.: Pro Dada

:: Update for January 7, 2010 ::

Date: January 7th 2010

Sunday, January 10 @ 11:30 AM
Temple Emanu-El Brotherhood presents:
Rabbi Simcha Green: “An Orthodox Rabbi Defends Reform Practice?"

Rabbi Green, Director of the newly-formed Beit HaMidrash of the Bay Area, will share his thoughts about Reform Judaism and its relationship to Orthodox Judaism. He will also discuss Jewish practices and if it is possible for an Orthodox Rabbi to actually defend the precepts of Reform Judaism.

This is a virtually unprecedented opportunity to hear how Reform and Orthodox can coexist and see what we share - and where we differ - in areas of Jewish philosophy, halacha and belief. Be sure and join Rabbi Magat in a follow-up discussion on January 17!

This is a free event and we really would like to have a strong Emanu-El contingent to welcome Rabbi Green to our shul - please do try and attend, it is going to be a fascinating hour of your time!

RSVPs are strongly encouraged to the office.

Next Tuesday: JFS Networking Group @ Temple Emanu-El
January 12, 10:30 AM -- noon. No charge.
Details below.

Let us help you with a new year's resolution to go green! We can send your statements and Connections bulletin via e-mail! Send your name and e-mail address to Lisas@templesanjose.org.

Adult Ed Spring 2010 Registration is OPEN!
Pick up a flyer from the Shalom Table or go online to: http://templesanjose.org/index.php/education/adult-education.html

Craig Taubman is coming to Temple Emanu-El
February 18 at 7 PM
"Craig Taubman's dynamic music and moving performance style have been an inspiration to the Jewish community for over 22 years. Craig's magical and enchanting music brings to life the joy and spirit of the Jewish heritage, appealing to young and old alike and captivating audiences wherever he goes."
Sponsorships Available! $18 General Admission.
For more Information contact the Temple office at 408-292-0939.

Services and Temple Events

Friday, January 8:
6:15 PM, Congregational Potluck Dinner
Last name begins with A-H: Bring a Side Dish or Salad
Last name begins with I-Z: Bring an Entrée (NO pork or shellfish and please do not mix dairy with meat or chicken.)

7:15 PM Erev Shabbat Family Service (TJS and 3rd Grade participating)

Saturday, January 9
9:00 AM Shabbat Morning Minyan led by Rabbi Magat and Cantor Simerly

Sunday, January 10
9:00 AM Brotherhood Meeting in the Cottage
9:00 AM Hebrew
10:15 AM Mishpacha Sheli/Jewish Studies
11:30 AM Rabbi Simcha Green “An Orthodox Rabbi Defends Reform Practice” presented by Brotherhood. No charge. BFR.

Wednesday, January 13
Noon: Lunch and Learn

Friday, January 15
6:00 PM Tot Shabbat/Potluck Dinner
7:30 PM Erev Shabbat Service

MARK YOUR CALENDAR
Thursday, January 21 at 7:30 PM
World War II Veteran and Historian Herb Kwart will speak about
The Jewish Recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor.
No charge. Presented by Sisterhood. Light reception to follow.

eScrip is Unique! No Cost to You!
We participate in a powerful fundraising opportunity...eScrip, a hassle-free way for Temple to raise funds through everyday purchases made at eScrip merchants.
**Log on to www.escrip.com and click on "sign up."
**Designate Temple Emanu-El to receive contributions.
**Our group ID# is 136985180.
**Register your credit/debit, Safeway/Macy's cards.
That's it! Visit eScrip merchants to shop and earn. It's automatic.
Any questions, call Lorie Kaplan, eScrip coordinator, 408.267.4563

Other Events of Interest:

Are you part of a young couple? Come spend an evening with other young Jewish couples! Enjoy monthly gatherings with food, games, great conversation and other fun activities! For more information contact Lisa Sobel at Lisas@templesanjose.org or find us on Facebook!
Couples Night Out is brought to you by Temple Emanu-El and the Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley Young Adult’s Division & is open to all couples, ages 21-45. All SVYAD events occur in an open & welcoming environment.


IN THE COMMUNITY

ISRAELI FOLK DANCE MARATHON
Saturday, January 9, 2010: 8:15 pm – 1 AM
Oshman Family JCC 3921 Fabian Way, Palo Alto, CA 94303
Come celebrate 2010 dancing your feet off!!!
We are moving to the AMAZING NEW JCC in Palo Alto
with the best dancing floor ever!!!
We will have a NEW YEAR Party with tons of :
Dancing
Teaching
Treats
Requests
Surprises and..
Dancing Guests as always!!!
Please bring dancing shoes only, no high heels allowed!!
You can't miss this historic event!!!
See you on the dance floor!!!
Fee $10 College students $ 6

JEWISH FAMILY SERVICES
Networking Meeting
Held monthly at Temple Emanu-El
Second Tuesday of the month
10:30 AM – noon in the BFR
Come share job search strategies, learn interviewing and resume techniques, make connections with new, share contacts. RSVP requested to the Temple office, 292-0939. Drop-ins welcome. Next dates: January 12 and February 9.

