UPDATE FOR MAY 22, 2008
32nd day of the Omer
In this Update:
-
Diaspora Dinner XV: The Jews and Cuisine
of the Ottoman Empire, May 31
-
June 1: WOTE Donor Luncheon
-
June 3: 7:00 PM Temple Emanu-El Annual Meeting
-
June 7th: Neighborhood
Havdallah event sponsored by the Membership Committee
-
In the community
-
Mah Jongg Tournament
June 27 at the Villages
-
JCC Wine
Auction: Save the Date June 14
-
Silicon Valley Duck
Race (supporting Jewish Family Services and Temple Emanu-El)
-
Beth David to offer
Adult Education Hebrew Classes through the summer
Life
Cycle Notifications
-
Helen Landman
(funeral on Sunday, May 25, graveside at noon, Home of Peace Cemetery)
- Refuah
Shleyma
Torah
Portion
Friday, May 23 – 7:30 PM Erev Shabbat Service: Piano and Song
Please note
7:30 PM start time.
Saturday, May 24 – 9:00 AM Shabbat
Morning Minyan
Friday, May 30 – 6:30 PM Kabbalat Shabbat Service
Saturday, May 31 – 9:00 AM Shabbat
Morning Minyan
Friday, June 6 – 7:30 PM Erev
Shabbat Service: Federation/Volunteer Shabbat
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DIASPORA
DINNER–JEWS OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE. Saturday, May
31 at 6:00 PM
$40 for Brotherhood Members, $49 for non-members, plus $18
optional wine pairing. Your check is your reservation. Space is limited to the
first 80 diners. If you have not yet attended one of these exciting events,
including a 5-course gourmet dinner and educational presentation, now is your
chance. Send your check payable to Brotherhood
to the Temple office.
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June 1 – WOTE
Donor Lunch @La Rinconada Country Club.
Come spend a wonderful Sunday
afternoon with your Sisterhood friends.
Entertainment will include:
The guitar strumming of the Acoustic Wizards
And an amazing 12-year-old singer Thia Megia
With the new online auction, everyone can
participate, even if you can’t be with us on June 1st.
Check out the items at www.templesanjose.cmarket.com . New items are added regularly.
If you have your own business and want a great
way to advertise, donate something for the auction. Contact Anita Medeiros for more information.
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June 3–Temple
Emanu-El Annual Meeting
Have you returned your ballot?
Come on down at 7:00 PM for a
dessert reception. The meeting will
begin promptly at 7:30 PM, including reports from Rabbi Magat, Temple officers,
schools and auxiliaries. Awards will be
given, retiring Board members will be recognized, and the results of the
election will be announced.
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June
7–Neighborhood Havdallah
Event…
A wonderful way to say farewell to Shabbat and meet Temple
friends from your area. Plan to bring an
appetizer or dessert to share.
RSVP
to Sharon Genkin (shosh4511@comcast.net
or 268-8989) with how many people will be attending, including number of
children under age 12. Then we can match you with a family in your
neighborhood. If you are interested in hosting (all supplies provided), contact
Kim Jackman.
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IN THE
COMMUNITY…
Come to the Cabernet:
Wine
Auction to Benefit the Addison-Penzak Jewish Community Center
Some of the finest names in wine are coming to the
JCC on Saturday, June 14th, 2008, from
6:00pm to 10:30pm, to celebrate the renaissance of fine drinking and dining
at the APJCC Wine Gala. The Wine Gala includes a wine tasting, dinner, and
silent and live wine auctions, as well as the opportunity to meet local
winemakers.
If you'd like to learn more about wine before
attending the Wine Gala tasting & auction, you can sign up to learn from
Jeff Moore--wine author, connoisseur and raconteur critic--in a two-part
lecture series at the JCC on Thursday, May 29th at 6:30pm and Thursday, June
5th at 6:30pm.
The Wine Gala is $90 per person and the 2-part wine
lecture series is $50 per person ($130 per person for both). To purchase
tickets, contact Lisa Ceile Goldfus at lisa@svjcc.org
or 408.357.7492. Check out the website
for more information:
http://www.svjcc.org/wine/
Silicon Valley Duck Race: June 22nd
Adopt a
duck -- Support Temple Emanu-El and Jewish Family Services by purchasing 1, 5,
10, even 25 ducks or more!
On Sunday,
June 22nd at 1:00pm egg-zactkly, 10,000 darling rubber duckies will
dive under the bridge and into Vasona
Lake, racing downstream
into a prize picking net. The Lucky Duck
winners will go home with more than $15,000 in prizes, with the possibility of
winning a $1 Million nest egg.
The
Silicon Valley Duck Race is a fun opportunity for the whole community. In addition to the race, there will be a
festival, food and games, beginning at 11:00am.
Bring the entire family! Jewish
organizations in the South
Bay are cooperating in
this quacky fun day, sponsored by Jewish Family Services of Silicon Valley, which
provides social, vocational, counseling, crisis intervention, refugee resettlement services and programs for seniors.
