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Tribeca Synagogue is putting its outdoor space to good use – Tribeca Citizen

Posted By on September 8, 2020

September 4, 2020 Kids, Schools

Over the decades, there was always someone who wanted to cover the plaza in front of Tribeca Synagogue on White Street enclose it to make more room for programming or to make better use of wasted space. Now that plaza may be the thing keeping the synagogue alive.

Not only is the synagogue using it for services, but it is also transforming it as a private outdoor playspace for its preschool and at low-fee rents for the preschools of both JCP and Chabad and Super Soccer Stars rec program. So the plaza will now be booked from 7:15a till 5p every day.

Here we are in 2020 and it is not only keeping us going but also helping two schools who are like everyone struggling with enrollment, said Tribecan Eli Weiss, president of the synagogue. Its been a tremendous challenge for us, but we have this wonderful building that has a big outdoor space. It seems like especially now, the building is here for a reason.

The synagogue closed in March and only started holding small services in the courtyard in early July. The state allows for a max of 50 people, so there is not much they can do. The whole point is to bring people together, so COVID really just wiped us out, said Weiss. But when parents started voicing concerns about using public playgrounds, which have no guarantee of being sanitized, a light bulb went off.

The synagogue will add some temporary play structures along with tricycles and other toys for the pre-school set, along with regular cleanings and spaces sectioned off for each school. Over the years the synagogue has hosted Super Soccer Stars and Church Street School in the courtyard for one-off programs, but this is the first time they have used the space to really enhance enrollment for their own programs.

This community has been entrusted with that building we inherited it for free, with no mortgage, Weiss said. Now it looks like that plaza saved everyone.

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Tribeca Synagogue is putting its outdoor space to good use - Tribeca Citizen

Observe Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Safely – The New York Times

Posted By on September 8, 2020

If you want to avoid services or simply want more ways to observe several holiday traditions lend themselves well to being done outside of synagogue. Tashlich, the symbolic casting away of sins on Rosh Hashana, is usually done outside by a body of water even when a global health crisis is not ongoing. But with many parks limiting group sizes even outdoors, synagogues are including birdseed (the more eco-friendly version of the traditional bread crumbs) and Tashlich instructions in holiday baskets being sent to members. HighHolidays@Home also offers downloadable prayers and guided meditations, and you can throw pebbles in whatever nearby water is available, including a kiddie swimming pool. Another option: Writing down your sins on rice paper, which dissolves in water. (On Amazon, its often referred to as spy paper.)

There is also the Rosh Hashana Seder, which is more like an elevated Shabbat dinner than the often lengthy Passover Seder. (Seder simply means order.) If youve never heard of this tradition (which is mentioned in the Talmud), youve already held a mini version of one if youve ever dipped apples in honey for a sweet new year, said Vanessa Ochs, a rabbi and professor of religious studies at the University of Virginia.

Before Rosh Hashana dinner is served or tapas-style during the meal you eat fruits or vegetables linked to a particular Jewish value or wish this time of year, like black-eyed peas or fenugreek to symbolize blessings increasing. Online you can find dozens of suggested ingredients, many involving puns on Hebrew, Aramaic and, these days, English. (Some people have raisins on celery a raise in salary.) Feel free to riff: Rabbi Ochs, dislikes having a fish head (symbolizing the head of the year, and also being a leader) at her table, so she substitutes Swedish fish candy.

Finally, keep in mind that observe is relative anything goes if it feels right to you.

Were really encouraging people to take the core of the holiday and do what Jews have done for 3,000 years and be creative, Rabbi Jacobs said. He said you can go for a walk and think about the message of the holidays, or have a conversation with a friend or family member about beginning anew. You could also perform acts of kindness toward people who are confined because of the health crisis for example, taking exceedingly good care of an older neighbor, he said.

Some families are forming pods for services, with the 10 adults required for a minyan, or quorum (with all the associated children). Aviva Pearlman, a sixth-grade teacher in Denver, is borrowing a Torah from her synagogue, prayer shawls and books (and a shofar!) from friends and hosting a few families, all masked up, in her backyard.

Ms. Pearlman, who this year switched to teaching online, said doing the High Holy Days virtually felt like one screen too many: I really wanted to come together and meet with other people in three dimensions.

