450+ Rabbis Support Governor Cuomo's and Mayor De Blasio's
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Faith Voices Letter
In Support Of Keeping Houses Of Worship Nonpartisan August 16, 2017 Dear Senator: As a leader in my religious community, I am strongly opposed to any effort to repeal or weaken current law that protects houses of worship from becoming centers of partisan politics. Changing the law would threaten the integrity and independence of houses of worship. We must not allow our sacred spaces to be transformed into spaces used to endorse or oppose political candidates. Faith leaders are called to speak truth to power, and we cannot do so if we are merely cogs in partisan political machines. The prophetic role of faith communities necessitates that we retain our independent voice. Current law respects this independence and strikes the right balance: houses of worship that enjoy favored tax-exempt status may engage in advocacy to address moral and political issues, but they cannot tell people who to vote for or against. Nothing in current law, however, prohibits me from endorsing or opposing political candidates in my own personal capacity. Changing the law to repeal or weaken the “Johnson Amendment” – the section of the tax code that prevents tax-exempt nonprofit organizations from endorsing or opposing candidates – would harm houses of worship, which are not identified or divided by partisan lines. Particularly in today’s political climate, engaging in partisan politics and issuing endorsements would be highly divisive and have a detrimental impact on congregational unity and civil discourse. I therefore urge you to oppose any repeal or weakening of the Johnson Amendment, thereby protecting the independence and integrity of houses of worship and other religious organizations in the charitable sector. -
The Debate Over Mixed Seating in the American Synagogue
Jack Wertheimer (ed.) The American Synagogue: A Sanctuary Transformed. New York: Cambridge 13 University Press, 1987 The Debate over Mixed Seating in the American Synagogue JONATHAN D. SARNA "Pues have never yet found an historian," John M. Neale com plained, when he undertook to survey the subject of church seating for the Cambridge Camden Society in 1842. 1 To a large extent, the same situation prevails today in connection with "pues" in the American syn agogue. Although it is common knowledge that American synagogue seating patterns have changed greatly over time - sometimes following acrimonious, even violent disputes - the subject as a whole remains unstudied, seemingly too arcane for historians to bother with. 2 Seating patterns, however, actually reflect down-to-earth social realities, and are richly deserving of study. Behind wearisome debates over how sanctuary seats should be arranged and allocated lie fundamental disagreements over the kinds of social and religious values that the synagogue should project and the relationship between the synagogue and the larger society that surrounds it. As we shall see, where people sit reveals much about what they believe. The necessarily limited study of seating patterns that follows focuses only on the most important and controversial seating innovation in the American synagogue: mixed (family) seating. Other innovations - seats that no longer face east, 3 pulpits moved from center to front, 4 free (un assigned) seating, closed-off pew ends, and the like - require separate treatment. As we shall see, mixed seating is a ramified and multifaceted issue that clearly reflects the impact of American values on synagogue life, for it pits family unity, sexual equality, and modernity against the accepted Jewish legal (halachic) practice of sexual separatiop in prayer. -
Daniel Soyer 379 East 8 Street Brooklyn, NY 11218 718-941-3219
Daniel Soyer 379 East 8 th Street Brooklyn, NY 11218 718-941-3219 [email protected] Education New York University - Ph.D. in History, 1994 - M.A. in History, 1985 - Certificate in Archival Management, 1986. Dissertation: "Jewish Landsmanshaftn (Hometown Associations) in New York, 1880s to 1924." Oberlin College - A.B. in Government, l979. Union College - Attended, 1975-1976. Columbia University, Uriel Weinreich Summer Program in Yiddish Language, Literature and Culture - Attended, 1975-l976, l978. Current Position Fall 1997 – Present – Assistant Professor (1997-2003), Associate Professor (2003-2009), Professor (2009-Present) of History, Fordham University -- “Introduction