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  • October 12, 2025 4:46 PM | Lance Strate (Administrator)

    AMERICA AT 250: FACING OUR HISTORY

    Yom Kippur, 5786

    Rabbi Barry L. Schwartz


    Later this year our country will celebrate its 250th birthday. There was so much hoopla when we celebrated our bicentennial … There doesn’t seem to be as much hoopla, very little in fact, as we approach our 250th. Are we in the mood to celebrate? If not, why not?

    Before we explore what I think is an important question, a humorous aside: what do you call a 250th birthday? I remember when Lance Strate introduced us to the word sesquicentennial when we celebrated our 150th. Few people could pronounce it or remember it. Well, for a 250th AI told me that we have several choices: semiquincentennial, which my Word spell check insists is not a valid word. Or sestercentennial, which my Word check insists is also wrong, but offers no alternative suggestion. The same with bisesquicentennial, which Wikipedia lists as a third option. We could also go with quarter millennium, which was accepted, only as two words. Let’s just stick with 250th.

    There is so much to think about and say about America at its 250th. On a subject so vast I can only offer now, on this Yom Kippur morning, a single reflection. It is only one of the great challenges to our country at this moment. Yet I think it is fundamental to who we are and how we act as Americans in general, and as Jewish Americans in particular. It’s about facing our history. Facing our history because the truth matters. Facing our history lest we are doomed to repeat it. And facing our history in order to face ourselves.

    On Jan. 25, just after assuming office, the president of the United States fired the first salvo. He issued an executive order “Ending Radical DEI Programs”. He labelled the teaching of diversity-equality- inclusion as un-American, because it often points out the dark side of American history.

    On March 27 the President followed up with another executive order entitled “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History”. He wrote: “Over the past decade, Americans have witnessed a concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our Nation’s history, replacing objective facts with a distorted narrative driven by ideology rather than truth. This revisionist movement seeks to undermine the remarkable achievements of the United States by casting its founding principles and historical milestones in a negative light. Under this historical revision, our Nation’s unparalleled legacy of advancing liberty, individual rights, and human happiness is reconstructed as inherently racist, sexist, oppressive, or otherwise irredeemably flawed.”

    To be sure, there are writers and teachers that present unbalanced or incomplete perspectives. Those need to be called out and corrected. The president is right about that. But he goes too far; way too far, in negating all DEI and what we call “hard history”.

    You do not throw out the baby with the bath water. We have come so far in this country to face the inconvenient truths of our history that were negated or suppressed until now. To turn back the clock on such hard won and vital perspectives is a disservice to ourselves and our children. We, and they, deserve to know the truth, whole and unvarnished.

      Tell me: How can we teach about America without referencing her original sin of slavery? Without telling the story of how we wreaked havoc upon Native Americans? Without narrating the hundred years of segregation and discrimination of the Jim Crow south from the end of the civil war to the civil rights era? Without chronicling the inherited misogyny that denied women the vote and basic equality? Without revealing the xenophobia that led to wave after wave of anti-immigrant agitation and legislation? Without memorializing the homophobia that closeted generations? Indeed, without confronting antisemitism from the nation’s founding to today?

    We might prefer to look away, but this too is America. An imperfect union, yet aspiring to wrestle with our past for the sake of our future.

    A few years ago I did a marathon read of The 1619 Project—the epic study of slavery in America from its beginning in Jamestown colony to abolition. I thought I was reasonably well-versed in American history, but I was floored. At the scope of American slavery and its institutionalization into the very fabric of this nation. At its enduring legacy, to this day. Yes, there were some claims that needed revision, and were revised. But The 1619 Project was attacked from top to bottom. It was trashed by the president during his first term, and a counter narrative, The 1776 Project, was written to debunk and replace it.

    Immersing myself in the 600-page tome was memorable. I was stopped in my tracks even before getting to page 1. The dedication page reads, simply, “To the more than thirty million descendants of American slavery”. Just think about that.