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Observe Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Safely - The New York Times

Washington DC synagogue will ‘seat’ you with a celeb for the High Holidays – jewishpresstampa

Posted By on September 8, 2020

By ohtadmin | on September 07, 2020

(JTA) Wanna join Daveed Diggs, Idina Menzel and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg for High Holidays worship?

The Sixth & I Historic Synagogue in Washington, D.C., has a way virtually.

The synagogue/arts and entertainment center, which has hosted dozens of Jewish celebrities in the past 15 years, has launched its You In A Pew fundraiser in which members and others can pay $36 to have a photo of themselves placed next to a cardboard cutout of one of the famous folks, like the trio noted above.

The pews will be shown during livestreams of virtual Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur services. Proceeds from the fundraiser will go to pay for the production of the services.

We miss seeing your face around Sixth & I, the synagogue said in an Instagram post announcing the program. Although this year isnt quite what many of us pictured, a picture of you in our sanctuary during the High Holidays would help us feel more connected to you at a time when we especially want to be together. You might even see yourself on screen sharing a prayerbook with Matisyahu.

To join in go to http://www.sixthandi.org and search for You In A Pew.

Continued here:

Washington DC synagogue will 'seat' you with a celeb for the High Holidays - jewishpresstampa

Lawsuit over Ann Arbor synagogue protests headed to U.S. Court of Appeals – MLive.com

Posted By on September 8, 2020

ANN ARBOR, MI A lawsuit over anti-Israel protests outside an Ann Arbor synagogue is now headed to the U.S. Court of Appeals, where plaintiffs are challenging U.S. District Judge Victoria Roberts dismissal of the case.

In a one-page order Thursday, Sept. 3, Roberts denied the plaintiffs motion for reconsideration of her recent ruling.

Plaintiffs motion presents the same issues already ruled on by the court, she wrote.

The protests are protected as free speech under the First Amendment and the plaintiffs lack standing to sue and fail to assert a concrete injury, Roberts previously ruled.

Michigan attorney Marc Susselman and Ziporah Reich of the New York-based Lawfare Project, who are representing two clients opposed to the protests, gave notice Friday, Sept. 4, theyre now appealing to the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Reich said in August she was confident theyd find justice in the appellate court if their motion for reconsideration was denied.

Theyre prepared to take the case as far as necessary to enforce the rights of the Jewish community, she said.

In granting the defendants motions to dismiss, the court is effectively saying that the emotional distress experienced by Jews, in reaction to the anti-Semitic slurs hurled at them every week for 16 years in front of their house of worship, is insufficient injury to grant them access to federal court, she said in a statement last month.

They fill our sidewalks with hate speech, Ann Arbor rabbi says in response to court ruling

The lawsuit was filed last year by Marvin Gerber, a member of the Beth Israel Congregation at 2000 Washtenaw Ave., where Henry Herskovitz and his anti-Israel protest group have demonstrated on Saturday mornings since 2003.

Miriam Brysk, identified in court records as a Holocaust survivor and member of the Pardes Hannah Congregation in an annex next to the synagogue, joined as a co-plaintiff.

The lawsuit alleged the protests amount to hateful, anti-Semitic speech and named as defendants both the protesters and city officials for allowing them to continue without restrictions.

Protest signs have carried messages such as Resist Jewish Power, Jewish Power Corrupts, No More Holocaust Movies, Boycott Israel, Stop U.S. Aid to Israel and End the Palestinian holocaust.

Gerber complained in the lawsuit the messages offend and anger him, cause extreme emotional distress, significantly diminish his enjoyment in attending sabbath services and adversely affect his willingness to attend.

The lawsuit also raised concerns about the impacts on children in the congregation.

Herskovitz said last year he would compare Gerbers alleged suffering with the actual suffering of Palestinians gunned down by the Israeli military. He has complained the synagogue displays the Israeli flag and prays for Israel.

Our protests are to highlight the ongoing, criminal actions of the state of Israel and we plan to continue to do so, Herskovitz said after the lawsuit was filed.

Herskovitzs synagogue protest group has had multiple names over the years and is now called Witness for Peace.

Deir Yassin Remembered, another of Herskovitzs groups that argues the historical suffering of Palestinians has been minimized while the historical suffering of Jews has been unduly amplified, was labeled by the Southern Poverty Law Center in 2017 as a Holocaust-denying hate group.

