel, Jeffrey Steger, Richard Udell, Stefanie Weldon, Richard Weitzner Voting Auxiliary Members Elizabeth Kingery, Immediate Past President; Maurice Axelrad and Lynn Kanowith, Brotherhood CoPresidents; Zach Kushner & Ben Feshbach, TaSTY; Karen Safer and Linda Gurevich, Sisterhood CoPresidents; Andrea Mark, Member at Large Auxiliary Members Ex Officio (NonVoting) Rabbi Michael Feshbach Cantor Lisa Levine Rabbi Rachel Ackerman, Director of Education Susan Goutos Zemsky, Executive Director Sandy Kamisar, URJ Board Member Stephen Sacks, URJ Counsel Jean Beeman, Founder’s Representative Marc Feinberg,Temple Counsel