Shofar - September 2011 - Elul 5771/Tishri 5772

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Shofar Elul 5771/Tishri 5772 Jewish Family Congregation September 2011 www.jewishfamilycongregation.org From the Rabbi’s Desk page 1 Service Schedule page 2 High Holy Day Appeal page 3 September Oneg Hosts page 3 Kids Ask the Rabbi page 5 Support-A-Walk page 5 JiFTY page 7 Religious School Notices pages8,20 The Religious School page 9 Yahrzeit/Annivs/Birthdays page 11 JFC Classified page 12 Early Childhood Center page 13 Eisner Camp pix page 14 Social Action Committee page 17 Ask the Rabbi page 21 Donations Form page 26 JFC Calendar page 27 From the Rabbi’s Desk Please Support Our Advertisers I have always thought it very appropriate that we begin the Jewish new year in the fall, at the same time that the school year begins anew, and so do many other program years, like the symphony, opera, ballet and certain sports calendars. This year, as we prepare to welcome 5772, at JFC we are shaking things up a bit. In an effort to offer activities and events that may be of interest to targeted subsets of the congregation, we are introducing several new things to our Shabbat calendar. Gone are the days when all Shabbat services started at 7:30 pm! You will not find any of the new Friday evening plans on the September or October calendars, because those two months are very busy in other ways. But thereafter...pay close attention, please. On an irregular basis, we will be holding some services at 6:30 pm, some at 7:30 pm, and some at 8:00 pm. You can decide which ones work for you. The services that will be from 6:30 to 7:15 pm are tar- geted at young families. There will be no meal involved, but a kid-friendly Oneg Shabbat will follow the service. We plan a service of singing, prayers and story-telling. There will not be a later service that evening. Sometimes the service will be at 8:00 pm, to appeal to those who get home late from work, perhaps. In order to build community, we will start those evenings with a pot- luck dinner at 6:30 pm…if you can make that (no sign-up required), just bring a dairy/veggie/fish dish to share with 6 people…and please...no pizza (we’ve had enough pizza dinners here!). We have scheduled a couple of “rock Shabbat” services featuring our youth members…and we are hoping that some of our adult members who play electric guitar, drums, etc., will provide an adult rock Shabbat once in the coming year. In addition, we have designated two Shabbatot as musi- cal occasions, and we look forward to the chance to learn some new or different music. We are also scheduling a couple of opportunities for con- gregants to deliver a drash (a mini-sermon on something from Torah or on a relevant Jewish subject), so please think about the ideas you’d like to share. And a few times over the year, there will be a new event on Shabbat afternoons: Lunch ‘n Learn. Over a byo bag lunch (again, dairy/veggie/fish only), we’ll discuss a topic of current interest, which will be announced in advance that week in the email broadcast. We’ll meet from 11 am till 1 pm…another way to build community and encourage thinking about matters of concern/interest to us as Jews. There will be one service this year featuring the music and style of Shabbat services at our URJ summer camps. And for fun, we are scheduling an Ashkenazi service…for those who cannot forget yisgadal v’yiskadash…and for the rest of us in a nostalgic frame of mind! The calendar also will feature a Shabbat called Worship 101, during which we will answer questions about the what/why/where/when/how of a Shabbat evening service; come prepared with questions!! All these changes are in addition to many services that will be at 7:30 pm; these include the grade services and the festival observances (Sukkot, Yom HaShoah, Yom Ha- Atzma-ut,). And services that occur the evening before a Bar/Bat Mitzvah will be at 7:30 pm as well. (Continued on page 19)

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Jewish Family Congregation Newsletter - September 2011 - Elul 5771/Tishri 5772

Transcript of Shofar - September 2011 - Elul 5771/Tishri 5772

Page 1: Shofar - September 2011 - Elul 5771/Tishri 5772

Shofar Elul 5771/Tishri 5772 Jewish Family Congregation September 2011

www.jewishfamilycongregation.org

From the Rabbi’s Desk page 1 Service Schedule page 2 High Holy Day Appeal page 3 September Oneg Hosts page 3 Kids Ask the Rabbi page 5 Support-A-Walk page 5 JiFTY page 7 Religious School Notices pages 8,20 The Religious School page 9

Yahrzeit/Annivs/Birthdays page 11 JFC Classified page 12 Early Childhood Center page 13 Eisner Camp pix page 14 Social Action Committee page 17 Ask the Rabbi page 21 Donations Form page 26 JFC Calendar page 27

From the Rabbi’s Desk

Please Support Our Advertisers

I have always thought it very appropriate that we begin the Jewish new year in the fall, at the same time that the school year begins anew, and so do many other program years, like the symphony, opera, ballet and certain sports calendars.

This year, as we prepare to welcome 5772, at JFC we are shaking things up a bit. In an effort to offer activities and events that may be of interest to targeted subsets of the congregation, we are introducing several new things to our Shabbat calendar.

Gone are the days when all Shabbat services started at 7:30 pm!

You will not find any of the new Friday evening plans on the September or October calendars, because those two months are very busy in other ways. But thereafter...pay close attention, please.

On an irregular basis, we will be holding some services at 6:30 pm, some at 7:30 pm, and some at 8:00 pm. You can decide which ones work for you.

The services that will be from 6:30 to 7:15 pm are tar-geted at young families. There will be no meal involved, but a kid-friendly Oneg Shabbat will follow the service. We plan a service of singing, prayers and story-telling. There will not be a later service that evening.

Sometimes the service will be at 8:00 pm, to appeal to those who get home late from work, perhaps. In order to build community, we will start those evenings with a pot-luck dinner at 6:30 pm…if you can make that (no sign-up required), just bring a dairy/veggie/fish dish to share with 6 people…and please...no pizza (we’ve had enough pizza dinners here!).

We have scheduled a couple of “rock Shabbat” services featuring our youth members…and we are hoping that some of our adult members who play electric guitar, drums, etc., will provide an adult rock Shabbat once in the coming year.

