Parashat Bereishit – extra special service

sukkot 2016
Friday Night Shabbat Services

Tonight 10/28, at the regular time of 7:00 PM. We will have a le chaim and deserts kindly sponsored by Nathan Finkelstein and Tamara Miller in memory of Tamara Miller’s late, beloved father Larry Miller (z’l) of blessed memory.

The High Holiday marathon may be over, but here at Beth El we are ultra Marathoners, therefore, added an extra special service this Shabbat!
Shabbat morning services are THIS Saturday OCTOBER 29. Story time for children at 11 AM. Light kidish lunch following. We have added an extra service this month in honor of the beginning of the cycle of Torah readings and a couple of our congregants will be reading from the Torah on this special occasion. Please be sure to join us.

Sunday school this Sunday October 30 at 10 AM. We are super excited to welcome Ms. Carol (Rubin) to join us for songs at 11:30 AM. ** See below for upcoming guests.

Candle lighting in Austin is at 6:28 PM

Cantor Ben Moshe’s Message

This Shabbat we begin the yearly cycle of Torah readings with Parshat B’reshit. Our parshah teaches that humanity began with one couple (which has been borne out by science-all humans living today are descended from an early human woman who lived in Africa one million years ago). The Sages asked why did God create all of humanity from one couple, and answered that this was to prevent anyone from saying that their ancestry is better than anyone else’s. Judaism as we know it today teaches that while people may have different abilities and talents, all humans have equal worth. All persons have the breath of God’s Spirit, and all are created in God’s image. May we soon see the day when the absolute equality of every woman and man is recognized everywhere. Shabbat Shalom. Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

We have some exciting guests who will be coming to Sunday school classes in the coming weeks and will help enrich the lovely experience our children are having.

Sunday October 30 – 11:30 AM Ms. Carol Rubin and her amazing songs and guitar.

Sunday November 6 – 11:30 AM Gregg Philipson avid historian and collector will talk to the kids about famous Jewish men and women in sports.

Sunday November 13 – 11:30 AM Arielle Levy of Jewish National Fund will come to talk to the children about the amazing work that JNF does in Israel.

Sunday December 4 – 11:30 AM Aviv Canaani will talk about his experience leading Birthright trips to Israel and Judith Golden will talk to the kids about being a participant in this life changing trip to Israel..

If you would like to share something fun with the kids, please let us know.

The sisterhood is planning some exciting events.

** November we will be having a cooking class with chef Mirit Solomon-Shimoni, chef and caterer, yoga instructor and Mom extraordinaire.

**Hold the date for Sunday December 4th at 1 PM for Hannukah themed art project with artist Sharon Yam-Sananes.

Check this space for more details in the coming weeks.

COMMUNITY NEWS:

Austin Jewish Book Fair is starting next week.
Check out http://www.jewishbookfair.org/
Some of the sisterhood is attending next Tuesday evening, at the J at 7PM. Let us know if you’d like to come to this free event and we’ll save a seat for you.
JENNIFER S. BROWN
MODERN GIRLS
In 1935, Dottie Krasinsky is the epitome of the modern girl. So when after a single careless night, she is “in a family way” by a charismatic but unsuitable man, she is desperate – unwed, unsure, and running out of options. After twenty years as a housewife and the birth of five children, Dottie’s immigrant mother, Rose, is itching to return to the social activism of her youth. Yet when she realizes that she, too, is pregnant, she struggles to reconcile her longings with her faith. Mother and daughter must confront their beliefs, the changing world, and the fact that their lives will never again be the same.

PLEASE DONATE GENEROUSLY TO YOUR SHUL. You can go directly to our website www.bethelaustin.org/donate/ and go to the Donate page. Donations are secure and every dollar helps us run this gem of a congregation.

You mean the world to us – weekend of joyful events

sukkotFriday Night Shabbat Services Tonight 10/21, at the regular time of 7:00 PM.

Shabbat morning services are a THIS Saturday OCTOBER 22. Story time for children at 11 AM. Kidush lunch immediately following sponsored by the Koellers in honor of our Jewish home Beth El, a place that has helped elevate our Jewish lives and enriched it in boundless ways.

Sunday school this Sunday October 23 at 10 AM.

Simchat Torah THIS Monday October 24 at 7:15 PM. Come and dance with the Torah!

Candle lighting in Austin is at 6:34 PM

Cantor Ben Moshe’s Message

This Shabbat we take a break from the cycle of Torah readings for the Festival of Sukkot, but resume again on Simhat Torah, when we read the last parshah of the Torah and then immediately begin with the first. The last word of Parshat V’zot Hab’rachah is Yisrael, ending with the letter “lamed”. The Torah begins again with Parshat B’reshit, which begins with the letter “bet”. Together, the last letter and first letter of the Torah spell “lev”, heart. The Torah has been the heart of our People from ancient times-telling us where we came from, and pointing the way that we should go. May we always follow our heart, our “lev”, not only at this holiday season but at all times. Shabbat Shalom umo’adim l’simhah.

Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

Fun fact following the Chazzan’s message: Did you know that recent studies have found that when people sing together, their heartbeats synchronize. Let’s sing and join with one heart this weekend at services!

Happy October birthdays to: Herschel Hochman, Iris Daniel, Patrice Jones, Natalie Bowers-Benderly, Amanda Golden, Elyse Tarlton, Nathan Finkelstein and Rachel Union.
Please send us your birthday so we can give you a shout out.

We greatly appreciate every person in our shul. As you know, we always keep our dues affordable, but rely on donations to run this sweet little shul. Please consider a tax deductible donation to help us
http://bethelaustin.wpengine.com/donate Other ways to help include, sponsoring a kidush for a special event or in memory of a loved one, or bringing needed supplies. Ask us how you can help.

Thank you to our dedicated “Shabbat Shefs”, Michelle, Iris, Shereen and Claudia. We are currently recruiting more shabbat shefs who can help us prepare kidishes every two weeks. Let us know if you would like to join! All you need to do is know how to chop and chat!

Sukkot For Our Time (extract from Koren Sacks Sukkot mahzor). Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks.

Of all the festivals, Sukkot is surely the one that speaks most powerfully to our time. Kohelet could almost have been written in the twenty first century. Here is the ultimate success, the man who has it all – the houses, the cars, the clothes, the adoring women, the envy of all men – who has pursued everything this world can offer from pleasure to possessions to power to wisdom and yet who, surveying the totality of his life, can only say, in effect, “Meaningless, meaningless, everything is meaningless.”

Kohelet’s failure to find meaning is directly related to his obsession with the “I” and the “Me”: “I built for myself. I gathered for myself. I acquired for myself.” The more he pursues his desires, the emptier his life becomes. There is no more powerful critique of the consumer society, whose idol is the self, whose icon is the “selfie” and whose moral code is “Whatever works for you.” This is the society that achieved unprecedented affluence, giving people more choices than they have ever known, and yet at same time saw an unprecedented rise in alcohol and drug abuse, eating disorders, stress related syndromes, depression, attempted suicide and actual suicide. A society of tourists, not pilgrims, is not one that will yield the sense of a life worth living. Of all things people have chosen to worship, the self is the least fulfilling. A culture of narcissism quickly gives way to loneliness and despair.

Kohelet was also, of course, a cosmopolitan: a man at home everywhere and therefore nowhere. This is the man who had seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines but in the end could only say, “More bitter than death is the woman.” It should be clear to anyone who reads this in the context of the life of Solomon, that Kohelet is not really talking about women but about himself.
In the end Kohelet finds meaning in simple things. Sweet is the sleep of a labouring man. Enjoy life with the woman you love. Eat, drink and enjoy the sun. That ultimately is the meaning of Sukkot as a whole. It is a festival of simple things. It is, Jewishly, the time we come closer to nature than any other, sitting in a hut with only leaves for a roof, and taking in our hands the unprocessed fruits and foliage of the palm branch, the citron, twigs of myrtle and leaves of willow. It is a time when we briefly liberate ourselves from the sophisticated pleasures of the city and the processed artefacts of a technological age and recapture some of the innocence we had when we were young, when the world still had the radiance of wonder.

The power of Sukkot is that it takes us back to the most elemental roots of our being. You don’t need to live in a palace to be surrounded by clouds of glory. You don’t need to be rich to buy yourself the same leaves and fruit that a billionaire uses in worshipping God. Living in the sukkah and inviting guests to your meal, you discover – such is the premise of Ushpizin, the mystical guests – that the people who have come to visit you are none other than Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and their wives. What makes a hut more beautiful than a home is that when it comes to Sukkot there is no difference between the richest of the rich and the poorest of the poor. We are all strangers on earth, temporary residents in God’s almost eternal universe. And whether or not we are capable of pleasure, whether or not we have found happiness, nonetheless we can all feel joy.

Sukkot is the time we ask the most profound question of what makes a life worth living. Having prayed on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur to be written in the Book of Life, Kohelet forces us to remember how brief life actually is, and how vulnerable. “Teach us to number our days that we may get a heart of wisdom.” What matters is not how long we live, but how intensely we feel that life is a gift we repay by giving to others. Joy, the overwhelming theme of the festival, is what we feel when we know that it is a privilege simply to be alive, inhaling the intoxicating beauty of this moment amidst the profusion of nature, the teeming diversity of life and the sense of communion with those many others with whom we share a history and a hope.

