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254 Broad Avenue Leonia, NJ 07605 201.592.1712

  • December 23, 2021 9:24 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Dec. 23, 2021

    Dear Friends,
       Yes, we will have services for Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve (though not in person)- Shabbat is Shabbat!
     
        From time to time I take note of a Jewish obituary- a life well-lived, worthy of comment, but perhaps missed amongst all the news.
      Such is the case of Aaron Feurerstein, a Massachusetts factory owner whose loyalty to his workers made national headlines in 1995 and who passed away last month.
       I'll speak about him at our Zoom Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM).

       Both Torah Study and Religious School are on break this week and next.
       Enjoy the winter break, but stay safe!

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

  • December 16, 2021 9:34 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Dec. 16, 2021
    Dear Friends,
       We come to the end of the epic Book of Genesis this week.
       Is it "happily ever after" for Joseph and his family after the big reunion?
       Let's talk about it at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM) which will be Livestreamed.

        From time to time a Jewish hero arises who is all out of character from the typical.
        Such is the case with Samson, the Jewish superman.
        We'll read his story from the Book of Judges at our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM)

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

  • December 09, 2021 8:16 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Dec. 9, 2021
    Dear Friends,
      One of the most emotional and significant moments in the entire Torah occurs in this week’s Torah portion, when Judah encounters Joseph.
       We'll discuss why it is so important at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM).

      The Book of Judges describes a dramatic but troubling chapter in the early history of our ancestors.
       For the next few weeks we read excerpts of this often overlooked part of the Hebrew Bible.
       You're always welcome to join us at our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM).

      Start reading: The  next Adas Emuno Book Club meets Jan. 10 and we are discussing the Nobel prize winning Isaac Bashevis Singer's classic The Magician of Lublin.

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

  • December 02, 2021 11:15 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Dec. 2, 2021

    Dear Friends,
      We sprint to the finish of Hanukkah with:
      1. Shabbat Hanukkah Family Service (7:00 PM in-person), with an outdoor lighting and pre-service oneg followed by our service led by Grades 3-4, and featuring special Hanukkah music by all our grades.

      2. Community Hanukkah Lighting and Reception (7:00 PM in-person), on Saturday night, outdoors with sufganiyot and other refreshments, and the rabbi's dreidel collection on display, with new additions.

      3. Last Night of Hanukkah Lighting (7:00 PM in-person), on Sunday night, with the finale of the AE 150 Trivia Quiz.
     
      We'll also mark Hanukkah at our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM)  and at Religious School on Sunday- all in all a full holiday celebration! 

    Shabbat shalom and Happy Hanukkah,
    Rabbi Schwartz
     
     For Livestream Services:
    Go to YouTube.com and enter Adas Emuno Streaming in the search box. About 5 minutes before, find the service that is "live" and wait for the service to begin.
  • November 25, 2021 8:05 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Nov. 25, 2021

    Dear Friends,
       Happy Thanksgiving!
       I hope you are enjoying the holiday with family and friends this year.
       And Hanukkah starts Sunday night!

       But first, join us for our  Zoom Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM) .
       Past president Alan Spector will offer a special message—an opportunity to learn about kidney donation as part of an effort to save the life of a dear friend of his.

       Torah study and Religious School are both on break this holiday weekend.

       Then on to Hanukkah:
       Lighting of our outdoor menorah will take place on Sunday at 7:00 PM sharp and every night. 
       We'll sing a different Hanukkah song each night, and in honor of our 150th, an Adas Emuno Trivia Quiz!
       On the the 6th night (next Friday) we will have our Shabbat Hanukkah Family Service in person!
       On the 7th night (next Saturday) a community lighting will take place with refreshments.
        So c'mon out and light it up! 

    Shabbat shalom and Happy Hanukkah,
    Rabbi Schwartz
  • November 18, 2021 8:08 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Nov. 18, 2020
    Dear Friends,
       You might call him "the lost patriarch". In comparison to his father and his son, Isaac had a rather uneventful and unfortunate life. But we'll offer an appreciation of Isaac at our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM)
     
        Joshua was no Moses, but his life was eventful and dramatic. We'll take a last look at Joshua and the conquest of Canaan at our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study  (10:00 AM).

        Get ready for Hanukkah at our Zoom Hanukkah Cooking Class this Sunday evening (7:00 PM).

         We are proud to host the Leonia Community Thanksgiving Service this year on Tuesday (8:00 PM). Two new pastors from the Methodist and Baptist churches will be joining us, and Student Cantor Karlin will be joined by a variety of singers. Help us be good hosts and neighbors by attending in person.
      