    And the next page: a short poem by Langston Hughes:

    I am the American heartbreak‒

    The rock on which Freedom

    stubbed its toe‒

    The great mistake

    That Jamestown made

    Long ago

    Two other excerpts. Historian Hasan Kwame Jeffries, brother, incidentally, to House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries, writes powerfully that when we neglect hard history “we are committing educational malpractice”. That’s haunting. Do we want to fail our children in this fundamental way?

    Jeffries continues, “Although we teach [students] that slavery happened…  we minimize slavery’s significance so much that we render its impact—on people and on the nation—inconsequential. This is profoundly troubling because it leaves Americans ill-equipped to understand racial inequality today, and that in turn leads to intolerance….”

    And the lead author of The 1619 Project, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones, argues, “Our myths have not served us well. We are the most unequal of the Western democracies. We incarcerate our citizens at the highest rates. We suffer the greatest income inequality… If we are a truly great nation, the truth cannot destroy us. On the contrary, facing the truth liberates us to build the society we wish to be.”

    She concludes, “We cannot change the hypocrisy upon which we were founded… We cannot make up for all of the lives lost and dream snatched, for all the suffering endured. But we can atone for it. We can acknowledge the crime. And we can do something to try to set things right, to ease the hardship and hurt of so many of our fellow Americans… Citizens inherit not just the glory of their nation but its wrongs too. A truly great country does not ignore or excuse its sins. It confronts them, and then works to make them right… If we are to be redeemed we must… finally, live up to the magnificent ideals upon which we were founded.”

    What a lesson for Yom Kippur! Facing the part of us we’d rather forget. Owning up to our sins and to our shortcomings. Doesn’t our tradition insist that when we hide the truth or distort the truth we sin anew? If we can’t talk about the pernicious role of racism and bigotry in our country, we as American Jews become more vulnerable. And we’re vulnerable enough.

    Every member of a minority in our great melting pot of a country becomes more vulnerable. And they’re vulnerable enough.

    It is in our history, in our DNA to side with the vulnerable and the marginal and the forgotten and the oppressed. “Love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt” is the most repeated trope in the Torah. I call it the great lesson of historical empathy.

    The Torah never lets us forget where we came from, our most humble of origins.

    And the Torah never shies away from the dark side of our ancestors’ history.

    The Torah believes in Jewish exceptionalism”—after all, we are called the chosen people. But the Torah is relentless in exposing every time we fail to live up to our calling, every time we fail to live up to the commandments. That’s part of what makes the Torah so compelling and so relevant.

    Shouldn’t we demand no less from our American history?

    As our Reform movement stated back in February in response to the president’s executive order: “Telling the full story of our people has been essential to Jewish life; Americans of all backgrounds, ethnicities, religions, and identities deserve the same.” 

    I am always struck by a contemporary reflection in our Shabbat siddur that we often read before our ancient prayer of thanks for our freedom—the mi chamocha. It is by Michael Walzer, a professor emeritus at Princeton:

    Standing on the parted shores of history, we still believe what we were taught before ever we stood at Sinai’s foot: that wherever we go, it is eternally Egypt; that there is a better place, a promised land; that the winding way to that promise passes through the wilderness; that there is no way to get from here to there except by joining hands, marching together.

    The winding way to the promise of America has passed through a wilderness of peaks and valleys, triumph and trial, exhilaration and desperation.

    It is our story, and it must be told to the fullest.

    It is our story and we must own up to all of it.

    Then, in those famous words “we will be able to speed up that day when all of God's children, Black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing… Free at last. Free at last. Thank God almighty, we are free at last.”


  • October 12, 2025 4:30 PM | Lance Strate (Administrator)

    LIBERAL ZIONISM

    Kol Nidre, 5786

    Rabbi Barry L. Schwartz

    Here I am talking about Israel once again.

    One year ago, at this same Yom Kippur service, I spoke about “Reform Jews and Israel: Addressing the Generation Gap”. I expressed alarm that support for Israel among young adults in general, and young Jews is particular, was seriously waning. It’s more than worrisome that barely more than a majority approve of America’s support of Israel.