In addition, we have designated two Shabbatot as musi-cal occasions, and we look forward to the chance to learn some new or different music.

We are also scheduling a couple of opportunities for con-gregants to deliver a drash (a mini-sermon on something from Torah or on a relevant Jewish subject), so please think about the ideas you’d like to share.

And a few times over the year, there will be a new event on Shabbat afternoons: Lunch ‘n Learn. Over a byo bag lunch (again, dairy/veggie/fish only), we’ll discuss a topic of current interest, which will be announced in advance that week in the email broadcast. We’ll meet from 11 am till 1 pm…another way to build community and encourage thinking about matters of concern/interest to us as Jews.

There will be one service this year featuring the music and style of Shabbat services at our URJ summer camps.

And for fun, we are scheduling an Ashkenazi service…for those who cannot forget yisgadal v’yiskadash…and for the rest of us in a nostalgic frame of mind!

The calendar also will feature a Shabbat called Worship 101, during which we will answer questions about the what/why/where/when/how of a Shabbat evening service; come prepared with questions!!

All these changes are in addition to many services that will be at 7:30 pm; these include the grade services and the festival observances (Sukkot, Yom HaShoah, Yom Ha-Atzma-ut,). And services that occur the evening before a Bar/Bat Mitzvah will be at 7:30 pm as well.

So, as you can see, we are going to have a busy and in-teresting year in 5772. But these new additions to our cal-endar will only be meaningful if you take advantage of them. When you check out our congregational calendar on the JFC website (www.jewishfamilycongregation.org), you can search through the months and pick out the dates that will be of special interest to you…and plan to join us for them.

(Continued on page 19)

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Page 2 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar September 2011

SEPTEMBER

Friday, Sept 2/ Elul 4 7:30 pm Parshat Shoftim Saturday, Sept 3 10:00 am Bat Mitzvah of Samantha Shulman

Friday, Sept 9/ Elul 11 7:30 pm Parshat Ki Tetzey Jennifer Ceisler chants Torah

Saturday, Sept 10 10:00 am Bat Mitzvah of Maggie Ceisler

Friday, Sept 16/ Elul 18 7:30 pm Parshat Ki Tavo Saturday, Sept 17 10:00 am Bar Mitzvah of Stephen Henshaw

Friday, Sept 23/ Elul 25 7:30 pm Parshat Nitzavim Saturday, Sept 24 10:00 am Bar Mitzvah of Alexander Wattles

Wednesday, Sept 28/Tishre 1 8:00 pm Rosh HaShanah Thursday, Sept 29 10:00 am Morning Service 10:30 am Youth Service 1:30 pm Tashlikh Service

At the home of Barbara and John Stern***

2:30 pm Family Service 8:00 pm Second Evening Service Friday, Sept 30/Tishre 2 10:00 am Morning Service 7:30 pm Shabbat Shuva

*** at 188 Smith Ridge Road…either walk with us, with police escort, or park at Stevens Memorial United Methodist Church (at Shady Lane), opposite the Sterns’ home; please bring your own bread crumbs to throw into the pond. Friday, Oct 7/ Tishre 10 8:00 pm Kol Nidre Saturday, Oct 8 10:00 am Morning Service 10:30 am Youth Service 2:00 pm Family Service 3:00 pm Healing Service

4:00 pm Yizkor and Concluding Service

SERVICE SCHEDULE

Jewish Family

Congregation 111 Smith Ridge Road

P.O. Box 249 South Salem, NY 10590 Phone: (914) 763-3028 Fax: (914) 763-3069 e-mail: [email protected]

jewishfamilycongregation.org

Rabbi

Carla Freedman [email protected]

Cantor Kerry Ben-David

[email protected]

School Director Leslie Gottlieb

[email protected] Early Childhood Center Director

Jane Emmer [email protected]

Temple Administrator Jolie Levy

[email protected]

Board Of Trustees Richard Mishkin,

President 914-764-8305;

Mark Lavin,

Vice President; Polly Schnell,

Vice President; Jeanette Sanders,

Secretary; Carrie Kane

Elise Serby Patterson Shafer Debra Verbeke

Elisa Zuckerberg and

Johanna Perlman, Past President

Shofar Editor Jolie Levy

Shofar Printer EnterMarket

CHOIR

If you would like to join the choir, or for more information, please contact Kathy Storfer

at [email protected]

We welcome all adults -- 13 or older!

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Elul 5771/Tishri 5772 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar Page 3

A High Holy Day Appeal to Support Our Fellow JFC Families by Jeff Berg and Richard Mishkin

Please find a substitute if you cannot host your assigned Oneg.

Please contact the JFC Office with

the names of the new hosts.

Please contact your Board Host if you have any questions.

SEPTEMBER ONEG HOSTS

-- ONEG HOSTS -- PLEASE REMEMBER NO MEAT GOODIES MAY BE SERVED AT ANY ONEG

BOARD HOST: Richard Mishkin (914) 764-8305

Since the inception of Jewish Family Congregation, it has been our practice to be inclusive of all types of individuals and families. This was one of our founding values. This practice extends to those who may not have the ability to pay their full membership fees in a particular year. This practice allows us to truly be a FAMILY to those congre-gants who find themselves in challenging financial circum-stances, enabling them to receive support from their con-gregation when they need it most. During the past few years we have seen an increase in these requests.

In turn, families who are granted “special arrange-ments” (i.e., partial relief from full annual membership fees) are typically some of our most active members. They become engaged in such activities as volunteering their time on social action programs, staffing fundraising events, serving as class parents, and leading communications ac-tivities for JFC. They value the helping hand that JFC pro-vides and actively give back to thank JFC for its compas-sionate support.