         Finally, the Adas Emuno 150 Exhibit at the Leonia library is now open for viewing. Kudos to Michael Fishbein and Richard Alicchio for their fine work.

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Go to YouTube.com and enter Adas Emuno Streaming in the search box. About 5 minutes before, find the service that is 
  • November 11, 2021 8:57 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Nov. 11, 2021

    Dear Friends,
      At our Zoom Shabbat Evening Family Service (7:30 PM), we invite the 6th Grade to lead us 
      We're in the middle of Genesis and the vivid stories of our patriarchs and matriarchs.

      At our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM) we're in the middle of another vivid biblical story- that of Joshua and the conquest of the Promised Land.

      Our Annual Mitzvah Mall takes place on Sunday (9:30 AM) in the sanctuary during religious school- come learn about how HIAS is supporting Afghan refugees in NJ and buy your donation cards, which make a great Hanukkah gift. 

      Finally, on Tuesday we marked Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass, that initiated the Holocaust 83 years ago, and today is Veteran's Day, when we honor all those who have served in defense of our country. Both these annual days of commemoration will be noted at our Shabbat and school services. 
       
    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

  • October 28, 2021 8:26 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Oct. 28, 2021

    Dear Friends,
       This week's Torah portion begins with the death of one matriarch (Sarah), ends with the introduction of the next matriarch (Rebecca), but also mentions two other rather mysterious women, Hagar and Keturah. 
       At our Shabbat Evening Service (7:30 PM) we'll discuss the significance of all four women and the relationship between them.

       You might think that the Torah's description of the most important event in Jewish history, the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai is a straight-forward, unified account. Think again!
         At our Zoom Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM) we'll look at the complex reality.

       Even if you are not a regular, you may want to attend our next Adas Emuno Book Club (Nov. 8 at 7:30 PM) and read the book now. The long lost novella of the great writer Sholom Aleichem, Moshkeleh the Thief, has just been published in English for the first time, and it is a delight. Call 1-800-848-6224 and use code 6JP21 to get 40% off, courtesy of The Jewish Publication Society.

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Go to YouTube.com and enter Adas Emuno Streaming in the search box. About 5 minutes before the service is scheduled to begin, find the service that is "live" and wait for the service to begin.
  • October 26, 2021 4:47 PM | Lance Strate (Administrator)

    Remarks on the Adas Emuno Sesquicentennial

    October 22nd, 2021

    Lance Strate

    One hundred and fifty years! My, how time flies! Doesn’t it seem like just yesterday that we were celebrating our centennial?

    Well, maybe not just yesterday. But it was almost a decade ago, as some of you may remember, back when I started on my first term as president of our congregation, that I pointed out that our 150th anniversary would be upon us before we know it. And some of you learned a new word: Sesquicentennial! Can you say that? Repeat after me: SES! QUI! CENTENNIAL! SESQUICENTENNIAL! See, it’s easy.

    So, for the better part of a decade, we’ve been thinking about our sesquicentennial, talking about our sesquicentennial, and planning for our sesquicentennial. And that brings to mind that old Yiddish saying about how we plan, and God laughs.

    This certainly isn’t the sesquicentennial that we had planned for before the pandemic. No one expected that we would usher in our anniversary after a year of lockdowns and quarantines, zooming and streaming, masking and vaxxing. But our congregation survived the last great pandemic over a century ago, and we are still going strong to this day. And we have learned a lot! We have learned to be flexible. We have learned to be adaptable. And most of all, we have learned about ourselves, and the true value of family and friends and our spiritual home, our sacred community, our Congregaton Adas Emuno.

    So, God may have had a real good laugh this time, but our best laid plans were simply to commemorate our sesquicentennial, and that is what we are doing tonight, right now, and for the coming anniversary year. And I think that the fact that our birthday, October 22nd, has fallen on a Friday this year is more than mere synchronicity. It is altogether auspicious that this occasion coincides with the most sacred time of Shabbat, and that, as we commemorate our anniversary we can join together in worship, which is exactly what has sustained us for these past 150 years, not to mention the past 3,000 years or so. We didn’t plan, we couldn’t plan, to have our congregation’s birthday fall on a Friday this year, but maybe someone else did? We may need to consult the Kabbalah, or Gematria, for the answer. Rabbi, I leave it to you.