    Well, what a year it has been, with Israel’s war against Iran, war against Hezbollah, and war against Hamas. As brilliant as the first two campaigns have been militarily, the Gaza war has ground on and on, and none of the three have succeeded politically, at least when it comes to support of Israel in the wider world, and especially among the political party many of us identify with.

    Allow me to share some new and grim findings. In 2013, according to Gallup, Democrats sympathized with Israel over the Palestinians by a margin of 36 percentage points. Those numbers have now flipped… This past February, Gallup found that Democrats sympathize with Palestinians over Israel by a margin of 38 percentage points. According to another survey that month by The Economist, 46 percent of Democrats want the United States to reduce military aid to the Jewish state. Only 6 percent want to increase it, and 24 percent want it to remain at the level it is.

    These opinions aren’t restricted to young progressives. Older Democrats’ views have swung even more sharply than young ones in the last three years. Between 2022 and 2025, according to the Pew Research Center, the percentage of Democrats age 50 and over with an unfavorable view of the Jewish state jumped 23 percentage points. This shift has largely erased the party’s generation gap on the subject. Only one in three Democrats now views Israel favorably, according to Gallup. (Beinart, NYT 7-6-25).

    “Houston, we have a problem.” A big one. Support for Israel in the party that has traditionally been home to 75% of the American Jewish community is in free fall. This in the wake of Oct. 7, only two years ago. What’s going on, and what are we going to do about it?

    Let me be honest with you—this issue is on my mind because I see once moderate liberal family members and friends and congregants abandoning the center to the right and to the left. And when the center does not hold… well we have seen what happens both in this country and in Israel.

    Last year, with regard to young people falling away from support of Israel, I admitted, “I don’t know if we can bridge the gap, but we must try. There are many variables, and the problems seem intractable. But solidarity, education and empathy might go a long way.

    Empathy means not just talking, but listening. Hearing the concerns of our young people. Acknowledging what is on their minds. Validating their struggles. Empathy means honestly admitting to the challenges Israel faces internally and externally.

    Empathy means openly discussing the plight of the Palestinians, and the humanitarian disaster that is Gaza. And I concluded my message about our young people:

    Show your kids where you stand on Israel. Show it with passion.

    Give them every teaching opportunity you can, and get them to Israel.

    Listen to them and empathize with their concerns.

    Tell them that you love them, and you love Israel.

    Tell them that this love is unconditional, but it is not uncritical.

    Tell them that disappointments and disagreements test families, but should not break families.

    Remind them that you care so much because they are the next generation of your family, and the next generation of the Jewish people.

    All well and good. What I call the SEE strategy. Solidarity. Education. Empathy. But I think we need to go one step forward, deeper, with all ages. Two steps actually. First, we need to truly educate ourselves and others about Israel’s history, from its founding and forward. About Israel’s existential threats, yes, but also about its dilemmas, its debates, its democracy. That is why the overall theme of my educational efforts this year is entitled “Loving Israel; Debating Israel”.

    To that end I have decided to devote this entire year of Torah study to: A History of Modern Israel. We just got started. You are welcome to any or all of our sessions. Every Shabbat morning from 10:00-11:15 AM in the social hall. I guarantee you will learn a lot, that the discussion will be lively, and that you will better understand the headlines of today with your knowledge of yesterday. Israel is the great story of modern Jewish history; we are so privileged to witness it. Shouldn’t we know it better than we do? And shouldn’t we be better informed before arriving at our opinions?

    We will also devote the year in Confirmation Class to Israel. As some of you know, I am passionate about debate. It started when I was in high school myself, and joined the debate team in a school district with a nationally renowned program. It led to one of my books, Judaism’s Great Debates. It’s the signature characteristic of Confirmation Class. So the theme for the year will be Israel’s Great Debates.

