Happy Summer BERS – see you August 27

Have an amazing summer BERS. We had the ultimate fun last day of school with all the kids learning about Shavuot. dancing the Israeli song Saleynu and then having an absolute blast with beach balls that they each received and a lovely collage of photos that all their classmates signed.

We are so lucky to have this unbelievable year, with sweet dedicated children, talented teachers and a variety of experiences, from gardening, to special guests from Israel and so much more. Looking forward to a great 2017-2018. Please contact us at info@bethelaustin.org to register for next year.

shavuot BERS classbeach ball fun

Updates on the Annual meeting – parashat BaMidbar

tewlvetribesFriday Night Live at 7 PM TONIGHT Friday May 26, please join us for genuine prayer, beautiful songs and an uplifting service.

Shabbat morning services TOMORROW, May 27. We will have our shabbat services from 9 AM, with the lovely Torah service at around 9:45 AM and a children’s service with Morah Shereen at 10:30. Delicious kidish lunch served immediately after, this week including healthy salads, bagels and lox and cheesecake in honor of Shavuot. HUGE thank you to the Jacobs family for sponsoring the kidish.

We want to wholeheartedly congratulate Yosef on being the new president of Beth El (see below for what was truly a heartening and inspiring annual meeting).

Have a very meaningful Memorial day. We salute the men and women who served to protect our country and note with awe that we are the “land of the free because of the brave”.

Candle lighting in Austin is at 8:07 PM

Cantor Ben Moshe’s Message

This week we begin the reading of Sefer B’midbar with the parshah of the same name. The parshah is concerned with numbers-which gives the Book its English name. Specifically, the Torah gives us the numbers of the men in the camp eligible for military service, and of Levites eligible for work in the Mishkan. Counting and numbering are of course very prominent in Jewish Tradition-we count the hours in the day to determine when to perform certain actions, we count the days of the week, years in the Sabbatical cycle, and we are coming to the end of the counting of he ‘Omer. However, we should recognize that our ability to quantify things is limited. The Torah and the Prophets often rhetorically ask if we are capable of counting the sand on the shore or the stars in the sky-obviously to indicate that we cannot. We are limited, finite beings, and only God has the ability to know and number all things. Our task is to do what is within our abilities with an attitude of humility (and a sense of humor). Shabbat Shalom and Hag Shavu’ot Sameah.

Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

What an absolutely inspiring annual meeting last week! Thank you to all who came and made it so special. The love and dedication of members old and new was just beautiful. The meeting as always was filled with laughter, a few jokes and of course a couple of reports on the state of the shul, which thank goodness is good! Much was accomplished this year, but much more remains to be done in coming years.

Kevin stepped down as president after many years of tireless devotion. He noted that Beth El has truly made him a better person and has been nothing but a blessing for him and his family. He has seen the kindest and most generous people imaginable; has seen people through joys and through sadness and above all has been part of a truly beautiful congregation. Kevin will continue to be just as active in his new role as treasurer, but Yosef will now take the mantle of president. Yosef and Claudia are raising their three lovely children at Beth El and have been on the board for several years. They are tireless in their devotion and enthusiasm and always have a smile on their faces. We wish Yosef much nachas in his new role. The congregation is truly appreciative of the board. PLEASE watch this space next week for Yosef’s message and a list of the board.

We had a very special end of year celebration for the Beth El Religious School BERS! The children learnt an Israeli Shavuot song “Saleynu” and danced it joyfully. They also each received class photos and a beach ball and had all their friends sign it. Ms. Carol Rubin ended our class with a sing a long outdoors which was just amazing. Thank you again to our dedicated teachers, sweet children and wonderful parents. Sunday school resumes Sunday August 27. Have a great summer BERS. Tell all your friends about this one of a kind school – we are growing and are even adding a Hebrew immersion class for native Hebrew speakers.

Behar – Behokotai and annual meeting

Friday Night Live at 7 PM this Friday May 19. Songs, prayers, friends old and new. We can’t wait to see you.