To insure financial equity and to provide a measure of fi-duciary financial responsibility, we ask those who are seek-ing “special arrangements” to share, confidentially, the summary pages of their federal tax return each year, with a three-person special arrangements committee. Over the past few years, this committee has authorized thousands of dollars of relief to JFC families who were not in posi-tions in a particular year to pay full dues.

If you read the annual meeting mailing sent in early June, or the special congregational mailing sent in mid-July, you will have noticed that JFC incurred a deficit last year and is budgeted to incur one again this year. This is even after the board implemented an aggressive series of budget cuts in all areas of temple operations and is planning a series of fundraising events for the coming year. Unlike our federal government, JFC cannot finance deficit spending by print-ing money (although we have had suggestions from the

Religious School that we use some of the shekels that Les-lie Gottlieb distributes to the students). This deficit (budgeted at $66,000) almost exactly matches the special arrangements relief provided to JFC families last year.

We don’t want to change our values, AND we do need to do something about our budget deficit. This is why, at Rosh Hashanah this year, we will implement a practice that has been used for decades at other synagogues throughout the United States. We will reinstitute a High Holy Day appeal, a practice JFC successfully used for a few years when we moved into our home over 15 years ago. Both current and past members of the Board of Trustees uniformly believe that this is an activity that must be em-braced at this critical time, just as it has in other congrega-tions around the country.

Rabbi Carla remembers the congregation she grew up in auctioning off aliyot for the year during the High Holy Days as a way to fund temple operations. Jeff remembers his father delivering several High Holy Day appeals to the small congregation in Connecticut where he grew up. We’re sure that many of you have similar memories.

Our appeal during Rosh Hashanah will be simple and straightforward, and hopefully as befits JFC, in line with our values. We will ask all families who are in a financial position to do so, to anonymously support part or all of another JFC family who requires special arrangements this year. We are hoping that this High Holy Day appeal, to help your fellow JFC members, will result in a substan-tial reduction in, or perhaps the elimination of, our budg-eted deficit for 2011-2012. Please listen for our appeal on the first morning of Rosh Hashanah and join with us to strengthen and support Jewish FAMILY Congregation.

9/2/2011 Sklarin, Richard & Beth B/M of Samantha Shulman

Dodes, Jeff & Cyndi

9/9/2011 Smith, Brian & Leslie B/M of Maggie Ceisler

Fisher. Michael & Alyssa

9/16/2011 Sturm, Steven & Rackear, Amy B/M of Stephen Henshaw

Berger, David & Fischer, Jennifer

9/23/2011 Portnoy, Matthew & Julie B/M of Alex Wattles

Henshaw, Donn & Plotka, Abbey

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Elul 5771/Tishri 5772 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar Page 5

Have you checked out the JFC Blog recently?

Go to www.jfc.rjblogs.org

On October 2nd, Support Connection is hold-ing their 17th Annual Support-A-Walk at FDR State Park in Yorktown Heights. Support Con-nection provides free personalized support programs for people affected by breast and ovarian cancer. The walk is held to raise breast and ovarian cancer awareness with all proceeds benefiting Support Connection's free services. The three-mile walk begins at 10 a.m. with pre-walk activities starting at 9 a.m. Debra Paget and Jeff Berg are again forming a "JFC team" to walk together - men, women, and children are all welcome! If you'd like to walk with us, please contact Debra Paget ([email protected]). If you can't attend the walk but would like to donate to this worthy cause, please go to www.firstgiving.com, enter “Jewish Family Congregation” in the search box, and the 10/2/11 Support-A-Walk will be right there! The picture below is last year’s JFC Team.

17th Annual Support-A-Walk Sunday, October 2, 2011

Registration for the

Winter/Spring 2011-2012

season of Taglit-Birthright

Israel trips with URJ Kesher

opens on September 14th,

2011 at www.gokesher.org.

URJ Kesher is a Taglit-

Birthright Israel program

provider. Learn More:

Taglit-Birthright Israel OR

contact Leslie Gottlieb

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Page 6 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar September 2011

Please Support

Our Advertisers

Jewish Family Congregation Early Childhood Center

Where Family is our middle name

WE ARE CURRENTLY REGISTERING FOR 2011-12!

Please visit our website at www.jewishfamilycongregation.org OR call (914) 763-3028

STILL AVAILABLE - IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN OBTAINING THIS GREAT OPPORTUNITY

FOR YOUR CHILD, PLEASE CONTACT THE JFC OFFICE FOR DETAILS.

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Elul 5771/Tishri 5772 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar Page 7

On Thursday, September 15th, 2011, JFC’s temple youth

group, JFTY, will be having its first meeting! There will be fun

and exciting games and yummy food! We have a whole new board

this year and hope that you will come and join us! All eighth

through twelfth grade students are invited to be a part of our youth

group. You will not be disappointed!

Also, do not forget JFTY will be hold-

ing a youth service during Rosh Hashanah

and Yom Kippur! We will have shortened

services with entertaining music and video

clips explaining the importance of Rosh

Hashanah and Yom Kippur.

JiFTY By Jessica Sheptin

Women Newly Diagnosed are Urged to Contact WJCS Breast Cancer Navigator

WJCS is urging women newly diagnosed to contact its Breast Caner Navigator Program, which provides mentors for help and support through breast cancer diagnosis and treatment. Each mentor is a breast cancer survivor, who can offer the type of support and understanding that only someone who has been down that road can provide. For more info, contact Jessica Cigale, MSW, BCN Coordinator, at 914-761-0600 ext. 144 or [email protected]. Breast Can-cer Navigator is a program of WJCS supported by funding from UJA-Federation of New York.

Free BRCA+ Support Group

WJCS's Pathways to Care and the Montefiore Medical Center Department of Reproductive Genetics are co-sponsoring a BRCA+ Support Group on September 26 at 6:00 PM at the Larchmont Woman’s Center, 2345 Boston Post Road. This free monthly group is for women who are at a high-risk for developing breast or ovarian cancer and have not personally been diagnosed with cancer. For more info, contact Jane Slevin at 914-761-0600 X143 or [email protected]. Funding for this group is provided by UJA-Federation of New York.