    To be an effective debater one must have a deep understanding of both sides of an issue. One must be able to articulate and defend one view, and dissect and rebut another. One must listen and learn. Studying Israel’s debates is to engage in the animating ideas of the Jewish state—an intellectual history of the country. I can think of no better preparation for understanding the dilemmas of today. And respectful debate also conveys that Adas Emuno is a congregation that welcomes dissent and diversity, a place that practices what is preaches.

    Better educated, we need to better articulate what it means to be a Reform Zionist. A proud one. A sensible and sensitive one. To this end, Rabbi Joshua Weinberg, head of ARZA, the Association of Reform Zionists of America, and a vice-president of the Union for Reform Judaism, recently wrote an essay that identifies five key elements of a Reform Zionism, which I have adapted as follows:

    1. We love and care for Israel deeply, and we see our connection to Israel as a central aspect of our Jewish identity.

    2. While we respect the democratically elected government of Israel, we decry the inclusion of ultra-Nationalist and ultra-Orthodox parties who wield disproportional power.

    3. We must uphold democracy, equality, and responsible free speech wherever and whenever is necessary.

    4. We vehemently condemn Hamas and all terrorism. The horrific events of October 7 cannot be understood in any way other than as an attempt to kill Jews and destroy the Jewish State. There should be no question that the State of Israel has a right to defend itself and to fight back against and punish those who seek its destruction.

    5. We are, at the same time, deeply concerned about every person held hostage and the high civilian casualty rate in Gaza: the thousands of children killed; the severe humanitarian disaster; and the vast destruction.

    What do these key points add up to?

    Ahavat Yisrael—love for Israel. Unconditional but not uncritical. Have we forgotten what Israel means to the Jewish people? Have we forgotten that we don’t walk away from those we love. If a loved one has gone astray we fight to bring them back.

    Haganat Yisrael—the defense of Israel. Why do we have to repeat and repeat that every nation in the world has the right to self-defense, and to do what it needs to do to defeat an enemy sworn to its destruction. Have we forgotten that lesson of history? There are still those among us who well remember the sacrifice. From the ashes Israel said, “never again”. And from the ashes she vowed, “Jewish blood is not cheap”.

    K’lal Yisrael—the unity of Israel. Yes, we will differ on issues big and small alike. Yes, we will need to call out extremism that is beyond the pale. But we are on the same team—team Am Yisrael—and what unites the Jewish people is greater than what divides us.

    And finally, Torat Yisrael—the ethics of Israel. The teachings of Torah; the accumulated wisdom of Judaism—that is the soul of our being. To do justly, to love mercy, to walk humbly. The path to a peaceable kingdom lies shrouded now in darkness; it must be illuminated.

    On Rosh Hashanah I spoke about the need to do our part in combatting antisemitism.

    Now on this Yom Kippur my plea is for us to do our part in combatting antizionism. And the best way to do that is to show our love for Israel and to educate ourselves and others about Israel. And yes, when necessary, to carefully and constructively criticize Israel.

    This is the fine line we walk with any family member, and for me at least, to be a Jew is to say that Israel is part of our family.

    On this holy day, may we grow in Ahavat Yisrael.

    May we never falter in Haganat Yisrael.

    May we ever appreciate K’lal Yisrael.

    May we walk toward the light of Torat Yisrael.

    Am Yisrael chai.

    Shanah Tovah.


  • October 12, 2025 4:05 PM | Lance Strate (Administrator)

    ANTISEMITISM ANEW

    Rosh Hashanah Morning, 5786

    Rabbi Barry L. Schwartz

    On April 13 this past spring, the first night of Passover, after Governor Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania and his family had gone to sleep, the ground floor of his residence was firebombed. A few hours earlier everyone had assembled there for the seder, which included the words of the Haggadah, b’kol dor vador omdim aleninu l’kaloteinu—in every generation they rise up to smite us. The governor and his family were not harmed, though the room suffered extensive damage.