The best way to adopt your ducks is
online at www.siliconvalleyduckrace.org. Be sure to enter
“Temple Emanu-El” as your team, and your synagogue will receive $2 for every $5
donated. Then come on down for all the
fun on June 22nd!
Beginning
Hebrew-12 Session Summer Class
Starts June 4th
at Congregation Beth David
Registration: Pre-registration
required by email ( registration@beth-david.org )
or by calling the Beth David Office (257-3333).
Indicate you are registering for the summer Beginning Hebrew class and
whether or not you are a Beth David member.
Non-members should pay at the first class.
Friday,
June 27, 2008, 10:00 A.M.
MAH JONGG
TOURNAMENT
Is back at The Villages
$30.00 per person
includes
lunch catered by Villages Clubhouse.
Make
your reservations now: call Bernice Vitcov—408-832-6390
Leave
your name and number.
TELL YOUR FRIENDS!
Join
us for food, fun and maybe fortune. Have
fun-support Hadassah!
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The
Temple is seeking a Temple Administrator.
Position is available immediately.
We provide a
collaborative, warm and nurturing environment to work in.
We are looking for an experienced administrator who
is responsible for supervising paid staff, directing volunteers, managing the
budget and overseeing the day-to-day operations and facilities of our spiritual
home. The Administrator acts as the liaison to members, clergy, the Board of
Trustees, the preschool, religious school, committees and auxiliaries.
Experience in running a non-profit enterprise is a plus.
The
position is available immediately. If you know of someone who might be interested
in and appropriate for the role, please contact Ruth Krandel, ruthkrandel@yahoo.com or 264-5376 or Pam Schuur, pamela.schuur@comcast.net or 483-6810.
Refuah
Shleymah – we pray for the following individuals – that they will be returned
to good health in short order so they can resume a full life with their loved
ones.
- Arthur Cagan
- Judith Siegel
- Eva Stanley
- Joelle Wolf
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Life Cycle
Notifications
We note with sorrow the passing of Helen Landman, longtime member
of Temple Emanu-El. Her funeral will be at Home of Peace Cemetery,
graveside, at noon on Sunday, May 25th. Arrangements by Sinai
Memorial Chapel.
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Torah
Portion of the Week from www.urj.org
B'chukotai ,
Leviticus 26:3–27:34
Shabbat, May 24, 2008 / 19
Iyar, 5768
The Torah: A Modern
Commentary , pp. 957−970;
Revised Edition, pp. 864−879;
Haftarah, Jeremiah 16:19−17:14
The Torah: A Modern Commentary ,pp. 1,006–1,008; Revised Edition, pp.
880−882
To listen to this commentary, please click here.
D'VAR TORAH
B'chukotai : Counting Days, Measuring Merit
Sue Levi Elwell
Each year, for forty-nine days, from the second night of Pesach until Erev
Shavuot, we Jews count. We count the days of the Omer. Some of us count every
evening. Some count sporadically. And some don't count at all. But regardless
of our personal or communal practice, night follows day, and day, night. Like
our ancestors, each year we make our way from Egypt to Sinai, reenacting the
journey from slavery to freedom, from involuntary servitude to Pharaoh to the
chosen service to the Holy One. We count the days as we travel from one reality
to another, from the degradation of enslavement to becoming a self-determined
community.
But we are not yet there. This week, as we read Parashat B'chukotai ,
we are making our way to Sinai with increased excitement: on the 18 of Iyar
(this year Friday, May 23), we celebrate Lag BaOmer, the only holiday that
falls during this period of counting.
Rabbi Jill Hammer teaches that this thirty-third day of the Omer is,
according to Jewish mystical tradition, "a wedding between heaven and
earth" (www.telshemesh.org/iyar). As we anticipate Shavuot, when we
celebrate God's union with the Jewish people, the 18 of Iyar is a day to redraw
connections that have been strained or broken during the years of slavery and
throughout the difficult wilderness journey. After a month of shuffling through
sand and sleeping under the stars, of making do with inadequate provisions and
dealing with exhaustion and frustration and fear, this day is a gift. On the 18
of Iyar, our people, then and now, lift up our eyes and see not dislocation but
connection. We remember the promise of an end to dispersion and to settling in
our own land. Rabbi Hammer teaches that this is a time of "linking: heaven
to earth, human to Divine, one person to another. . . . The 18th of Iyar is a
moment of union par excellence, signifying the knowledge that all of us are
leaves on one tree of life" (ibid.).
How does B'chukotai , this final Torah portion in Leviticus, help us
claim a day that reminds us who we are and where we are going?
B'chukotai challenges readers by beginning with a series of
"blessings and curses" and continues with direction on the funding of
the sanctuary. Throughout our history, sages have struggled with this portion
as the conclusion of our law book. Robert Alter writes, "This miscellany
of laws seems, by modern lights, an odd way to conclude a book. Interpretive
attempts have been made to rescue it as a thematically appropriate conclusion,
but none is altogether persuasive. This final chapter is best regarded as an
appendix to Leviticus. . . . Perhaps these . . . issues, necessary for the
maintenance of the sanctuary but not altogether agreeable for the audience of
the book to contemplate, were deliberately tacked on at the very end" (
The Five Books of Moses [New York: W. W. Norton, 2004], p. 667).