Most majestically of all, Sukkot is the festival of insecurity. It is the candid acknowledgment that there is no life without risk, yet we can face the future without fear when we know we are not alone. God is with us, in the rain that brings blessings to the earth, in the love that brought the universe and us into being, and in the resilience of spirit that allowed a small and vulnerable people to outlive the greatest empires the world has ever known. Sukkot reminds us that God’s glory was present in the small, portable Tabernacle Moses and the Israelites built in the desert even more emphatically than in Solomon’s Temple with all its grandeur. A Temple can be destroyed. But a sukkah, broken, can be rebuilt tomorrow. Security is not something we can achieve physically but it is something we can acquire mentally, psychologically, spiritually. All it needs is the courage and willingness to sit under the shadow of God’s sheltering wings.

For more inspiring talks by Rabbi Sacks, go to

Shabbat shalom – Sunday night Shake the lulav – sing some songs!

Friday Night Shabbat Services

Tonight 10/14, at the regular time of 7:00 PM.

Our next Shabbat morning services are a week away Saturday OCTOBER 22.

Sunday October 15, Hebrew school at 10 AM with the children helping to decorate the sukkah for the evening party!

Sukkot services, sing a long and dinner Sunday evening October 15 at 6:15 PM. Services in the sanctuary at 6:45. Dinner immediately following.

Simchat Torah Monday October 15 at 7:15 PM. Come and dance with the Torah!

Candle lighting in Austin is at 6:41 PM
Cantor Ben Moshe’s Message

As we move past Yom Kippur and towards Sukkoth, we read Parshat Ha’azinu, the penultimate parshah of the Torah. Moshe gives his last instructions to the People of Israel in the form of a song. Music is of course a potent aid to memory-this is why we chant our prayers and our Torah readings. Music in fact activates the right brain, which adds to the processing of language in the left brain. Singing engages all of our mental faculties. As we enter the Season of Rejoicing, the Festival of Sukkoth, let us always try to have a song in our hearts- a song of praise and gratitude to God. Shabbat Shalom and Hag Sameah. Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

Happy 69th wedding anniversary to Morris and Elaine Shapiro! Pictured with Cantor Ben-Moshe sounding the shofar. We were all so happy to see Elaine at services and wish them both much nachas together!

Happy October birthdays to: Herschel Hochman, Iris Daniel, Patrice Jones, Natalie Bowers-Benderly, Amanda Golden, Elyse Tarlton and Rachel Union.

Please send us your birthday so we can give you a shout out.

You will learn…
THE THREE MITZVOT OF SUKKOT:
Sukkot has all the ingredients for one large-scale party: a special place to have the party (sukkah), decorations, guests (our friends and family as well as Ushpizin, food and special party equipment (a lulav and etrog). The three basic mitzvot for Sukkot are:
1) Live in the sukkah, which at its minimum means having a nosh in a sukkah.
2) Shake the Lulav & Etrog, also called “gathering together the four species.”
3) Rejoice during the holiday. That is not a typo: we are actually commanded to rejoice!! It is so important a mitzvah that it is even more important than dwelling in the sukkah. For instance, if there are bees in the Sukkah, or it’s raining too hard, one does not have to dwell in one’s sukkah…but you have to be happy – it’s Sukkot.
We will be making decorations to beautify our sukkah, just in time for the congregational Sukkot dinner, later Sunday evening following services!
If you LOVE making decorations, I encourage you to make one with your family and bringing it this Sunday to put up in the Beth El sukkah!
See ya soon!

L’Shalom, Shereen Ben-Moshe

Sunday school
YASHER KOACH to all the great kids and teachers on a fantastic first day of Hebrew School today! The children delighted in seeing all their friends and welcomed some new smiling faces to the classes. I had the pleasure of substituting for Morah Enat in Kitah Alef. Our morning centered on getting to know each other, writing our names in Hebrew, and creating a mitzvah tree. We read a PJ Library favorite, “Michael Says No!” and then created a list of classroom rules to help the class run smoothly. In Kitah Bet, our new teacher, Morah Lital reviewed the Hebrew alphabet with her class, practiced some writing, and made beautiful necklaces. Meanwhile, Kitah Gimel spent an hour with Morah Bev discussing Jewish history, and then an hour with Hazzan Ben-Moshe in the sanctuary reviewing some prayers. In the future this group will be working on strengthening their Hebrew reading and writing skills.
A fun, meaningful morning was had by all!
Remember, there will be no class next Sunday, in observance of Labor Day. The teachers look forward to seeing all the students on Sunday, September 11, as each class begins to learn about and prepare for Rosh Hashanah.
We wish all our cuties a terrific WEEK #2 in school this coming week!
L’Shalom,
Shereen Ben-MosheSunday school 8.16