    It was the first of three high profile antisemitic acts that took place in our country in a short stretch. Just over a month later, on the evening of Wednesday, May 21, 2025, two young Israeli embassy staffers, engaged to be married, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim, were fatally shot by a Michigan man shouting “free Palestine”. Ten days later, on June 1, a man shouting the same words, attacked a rally in Boulder, Colorado with a flame-thrower, burning seven people. One of them, Karen Diamond, later died of her wounds.

    Then, three weeks later, on June 24th, a freely democratic and peaceful event took place, right across the river. A far-left candidate for New York City mayor won the primary. To say it was a surprise victory is an understatement. But it came with another surprise. In the city with the biggest Jewish population in the world, the winner came with a record of relentless criticism of Israel, refusal to affirm that Israel has the right to exist as a Jewish state, and refusal to disavow the slogan “globalize the intifada”. Zohran Mamdani is now poised to become the next mayor of NYC.

    Antisemitism in America is as old as our country—even older than our founding. In fact it arrived with the first group of Jews who came to our shores in 1654. Good old Peter Stuyvesant did not want them to stay. The bedraggled group of 24 Jews appealed to the directors of the Dutch West India company of Amsterdam, who ordered Stuyvesant to accept them in New Amsterdam.

    In Torah study this past year we spent the entire year learning about American Jewish history and the struggle of our forebears to overcome antisemitism at every turn. It was eye-opening both in terms of the trials and the triumphs. And it was challenging because every week the headlines were full of incidents that just reinforced that the struggle is not over. Far from it.

    In the wake of the shooting and the two fire bombings more than a few in the liberal media claimed that these heinous acts should be understood as political protest rather than antisemitism. This too is profoundly disturbing. In all three cases, Jews were targeted… because they were Jews.

    “We shouldn’t try to split hairs here: If someone shouts “Free Palestine!” and targets Jews in America for supporting Israel, the only Jewish state in the world, at a nonpolitical event, it is textbook antisemitism,” writes Jonathan A. Greenblatt, national director of the Anti-Defamation League.

    “To frame these attacks as ambiguous, or somehow understandable expressions of rage over Gaza, blurs a dangerous line,” notes Robert Russell. “It rests on the same logic that has historically fueled antisemitism: the erasure of the boundary between Jewish identity and the actions of the Israeli state, and the belief that Jews—anywhere—are legitimate targets of protest. Such framing not only endangers Jewish communities but also undermines legitimate Palestinian advocacy by associating it with violence against civilians. One can—and must—oppose injustice in Gaza without excusing or minimizing attacks on Jews. Violence against Jews, wherever it occurs, must be named clearly. These acts were not just political. They were antisemitic.” (New York Times, 6-28-25)

    I repeat a distinction I have made multiple times since the nightmare of Oct. 7th. If you deny Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state you are more than antizionist. If you deny Israel’s right to defend itself you are more than antizionist. If you fail to call out the evil of terrorists bent on destroying Israel you are more than antizionist. You are antisemitic.

    Mr. Mamdani, with all due respect, fails on all three accounts. When given the chance to affirm Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish State he demurred. After Oct. 7 he railed against Israeli colonialism without denouncing Hamas. Before and after, he supported the BDS movement that has no place for Israel as we know it. He has refused to truly disassociate himself from the “globalize the intifada”—knowing that the first, second and third intifadas launched scores of terrorist attacks that have killed 1400 Israelis, not including the 1200 who were murdered on Oct. 7. I don’t vote in New York, and of course, I do not endorse candidates from the pulpit (though the IRS recently changed its ruling on that). But I will always comment on ethical concerns.

    That includes Israeli political figures and Israeli government actions as well. You have heard me challenge them and criticize them over the years, and there has always been room for debate in this congregation. But there are limits.

    Our long and challenging history has taught us two things about antisemitism. First, it needs to be called out. That is why I’m speaking about this subject again, now, on Rosh Hashanah. And second, we cannot fight this fight alone. We need allies, and always have. People of good faith. The brave souls of our people who speak up make a difference, and the brave souls of our friends who support us make a difference.