We are left with what seems to be an assessment of the comparative worth of
men and women of various ages were they to dedicate their labor to the
sanctuary: "Speak to the Israelite people and say to them: When anyone
explicitly vows to the Eternal the equivalent for a human being, the following
scale shall apply: If it is a male from twenty to sixty years of age, the
equivalent is fifty shekels of silver by the sanctuary weight; if it is a
female, the equivalent is thirty shekels. If the age is from five years to
twenty years, the equivalent is twenty shekels for a male and ten shekels for a
female. If the age is from one month to five years, the equivalent for a male
is five shekels of silver, and the equivalent for a female is three shekels of
silver. If the age is sixty years or over, the equivalent is fifteen shekels in
the case of a male and ten shekels for a female" (Leviticus 27:2–7). What
are we to make of this text?
Our people has just come out of slavery, escaping from a system that coldly
measured the worth of each individual. For Americans, pre–Civil War images of
African American slaves huddled together—or standing alone—on the auction block
are a source of our national shame. How can we read this text as a response
to—and not merely a perpetuation of—an arbitrary system of objectifying human
beings?
The scholar Carol Meyers suggests, "Many commentators now understand
that . . . [the separate assessment of men and women of various ages] relates
mainly to labor potential rather than to intrinsic worth . . . [and thus]
provide an insight into the labor patterns in Israelite households . . .
correlates with the maximum prestige for women" ( The Torah: A
Women's Commentary, ed. Tamara Cohn Eskenazi; Andrea L. Weiss, assoc. ed.
[New York: URJ Press, 2008], p. 780).
If Professor Meyers is correct, this text assumes the essential equality of
all human beings. Even in our so-called postmodern world, the equality of all
people continues to be debated. This challenging text posits a measure of one's
ability to contribute to the collective; this measure of individuals' worth is
based on how people fit into a functioning community. But most importantly,
this assessment is made in the context of creating a culture of
interdependence, crafting a free society of individuals who choose how to serve
one another and how to serve God.
We read this concluding chapter of Leviticus as we reach this single, sweet
day in our days of counting. On Lag BaOmer, we see the possibility of
connection and of working together as diverse individuals to build a society
that works for all its members. We need to continue our journey to Sinai and
beyond, working toward a time when distinctions will be made not on the
basis of gender or age, or on predetermined assessments of strength or talent
or ability. B'chukotai challenges us to think about how we measure
ourselves and others, empowering us to see one another as free, self-determined
participants in creating and sustaining sacred communities.
Rabbi Sue Levi Elwell , Ph.D., serves as the director of
the URJ Pennsylvania Council and the Federation of Reform Synagogues of Greater
Philadelphia, and as co-president of the Women's Rabbinic Network.
DAVAR ACHER |
Leaves on the Tree of Life
Judith R. Baskin
B'chukotai , the concluding parashah of Leviticus, a book
devoted to divine commandments, begins with an exposition of covenantal
theology. This idealized priestly vision proclaims that if the Israelites
follow all of God's mitzvot , their blessings will include fertility,
peaceful relations with human beings and wild beasts, victory over enemies, and
an enduring consciousness of the Divine Presence. However, should they
transgress, they will suffer devastating calamities. This conviction that
observance of God's statutes guarantees a healthy and prosperous existence is
not questioned in Leviticus. It is only in later biblical writings such as the
Book of Job that doubts about this conventional wisdom are expressed.
There is, however, an interesting link between B'chukotai and Job
that expresses the same concern. Leviticus 26:36 and Job 13:25 are the only two
biblical passages to invoke the "driven leaf" ( aleh nidaf )
as a metaphor for disconnection. In Leviticus 26:36, the Israelites are warned
that if they disobey God, they will be terrified even by the rustle of a
windblown leaf. Since they have severed their connection to God, they will
succumb to a constant and crippling anxiety. Similarly, the suffering Job
inquires, "Why do you hide Your face . . . ? Will You harass a driven
leaf?" (Job 13:24–25). As this phrase implies, and as Milton Steinberg so
brilliantly demonstrated in his 1939 novel, As a Driven Leaf (New York:
Berman House, 1996), a Jew who is cut off from God and community has no
moorings and no comfort. The devastating catastrophes delineated in Leviticus
26 are not always preventable, even for those who observe divine commandments
faithfully. However, adherence to Judaism's teachings, our Tree of Life, can
provide consolation and assurances of a larger meaning, even in times of
desolation.
Dr. Judith R. Baskin is Knight Professor of Humanities and
director of the Harold Schnitzer Family Program in Judaic Studies at the University of Oregon. She served as subeditor for postbiblical commentary for "The Torah: A Women's
Commentary" (New York:
URJ Press, 2008).