Herskovitz has argued the label is unfair and has denied being anti-Semitic. He also has said he is Jewish and used to attend Beth Israel, but he had a falling out with his faith years ago.

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Lawsuit over Ann Arbor synagogue protests headed to U.S. Court of Appeals - MLive.com

Local synagogue reimagines the Jewish New Year – mysouthborough

Posted By on September 8, 2020

Since Southborough doesnt have its own synagogue, I occasionally share news from Congregation Bnai Shalom in neighboring Westborough.

The Congregation asked me to share their announcement on how they are handling upcoming high holy days.

Congregation Bnai Shalom reimagines the Jewish New Year

In an effort to foster inclusivity and community and retain a sense of normalcy during this widespread pandemic, Congregation Bnai Shalom will be hosting reimagined High Holy Days services this September. The programming is open to everyone, including members, families and friends of members, or those not previously or officially affiliated with the synagogue. The services will be broadcast digitally and there will be components that will take place in person while adhering to all guidelines related to social distancing.

Rabbis Rachel Gurevitz and Joe Eiduson and their team have been working all summer to prepare for the Jewish New Year which begins on the evening of September 18 this year. To redesign a meaningful High Holy Day experience, they began by asking the members of the congregation, now entering its 42nd year, what was most important to them.

The feeling of community and of Jews coming together at the same time to celebrate was the most important of all, Rabbi Gurevitz reflected. In our reimagined services and offerings, we have created ways, even online, to see and connect with each other during these holy days. Additionally, hearing the special melodies of the season, the chanting of Torah, and a spiritually-uplifting and inspiring message from the Rabbis, were important to congregants. Hearing the sounding of the shofar the ancient instrument made from a rams horn to announce the New Year. These are all components that people can expect to experience with us this year, she continued.

Rabbi Eiduson, who has also been developing a reboot of the congregations successful Religious School program, Eitz Chayim, has brought the same creativity to engaging youth in the New Year celebrations. We are offering short, interactive online gatherings with movement, song, activities and more for our children. Weve also created an interactive online page full of stories, videos, and activities for families to do at times that work for them. And, subject to the presence of Covid-19 in the community remaining low, we are also offering some in-person physically-distanced outdoor gatherings to help bring the experience of community and the message of the New Year to life for families with children.

The reimagined services will include an online link, enabling remote participation, regardless of where they are located, to join the community. The congregation, just as they do in other years, is welcoming all who are seeking to celebrate the Jewish New Year to join them. Grandparents, aunts and uncles, young adult children and college kids wherever they are they can share an experience together this year with us.

You can learn more and register to participate in these High Holy Day experiences at https://www.cbnaishalom.org/hhd

To learn more aboutCongregation Bnai Shalom, click here.

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Local synagogue reimagines the Jewish New Year - mysouthborough

Synagogue vandal in Racine, Wis. called it Operation Kristallnacht – Forward

Posted By on September 8, 2020

The trial of a young man accused of vandalizing a synagogue has revealed the thought process behind a neo-Nazi groups decision last fall to accelerate its activities.

Yousef Omar Barasneh, 22, a member of the group known as the Base, pleaded guilty last month to spray-painting anti-Semitic messages and swastikas on the walls of the Beth Israel Sinai Congregation in Racine, Wis. last September. Hes now awaiting sentencing.

The documents describe the Base as a neo-Nazi group that aims to unify militant white supremacists around the globe and provide them with paramilitary training in preparation for a race war.

The vandalism of Beth Israel Sinai was carried out after members of the group made a pact to ramp up their activities that week.

A purpose of the agreement was to show the strength and cohesion of The Base, as well as to terrorize Jewish citizens so they would fear for their physical safety and refrain from freely exercising their rights to use and hold property in the same manner as non-Jewish white citizens, the document said.

They called it Operation Kristallnacht, a reference to the 1938 German pogrom which ushered the start of the Holocaust.

Imagine if across the country on local news, everyone is reporting on new Nazi presence, Barasneh wrote in the groups chat. Our op will be a perfect fuck you to these kikes if we become terrorists.

For his actions and involvement in the group Barasneh could face a maximum of ten years in prison and a fine of $250,000, he is set to be sentenced in November.