to Modern American History” -- “Ethnic America” -- “The City in American History” (undergraduate and graduate versions) -- “New York City: History and Culture” (graduate course) --“New York City: People and Communities (undergraduate seminar) --“U.S. Immigration and Ethnicity” (undergraduate and graduate versions) --“Jazz Age to Hard Times: U.S. in the 1920s and 1930s” --“US Ethnic Politics” (undergraduate seminar) --“September 11 in New York City History” --“Proseminar/Seminar in US History” (graduate seminar) --“New York City Politics” (undergraduate and graduate versions) --“History of New York City” --“New York as a Catholic and Jewish City” (co-taught) --“Jewish People in the Modern World” Other Teaching Experience Fall 1996 - Adjunct Assistant Professor, Brooklyn College, C.U.N.Y. (Adult Extension) -- "The History of New York City." Spring 1995 - Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin - Madison -- "The Jewish People in America" -- "Eastern European Jewish Immigrant Experience, 1880s-1920s." Fall 1994 - Guest Faculty (Unranked), Sarah Lawrence College -- "Jewish Identities in the Modern World." Summer 1985 - Adjunct Lecturer, Fiorello H. La Guardia Community College, C.U.N.Y. -
26Th Annual Julian Y. Bernstein Distinguished Service Awards Ceremony 2021/5781
7:30pm 4 Nisan 5781 Nisan 4 Tuesday, March 16, 2021 16, March Tuesday, AWARDS CEREMONY AWARDS DISTINGUISHED SERVICE DISTINGUISHED JULIAN Y. BERNSTEIN Y. JULIAN ANNUAL th 26 WESTCHESTER JEWISH COUNCIL Connect Here® Academy for Jewish Religion Hebrew Free Loan Society Sanctuary ACHI - American Communities Helping Israel Hebrew Institute of White Plains Scarsdale Synagogue - Temples - Tremont AIPAC - American Israel Public Affairs Committee HIAS and Emanu-El AJC Westchester/Fairfield Hillels of Westchester Shaarei Tikvah Ameinu, Project Rozana Holocaust & Human Rights Education Center Shalom Hartman Institute of North America American Friends of Magen David Adom ImpactIsrael Shames JCC on the Hudson American Friends of Soroka Medical Center Israel Bonds (Development Corporation for Israel) Sinai Free Synagogue American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) Israel Policy Forum Students & Parents Against Campus American Zionist Movement (AZM) J Street Anti-Semitism (SPACA) Anti-Defamation League (ADL) JCCA Sprout Westchester Areyvut The Jewish Board StandWithUs BBYO Westchester Region Jewish Broadcasting Services (JBS) Stein Yeshiva of Lincoln Park Bet Am Shalom Synagogue Jewish Community Center of Harrison Temple Beth Abraham Bet Torah Jewish Community Center of Mid-Westchester Temple Beth Am Beth El Synagogue Center Jewish Community Council of Mt. Vernon Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester The Blue Card Jewish Deaf (and Hard-of-Hearing) Resource Temple Beth El – Danbury Bronx Jewish Community Council, Inc Center Temple Beth Shalom - Hastings Camp Zeke The Jewish Education Project Temple Beth Shalom - Mahopac Chabad Center for Jewish Life of the Rivertowns Jewish National Fund of Temple Israel Center of White Plains Chabad of Bedford Westchester & Southern CT Temple Israel of New Rochelle Chabad Lubavitch of Larchmont and Mamaroneck Jewish Theological Seminary Temple Israel of Northern Westchester Chavurat Tikvah Justice Brandeis Westchester Law Society Temple Shaaray Tefila of Westchester Children’s Jewish Education Group Keren Or, Inc. -
To Shrink Classes Amid COVID-19, Israel Needs to Hire 15000 Teachers. It Won't Be Easy. College Students
Washtenaw Jewish News Presort Standard In this issue… c/o Jewish Federation of Greater Ann Arbor U.S. Postage PAID 2939 Birch Hollow Drive Ann Arbor, MI Phoenix's High Adin Ann Arbor, MI 48108 Permit No. 85 Jewish Holidays Steinsaltz Mayor Dies page 4 pages 12 to 20 pages 21 September 2020 Elul 5780/Tishrei 5781 Volume XX Number 1 FREE College students start (or not) fall semester Patti Smith, special to the WJN on time and graduate, so I (don’t) want to conditions improve at some point during the decision,” she says. “At the end of the day I ormally at this time of year, col- take time off . and I’m enjoying seeing my semester. Lewis decided to stay home in Ann decided to prioritize money and my health. I lege students are getting ready to friends who are here, even if it’s outside at a Arbor for the fall semester, which means she am not expecting to have a particularly excit- N pack their cars and return to their distance.” has to withdraw from Berkeley and then re- ing fall, but I will dedicate my time to various campuses for another semester of classes, Sarah Lewis, 19, is an incoming sopho- apply in the spring. “I made the decision to campaigns leading up to the general election sports, and friends. But this year is anything more at University of California, Berkeley. stay home this fall semester because travel- in November, as well as continuing with my but normal. internship on candidate Gretchen Driskell’s COVID-19 has thrown a wrench into the campaign for Congress. -
