Adult Education at TE: Coping With Death and Dying, Sunday March 30th, 10:15 am

imagesBagels 9:45 am, talk 10:15 – 11:45 am, TE Sanctuary.

How do we accompany our friends, family and fellow congregants in difficult moments,such as serious/terminal illness or end-of-life?

How do we care for ourselves as we seek to care for those we love?

Chaplain Lisa Irish, MEd, MA, BCC and Chaplain N. Sarah Blum, MS, DMINc, NAJC, both from Yale-New Haven Hospital, St Raphael campus will present a point of view that responds to these questions. Their presentation will be followed by TE members Rise Siegel, Ed Cantor, Sandy Boltax Stern and Steve Rivkin sharing their personal experience in coping with death and dying. Chaplains Sarah and Lisa will then facilitate a discussion on this topic that touches all of us in some way.

Interfaith SCHOLAR IN RESIDENCE Sunday, March 30, 2014 “END OF LIFE CHALLENGES IN HEALTHCARE FOR PEOPLE OF FAITH"

Join the Orange Interfaith Community in a Unique Learning Experience:
“END OF LIFE CHALLENGES IN HEALTHCARE FOR PEOPLE OF FAITH”IMG_3842
A discussion with our own orange clergy facilitated by Dr. Julius Landwirth, Past associate director & current member of the Yale interdisciplinary center for bioethics.

Potluck Dinner at 4:00 PM, Program at 5:30 PM
To sign up for potluck (essential!) please follow this link.

On Legacies, Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Future Generation of Jews

IMG_8151I am writing this column at the end of a very long Sunday.  This morning our Hebrew School marked Martin Luther King, Jr.’s legacy and engaged in a series of projects to make the world a better place. The students shared their dreams and prepared gifts for those in need. It was a perfect way to celebrate this day in a very Jewish way.

The day continued with the second session of our new teen program that brought together 17 teenagers from Temple Emanuel, Congregation Mishkan Israel (Hamden) and Temple Beth David (Cheshire).  The program is dedicated to exploring the issues of Social Justice with our teens, and one of the important elements of the program is the residential weekend in Washington, D.C., the ‘L’taken’ seminar organized by the Religious Action Center (RAC) of our movement, that we will attend in March. This Sunday, in honor of MLK Jr., we wanted to engage our students in both learning and action, allowing them to experience first-hand the opportunity to engage with the world’s problems, and to heal the world in a small measure with the work of our hands.

IMG_8180After a few ice breaker games, allowing the teens to get to know each other a little, Rabbi Brockman spent some time teaching about the ancient biblical laws of ‘peah,’ that required the farmer to leave the corners of the field unharvested, thus allowing the stranger and the widow and the orphans – the unprotected within the ancient society – to have access to food required for basic survival. In the following session, I asked the students to come up with the dinner menu for a family of four, create a shopping list and then price out the dinner. The four teams came back with $18.50, $21, $25 and $63 meals (the last one clearly sounded like a gourmet dinner!) You can imagine their reaction when I shared the SNAP (formerly food stamps) numbers with them: a family of four has a maximum of $17.73 per day to spend on food… A wonderfully sobering discussion ensued, one that helped us frame in very Jewish terms what we were going to do for the rest of the day.

IMG_8170With the help of Harvey Cheskis, a leader of the group ‘Life is Delicious’ from Congregation Mishkan Israel, our TE kitchen and social hall were transformed into a buzzing, pulsating ‘cooking central.’ Within a few hours, the teens had fully prepared from scratch a meal for nearly 120 homeless men. There was meatloaf, mashed potatoes, salad, fresh fruit salad and sponge cake. While the food was in the oven, we watched a recent documentary “A Place at the Table’ that discussed the realities of hunger and food insecurity in our country. Listening to the students discuss the film with Rabbi Whinston was one of the highlights of the day; they were not afraid to probe the issues, to raise their concerns and to listen to each other. They were truly engaging with the challenges of the world, making their teachers and their rabbis beam with pride…

IMG_8213The long day ended at an overflow shelter of Columbus House, a sobering room filled with over 100 homeless men who were yearning for some homemade food and a kind smile at the end of a very cold day… The students helped serve about 120 meals and then were cheered and applauded, quite appropriately, by a room full of strangers who appreciated their kindness. They did a great deed that day, but they gained far more than they shared.

I could think of no better way to spend the Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, than to be able to go on such a journey of learning and service with a group of phenomenal Jewish teens.

 

Coping with Death and Dying – Panel with TE members and discussion facilitated by Chaplains Lisa Irish and Sarah Blum, Yale-New Haven Hospital, Saint Raphael Campus

Coping with Death and Dying – Panel with TE members and discussion facilitated by Chaplain Lisa Irish, Bereavement Coordinator, Yale-New Haven Hospital, Saint Raphael Campus and Chaplain Sarah Blum.

images

Sunday, March 30th, 2014.

Bagels @ 9:45 am, talk 10:15 – 11:45 am

How do we accompany our friends, family and fellow congregants in difficult moments, such as serious/terminal illness or end-of-life? How do we care for ourselves as we seek to care for those we love?

Chaplain Lisa Irish, MEd, MA, BCC and Chaplain N. Sarah Blum, MS, DMINc, NAJC, both from Yale-New Haven Hospital, St Raphael campus will present a point of view that responds to these questions. Their presentation will be followed by volunteer TE members Rise Siegel, Ed Cantor, Steve RIvkin and Sandra Boltax Stern sharing their personal experience in coping with death and dying. Chaplains Sarah and Lisa will then facilitate a discussion on this topic that touches all of us in some way.
This program is part of TE Adult Education Series, free and open to all.