Admissions Open House at Kehillah Jewish High School Sunday January 10 at 2 p.m.

Come discover Kehillah Jewish High School at its Admissions Open House on Sunday January 10 at 3900 Fabian Way, Palo Alto 94303! Hear from our students, faculty and administrators; take a student-led tour of our facility; visit our science labs, art and music studios, theater and beit midrash; discover how the Oshman Family JCC enhances the life of Kehillah students and teams; learn about our outstanding academic program, Jewish studies curriculum, after school sports programs, class trips and extra-curricular clubs and activities. RSVP to Marily Lerner at 650 213 9600 x154 or mlerner@kehillah.org. Open to all middle school families!

Come Join Us at UnityJam!
Sunday, January 17 at 7 PM
Spangenberg Theatre, 780 Arastradero Road
Palo Alto, CA 94306

UnityJam is a concert to benefit two non-profit organizations: Abraham’s Vision is educating Muslim, Jewish, Palestinian, and Israeli communities towards inter- and intra-communal conflict transformation and the Salman & Samina Global Wellness Initiative is working to help Pakistan’s 3 million impoverished IDP’s (internally-displaced persons).

Performers include
Salman Ahmad
A blend of Western rock music and eastern/Islamic music popularized by his band Junoon

Yale Strom
As a violinist and composer, Strom is known as a pioneer of the revival of klezmer music.

ELIZABETH SCHWARTZ
A singer of klezmer music, she has performed all over North America and Europe in venues ranging from jazz clubs to synagogues to concert halls.

MUHAMMAD SALEEM
Ustad Muhammad Saleem Khan is a distinguished virtuoso tabla player and has performed all across the United States, including at the UN General Assembly and Shea Stadium.

Find Tickets at http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/92556

SAVE THE DATE: Sunday January 24 1:00 – 8:00 PM
JEWBILEE celebrating Jewish Life at the APJCC
A day of classes, programs and performances. Open Kosher Buffet, film screenings, programming for all ages; complimentary daycare. $7 for adults $4 senior/students. Check it out: www.svjcc.org/jewbilee


Torah portion from www.urj.org
Sh’mot, Exodus 1:1-6:1
Shabbat, January 9, 2010 / 23 Tevet, 5770

• D'VAR TORAH
Discovering Your Real Name
Laura Geller

Our tradition teaches that each of us has three names: the one we are given at birth, the one we are called, and our real name. The task of each person, according to the tradition, is to discover our real name.

This week we begin a new book of the Hebrew Bible, Sh’mot (Exodus). It takes its name from the important word in the first sentence. The Rabbis tell us that the name of the parashah—and in this case, the whole book—is not just an accident of the first sentence. Instead, the name captures the essence of the book.

“These are the names of the sons of Israel who came to Egypt with Jacob . . . Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah . . . “ (Exodus 1:1)—the list goes on. “The total number of persons that were of Jacob’s issue came to seventy . . . Joseph died, and all his brothers and that generation . . .” (1:5–6).
One commentary focuses on each of these names, interpreting each one to be connected to our future deliverance (see Sh’mot Rabbah 1:5). So, even as we entered Egypt, our own names carried the seeds of redemption. Another commentary explains that we were redeemed from Egypt because we never assimilated, never changed our names (M’chilta Bo 5).

But the irony of the Torah portion is that there are so many unnamed, including the heroes. Consider the following:
A certain man of the house of Levi went and married a woman of Levi. The woman conceived and bore a son; and when she saw how beautiful he was, she hid him for three months. When she could hide him no longer, she got a wicker basket for him . . . put the child into it and placed it among the reeds by the bank of the Nile. And his sister stationed herself at a distance, to learn what would befall him. The daughter of Pharaoh came down to bathe in the Nile . . . . ” (Exodus 2:1–4)

A certain man? A Levite woman? A sister? The Torah only later tells us their names: Amram, Jocheved, Miriam (6:20, 15:20). The daughter of Pharaoh? She remains nameless in Torah; the Rabbis, generations later, named her Batya, “daughter of God.” (see The Torah: A Women’s Commentary, ed. Tamara Cohn Ezkenazi [New York: URJ Press, 2008], p. 325). Even the Pharaoh who forgot Joseph’s name is unnamed (1:8).

The first to be named are Shiphrah and Puah, the midwives to the Hebrews (1:15–16). After Pharaoh, they are the first to speak in the story. What compels them to speak is their disobedience of Pharaoh’s decree. The Torah, using the expression for the first time, tells us that they were “fearing God” (1:17).Others before them were described as God-fearing, but the midwives “do” God-fearing—they act out of their connection to God by choosing to preserve life. It is not completely clear from the Hebrew whether they are Hebrew midwives or midwives to the Hebrews. Playing off the first possibility, one midrash identifies them as Jocheved and Miriam (Babylonian Talmud, Sotah 11b). Other commentary suggests they, like Pharaoh’s daughter, might be Egyptian women (see Nehama Leibowitz, New Studies in Shemot (Exodus) [Jerusalem: World Zionist Organization, 1976], pp. 33–35).