Las Sunday Funday of the semester this Sunday May 21. Ms. Carol Rubin is our special guest . Lots of fun planned – lots of learning accomplished!

THIS SUNDAY: Our annual “state of the shul” meeting will be held on Sunday, May 21, at 4:00 PM followed by a Kosher cookout. We plan to discuss shul business and elect officers for the upcoming year. Lots of great things happening at Beth El. Thank you to Barry and Audrey Mann for sponsoring the cookout.

Shabbat morning services as per our schedule of second and fourth shabbats are on the following dates – May 27, June 10, June 24, July 8 and 22, August 12 and August 26.

Candle lighting in Austin is at 8:03 PM

Cantor Ben Moshe’s Message
This week we conclude the reading of Sefer Vayikra, the Book of Leviticus, with the combined parshot of B’har/B’hukkotai. B’har begins with the description of the Sabbatical Year, which occurs every seven years, followed by the Yovel, the Jubilee year after seven times seven years. We are now getting to the end of the counting of the ‘Omer, when we count the forty-nine days between Passover and Shavu’ot. Shavu’ot is a kind of reset-when we changed from a rabble of escaped slaves into a nation with a code of Law. At Sinai, we all stood equally to receive Torah. Similarly, the Yovel is a reset to that equality-when accumulated property is redistributed to its original owners, and all once again have equal opportunity. The Torah teaches that we should all stand equally before God, and that we should do what is in our power to ensure that equality. Let us always be mindful of that goal. Shabbat Shalom.
Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

 

MELTON GRADUATION CEREMONY 2017
Celebrate Adult Jewish
Learning and congratulate
the Melton graduating
class of 2017!
Toast and reception to follow
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
7:00 PM
JCC Community Hall
7300 Hart Lane
Please RSVP to:
Lisa Quay
lisa.quay@shalomaustin.org
512-735-8086

SAVE THE DATE FOR SPLASH BASH AT THE J!
Sunday June 4 from 11 to 3. Everyone is welcome at the J.

“If Your Brother Becomes Impoverished”
by Rabbi Ephraim Z. Buchwald

In parashat Behar, the first of this week’s two parashiot, Behar-Bechukotai, we encounter the mitzvah requiring Jews to redeem the land of fellow Jews who become impoverished.

The Torah, in Leviticus 25:25 states, כִּי יָמוּךְ אָחִיךָ וּמָכַר מֵאֲחֻזָּתוֹ, וּבָא גֹאֲלוֹ הַקָּרֹב אֵלָיו וְגָאַל אֵת מִמְכַּר אָחִיו , If your brother becomes impoverished and sells part of his ancestral heritage, his redeemer who is closest to him, shall come and redeem that which his brother sold.
Rashi citing the Sifra indicates that one may not sell his ancestral land (patrimony) unless he becomes totally impoverished, and even then should not sell all of it.

According to the Talmud in Kedushin 21a, a dispute is recorded whether the Torah requires the relative to redeem the land or urges the relative to redeem the land. All agree, the closer the relative, the greater the responsibility. However, since all Jews are related, going all the way back to Jacob, the responsibility to redeem the land ultimately, applies to all Jews. (See Behar-Bechukotai 5769-2009).
Rabbi Chaim Dov Rabinowitz in Da’at Sofrim, notes that the sages attribute the poverty requiring the sale of the land, to the sin of not keeping the sabbatical year, Shemita–failing to allow the land to lay fallow during the seventh year. For this sin, the landowner may have to sell his property, including his land and his house. He may even have to sell himself–to serve as a Hebrew slave, or even as a slave to a gentile.

Says Rabbi Rabinowitz, even though the suffering is a result of Divine decree, the Torah insists that every Jew must be merciful, and stand at the side of those who are poverty stricken and redeem their land.
Rabbi Yaakov Filber in his volume Chemdat Yamim, cites the interpretation of the Or HaChaim on this verse who interprets it homiletically. If a “man” has no redeemer, is a reference to G-d. If no Jew sufficiently motivates the people to repent and G-d is left with no redeemer, then G-d must find His own way, and lift His hands. The Jews will receive punishment while in exile, until such time as they recognize the need to repent and serve G-d. Only then will they be returned to their ancestral patrimony.