Despite his hostility to non-white groups, Barasneh is himself the son of Jordanian immigrants, Ynet reported.

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Synagogue vandal in Racine, Wis. called it Operation Kristallnacht - Forward

Tailgates of Repentance: Jews to Observe Ancient High Holidays in a New Way – The Media Line

Posted By on September 8, 2020

Jews around the world are changing their services and traditions to fit COVID-19 guidelines for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur

Jews across the globe are adapting their prayer services to limit the spread of COVID-19 during the High Holidays, which begin with Rosh Hashanah, the start of the Jewish new year, at sundown on September 18. The second High Holiday, Yom Kippur, is the holiest day in the Jewish calendar and begins at sundown on September 27. Both holidays draw far larger crowds than other days. This year, Jewish communities have to find ways to make prayers and customs safe during the pandemic.

A spokesperson for the Jewish Community of Turkey, an Istanbul-based affiliate of the World Jewish Congress, told The Media Line: Mandatory mask-wearing, social distancing and cleaning rules will be strictly followed.

At the Great Synagogue in Sydney, Australia, the rabbi emeritus, Dr. Raymond Apple, told The Media Line that the new measures include running an array of services with limited numbers at each one and a [shortened sermon]. The synagogue choir will not be singing.

In Krakw, Poland, the Jewish community is small enough that social distancing in the large synagogues is not a problem. However, at the Jewish Community Center [JCC] of Krakw, their social hub, people will be divided into smaller groups to protect older and sicker members.

We have a special dinner just for Holocaust survivors, and then the next night is the regular community, and the next day is children and families. Instead of having the whole community together, well have to split things up this year, Jonathan Ornstein, executive director at the JCC Krakw, told The Media Line.

One of the strengths of our community is its intergenerational aspect. In larger communities, you normally have things more divided [into groups, but] because of the recent re-emergence of Jewish life [in Poland], we try to do everything together.

I think that Krakw is resilient, especially our Holocaust survivors, who have been through the Shoah [Holocaust] and Communism, Ornstein said. Theyre not especially worried or pessimistic about whats going to happen with corona because theyve lived through difficult times.

While Orthodoxy is the predominant stream of Judaism outside the US, Reform and Conservative Jews are more commonly found in the US.

All of them have to adapt their services for the coronavirus crisis, and the most frequent change is a shorter prayer session.

Yosef Ote, the community rabbi of the Orthodox Hazvi Yisrael synagogue in Jerusalem, said services were being reduced from four hours to slightly more than two hours.

Amy Schwartzman, senior rabbi at Temple Rodef Shalom (TRS), a Reform congregation in the Washington, D.C. suburb of Falls Church, Virginia and the largest synagogue in the state, said that the services will be virtual and are being cut to one hour instead of two and a half.

Normally crowded congregations most of them at this time of year are mandating social distancing and masks.

At Hazvi Yisrael, the gabbaim, who make sure that the Torah is read correctly, will also check that worshippers are wearing their masks properly the entire time.

Noses and mouths will not be the only things covered to prevent the viruss spread.

Senior Rabbi Chaim Steinmetz of Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun (KJ), an Orthodox Synagogue in New York City, said that the shofar, a rams horn sounded on the High Holidays, will be tested for the coronavirus and will have a mask placed over its end to prevent tiny droplets from spreading while it is being blown. Steinmetzs congregation is limiting attendance to those ages 12 and older because it can be difficult to get children to comply with guidelines.

Changes in ritual customs are more limited for Orthodox Jews, who strictly observe Jewish law, known as halakha. This includes not using technology on the holidays, so services cannot be shown online.

Synagogues must pre-determine how many people are coming, so they can hold enough prayer sessions to accommodate more, smaller groups instead of a large crowd in order to comply with health regulations.

We will make sure to find a service for anybody who says theyre coming to synagogue them even if it means that we have to rent another space or pray outside with the tarp, Ote said.

This can be a logistical nightmare as health rules change. Israel has been discussing a possible total lockdown, lockdowns in some neighborhoods and curfews.

Its difficult because you also have to find service leaders, Torah readers and shofar blowers, Ote said. As of now, we have enough space [but that can change]. We have two weeks to figure it out.

Congregants who are not physically present will miss services at a time when Jews pray for God to write them down in the book of life for the coming year, and synagogues are trying to facilitate a meaningful experience for people who cannot attend.