    I do think it’s important to be clear on what it is that we’re celebrating. What does 150 years of Adas Emuno mean? It’s not about this sanctuary, or the social hall downstairs, or the school building, or our garden. It’s not about Hoboken and it’s not about Leonia. Our membership comes from all over Northern New Jersey, and beyond. We are not circumscribed by our properties, not limited to one town, not defined by geography.

    What does 150 years of Adas Emuno mean? It’s not about a place. It’s about a congregation. It’s about a sacred community. It’s about an assembly of the faithful. It’s about people. Adas Emuno is us. All of us gathered here today, and all of us watching the livestream. We are Congregation Adas Emuno.

    But it’s not just about us. It’s about the pioneers who founded this synagogue 150 years ago. It’s about everyone who was a part of our community over the past century and a half. And it’s about everyone who will join our faithful assembly in the future. Just as we are not defined by geography, neither are we limited to any one point in time.

    And, let’s also think about, and remember the members of this congregation who are no longer with us, many that I have known, many that you have known. We should understand that they are more than names on memorial plaques. And they are more than names that are said each year on their yahrzeit. They will always be a part of our congregation. And they are a part of this moment, they are with us in our celebration, here tonight.

    One hundred and fifty years ago Congregation Adas Emuno was founded by a group of immigrants. We should consider the courage they had, to leave their homes and journey across the ocean to a strange new country with a different language and a different culture, to start all over again. They were not defined by geography, and they were supported by our time-honored tradition and a commitment to community. Let’s take a moment to recognize their courage, and how today we stand on their shoulders, and enjoy the benefits that their courage bestowed upon us.

    And let us also acknowledge that it takes some courage to be here now, today, to be true to our tradition, and to be a part of a congregation. It takes courage to stand up for ourselves in the face of growing anti-Semitism. It takes courage to carve out time to devote to our temple, especially when there are so many other demands that are made on us. It takes courage simply to set aside the pursuit of pleasure, the endless distractions that are constantly vying for our attention. It takes courage to set aside the pursuit of power, status, wealth, even just for a little while, to resist the seductive call of personal ambition, and make room for something more in our lives. It takes courage to make the choice to be Jewish, make the choice to be a member of the Jewish community, to make the choice to live and worship as Jews. Today we are all Jews by choice.

    And if the pandemic has taught us anything, it’s taught us that what really matters are family, friends, and community. What really matters are our relationships. What really matters are the things that give life meaning, that transcend space and time, that link us together to something greater than ourselves.

    So tonight, and for the coming year, we celebrate our sesquicentennial. One hundred and fifty years of Congregation Adas Emuno. We celebrate our past and our present. And we celebrate our future. And when it comes to all of our planning, well that Yiddish saying doesn’t indicate that there’s anything wrong with making God laugh. Why wouldn’t it be a good thing? After all, with all that’s going on in the world, God could probably use a good laugh.

    So, in that spirit, at this time next year, after we are finished honoring the founding of our shining shul on a hill, after we are finished commemorating the survival of our sacred community, after we are finished sharing in the joy of the sesquicentennial of our little shul-that-could, we should start planning for Congregation Adas Emuno’s bicentennial celebration. It’s only 50 years away! It’ll be here before you know it!

    Until then, happy birthday Adas Emuno! And Shabbat shalom!


  • October 21, 2021 12:34 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Oct. 21, 2021

    Dear Friends,
      And so we have arrived at our 150th Anniversary!

      Join us in-person (or livestream) for our Shabbat Evening Adas Emuno 150th Anniversary Service (7:30 PM). The service will feature festive music, remarks by past presidents Beth Ziff and Lance Strate, a proclamation from Leonia mayor Judah Ziegler, and the dedication of a new hand-embroidered Torah cover made for this milestone occasion.

      Arrive early for an outdoor wine and cheese reception (6:45 PM). View a collection of memorabilia in the social hall. And if you haven't already, pick up a beautiful t-shirt with our congregational and anniversary logos.

      Shabbat Morning Torah Study (10:00 AM) continues via Zoom as we celebrate another founding- that of the Jewish people at Mount Sinai, as recorded in the Torah.

      If you missed the enjoyable feature on our milestone anniversary in The Jewish Standard you can view it here:
    https://jewishstandard.timesofisrael.com/adas-emuno-at-150/.

    Shabbat shalom,
    Rabbi Schwartz

    For Livestream Services:
    Go to YouTube.com and enter Adas Emuno Streaming in the search box. About 5 minutes before the service is scheduled to begin, find the service that is "live" and wait for it to begin.

Student Cantor

Joseph Flaxman

Religious School Director

Annette De Marco

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