    So allow me to utilize the balance of my time in a positive vein; sharing three remarkable instances of “Saying No to Hate—Overcoming Antisemitism in America”. That was actually the name of the textbook we used this past year in Torah study. I am sure my Torah study students would agree that we found these stories inspirational.

    Those first Jews in America that took on Peter Stuyvesant—they were led by a brave man named Asser Levy. In that first year of 1654 he rallied support from other colonialists. He led the successful appeal to the Dutch West India Company. Then he took on Stuyvesant a second time the next year, when the Jews were told they could not serve in the militia, but would have to pay a special tax instead. And then Levy took on Stuyvesant a third time in 1657, when the governor refused to grant burgher status to Jews, with their attendant trading rights. You might not know his name, but a park, a recreation center, and an elementary school are named after him. Thank you Asser Levy.

    The most notorious antisemitic incident of the 19th century took place during the Civil War. It involved General Grant, who would later become president. He issued General Order No. 11 on Dec. 28, 1862 expelling all Jews from parts of the south. It began, “The Jews, as a class, violating every regulation established by the Treasury Department… are hereby expelled…within twenty-four hours.” Cesar Kaskel, a Jewish businessman from Paducah, Kentucky swung into action. With fellow Jewish shop owners he sent an emergency telegram to President Abraham Lincoln the very next day. He pointed out that the undersigned were “good and loyal citizens”. He objected that the Jews were being singled out as a class. He concluded, “We respectfully ask your immediate attention to this enormous outrage on all law and humanity and pray for your effectual and immediate interposition.”

    Kaskel then made the long trip to Washington, and with the help of his congressman John Addison Gurley, met with Lincoln on the evening of Jan. 3 immediately upon his arrival, still in his dusty travel clothes. He bore messages from Jewish congregations and organizations around the country. President Lincoln rescinded the order on the spot. He said, “To condemn a class is, to say the least, to wrong the good with the bad.” Thank you, Cesar Kaskel… and Abraham Lincoln!

    And finally, just over a hundred years ago, a wildly wealthy and well-known American purchased a failing local Michigan newspaper and used it to launch unrelenting attacks on American Jewish patriotism and character. His name was Henry Ford. His newspaper: the Dearborn Independent, which he required every Ford dealer in the country to distribute. Attempts by the Anti-Defamation League and others to stop Ford failed. Then in April of 1924 Ford attacked a Jewish lawyer named Aaron Sapiro for his work organizing California farm workers. He alleged that Sapiro was a Communist agent, and that he and a cabal of Jewish bankers were plotting to take over the entire agricultural sector.

    Sapiro fought back. He demanded a retraction, and when that was not forthcoming, he brought a libel suit against Ford in the amount of $1 million dollars (over $18 million today). Fighting motion after motion to dismiss and delay, the trial finally began nearly three years later, and Sapiro held firm under withering cross examination. When Sapiro’s team subpoenaed Ford, the tycoon caved. The public embarrassment was too much for Ford. And besides, he had a new model T coming out. Ford retracted his claims. He reached an out of court settlement with his dogged challenger. He issued a written apology reprinted in newspapers around the country. He shut down his newspaper. Thank you Aaron Sapiro.

    I conclude with this: After the firebombing of his home, Governor Josh Shapiro visited the Harrisburg Fire Department to thank them for their efforts. A chaplain handed him a letter signed by every member of his department. On the back of the letter the chaplain hand wrote a prayer for the governor and his family. They were the words of what we call the Birkat Shalom, the blessing of peace, from the book of Numbers; the ancient words of Aaron, brother of Moses, over the Israelites. Governor Shapiro wrote, “I cried when I read this. Because… it happens to be the same prayer that Lori and I have recited to each of our children every night in Hebrew before they go to bed for more than two decades.”

    The Governor continued: “Moments like that have given us strength over the past week. The prayers, blessings and messages of support we’ve received have lifted us up and shown us the way forward in the wake of a traumatic event.”