Volunteers Needed to Deliver Kosher Meals to Yonkers Homebound

Volunteers are needed to deliver kosher meals to homebound individuals living in New Rochelle and Mt. Vernon. Sponsored by Westchester Jewish Community Services, the Kosher Meal Program operates Mon-day, Wednesday and Friday from Sinai Free Synagogue in Mount Vernon where the meals are picked up at 11:30 AM and the warming containers are returned daily at about 1:00 PM. Volunteers use their own cars and can travel in two-person teams. Each route encompasses about five deliveries and takes about one and a half hours from start to finish. Volunteers can participate weekly, monthly or on an as-needed basis. Any-one interested can contact Caron Gelles at 668-4350.

WJCS Holocaust Survivor Groups Set Meeting Dates

The WJCS Holocaust Survivor Group meets the first Tuesday of the month starting September 6, The WJCS Holocaust Child Survivor/2nd Generation Group meets the second Tuesday of the month starting September 13 and The WJCS Holocaust 2nd Generation Group meets the third Tuesday of the month starting September 20. All groups meet from 7 – 9 PM at WJCS, 141 North Central Avenue, Hartsdale. Any-one interested in joining can contact Facilitator Halina Rosenkranz at 949-6761 X541 or [email protected].

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Why is it that no one can get along throughout the millen-nia? Many of you might remember what Mick Jagger anemically uttered decades ago as a melee ensued at the rock concert in Altamont, California. The Hell’s An-gels and crowd fought with a very ugly outcome while Mick helplessly cried, “Why can’t we all get along?” Some years later a similar thing was said when Rodney King, in 1989, asked-- after he was involved in a racial incident with police in Los Angeles which prompted widespread rioting-- “People, I just want to say, you know, can we all get along?” That one made it to number 22 in a list of 25 of the most famous quotes in recent history. Getting along is something we try to teach our children from the earliest stages of life and yet real understanding eludes us so often. The latest round of arguing from the halls of Congress regarding the debt ceiling issue makes me think of this poorly learned lesson once again. I began to think of the De-mocrats and Republicans as kids on a playground argu-ing about something like possession of a ball. Really? Can’t we just get along?

At Religious School we teach our students selected mitzvot or values for action. Whether it’s chesed or kindness, hav’ at shalom ben adam l’ chavero or making peace between friends or derech eretz or the way of the land and the right thing to do… we extend the work of the family by instilling a need to perform real acts in the world that change lives and things that matter. When we talk about peace, we don’t take sides. We profess peace for its own sake. Sometimes the gap between sides is great and peace is hard to deliver, but then there are those moments on the planet where good people come together to make this life seem wonderful.

Take the scene in Tel Aviv over the summer. Here is a quote from a news article that described the situation….

“Most had never seen the sea before.

The women were Palestinians from the southern part of the West Bank, which is landlocked, and Israel does not allow them in. They risked criminal prosecution, along with the dozen Israeli women who took them to the beach. And that, in fact, was part of the point: to protest what they and their hosts consider unjust laws.

In the grinding rut of Israeli-Palestinian relations — no ne-gotiations, mutual recriminations, growing distance and dehumanization — the illicit trip was a rare event that joined the simplest of pleasures with the most complex of politics. It showed why coexistence here is hard, but also why there are, on both sides, people who refuse to give up on it.

“What we are doing here will not change the situation,” said Hanna Rubinstein, who traveled to Tel Aviv from Haifa to take part. “But it is one more activity to oppose the oc-

cupation. One day in the future, people will ask, like they did of the Germans: ‘Did you know?’ And I will be able to say, ‘I knew. And I acted.’ ”

All the tension disappeared between two peoples and gov-ernments… all with a swim in the Mediterranean Sea that put women together who wanted good things for each other. Imagine that? With a little water and some human kindness the rage washed away—even just for a short time. And risks were taken all around but the price of peace for them on that day was worth it.

Even Leopold Bloom in James Joyce’s tome Ulysses ram-bles on saying, “I stand for the reform of municipal morals and the plain ten commandments. New worlds for old. Union of all, jew, moslem, and gentile. Three acres and a cow for all children of nature. Saloon motor hearses. Compulsory manual labour for all. All parks open to the public night and day. Electric dishscrubbers. Tuberculosis, lunacy, war, and mendicancy must now cease.” You will surely go mad reading anymore as I have this summer. Finding a subject and predicate in sentences in this book is a rare thing but I like language so I stuck to it. You get the point. Even Joyce at the turn of another century gave his central character a voice to combat the disagreeable as-pects of life, things that ensnare us like war and fighting. We never seem to learn but we keep on teaching our chil-dren these truths about peace and understanding and pray for it in different ways so that with any hope the next generation will live to see it realized. I remember my grandfather thinking he would live to see Israel live in peace. The dream of peace and the fighting never stop. These two forces coexist side by side and guide us through bitterness and love that wrap around this world over time like two vines climbing up the same tree both striving to obliterate the other… but in the end it is the tree that suf-fers most. The vines will kill the tree given time.

Seventy years after the slaying of innocent Jews in the hill-sides of Bukovina where my father’s family is from, Mor-dechai Twersky visited some mass graves. He recited from our liturgy standing over the grassy mounds. “Life can still sprout here,” says a Jewish survivor in Russian witnessing his visit. He recites El Moleh Rachamim (Gd full of Com-passion) and reads from Ezekial, “Son of man, can these bones live?” When will we learn from the mistake of war? Perhaps the study of how much we fail in this life should bring us back to reflect on the beauty and innocence of children. Surely, what we cannot teach them they will teach us—even in lessons of war and hate. A few ago an op-ed piece ran that described a little girl’s frustration with the crisis concerning the lack of clean water for chil-dren in many parts of Africa. For her 8 year old birthday party she decided that her guests should bring $9 each to be donated to the cause. She only collected $220, some-

(Continued on page 15)

The Religious School by Leslie Gottlieb

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Does your company match charitable donations? JFC is a non-profit organization, and your

contributions may qualify.

