Posts Tagged ‘Shabbat’

“Adult Bat Mitzvah”

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

Under the guidance of our dear friend, Kate Jennes-Kahn, 8 of us embarked on a journey of reading, sharing, and inquiring into the basics of the Jewish tradition, and how those traditions reflect in our lives as women who come from a variety of backgrounds and experiences.  We each have varying levels of prior knowledge of Hebrew, and varying comfort level with religious practices and davening.

This coming Shabbat, on Nov 14th, we will lead the congregation through the Shabbat morning service, each of us participating in davening, layning Torah and Haftarah, and reciting the blessings of the Shabbat mitzvot (Kiddush, Motzi, etc).  I, for one, am looking forward to the day with some trepidation – I’m sure we’re all thinking “Am I ready?  Will I pronounce all the Hebrew correctly?  Will I acquit myself up on the Bimah without making any major goofs?”.  Some of us already have experience being up on the Bimah, having read from the Torah, or the Haftarah, and given D’var Torah speeches (sermons) already – some of us have rarely, if ever, been on the Bimah.  But all of us are taking on something new, and doing so in a public statement of commitment to rededicating ourselves as Jews, and I am honored to be taking this step in the company of a fascinating group of women whom I have come to know over the last year and a half.

I look forward to wishing a Yasher Koach (or is it Yasher Kochech?) to my fellow students, and continuing on in discovery of self and of the Divine in this lifelong path of exploration and questioning.

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Cliff Fishman’s recent D’var

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

We have a space on our website where we post Divrei Torah presented on Shabbat by our many talented congregation members.  The most recent of these was presented by Cliff Fishman on June 30, in celebration and honor of the 40th anniversary of his marriage to our lovely friend, fellow-congregant, and past-president, Betty Fishman!  He would like to invite your thoughts and comments on his interesting take on the guilt or innocence of Korah.  Tell us what you think!


Note1

 

 

This week we read Parashah Korah2. Korah, Dathan and Abiram, and 250 chieftains associated with them, challenge Moses and Aaron’s leadership. God punishes the rebels by having the earth swallow them up. The overwhelming consensus among the rabbis is that Korah and his allies were evil men concerned only with their own power and status. This attitude is summarized in Perkei Avot, Chapter 5, ¶ 193:

A controversy for the sake of Heaven will have lasting value, but a controversy not for the sake of Heaven will not endure.

What is an example of a controversy for the sake of Heaven? The debates of Hillel and Shammai.

What is an example of a controversy not for the sake of Heaven? The rebellion of Korah and his associates.

I want to develop two themes today. First, I will be Korah’s defense attorney: putting aside centuries of rabbinic gloss, and focusing on the actual text of this week’s Torah portion, I submit that Korah (but not Dathan and Abiram) got a raw deal – from the rabbis, and from Moses, and perhaps even from Higher Authority. Korah is not guilty of the charge leveled against him in the “indictment” (Perkei Avot 5:19).

Second, I’ll discuss what we can learn from the Torah reading, and from this passage in Perkei Avot, and how we can apply them to our lives today – our political lives, and also our professional and personal lives.

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