Steinmetz, the senior rabbi of KJ in New York, told The Media Line: We are telling people that if they dont feel comfortable attending this year, they should not. Weve decided that if you cant come to KJ, KJ will come to you.

The synagogue, or shul, will send members commentaries and guides that go along with the High Holiday prayer book. KJ is also creating a High Holiday website for pre-holiday viewing, with sermons and concert quality videos with Rosh Hashanah prayers featuring the cantor, who leads the singing, and the choir.

For us, it really is about being an Orthodox synagogue and still trying to reach out to members in accordance with Jewish law.

Not all holiday-related events are high-tech.

Rabbi Ote in Jerusalem said: Those who cant attend will get a phone call from me and well provide a shofar on the second day. I also send out all the halakhot [Jewish laws], the rules and regulations about how congregants should pray at home, so they know what they can and cant say without a minyan of 10 men, he added.

Jewish law requires hearing the blowing of the shofar during this period, so Ote, his wife and some volunteers will go to neighborhoods around Jerusalem on the second day of Rosh Hashanah, blowing the shofar for congregants.

TRS in Virginia belongs to the more progressive wing of Judaism and is laxer about observing Jewish law, as illustrated by its safe shofar solution.

On the afternoon of Rosh Hashanah, we have secured the big 600-car parking lot at Wolf Trap [a vast outdoor concert venue in Northern Virginia] for two services, Senior Rabbi Schwartzman told The Media Line.

What follows is a shofar tailgating party of sorts.

We bought a shortwave radio station for the day that works within a one-mile radius and people will pull in with their cars and turn on the radio. In the middle of the parking lot, well have these flatbed trucks where the half-hour service will take place, she added.

Orthodox Jews would not drive or turn on the radio on the holiday.

Technology is key for Reform and Conservative virtual services, which will be pre-recorded and/or livestreamed. For many of them, tashlikh, the symbolic casting away of sins by throwing bread into a body of water, will also take place online.

Renewal is something we are desperate for. We are trying to create a spirit of hopefulness and resilience

Reform and Conservative shuls have been avoiding in-person events during the pandemic.

However, TRS, will have smaller, in-person sessions between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, including a 25-person maximum, pre-recorded meditation in the sanctuary, which can hold up to 900 people. There will be tzedakah, or charity, events from vehicles in the synagogues parking lot. Even the cars will be socially distancing.

People who attend must wear masks and sign a statement saying they do not feel sick and have not been around anyone with COVID-19. Participants will also have to leave their cellphone numbers so they can be notified if someone in attendance becomes ill.

Conservative synagogues, which do not follow halakha as closely as the Orthodox, are also making modifications for the new reality.

With just three in-person events during the High Holidays, Congregation Agudas Achim in Austin, Texas, exemplifies this approach. Its holiday schedule includes a moment in front of the open ark, which holds the Torah, and a pre-Kol Nidrei event outside in vehicles followed by a drive-in movie-style screening of the service. Kol Nidrei is an Aramaic declaration recited before the evening service at the start of Yom Kippur.

Rosh Hashanah, unlike Yom Kippur, is all about the world and togetherness. Thats where our focus should be: not for ourselves but for others

Like their Reform counterparts, the synagogues other services will be livestreamed in a Choose-Your-Own-Experience observance.

No matter how it is marked, Rosh Hashanah is a chance for a new beginning.

TRSs Schwartzman said: Renewal is something we are desperate for. We are trying to create a spirit of hopefulness and resilience.

Hazvi Yisraels Ote added, Rosh Hashanah, unlike Yom Kippur, is all about the world and togetherness. Thats where our focus should be: not for ourselves but for others.

Am Yisrael [the nation of Israel] is there for the world but [internal ]unity is our main challenge. We have to accept and respect people that dont have the same opinions and live a different type life, he said. I think that if we can succeed with that, theres no stopping what we can do as a nation.

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Tailgates of Repentance: Jews to Observe Ancient High Holidays in a New Way - The Media Line

Jews Gather In Virtual Space for the High Holy Days – Livermore Independent

Posted By on September 8, 2020

Jews at Congregation Beth Emek, a Reform synagogue in Pleasanton will be meeting online for the holiest days on the Jewish calendar.