Susan Andrade Alissa Auerbach Sophia Barson

Jeffrey Berg Isabella Berland

Matthew Berland Ella Blum

Zachary Brand Maxwell Buchman

Chloe Carson Jennifer Ceisler

Ellen Cohen Sarah Dash Bryan Dorf

Noah Falconer Sophia Firestein Bryon Friedman

Abigail Gabor Jack Goldberg

Kevin Goldman Michael Gottlieb

Stephen Henshaw Mindy Hoffman

Meryl Honig Zachary Horwitz Allison Junquera

Lucas Kane

Andrew Kaplan Elana Kaplan

Gregory Kaplan Zachary Kaplan Jerome Kerner

Rachel Kurlander Henriette Kutscher

Tyler Leitner Roy Lerner

Sherry Levin Wallach Eric Levine Carly Moss

Ruth Ossher Douglas Paulding

William Pink Julie Portnoy Samantha Rai

Sarah Richman Ginger Schwartz Jessica Sheptin

Marcia Sher-Kalter Andrea Shulman Jonathan Storfer

Sarah Valente Edmond Verbeke Bonnie Wattles

Gabriel Zuckerberg

Please call the JFC Office when any relevant information arises or changes so all Birthday, Anniversary and

Yahrzeit listings are accurate and up to date. JFC can only

list names/dates that have been reported to us.

BIRTHDAYS

Have you considered celebrating signifi-cant birthdays and anniversaries with a

leaf on our Simcha Tree of Life?

Call the JFC Office for details.

Brian Besterman & Alison Ganis David & Jennifer Ceisler

David & Marina Fried Mr. Michael Gitlitz & Dr. Rita Landman

Drew & Mindy Hoffman Joel & Laura Kaplan

Peter & Jamie Kaplan Jerome Kerner & Alexis Johnson

Jeffrey & Elizabeth Klotz Matthew Meister & Dafne Sanchez-Aldama

William & Jennifer Pink Andrew & Nicole Rose

Edmond and Debra Verbeke

ANNIVERSARIES

Samuel Berger Edith Blumenthal Emery Ceisler Irving Cohen Murray Emmer Roslyn Garin Sonia Goodstein Max Kalb

Seymour Kalter Sidney Kirstein Dina Leitner Samuel Levine Rose Margolis Mordecai Lester Mendell Herbert Storfer Leopold Weisberg

YAHRZEITS

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Page 12 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar September 2011

IMPORTANT MESSAGE TO ALL READERS

Ruth Ossher is DANGEROUSLY ALLERGIC to many flowers. Accordingly, we CANNOT have the fol-lowing flowers in the building at any time:

Lillies Tropical flowers Jasmine scent

Any highly scented flowers Artificial flowers that have been sprayed

Ruth is NOT allergic to: Tulips

Daffodils Hydrangeas

Mums Sunflowers

Potted flowers that we plant outdoors

If you are using a florist, PLEASE have them call us even if they are sure. Dangerous mistakes have already been made.

Many thanks for your cooperation!

PLEASE

SUPPORT OUR

ADVERTISERS

JFC CLASSIFIED

ALL ADS ARE A FLAT $18 AND MAY NOT EXCEED 50 WORDS. THEY WILL RUN FOR ONE MONTH ONLY.

To place an ad, submit the text and your payment to the JFC Office. You may email the text to

[email protected] and either drop off or mail your check (payable to JFC).

Credit card payments are also accepted.

Special holiday foods needed for Community Center of Northern

Westchester’s Holiday Share drive.

Fall is just under way, but the Community Center of Northern Westchester is already focused on the holiday season to come. The Thanksgiving season and December holidays move many to generously donate special holiday foods to those in need. Did you know that the Commu-nity Center begins distributing those holiday foods as part of its Holiday Share program on November 1st? Families visit the Center’s food pantry once a month, so the Center’s early November “shoppers” are already pick-ing up food for Thanksgiving. That means that beginning in early October, the Center collects food and monetary donations so that hundreds of our neighbors in need in northern Westchester can enjoy special holiday meals. Please help us “plan ahead” and donate to this very spe-cial community collaboration in the months before the holiday seasons begin.

Donations are gratefully accepted for our Holiday Share drive starting in early October. We especially need:

Frozen Turkeys up to 12 lbs. Frozen Turkey Breasts Frozen Roaster Chickens, 6-7 lbs Flour (1 or 2 lb bags) Sugar ( 1 or 2 lb bags) Coffee (instant or ground) Tea Bags Hot Chocolate Fruit Juice ( 64oz/family size) Butter Cookies in Tins Cake Mixes

Bring your donations to: Community Center of Northern Westchester 84 Bedford Road, Katonah, NY 10536 Phone: (914) 232-6572 Tuesday - Friday 10:00 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.

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Elul 5771/Tishri 5772 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar Page 13

As I write this September Shofar article it is still summer, the end of summer, but still summer. I have just returned from a short vacation, and I return to JFC with great excitement and joy. The air is still warm, but the tips of some leaves are showing the sparkle of fall. The teachers in the Early Childhood Center have begun to ready their classrooms for the arrival of new friends.

The learning environment is an important and pow-erful teaching tool. Much of the early childhood teacher’s work is done before the children ever arrive. If the environment is set up with the knowledge of how children learn and develop, it can positively support teaching and learning. The classrooms are organized to foster exploration with learning materials. Learning materials are concrete and relevant to a child’s own life experi-ences (open ended but purposeful). The classroom environment is setup for choices.