    “Those moments have served as yet another reminder of our common humanity. A recognition that there is far more that binds us together than divides us—no matter what those who stoke that division would have us believe.”

    “I believe our political divide can be repaired. But our leaders must act with moral clarity and take their cues from the good people of this nation, who in times of tragedy always seem to find our better angels.” (NYT 4-23-25)

    Asser Levy, Cesar Kaskel, Aaron Sapiro, and Josh Shapiro had the courage of their convictions to speak truth to power, to call out the antisemitism of their day; to rally others to their cause. These past two years since Oct. 7 have been like a slow-motion nightmare as an age-old curse has raised its hoary head yet again. May we too have the courage of our convictions to raise our voice like a shofar.

    And may we all find those better angels.

  • October 09, 2025 8:15 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Oct. 9, 2025

    Dear Friends,
      This weekend is a big close to the holiday season.
      Our Shabbat/Sukkot Evening Service (6:00 PM) will take place on the patio, next to the Sukkah, featuring fine folk music.
       It's preceded by Pizza-in-the Hut (5:00 PM) al Fresca. 

       And then on Sunday morning we cap things off with our SImchat Torah Family Celebration (11:00 AM), also on the patio, weather permitting.
       We'll read from the end and the beginning of the Torah, and call up everyone for an aliyah by birthday month.
       The kiddush/lunch afterwards will be worth staying for.

       In between, our Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM), blending history and current events, as we pray for the peace deal that will end the war in Gaza and bring home the hostages.

      A big, big thank you to everyone who participated in all our holiday celebrations, and behind the scenes, from Torah and Haftarah readers, to ushers, to Sukkah builders, and more.

      Finally, are you ready for our first ever Blessing of the Animals next Sunday the 19th (11:30 AM)?
      Please RSVP to Annette (adasschool@gmail.com) by Wednesday and include what kind of pet.
      And, yes, stuffed animals are also welcome!
      
    Shabbat Shalom and Hag Sameach,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    Please note that our outdoor services are not livestreamed. 
  • October 01, 2025 11:14 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Oct. 1, 2025

    Dear Friends,
      As Yom Kippur begins this evening, this weekly message is being sent a day early.
      A unique feature of the Yom Kippur Evening Service (7:30 PM)  is the cello and cantorial rendition of Kol Nidrei- always so moving. 
       Tomorrow: Yom Kippur Morning Service (10:00 AM), Children's Service (2:00 PM), Afternoon-Yizkor-Neilah (4:30 PM) makes for a long but rewarding day, and will be followed by the return of our Break-the-Fast (6:30 PM).

       No rest for the weary- it’s on to Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM), where we take note, so sadly, of the upcoming second anniversary of Oct. 7, and more happily, of the approach of Sukkot.

        Back to our history discussion, our topic at our Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM) is the huge effect of WWI on pre-state Israel- the effects are felt to this day.

       On Sunday a dedicated crew will help Build our Sukkah (10:00 AM). You are welcome to lend a hand or contribute decorations or mums. The Sukkah will be open 24/7 for your use!

         Our big gathering will be next Friday the 10th for Pizza-in-the-Hut (5:00 PM) and Sukkot Patio Service (6:00 PM). 

        And finally, mark your calendar for our Simchat Torah Celebration on Sunday morning the 12th (11:00 AM ), also outdoors, weather permitting. 

    Shabbat shalom- Shanah tovah- Hag sameach, 
    Rabbi Schwartz
  • September 25, 2025 8:15 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Sept. 25, 2025

    Dear Friends,
      We are in the midst of aseret y'mei teshuva, the "ten days of repentance", between the New Year and the Day of Atonement.
      This Sabbath is called Shabbat Shuvah, the "Sabbath of Return".
      At our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM) we will highlight the special words and melodies associated with this sabbath.

      Appropriate to the spirit of soul-searching at this season, we will examine a provocative question at our Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM)- how the crisis in the Middle East has affected our very understanding of our own Judaism.