Femmes Juives
leREVUE MENSUELLE shofar DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ ISRAÉLITE LIBÉRALE DE BELGIQUE N° d’agréation P401058 DÉCEMBRE 2013 - N°349 / TEVET 5774 SYNAGOGUE BETH HILLEL BRUXELLES FEMMES JUIVES Le Shofar est édité par la COMMUNAUTÉ ISRAÉLITE LIBÉRALE N°349 DÉCEMBRE 2013 DE BELGIQUE A.S.B.L. TEVET 5774 N° d’entreprise : 408.710.191 N° d’agréation P401058 Synagogue Beth Hillel REVUE MENSUELLE DE LA 80, rue des Primeurs COMMUNAUTÉ ISRAÉLITE B-1190 Bruxelles LIBÉRALE DE BELGIQUE Tél. 02 332 25 28 Fax 02 376 72 19 EDITEUR RESPONSABLE : www.beth-hillel.org Gilbert Lederman [email protected] CBC 192-5133742-59 REDACTEUR EN CHEF : IBAN : BE84 1925 1337 4259 Luc Bourgeois BIC : CREGBEBB SECRÉTAIRE DE RÉDACTION : RABBIN : Rabbi Marc Neiger Yardenah Presler RABBIN HONORAIRE : COMITÉ DE RÉDACTION : Rabbi Abraham Dahan Rabbi Marc Neiger, Gilbert Lederman, DIRECTEUR: Luc Bourgeois Isabelle Telerman, Luc Bourgeois PRÉSIDENT HONORAIRE : Ont participé à ce numéro du Shofar : Paul Gérard Ebstein z"l Catherine Danelski-Neiger, Anne De Potter, Leah Pascale CONSEIL D’ADMINISTRATION : Engelmann, Annie Szwertag, Gaëlle Gilbert Lederman (Président), Myriam Szyffer, David Zilberberg Abraham, Gary Cohen, Anne De Potter, Nathan Estenne, Ephraïm Fischgrund, MISE EN PAGE : Josiane Goldschmidt, Gilbert Leder- inextremis.be man, Willy Pomeranc, Gaëlle Szyffer, Elie Vulfs, Pieter Van Cauwenberge, ILLUSTRATION COUVERTURE : Jacqueline Wiener-Henrion Old Jewish woman, ca. 1880 Meijer de Haan Les textes publiés n’engagent que leurs auteurs. Sommaire EDITORIAL 5 Femmes juives (Luc Bourgeois, -
The Bulletin Affiliated with the Union for Reform Judaism
The Bulletin Affiliated with the Union for Reform Judaism DECEMBER 2015 KISLEV - TEVET 5776 Vol. 167, No. 4 SHABBAT SERVICES FOR DECEMBER Israel: Land and People Join Rabbis Linda and Stephen Goodman SHABBAT VAYEISHEV for a profoundly memorable experience 4 Friday Evening July 16-29, 2016 4:00 PM - Fridays @ 4 First Friday Family Shabbat Highlights: 6:00 PM - Snacks • Jerusalem - eternal capital 6:30 PM - Kabbalat Shabbat • Tel Aviv/Yafo - yesterday, today, 7:15 PM - Potluck Dinner tomorrow • Makhtesh Ramon - geological 5 Saturday Morning wonder 9:00 AM - Shabbat Hevre • Sdeh Boker - making the desert 9:30 AM - Out of the Shabbox bloom 10:30 AM - Shabbat Morning Service • Masada - desert fortress, heroic 11:30 AM - PJ Library: It's Time for Shabbat last stand Torah: Genesis 37:1-40:23 Haftarah: Amos 2:6-3:8 • Sea of Galilee - in the footsteps SHABBAT ROSH CHODESH CHANUKAH - MIKEITZ of Jesus 11 Friday Evening Giv'at Haviva - building 4:00 PM - Fridays @ 4 Arab-Jewish partnerships 6:30 PM - Kabbalat Shabbat - Presentation by Akira Kitade on • Wadi Ara - conflicts of interests Japanese Rescuer Chiune Sugihara • The Jordan River - waters of Dinner and Oneg to follow peace • Tzefat - inspiration of the mystics 12 Saturday Morning • The Golan Heights - mountains, water, history, 9:00 AM - Shabbat Hevre neighbors 9:30 AM - Out of the Shabbox The Burma Road - saluting our congregant, 10:30 AM - Shabbat Morning Service Col. David (Mickey) Marcus 11:30 AM - PJ Library: It's Time for Shabbat • Yad Vashem - Israel's Memorial to the Shoah Torah: Genesis 41:1-44:17 Haftarah: Zechariah 4:1-7 • Rosh Hanikra - grottoes and bluffs SHABBAT VAYIGASH • The Shalom Hartman Institute - center of 18 Friday Evening transformative thinking and study 4:00 PM - Fridays @ 4 Personal conversations with: Palestinians, 6:30 PM - Kabbalat Shabbat - Movie to follow: Cast a Giant Shadow - Israelis; Muslims, Christians, Jews; The story of Col. -
November 2020