Each teacher team discusses, plans and organizes. Throughout the year, the classroom space evolves as our curriculum and children change.. We are careful to observe how each child and class uses the space and the materials that we have pre-pared. The staff invests a great deal of thought and time while setting up the classroom environ-ment before school begins. The result is a natu-ral, peaceful, calm and aesthetically pleasing space that provides the children and their families a sense of comfort, a place they can call home. As the children live in the classrooms and hallways, the space becomes their own, rich with works of art and artifacts that are visible to everyone who visits JFC.

Synagogue schools have the additional challenge of shared space. Creating an environment where our youngest learners will thrive and our older students will feel comfortable is not as easy as it looks.

In peaceful classrooms, children and their families feel welcome, child-centered activities happen easily, and those who use the space feel happy and have the ability to take ownership. The environ-ments make a big difference in children’s success in school and beyond. “The environment in the

classroom has a profound effect on the feelings and actions of the children, their families, and the teachers. Children organize their world through the environment we provide” (Dombro, Colker, and Trister Dodge, 1997). The world children are pre-sented with will make a big difference in their lifelong journey!

The classroom is the focal point of each teacher team; however my focus is the bigger environ-ment. We are blessed to have 10 acres of land to use as our classroom. We are anxious to make some improvements to our playground. I am work-ing on a 12 month curriculum centered on garden-ing and planting in a Jewish context. Thank you Dale Saltzman (Grandpa of Aaron and Reed Sa-padin) for helping with this effort!

Please help me in welcoming our new and returning gifted group of educators: Yellow Room – Debra Cohen & Laura Vayness Blue Room – Alison Brodoff & Ellen Goldstein Green Room – Lynn Kassel & Dinah Rader

As the New Year begins please do not hesitate to share your ideas, energy and creativity. Feel free to stop by or give me a call!

Early Childhood Center By Jane Emmer

Todah Rabbah to: Our wonderful camp staff (I hope that I do not

leave anyone out)… Kathy Weingarten, Dinah Rader, Jodi Waxman, Debra Cohen, Indy Li, Billie Li, Spencer Kaplan, Elana Kaplan, Phil Levens, Skyler Levy, Scott Dorf, Navi Weiss, Stephanie Goodkind

Skyler Levy for putting together our new airplane And for painting our rainbow line!

The Heftler family for their donation that allowed us to buy our new mini roller coaster.

Stephanie and Karen Blum for helping take down the NEW playground canopy before Irene arrived.

and of course… Rabbi Carla Freedman – for joining us in our spir-

ited camp Shabbat celebrations ( in the playground this summer).

Jolie and Kathleen for holding down the fort in the office

Jason Breslin for sharing his music with our camp-ers.

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Page 14 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar September 2011

LOOK WHO’S

EISNER

THIS

SUMMER

AT

CAMP

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Elul 5771/Tishri 5772 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar Page 15

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what shy of the $300 goal she set for herself. After her family’s car accident that soon claimed her life only, the donations poured in and now the total collected is over $850,000.

Before she discovered charity: water, she donated her hair to Locks of Love at 5 years of age. Nicolas Kristof writes, “In the midst of this grim summer, my faith in humanity has been re-stored by the saga of Rachel

Beckwith. She could teach my generation a great deal about maturity and unselfishness — even though she’s just 9 years old, or was when she died on July 23.

Rachel lived outside Seattle and early on showed a desire to give back. At age 5, she learned at school about an or-ganization called Locks of Love, which uses hair donations to make wigs for children who have lost their own hair because of cancer or other diseases. Rachel then asked to have her long hair shorn off and sent to Locks of Love.

‘She said she wanted to help the cancer kids,’ her mother, Samantha Paul, told me. After the haircut, Rachel an-nounced that she would grow her hair long again and do-nate it again after a few years to Locks of Love. And that’s what she did.”

So we will keep on teaching chesed or acts of loving kind-ness to quiet the beast that is famine and disease and ha-tred--- and to those who perpetuate war which destroys the lives of innocents as well as the innocence in all of us,

remember Rachel Beckwith from Seattle, a small voice who from the grave reminds us that if we all got along… that’s right, Mick… then we could provide clean water and food to the most needy. As the song goes, it’s time to give peace a chance.

And at this special time of year with the High Holy Days before us, think of the Ki Anu Amecha and how small we are with so much ability to create good and harm in this life:

We are arrogant; but you are merciful.

We are obstinate; but You are patient.

We are laden with sin; but you abound in compassion.

We are a passing shadow; but You are eternal.

If we remember that we are but passing shadows, maybe we can get over ourselves enough to live in peace with each other and help to provide the most basic necessaries to those suffering.

Shalom!

Todah Rabbah to… All of the RS Class parents who have volunteered to

help this school year The Youth Group and President Andrew Blum for their

work on the HHD Youth services Karen Blum for her help in creating a book inventory

for the RS over the summer

(Continued from page 9)

The Religious School (cont’d)

JFC was honored for send-ing 13 campers and 5

staff members to Eisner Camp this summer!

Pictured left to right: Ivy Cohen, Jane Emmer, Corey Cutler, Rabbi Carla Freedman, Cheryl Chess (JFC’s new Ambassador to Crane Lake and Eisner Camp), Debby Shriber and

Rabbi Jonah Pesner

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The Tzedakah of the Month

For SEPTEMBER Is

HOMES FOR HEROES FOUNDATION Their purpose is to provide or coordinate financial assistance and housing resources to our nation’s heroes such as military personnel, police/peace

officers, firefighters and first responders in need.

Selected by the

JFC Social Action Committee

JFC Social Action Committee by Lee Goldstein

ShopWithScrip!

And help support JFC at no cost to you while shopping at the same stores you already visit!

If you have not yet created an account with ShopWithScrip, please contact the JFC Office and we’ll get you started!

It’s easy! It’s free! And there are many exciting offers!