Rabbi Filber quotes the work of Rabbi Issachar Shlomo Teichtal, “Aym Ha’Bah’nim S’may’chah,” אֵם הַבָּנִים שְׂמֵחָה , which was written as a response to the Satmar Rebbe’s strong objections to the establishment of the State of Israel. Rabbi Teichtal writes that the punishment that the Jewish people experience, is G-d’s way of arousing people to return to the Holy Land. He quotes Rabbi Simcha Bunim of Peshischa, who cites the verse in Song of Songs 1:4, מָשְׁכֵנִי אַחֲרֶיךָ נָּרוּצָה , “drag me after you and we will run together.” Explaining that there are two ways of taking ownership of an animal: the first is to call the animal to follow; the second is to beat it with a stick, as it runs in front of the master.

Rabbi Teichtal declares that if the People of Israel heed the voice of G-d calling them to return to the Land of Israel, G-d will lead the people to the land and they will follow without pain or suffering. However, if the people fail to listen to G-d’s beckoning, then they will suffer greatly from the beatings of the enemies, until there will be no escape except to the Land of Israel.

As we approach the celebration of the 50th year of the unification of the Holy City of Jerusalem, the message of return should be ringing in our ears. Although it is difficult for many of us to leave the comforts of the diaspora and relocate to Israel, there are important steps that can be taken to show our unrequited love for the land. Among the important gestures are supporting charities and institutions in Israel, vacationing in Israel more frequently, encouraging our children to study and to even live in Israel, buying a second home and investing in business in Israel.

These steps, although limited, will serve as a strong indication of our sincerity and our willingness to place the land of Israel and the City of Jerusalem at the forefront of our joy, “Ahl rosh simcha’tay’noo,” עַל רֹאשׁ שִׂמְחָתֵנוּ.
May you be blessedSplash-Bash-2017-600px.jpghar sinai

Happy Mother’s Day from the BERS

BERS teachers 2017 B'HAnother fabulous Sunday morning at the Beth El Religious School!

Highlights from last Sunday:

*Learning about Israel and the observances of Yom Hazikkaron and Yom Ha’Atzmaut

*We talked about our moms and all the wonderful things they do and their best qualities

*Hazzan Ben-Moshe spoke about and sang a little of the blessing for a wife, Eshet Chayil, “A Woman of Valor”

*We learned a song that children in Israel sing to their moms

*The children made books and portraits for their moms

ALL our BERS MOMS are invited to join us for a little treat this coming Sunday, May 7 at 11:45am.

Uplifting services – Parashat Emor

Professor Pedhazur and TzahiFriday Night Live at 7 PM
this Friday May 12. Songs, prayers, friends old and new. We can’t wait to see you.

Shabbat morning services this Saturday May 13 at 9 AM,
with the Torah service at 9:45 and children’s story time/services at 10:30 with our special Morah Shereen. Lunch immediately following services.

No Sunday Funday this Sunday May 14. Happy Mother’s Day!!!

SAVE THE DATE: Our annual “state of the shul” meeting will be held on Sunday, May 21, at 4:00 PM followed by a Kosher cookout. We plan to discuss shul business and elect officers for the upcoming year. To nominate a current member including yourself as an officer, please send an email to Bob Miller, chair of the nominating committee at bob.miller@milleruniforms.com. Lots of great things happening at your neighborhood shul. Thank you to Barry and Audrey Mann for sponsoring the cookout.