We may be praying in a Zoom room, but it wont be virtual prayer said Rabbi Dr. Laurence Elis Milder. The prayers will be as real as ever. In fact, people who could never make it to the synagogue, or who live across the country, will be part of our High Holy Day worship this year.

The High Holy Days consist of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. On the Jewish calendar, this month marks the beginning of the year 5781.

Jews around the world will be celebrating the New Year on the evening of Sept. 18 and the following day. Yom Kippur is observed by Jews as a day of fasting, prayer and reconciliation. Yom Kippur begins on the evening of Sept. 27 and continues until sundown the following evening.

Judaism has always adapted to the challenges of the moment, said Milder. Recognizing the preeminent Jewish value of protecting ones health, we are proud to move our worship services online. We love the age-old prayers and melodies of this season and being online brings us into a new dimension of worship, which allows for connection and creativity that we might never have otherwise explored.

The congregation extends a welcome to the community to join in their observance of these sacred days. For more information or to join in, visit http://www.bethemek.org.

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Jews Gather In Virtual Space for the High Holy Days - Livermore Independent

Ordained as rabbis during a pandemic, they’re finding a path in rural Wisconsin – The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle

Posted By on September 8, 2020

In the 1800s, much of organized Reform Judaism was founded at the renowned Plum Street Temple in Cincinnati. Its where Reform movement co-founder Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise famously made things happen.

In the modern era, its in this building that a rabbi lays hands on the shoulders of a rabbinical candidate. In this moment, a student from the nearby Hebrew Union College Jewish Institute of Religion is ordained a rabbi.

Except for during a pandemic.

Its a really historic moment for us. That did not get to happen. We did it over Zoom, said Rabbi Natalie Louise Shribman, ordained in May 2020.

Shribman and her fianc, Rabbi Benjamin Altshuler, were ordained together during the ongoing worldwide struggle with COVID-19, giving them an offbeat start as new rabbis. After seeing many opportunities to serve the Jewish people disappear, theyre grateful to have found roles in and around Wausau.

Altshuler said there will be an in-person ceremony, currently scheduled for May 8, 2021. We are rabbis but will have to wait until it is safe for the ritual and ceremonial designations, he said.

Serving an Iowa synagogue from Wausau

We met our first year of school in Jerusalem, said Shribman, referring to the period in Israel thats typical for rabbinical students. We were classmates. Just like any other students, we met. We became friends. It was kind of a slow progression.

Altshuler is from the suburbs of Chicago and spent many summers at the Olin-Sang-Ruby Union Institute summer camp. Shribman, of Pittsburgh, had never been to Wisconsin before moving here for Altshulers new role as spiritual leader of Mt Sinai Congregation in Wausau.

Its notoriously a challenge for coupled Jewish professionals to find contemporaneous opportunities in the same city. This challenge was exacerbated for the two rabbis, just like so many aspects of life outside the rabbinical world that have also faced new obstacles during the pandemic. Organizations that indicated genuine interest in Altshuler or Shribman, or even both at once, ultimately backed out, citing a sudden change of plans because of an uncertain economic future.

Then, Altshuler connected with the Wausau shul.

It was a little bit unusual to meet the congregation through a series of Zoom meetings, he said. But it worked. After Altshuler was offered the spot, the couple moved to Weston, minutes from Wausau, without ever having been to the area. A sales representative for their apartment provided a FaceTime tour.

Meanwhile, Shribman agreed to serve part time for Temple Beth El in Iowa.

Theyve been really nice and welcoming, Shribman said, having started Aug. 1, by way of Zoom. Were sending each family a package of High Holy Day materials, she said, along with a letter from her.

She plans to travel to Dubuque, three-and-a-half hours away from Wausau, to record some things for the High Holidays inside the synagogue. Shes also happy to be starting full time as a chaplain resident for the Mayo Clinic Health System in Eau Claire, an hour-and-a-half from Wausau.

But she also admits that coming to rural Wisconsin during a pandemic has been a lonely experience.

Altshuler has been heading into the Mt Sinai Congregation building most weekdays during business hours.

Its been suggested I could do the work from my laptop at home, he said.

But he feels its important to show that theres still Jewish life during the pandemic.

My car is here, he said. Im here.