As the new year ap-proaches, our Social Action Committee is gearing up for some great activities. We invite everyone – adults, teens, children – to get in-volved. Join us for Midnight Run, Project Hope, and our various giving projects throughout the year. Or do you have a fantastic idea or dream project you would like to spearhead? We wel-come your engagement!

Midnight Run The next Midnight Run will be in late fall; contact Deb-bie Lavin if you would like to participate with food, dona-tions, driving, direct sup-port. We may only be doing two midnight runs this year, one in the fall and the other in spring – so plan accord-ingly!

Garage Rehab We are transforming the old, decaying garage into the staging area for the Midnight Run. We are still looking for donations of roofing material to finish the job: 1000 sq feet of roll roofing, nails, and roofing cement (about $700). Con-tact the Tammi Shulman at 767-0544 for more informa-tion about materials or in-stallation.

Also – we are planning a barn raising to put up that new roof on Sunday Sep-tember 18th. Volunteers wanted!

We wish everyone a sweet new year, and will love to see more of you!

Want to help? Contact Debbie Lavin ([email protected]) or Jeanette Sanders ([email protected])

Don’t forget to stop in and check out the JFC Gift Shop!

The items change frequently!

If you are interested in pur-

chasing anything, please let us know in the JFC Office.

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Page 18 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar September 2011

- - - Lots of new vendors! - - - Check website for details.

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JFC ANNOUNCEMENTS

If you would like to “announce” a Simcha in your family, please

send the text (pictures are welcome too!) to Jolie Levy at [email protected].

Announcements must be

received by the 15th of the month to appear in the next month’s Shofar.

Please feel free to acknowledge

your Simcha with an $18 donation to any JFC Fund or with a leaf on

our Simcha Tree.

Donation forms appear in every Shofar.

The items in the JFC Gift Shop have changed again.

Please stop in and

take a look!

From the Rabbi’s Desk (cont’d)

And the service schedule, with all the new offerings, will be in the Shofar service schedule, on the monthly calen-dar at the back of the Shofar, and in the email broadcast each week…so watch for them!

And don’t forget to check the service schedule this month…the High Holy Days are coming, and on Yom Kip-pur there is a new offering as well…………….check it out.

If you have suggestions for other ideas to add spice (i.e., variety) to our Shabbat observances, please discuss them with any member of our Ritual Committee, or me.

Jeanne and I wish you and your family a year of health, peace, prosperity, and joy.

L’shanah tovah t ikateyvu v’t’khateymu….may you be inscribed and sealed in the Book of Life for a good new year.

(Continued from page 1)

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ASK THE RABBI

Question: What do Jews believe about life after death? Is there a heaven/hell? Do Jews believe in reincarnation?

Answer: This is a complicated question, and is a good ex-ample of the old adage, that where you have two Jews, you will have (at least) answers!

We Jews always begin our search for an answer...to any question!...with the Torah. And there you will find no ref-erence at all to life after death. There are references to a place called “Sheol”, but that seems only to be a place where all go after death...not a location for reward or pun-ishment.

When our sages read Leviticus 16, or Deuteronomy 18, which speaks about reward and punishment, they con-cluded that God’s words (as they understood the Torah to be) were true and certain to their core, so even though they could see that some righteous people did not enjoy God’s blessings (the explicitly promised reward for follow-ing God’s teachings), and some evil people did not suffer God’s punishments, still these promised responses to hu-man behaviour must happen. Perhaps, they reasoned, these responses to human behaviour would happen on some plane or some level that we simply cannot perceive; thus was born the concept of life after death.

But our sages never felt the need to elaborate much on this subject. They merely posited the possibility that life after death exists. The idea that there are separate realms for reward and punishment (heaven/hell) is not developed in Judaism the way it has been in Catholicism, for example. Our sages used the idea of “heaven” as a teaching tool, mainly in allegories they created to teach right behaviour. Nor did they ever figure out how many mitzvot would be required to qualify for heaven (or how many violations of

commandments would be a sure pass into hell).

It should be noted that this concept of possible life-after-death was endorsed by the Pharisees about 2000 years ago, and vigorously opposed by the Sadducees, who only accepted what is actually contained in the words of Torah; this was a hotly debated topic at that time, and since the Sadducees vanished, the Pharisaic idea became part of normative Rabbinic Judaism, to which we are heir today.

So clearly, from the very beginning of the consideration of the concept of life after death, it was rejected by at least some Jews. Therefore, it is not possible, especially today, to offer one universal, one-size-fits-all answer to your question.

Since the time of the Pharisees and Sadducees, Jews have at different times believed various things about life after death: resurrection of the body and soul when the Mes-siah comes; reincarnation; transmigration of souls, etc. There are probably some Jews who believe one or more of these ideas right now. Since no one has ever come back from the other side of death to tell us what awaits us, we can have no certainty about this subject, and no one can say for sure what is right or wrong.

If you are interested in reading more about this subject, I recommend a book by Rabbi Rifat Soncino and Daniel Syme, called What Happens After I Die (available via Ama-zon; be sure to go through the JFC website when you or-der...). The book offers good descriptions of various ac-ceptable Jewish answers to the question, and may help to clarify your own thinking on this subject.

I will be interested to know what you think, after you have read this book.

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“Bringing together youth and adults throughout the area to learn klezmer and to bring this art form to the community.”

The Westchester Klezmer Program is a not-for-profit corporation that operates a music performance program to promote community service through klezmer music performances.

Members participate by giving frequent public performances of klezmer music at nursing homes, programs for chil-dren with special needs, programs for developmentally disabled adults, synagogues, and other community based events.

The goals of the program are achieved through multigenerational participation. Adults and teens take part by attend-ing rehearsals and performing at concerts along side the children, helping to keep the students engaged in the pro-gram, providing them with appropriate modeling, and assisting at rehearsals.

Many area synagogues have approved the program as a community service project for musicians who are preparing for their bar/bat mitzvah.