It is through a conspiracy of women reaching across religion, class, and race that a baby boy is saved. He is named Moses (Hebrew, Mosheh) by the daughter of Pharaoh because, “I drew him out of the water.” The explanation is not an accurate etymology; a closer meaning would be “one who draws out.” Most commentators belief this is a prophetic hint that Moses will be the one to draw us out of Mitzrayim, Egypt, which means the “narrow place.”

But there is another interpretation. Moses is the one who draws God out, and gives us a name that can liberate us from our own narrow places, a name that can help us discover our own real names.
God calls Moses from a bush that burns without being consumed to send him to Pharaoh to free the Israelites:

Moses said to God: “When I come to the Israelites and say to them, ‘The God of your ancestors sent me to you,’ and they ask me, ‘What is his name?’ what shall I say to them?” And God said to Moses, “Ehyeh-Asher-Ehyeh,” continuing, “Thus shall you say to the Israelites: ‘Ehyeh sent me to you.’ ” And God said further to Moses, “Thus you shall speak to the Israelites: ‘The Eternal, the God of your ancestors—the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob—has sent me to you:
This shall be My name forever,
This My appellation for eternity.’” (Exodus 3:13–15)

Ehyeh is the first-person singular of the verb “to be.” It seems to be the future tense, but it isn’t totally clear how it ought to be translated. Is it “I am” or “I will be”? Or is it “I cause to be? Is it an answer or an intentional obfuscation? Or is it a challenge?

Rashi tells us: Ehyeh-Asher-Ehyeh means “I will be [with them in this trouble] what I will be [with them in future bondages].” For Ramban, it means: “As you are with Me so I am with you. If you open your hands to give charity, so I will open My hands as is said, ‘God will open for you God’s goodly treasure.” (Deuteronomy 28:12). Aviva Zornberg, citing Maharal, has another interpretation: “God’s being is a being- with—‘I shall be with you.’ It will always respond to the needs of the human, to the specific quality of the human cry. The particular idiom of a particular time, a particular place, a particular conception of God will draw forth an answering sense of redemption. From Moses’s viewpoint this name of God is not a name at all; it yields nothing constant, nothing knowable through all vicissitudes. It is contingent, the very figure of human desire—a fluid dynamic name, it expresses the First Person form of God’s name, addressing the human, involved in dialogue with the hu
man. It changes constantly as humans beings find and lose relationship with God.” (Aviva Zornberg, The Particulars of Rapture; [New York: Doubleday, 2001], p.74)

There is no record that Moses ever reports the name to the Israelites. Maybe Moses asked just for himself. What Moses learned is what each of us can learn: Ehyeh-Asher-Ehyeh: I am in the process of becoming who I am. I am never completely stuck in the mitzrayim, “the narrow places” of my life. I am always in relationship with others and with God, and it is through responding to the needs of others that I become more fully the image of God.

Each of us has three names: the one we are given at birth, the one we are called, and our real name. We discover our real name when we connect God’s name to our lives.

Rabbi Laura Geller is the senior rabbi at Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills in Beverly Hills, California.

DAVAR ACHER

Earning Your Real Name
Richard J. Birnholz

Rabbi Geller writes that each of us has three names: a name given at birth, one by which we are called, and one that we discover when we connect God’s name to our lives.

I would suggest a fourth name, our Hebrew name. More than a label and a mark of religious identity, a Hebrew name has the power to challenge and transform us. Jewish parents can give their children Hebrew names. But adult Jews must decide if their Hebrew names are to be a blessing or a burden.

American poet, singer, and songwriter Shel Silverstein wrote about a burdensome name in a song made famous by Johnny Cash called, “A Boy Named Sue.”* In it, a boy does not blame his father for abandoning the family, but hates him for naming him “Sue.” After a lifetime of fighting to prove his manhood, the boy searches for his dad, intent on killing him for the pain he has caused. When they finally meet and each turns to fire his gun, the father hesitates and explains the method behind his madness:

And he said, “Son, this world is rough
And if a man's gonna make it, he's gotta be tough
And I knew I wouldn't be there to help you along.
So I gave you that name and I said, 'Goodbye.'
I knew you'd have to get tough or die.
And it's that name that helped to make you strong."
. . . I got all choked up and I threw down my gun,
And I called him my pa, and he called me his son,
And I came away with a different point of view.

Being a boy or girl with a Hebrew name that says “Jew” can be almost as challenging as being a boy named Sue. It’s never easy being different. But our willingness to accept our uniqueness with all the responsibility it entails can also make us stronger.

Perhaps Shiphrah and Puah were the first names in Sh’mot because the women who bore these names turned their burden into a blessing for the Israelite slaves. And maybe, as the commentaries suggest, the reason these slaves finally earned the blessing of redemption is that they chose Hebrew names over Egyptian names, despite the hardships they knew they would have to face. Ultimately, Jewish survival depends on how we play the name game.

* “Boy Named Sue” was written by Shel Silverstein and first recorded by Johnny Cash at the concert, “Live at San Quentin” on February 24, 1969.

Rabbi Richard J. Birnholz is senior rabbi at Congregation Schaarai Zedek in Tampa, Florida.

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