Cantor Ben Moshe’s Message

We read in the this week’s parshah, Emor, about a commandment which we have been observing for the past month-the mitzvah of counting the ‘Omer. Our parshah tells us to bring an ‘omer, a sheaf of barley, to the Sanctuary every day for seven weeks, beginning from “the day after the sabbath”. The Sages interpreted this to mean the day after the first day of Passover, and the forty-nine days were to correspond to the forty-nine days between the Exodus and Revelation at Sinai. Thus the Festival of Shavu’ot, Weeks, originally the festival of the wheat harvest,became the Festival of the Giving of the Torah. Our Tradition has always linked the cycles of nature with the cycles and events of Jewish history. The physical and the spiritual are one to our way of thought-not either/or, but both/and. Perhaps this is one of the secrets of our survival over the millennia, through many hardships. Shabbat Shalom.

We wish all our amazing teachers a Happy Mother’s day. Shereen Ben-Moshe, Iris Daniel, Anat Inbar and Maya Amos. And of course, to Cantor Ben-Moshe a Happy Father’s day in June. The children and all of us greatly appreciate your devotion and talent every Sunday morning.

Pictured are Chazzan Ben-Moshe and Professor Ami Pedahzur. Thank you to Ami and Galit Pedahzur from the Schusterman Center for Jewish studies.

We are truly grateful to Ami and Galit for coming last week, and to Professor Pedahzur for giving such an interesting talk about the Six Day War. We were absolutely enthralled.

We also want to thank our shabbat shefs, spearheaded by Yafit Aviv for the authentic falafel dinner served after shabbat services. What a treat.

MELTON GRADUATION CEREMONY 2017
Celebrate Adult Jewish
Learning and congratulate
the Melton graduating
class of 2017!
Toast and reception to follow
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
7:00 PM
JCC Community Hall
7300 Hart Lane
Please RSVP to:
Lisa Quay
lisa.quay@shalomaustin.org
512-735-8086

SAVE THE DATE FOR SPLASH BASH AT THE J!

Sunday June 4 from 11 to 3. Everyone is welcome at the J.

Parashat Hashavua from Rabbi Jonathan Sacks:
The Duality of Jewish Time.

