year-old Dini felt warmth that her youth could not yet defin
Transcription
year-old Dini felt warmth that her youth could not yet defin
A s the flickering light of Sha.bbat candles danced around her, six- year-old Dini felt warmth that her youth could not yet define. As she took the challah cover and draped it about her shoulders, the child recited Birkat Hamazon, Grace After Meals, and knew only that it felt right. Her family knew these were not the actions of an ordinary girl. Dini was born in Montreal in 1968 to an observant family whose patriarch, her grandfather, was an Orthodox Rabbi. He is described through Dini's now adult eyes as "courageous and unafraid to promote ideas that may have been different." Dini - better known today in Bergen County as Rabbi Adina Lewittesdrank in the example set by her grandfather, and developed a hunger "to learn II 10 L:CHAIM FALL 2013 and understand more." Soon, however, she found herself "pushing the boundaries of the Orthodox community," and set about finding an observant Jewish life that "invited vigorous, open-minded intellectualism." She found sanctuary in the Conservative movement, and read from the Torah for the first time at age 19. Supported by her immediate family, Lewittes' more distant relatives found her peregrination away from orthodoxy difficult to understand. At age 20, Lewittes enrolled at the Jewish Theological Seminary in Manhattan, and was ordained, in 1993 at age 25, as a Conservative cleric. She later returned to the school to serve as its first female Assistant Dean. Just as the flame of the Shabbat candles of her youth had ignited something in her, Lewittes remained aglow with what she describes as a "need to serve on the ground; to join the front lines of creating a living Jewish dynamic." She founded Kol Haneshamah in Englewood in 1997, which, while affiliated with the Conservative movement, was a unique model. Lewittes describes it as akin to the offspring of a Chavurah and an organized, institutional synagogue. Lewittes left that congregation in 2002 to plant the seeds, which would grow over the ensuing decade, into Sha'ar Communities. Sha'ar Communities is not a brick and mortar congregation. Rather, it is a network of small, suburban groups, which Lewittes calls "Gates," through which individuals may experience Jewish life and its connections. Dina and son Aaron Lewittes Tannenbaum "We live in an age where synagogues are losing members; where people are opting out of traditional legacy institutions and where the vast majority of Jews don't have a formal affiliation of any kind,'; Lewittes said. "In fact, the largest segment across all religions is the 'nones'; those who hunger for spiritual connections, but are finding them outside the doors of religious edifices," she added. Lewittes believes that in today's day and age, innovative portals into Jewish life are not only relevant, but vital to building lasting identity and fellowship. As such, Sha'ar Communities presents six Gates, each a self-standing aspect of Jewish engagement, which include prayer, study, discovery, youth education, social action and wholeness and healing. Each Gate is intended to provide its own sufficiency and to create a framework within which individuals may approach Judaism in a manner that most authentically speaks to them. The Gate of Discovery, for instance, exposes members to Jewish leaming through international travel. Participants Iearn what it is like to live as a Jew all over the world, as they explore foreign countries and cultures. "As we meet and learn about others, we learn more about ourselves," Lewittes reflected. The Gate of Prayer offers "warmth and intimacy through guided learning," as members gather in one another's homes, led by Lewittes. "Our informality does not equate to casualness," the Rabbi clarified. And, Sha'ar Communities' youth education program, referred to as the Gate of Tomorrow, seeks to show children the largeness of Judaism. IIOur informality does not equate to casualness." The program includes encounters with dynamic Jews, including, business, entertainment, sports figures, who share their life experiences with the students. For those who desire "more than facts and figures," the Gate of Study provides a framework for analysis, interpretation and introspection. Lewittes acknowledges that some may dismiss the novelty of Sha'ar Communities' approach, but, she is steadfast in her belief that today's world is all about access and harnessing "the possibilities of inter-connectedness and shifting trends in the 21st Century." She is also assured of the "potential of Judaism to transform lives and heal a world in need." "I know we have touched and changed people's lives." • FALL 2013 I:CHAlM 11