November 2020 | 14 Cheshvan 5781 – 14 Kislev 5781 | Volume 75, Number 6 2021 Annual Campaign Leadership By Jamie Richman Allan has provided David Eichholz Autumn has arrived, and believe years of service to the will co-chair the it or not, the 2021 Savannah Jewish community including Men’s Campaign. Federation Annual Community serving on the Jewish This father-son Campaign season is also here! We are Educational Alliance duo will be sure excited to announce the 2021 Campaign Board of Directors and to mix things up Leadership Team and thank them for teaching at Shalom this campaign Candle Lighting Times their commitment School. Hilary Kronowitz season with their David Eichholz to our Federation Hilary Kronowitz passion for and Friday, November 6 5:12pm and entire Jewish will chair the Women’s dedication to the Savannah Jewish community. Campaign. Kronowitz has community. David is currently the Friday, November 13 5:07pm Michelle Allan chaired the Lion of Judah Vice-President of the Federation Friday, November 20 5:04pm has graciously division for the past handful Board of Governors. Friday, November 27 5:02pm agreed to serve as of years, sits on the Federation When you get a call from the 2021 overall Michelle Allan Board of Governors and is one of them or one of our many Friday, December 4 5:01pm Campaign Chair excited to coordinate the dedicated volunteers, please after serving as Women’s Campaign entire Women’s Campaign. answer and give graciously. Chair for the 2019 & 2020 campaigns. Benjamin Eichholz and Benjamin Eichholz Creativity flourishes through COVID-19 In this Issue By Jennifer Rich who, prior to the shutdown, were timely topical conversations, access P2 Now More Than Ever When COVID-19-19 shut not able to come to the synagogue to curated resources to help with our down Synagogues in Savannah and due to limited mobility or health rea- personal, emotional, and spiritual P4 Greenberg Retirement throughout the United States in sons. -
Sept08greenberg.Pdf
the opportunity to engage and to relate to the sources today, particularly during Yom sacrificial service. Kippur when the Seder HaAvodah serves as For modern Jews, sacrifice was anath- the climax of the entire sacrificial system. ema; those ancient forms of worship seemed The language of these sources expresses vital primitive and outmoded. The notion that ideas about relationship, closeness and God is to be found in one central place was distance, gift-giving, and the connection be- objectionable. The burning of animals in tween human behavior and God’s willing- service to God seemed unnecessarily cruel. ness to abide among us. The language of the Temple and sacrifice, We need new approaches to reclaim these which could have lent itself so easily to difficult texts. Although Temple and sacrifice metaphor, art, and poetry, disappeared, and have long ceased to exist, the imaginative, in- the vast number of sources that were rooted terpretive, and linguistic influence of these in such language were cut off. We need these texts can indeed last forever. Sorting Sins: When the Law Stays the Same and Everything Else Changes Steven Greenberg t has long been the claim of the Orthodox tus of Shabbat and its violation needed to be Icommunity that Jewish law does not or understood in a different light. Important or- should not change to accord itself with the thodox poskim (halakhic decisors) insisted that times. Among certain Jews, since the early Sabbath violators not be classified and treated 19th century, all new things are considered a as idolaters or gentiles whose touch disquali- priori forbidden. -
Members List Sre 2021
Members List • A Wider Bridge • ADL • AJC Global Jewish Advocacy • ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal • American Conference of Cantors • American Jewish World Service • American Technion Society • Amplifier • At The Well • Aviv Foundation • Avodah • B'nai Israel Congregation • Bamidbar Wilderness Therapy • BBYO • Bend the Arc • Bender JCC of Greater Washington • Birthright Israel (now Taglit Birthright Israel) • Birthright Israel Foundation • Boulder Jewish Community Center • Central Conference of American Rabbis • Challah for Hunger • Charles and Lynn Schusterman Philanthropies • Charles E Smith Jewish Day School • Congregation Har HaShem • Congregation M'kor Hayim • Dimensions Education Consulting • Dobkin Family Foundation • Encounter • Footsteps • Foundation for Jewish Camp • Gather DC • Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life (ISJL) • Good People Fund • Greater Miami Jewish Federation • Habonim Dror North America • Hadassah • Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation • Hazon, Inc. • HIAS • Hillel at Temple University • Hillel International • Hillel University of Michigan • Honeymoon Israel • iCenter • IKAR • Institute for Curriculum Services • International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism • IsraAID • Israel Institute • Israel on Campus Coalition • Israel Policy Forum • itrek • JCC Association of North America • JCFS Chicago • JDC • Jewish Community Center of Greater Pittsburgh • Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund • Jewish Community Foundation of Southern Arizona • Jewish Education Project • Jewish Family -