Alongside the holiness of place and person is the holiness of time, something parshat Emor charts in its deceptively simple list of festivals and holy days (Lev. 23:1-44).
Time plays an enormous part in Judaism. The first thing God declared holy was a day: Shabbat, at the conclusion of creation.
The first mitzvah given to the Jewish people as a whole, prior to the Exodus, was the command to sanctify time, by determining and applying the Jewish calendar (Ex. 12:1-2).
The prophets were the first people in history to see God in history, seeing time itself as the arena of the Divine-human encounter. Virtually every other religion and civilisation before and since has identified God, reality and truth with timelessness.
Isaiah Berlin used to quote Alexander Herzen who said about the Slavs that they had no history, only geography. The Jews, he said, had the reverse: a great deal of history but all too little geography. Much time, but little space.
So time in Judaism is an essential medium of the spiritual life. But there is one feature of the Jewish approach to time that has received less attention than it should: the duality that runs through its entire temporal structure.
Take, for instance, the calendar as a whole. Christianity uses a solar calendar, Islam a lunar one. Judaism uses both. We count time both by the monthly cycle of the moon and the seasonal cycle of the sun.
Then consider the day. Days normally have one identifiable beginning, whether this is at nightfall or daybreak or – as in the West – somewhere between. For calendar purposes, the Jewish day begins at nightfall (“And it was evening and it was morning, one day”). But if we look at the structure of the prayers – the morning prayer instituted by Abraham, afternoon by Isaac, evening by Jacob – there is a sense in which the worship of the day starts in the morning, not the night before.
Years, too, usually have one fixed beginning – the “new year”. In Judaism, according to the Mishnah (Rosh Hashanah 1:1), there are no less than four new years. The first of Elul is the new year for the tithing of animals. The fifteenth of Shevat (the first according to Bet Shammai) is the new year for trees. These are specific and subsidiary dates, but the other two are more fundamental.
According to the Torah, the first month of the year is Nissan. This was the day the earth became dry after the Flood (Gen. 8:13)[1]. It was the day the Israelites received their first command as a people (Ex. 12: 2). One year later it was the day the Tabernacle was dedicated and the service of the priests inaugurated (Ex. 40: 2). But the festival we call the New Year, Rosh Hashanah, falls six months later.
Holy time itself comes in two forms, as Emor makes clear. There is Shabbat and there are the festivals, and the two are announced separately. Shabbat was sanctified by God at the beginning of time for all time. The festivals are sanctified by the Jewish people to whom was given the authority and responsibility for fixing the calendar.
Hence the difference in the blessings we say. On Shabbat we praise God who “sanctifies Shabbat”. On the festivals we praise God who sanctifies “Israel and the holy times” – meaning, it is God who sanctifies Israel but Israel who sanctify the holy times, determining on which days the festivals fall.
Even within the festivals there is a dual cycle. One is formed by the three pilgrimage festivals: Pesach, Shavuot and Sukkot. These are days that represent the key historic moments at the dawn of Jewish time – the Exodus, the giving of the Torah, and the forty years of desert wandering. They are festivals of history.
The other is formed by the number seven and the concept of holiness: the seventh day, Shabbat; the seventh month, Tishri, with its three festivals of Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and Sukkot; the seventh year, Shemitah; and the Jubilee marking the completion of seven seven-year cycles.
These times (with the exception of Sukkot that belongs to both cycles) have less to do with history than with what, for want of a better word, we might call metaphysics and jurisprudence, ultimate truths about the universe, the human condition, and the laws, both natural and moral, under which we live.
Each is about creation (Shabbat, a reminder of it, Rosh Hashanah the anniversary of it), divine sovereignty, justice and judgment, together with the human condition of life, death, mortality. So on Yom Kippur we face justice and judgment. On Sukkot/Shmini Atseret we pray for rain, celebrate nature (the arba minim, lulav, etrog, hadassim and aravot, are the only mitzvah we do with unprocessed natural objects), and read the book of Kohelet, Tanakh’s most profound meditation on mortality.
In the seventh and Jubilee years we acknowledge God’s ultimate ownership of the land of Israel and the children of Israel. Hence we let slaves go free, release debts, let the land rest, and restore most property to its original owners. All of these have to do not with God’s interventions into history but with his role as Creator and owner of the universe.
One way of seeing the difference between the first cycle and the second is to compare the prayers on Pesach, Shavuot and Sukkot with those of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. The Amidah of Pesach, Shavuot and Sukkot begins with the phrase “You chose us from all the peoples.” The emphasis is on Jewish particularity.
By contrast, the Amidah for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur begins by speaking of “all You have made, all You have created”. The emphasis is on universality: about the judgment that affects all of creation, everything that lives.
Even Sukkot has a marked universalist thrust with its seventy sacrificial bulls representing the “seventy nations”. According to Zechariah 14, it is the festival that will one day be celebrated by all the nations.
Why the duality? Because God is both the God of nature and of culture. He is the God of everyone in general, and of the people of the covenant in particular. He is the Author of both scientific law (cause) and religious-ethical law (command).
We encounter God in both cyclical time, which represents the movement of the planets, and linear-historical time, which represents the events and evolution of the nation of which we are a part. This very duality gives rise to two kinds of religious leader: the prophet and the priest, and the different consciousness of time each represents.
Since the ancient Greeks, people have searched for a single principle that would explain everything, or the single point Archimedes sought at which to move the world, or the unique perspective (what philosophers call “the view from nowhere”) from which to see truth in all its objectivity.
Judaism tells us there is no such point. Reality is more complicated than that. There is not even a single concept of time. At the very least we need two perspectives to be able to see reality in three dimensions, and that applies to time as well as space. Jewish time has two rhythms at once.
Judaism is to the spirit what Niels Bohr’s complementarity theory is to quantum physics. In physics light is both a wave and a particle. In Judaism time is both historical and natural. Unexpected, counter-intuitive, certainly. But glorious in its refusal to simplify the rich complexity of time: the ticking clock, the growing plant, the ageing body and the ever-deepening mind.

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