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In early August, a soon-to-be First Grade student visited me, and posed several really good questions; I told him that, in addition to discussing them with him that day, I would answer some of his questions in this place in the Shofar.

Question: Is the world going to end?

Answer: Not any time soon…that’s the short answer.

But there is another way of answering this ques-tion. The Torah tells us that God created the en-tire world, including human beings. And God turned the world (at least, this planet) over to us humans, charging us with responsibility for looking after it (Gen. 1:28; Gen 2: 15).

The Torah also tells us that God gave humans some instructions on how to live successfully; in fact, the word “Torah” means instruction. And God tells humans that, if they follow God’s teachings, God’s instructions, they will live a good life (Lev. 26:1-13; Deut. 28: 1-14; Deut: 30: 1-20).

From these sources and the verses that occur be-fore or after them, we know that it is possible…not desirable, but possible…for humans to choose not to follow God’s instructions.

That’s because God gave humans the power to choose to follow God’s teachings, or not. If we had not been given the power to decide to do the right thing, or the wrong thing, there would be no mean-ing to doing the right thing…it would be like humans just being puppets, with the puppet-master (in this case, God) making all the choices. But God did give us that power, and so when we choose to do the right thing, we are rewarded with a good life.

Now, back to your question!

Since we were instructed by God to look after this world, and we were given the ability to choose to do the right thing, it is up to us to keep the world go-ing.

Every day we make choices that, taken all together, will determine whether the world can survive.

Some familiar examples: when we recycle plastic bottles and other things, we are looking after the

world by preventing the plastic from poisoning the earth; when we use products made of recycled pa-per, we save trees from being cut down, and the trees contribute to the well-being of the planet in many ways; when we produce and eat foods made without harmful chemicals, we protect and pre-serve the earth for the future.

The other thing we have to do to preserve and pro-tect the world for the future is to look for peace-ful and healthful solutions to problems between people, so that we do not have wars anymore. Wars leave people without shelter and food, and that is not what God tells us to do to look after our world. Wars not only kill and injure and otherwise harm people, but they damage trees and crops and fields, and so, we must work to resolve our problems peacefully.

When we choose not to do these things…not the occasional slip-up, but on a regular basis… we are doing the wrong thing, and hurrying the damage to the planet that could, in the long run, result in the end of the world we know.

So, in that sense, we are responsible for the sur-vival of the world, and by following God’s instruc-tions and making good choices as often as possible, we are actively working to keep the world going.

The good news is that we humans are learning all the time how to take better care of our world. And it will be up to people like you, in the future, to make the best possible use of that knowledge, to keep the world going.

And that’s the other piece of good news: when people like you understand the consequences of your actions and decisions, because you care about keeping the world going, we can all be assured that you will make good choices in life, that you will en-courage others to make good choices, and that the world is in good hands…yours!

So please take that idea with you as we begin the new Jewish year, and make preserving the world part of your plan to be a good person in 5772!

Kids Ask the Rabbi

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Bedford Bagel & Bakery 720 Bedford Rd. (Route 177)

Bedford Hills, NY 10507 (914) 242-0641

Owned & Operated by Gary & Paula Levine (JFC

Members) Kerry & Kathy Levine

PLEASE SUPPORT OUR ADVERTISERS

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Page 26 Jewish Family Congregation Shofar September 2011

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Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

1 YG - End-of-Summer Bash 5:00-6:30

Bd Mtg

2

Service 7:30 Tot Shabbat

3

Bat Mitzvah Of

Samantha Shulman

4 5

LABOR DAY

OFFICE CLOSED

6 7 ECC Staff Mtg. 9:30 a.m.

[K/L First Day]

8

YG - HHD re-hearsal 4-5:30

YG - End-of-Summer Bash 5:00-6:30

YG Board Meet-ing 6:30-7:00

(NO RS)

9 ECC Breakfast 10:00 a.m.

Service 7:30 Tot Shabbat

10 NFTY/NAR LTI (NYC)

Bat Mitzvah Of

Maggie Ceisler

11

12 ECC - meet the teachers

ECC Parent Orientation 7:00 p.m.

13 ECC - first day 3’s and 4’s

14 ECC - first day 2’s

RS Comm Mtg 12:30

Kids’ Knesset forms due (K-6)

15 YG - 7:15-8:15

(NO RS)

16 ECC Creation Station Service 7:30 Tot Shabbat

17

Bar Mitzvah Of

Stephen Henshaw

18 Gr. 4-6 9:00-12:00 Gr. 4-6 Meet & Greet 11:30-12:00

19 ECC Gr. 7 4:20-6:15

20 ECC

21 ECC

22

K-3/CC/SMP/—Meet & Greet (w/parents) 4:15-4:45 class-rooms; 4:45-5:15 assembly

5:30-6:30 staff mtg.

(SMP 3:30-5:15)

23 ECC Creation Station Congregant Drash Service 7:30 Tot Shabbat

24 Gr. 7 9-9:45

Bar Mitzvah Of

Alex Wattles

25 Gr. 4-6 9:00-12:00

Kids Knesset 11:10-11:30

ROADSIDE CLEANUP 8:45-11:30

26 ECC Gr. 7 4:20-6:15

27 ECC

28 ECC

Erev Rosh haShanah

OFFICE CLOSES 1:00

29

Rosh haShanah

OFFICE CLOSED

30

Rosh haShanah

OFFICE CLOSED

Service 7:30 Tot Shabbat

Shabbat Shuva

September 2011 September 2011

JEWISH FAMILY CONGREGATION

Distribution of Food Bags—Gr. 7 (at conclusion of RH services)

FOCUS GROUP 7:30

At JFC

FOCUS GROUP 10:00 At JFC

x

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Jewish Family Congregation 111 Smith Ridge Rd/Rte. 123

P.O. Box 249

South Salem, NY 10590

Non Profit Organization

Postage PAID

White Plains, NY Permit No. 9022

CURRENT RESIDENT OR