* * *

About the laying of hands

The laying of hands, also called smicha, is the ritual of conveying rabbinic status, a tradition that is traced back to Moses empowering Joshua to follow his leadership. The ritual is not unique to the Reform movement.

Related

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Ordained as rabbis during a pandemic, they're finding a path in rural Wisconsin - The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle

Why This is the Ideal Time for a Zionist Spring – Jewish Journal

Posted By on September 8, 2020

Israel-haters must not be very happy these days. All of a sudden, the big lie that nourished their anti-Zionist venom for so long is slipping away.

For more than 50 years, diplomatic geniuses kept telling the world that the key to peace in the Middle East is to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The convenient corollary was that the solution was in Israels hands, which kept the Jewish state constantly on the receiving end of global condemnation.

This brilliant maneuver sought to camouflage the plain truth that the deepest ills of the region have absolutely nothing to do with Israel or the Palestinian conflict.

Consider just a few: centuries of conflict between Shiite and Sunni Muslims; brutal dictatorships that have led to general misery and despair; a predatory Iranian regime seeking domination of the region; civil wars in Lebanon, Syria and Yemen; the rise of terror groups like ISIS; and a gross absence of civil liberties that results in the routine jailing of dissidents.

When the Arab Spring erupted in 2011 and millions poured out onto the streets to demand those very liberties, many of us thought the big lie would be exposed. After all, what were these desperate protestors demanding if not the same rights, freedoms and opportunities that their Arab and Muslim brethren already enjoyed in Israel?

Turns out it took a little longer, about nine years.

One cant overstate the paradigm shift represented by the decision of the United Arab Emirates to go public with its open relationship with Israel. Here is the dreaded Zionist enemy, the scapegoat exploited by countless dictators over the decades to distract from their own failures, being publicly legitimized and validated by a powerful Arab nation.

No wonder Israel-haters are unhappy. Their lie is crumbling. The Zionist state is suddenly turning into a source for solutions and hope rather than hatred.

No wonder Israel-haters are unhappy. Their lie is crumbling. The Zionist state is suddenly turning into a source for solutions and hope rather than hatred.

For anti-Zionist groups like the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement, this is a disaster in the making. How can they continue to undermine Israel if Arab countries announce that its good for the health of their societies to do business with the Zionist state?

You can bet they wont stop trying. They will be helped by ever-eager peace activists who will continue to parrot the worn-out mantra about the importance of ending Palestinian oppression and resolving the Palestinian conflict.

But if these peaceniks look a little deeper, they will realize that the conditions for resolving the conflict are actually better now, when corrupt Palestinian leaders no longer hold a veto on progress in the region. That veto gave these selfish leaders an incentive to maintain a lucrative status quo, one that nourished their victim status while leaving Israel as a dark force worthy only of boycotts and condemnations. Without that veto, maybe they will focus more on what is good for their people.

As more college students show pride in their Zionist identity, we can expect the BDS movement to double down on its anti-Zionism.

After all, it wont be easy to push for boycotts of Israel now that some Arab countries are itching to do the very opposite. These countries will reasonably ask: Why not emulate the UAE and take advantage of Israeli innovation in areas such as desalination, cybersecurity, medicine, food security, renewable energy, and, not least, defense against common threats?

This is the nightmare of Israel boycotters everywhere the rise of a Zionist Spring in the Middle East.

As long as the big lie prevailed, the global BDS movement had the field to itself, throwing poison on the Zionist idea. On college campuses across America, it has been so successful that the mere mention of the Z word has become controversial.

As more college students show pride in their Zionist identity, we can expect the BDS movement to double down on its anti-Zionism. Their foot soldiers will do all they can to suffocate any chance of a Zionist revival. They will continue to use the Palestinian cause to malign Zionism, even though their movement has always been about bashing Israel rather than raising Palestinians.

How ironic if, in the end, it is Arab countries seeking real peace and real hope that will create a Zionist Spring.

But now, they will have a major new force going against themArab states that want to follow the UAE.

These states have the credibility to expose the big lie and reveal a simple truth: Israel is not the enemy of the Arab world and has plenty to offer its Arab neighbors to help improve peoples lives. No onenot even the Palestinianscan call that a lie.

How ironic if, in the end, it is Arab countries seeking real peace and real hope that will create a Zionist Spring.

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Why This is the Ideal Time for a Zionist Spring - Jewish Journal


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