Amudim Community Resources, INC. Amount
Beis Community 2018 Amount: $7,000 Project: Women’s Leadership Development Amudim Community Resources, INC. • Supports women’s leadership development for Amount: $10,000 volunteers of an intentional and inclusive Project: Project Shmirah Orthodox Jewish community in Washington • Hold age-appropriate workshops in yeshivas Heights that attracts those traditionally on the and day schools to teach children about margins. healthy boundaries and strategies to increase emotional wellbeing. They will also provide Moving Traditions events in community centers, synagogues, and Amount: $60,000 homes that will encourage adults to become Project: National Jewish Summer Camp Healthy community advocates against abuse. Sexuality Initiative Center for Initiatives in Jewish Education (CIJE) • Moving Traditions will prepare two cohorts of Amount: $10,000 camp directors and assistant directors to train Project: YES I CAN their staff on bias prevention, harassment, and • Motivate, encourage, and support girls to peer pressure among staff and campers. pursue STEM education and careers through exposure to mentors and educational, T’ruah volunteer, and internship opportunities. Amount: $75,000 Additionally, CIJE will establish the YES I CAN Project: Development of Rabbinic Network career center which will establish STEM • Supports strengthening their rabbinic network internships and opportunities in the US and and training rabbis and cantors to be more Israel and offer assistance to young women effective leaders and to amplify the moral with college and scholarship applications. voice of the Jewish community. T’ruah will Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (JFREJ) develop trainings on anti-Semitism and Amount: $75,000 provide support to their network, particularly Project: Leadership Development women clergy, and promote the voices of • JWFNY’s unrestricted funds will support women as experts in teaching positions and leadership development and political journalism. -
New Israel Fund and Truth to Power Foundation
COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS NEW ISRAEL FUND AND TRUTH TO POWER FOUNDATION FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2018 WITH SUMMARIZED FINANCIAL INFORMATION FOR 2017 NEW ISRAEL FUND AND TRUTH TO POWER FOUNDATION CONTENTS PAGE NO. INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT 2 - 3 EXHIBIT A - Combined Statement of Financial Position, as of December 31, 2018, with Summarized Financial Information for 2017 4 - 5 EXHIBIT B - Combined Statement of Activities and Change in Net Assets, for the Year Ended December 31, 2018, with Summarized Financial Information for 2017 6 EXHIBIT C - Combined Statement of Functional Expenses, for the Year Ended December 31, 2018, with Summarized Financial Information for 2017 7 EXHIBIT D - Combined Statement of Cash Flows, for the Year Ended December 31, 2018, with Summarized Financial Information for 2017 8 NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 9 - 21 SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION SCHEDULE 1 - Combining Schedule of Financial Position, as of December 31, 2018 22 - 23 SCHEDULE 2 - Combining Schedule of Activities, for the Year Ended December 31, 2018 24 SCHEDULE 3 - Combining Schedule of Change in Net Assets, for the Year Ended December 31, 2018 25 SCHEDULE 4 - Schedule of Grants, for the Year Ended December 31, 2018 26 - 33 1 INDEPENDENT AUDITOR'S REPORT To the Board of Directors New Israel Fund and Truth to Power Foundation San Francisco, California We have audited the accompanying combined financial statements of New Israel Fund (NIF) and Truth to Power Foundation (the Foundation), collectively the Organizations, which comprise the combined statement of financial position as of December 31, 2018, and the related combined statements of activities and change in net assets, functional expenses and cash flows for the year then ended, and the related notes to the combined financial statements.