      A reminder ahead of Yom Kippur that books are available for those who watch the livestream from home in the blue bin on the school porch, which is also where you can drop off your bag of non-perishable food.

    Shabbat shalom and shanah tovah,
    Rabbi Schwartz
  • September 18, 2025 8:19 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Sept. 18, 2025

    Dear Friends,
      On this last Shabbat of the Jewish year we will read a passage from the weekly portion of the Torah (as we do monthly) at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM).
       The passage, from Deuteronomy, is considered so important that it is repeated on Yom Kippur.

      The beginnings of the modern Zionist movement, under Theodor Herzl, made possible the creation of modern Israel fifty years later. We'll look at this critical period at our Shabbat Morning Torah study (10:00 AM). 
       We are mixing in current events at our sessions, and if last week was any indication, it will be lively!

        Religious school is in session on Sunday (9:00 AM).

        We hope to see you early and often at the Holidays!
         That begins with Rosh Hashanah on Monday evening (7:30 PM), Tuesday morning (10:00 AM), and Tuesday afternoon (2:00 PM- Children's service; 3:30 PM Tashlich ). 

           With warm wishes, even in these troubled times, for a sweet new year.

    Shabbat shalom and Shanah Tova,
    Rabbi Schwartz
  • September 11, 2025 8:54 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Sept. 11, 2025

    Dear Friends,
      I send this weekly message mindful that today is the 24th anniversary of 9-11.
      We shall never forget the nearly 3000 souls who lost their lives on that tragic day, nor the many first responders who suffered greatly in its aftermath.

      Now, less than two weeks before the Holidays, is the time of Selichot, prayers of forgiveness. 
      We will look at some of the readings from our machzor on this crucial theme at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM).

        Our Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM) is off and running, as we devote the year to the history of modern Israel. It's never too late to join!

        Our religious school is also off and running, and this Sunday includes our monthly Tot Program (9:30 AM) and Confirmation Class (11:00 AM). 

       What would the Holidays be without food? Join Virginia, Doris and friends this Sunday in a special Holiday Cooking Class (4:00 PM), via zoom, with two of our esteemed chefs- Gibson Borrelli and Kim Merlino. See the special email sent out this past Monday or email vegitter@aol.com.

    Shabbat Shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz
  • September 04, 2025 9:56 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Sept. 4, 2025

    Dear Friends,
    Just like that summer ends and we jump into our busy season.
    Religious School resumes, Torah Study resumes, and the Holidays approach.

    We'll continue a discussion we began last week about what many are calling a constitutional crisis facing our county at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM). 

    We'll begin what I hope will be a fascinating year exploring the history of modern Israel at our Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM). 

    We'll commence another year of creative learning at our Sunday Morning Religious School (9:00 AM), that includes a parent orientation (10:00 AM) and an open house for prospective families (11:00AM). 

    The great Israeli novelist Amos Oz is the subject of our Adas Emuno Book Club (7:30 PM) on Monday, specifically the acclaimed novel "A Tale of Love and Darkness", which is also now a movie starring Natalie Portman https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMjh5Yv55Vg. See zoom link below.

    Please watch your mail soon for the Ritual Committee's High Holy Day letter, including details on all services and the Book of Remembrance form.

    Shabbat Shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz
  • August 28, 2025 8:47 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Sept. 28, 2025

    Dear Friends,
      This week's Torah portion issues the clarion call, "Justice, justice shall you pursue". 
      One of the great, but now little remembered, heroes of social justice in our country was Charles Sumner.
      He is the subject of a new biography, and I'd like to tell his story at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM).
      And Peter Hayes will join the cantor on guitar to enhance our always uplifting music.

      Get ready: Torah Study and Religious School start next week!

      As the summer unofficially ends, wishing you a restful Labor Day weekend.

    Shabbat Shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz
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Cantorial Soloist

Suzy Auriel Merritt

Religious School Director

Annette De Marco

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