Temple Emanuel Scholar-in-Residence Feb. 28-Mar. 2, 2014 "Jewish Recipes for Holiness in the 21st Century"

Jewish Recipes for Holiness in the 21st Century

Temple Emanuel Scholar-in-Residence Feb. 28-Mar. 2, 2014

All of us are seeking meaning for our lives as we rush through our busy weeks and packed schedules. We want to cultivate wonder and creativity in our children and we would like to be part of a larger community that nurtures these values, reminds us of ways to seek holiness in our lives and reach out to others in holy relationships of care and concern. How can Judaism play a centring thread in our search for meaning? How can we cultivate these dispositions in our children for a lifelong experiencing of wonder and creativity? How can we find in our community a shared place of value and trust and a means to outreach to others with care? Join Rabbis Michael Shire and Marcia Plumb for an exploration and a rich Jewish experience of Shabbat menucha (comforting) and kedusha (holiness).

Friday Feb. 28

marcia

8 PM Kabbalat Shabbat Service “Jewish recipe for Holiness in the 21st century” with Rabbi Marcia Plumb

What are the Jewish recipes that our tradition has handed down to us through Jewish study, practices and thought?

Saturday March 1

10:30 AM (Bagels and Coffee at 10 am, session starts at 10:30)

Musar study with Rabbi Marcia Plumb. Musar study of Jewish texts is a traditional practice of focusing on character development through studying our biblical and rabbinic texts. It has become a rich spiritual practice for modern Jews and opens a new dimension to Judaism’s role in our search for holiness and meaning in our lives.

shire

4 PM

Seudah Shlishit with Rabbi Michael Shire. Join us for food for the soul and body at the traditional third meal of Shabbat. Our Torah portion Pekudei details the intricate details of the holy vessels of the Israelite camp: the mishkan, the High Priest’s vestments, the holy ark, all of the things they created on their journeying in the wilderness. What can we glean from our ancient religion that resonates for our search for holiness today? Where and when will the shechinah (God’s presence) journey with us and rest with us today?

5:30 PM

“Stepping into holiness” Havdalah experience. Havdalah heightens all our senses; tasting the wine, seeing the flame, smelling the spices, hearing the sizzle of the flame extinguished and embracing each other in a close circle of intimacy as we say goodbye to a time of menucha and kedusha. Step into an exploration of all these senses with spiritual exercises, lilting melodies and warm feelings.

Sun March 2
The Jewish Prophet10 AM (Bagels and Coffee at 9:30 am, session starts at 10)
“Modern Prophets” – adult study session.
Holiness in Judaism cannot be divorced from passionate engagement with the world and the activity of Tikkun Olam (repair of the world). Our Hebrew prophets of old were the first to speak ‘truth to power’ and forcefully represent a holy message of social justice.
However, it did not end with the ancient prophets and there are many who have continued this perspective of Judaism’s unique contribution to our moral and ethical society. Rabbi Shire has written a book on the prophets of Judaism; ancient, medieval and modern, as role models for us all.

About our scholars:

Rabbi Dr. Michael Shire
Rabbi Dr Michael Shire is the Dean and Professor of the Shoolman Graduate School of Jewish Education at Hebrew College in Boston. Formerly Vice-Principal of Leo Baeck College in London, he has authored four books on creative liturgy accompanied by medieval Jewish illuminations. His doctoral studies at Hebrew Union College in Los Angeles investigated the enhancement of the spiritual life of children. He now directs the Torah Godly Play project as a methodology of spiritual pedagogy of teaching Torah. He is a board member of the Union of Reform Judaism’s Day School Board (PARDES).
Rabbi Marcia Plumb
Rabbi Marcia Plumb is the Rabbinic Chaplain at Hebrew Senior Life facility in Boston and Associate Rabbi at Congregation Mishkan Tefila in Chestnut Hill, Mass. She is an accredited teacher of Jewish Spirituality including the Jewish spiritual practice of Musar. She is the teacher of Musar and spirituality at several Reform synagogues in the Boston area including Beth Elohim Wellesley, Beth El
Sudbury and the Rashi School. Formerly Rabbi at Congregation Shaarey Tsedek in London, she is the founder of Neshama; a Jewish spirituality organization in the UK.

Rabbis Michael Shire and Marcia Plumb currently live in Boston and are raising two children, Anya and Micah.

3rd Annual Debbie Friedman z"l Memorial Concert at Temple Emanuel – Sun, Jan 12, 10:30 AM

The Temple Emanuel Band, Children’s Choir and Hebrew TE band at Debbie Friedman memorial concert 2012School invite you to join in a morning of singing and celebration in memory of the music and legacy of Debbie Friedman, z”l, on Sunday morning, January 12, at 10:30. This year, we welcome the participation of the Ezra Academy Choir.
In addition to several iconic songs by Friedman, who passed in 2011, songs by two generations of musicians who were influenced and inspired by her ability to bring a woman’s voice and perspective into late 20th-century Jewish music and to write accessible songs combining liturgy and social commentary will be performed. Please bring your friends and your voices!

The event is free and open to public.

Adult Education series – Saturday, Jan. 11, 3-4:30 PM: Humanity and Ethnicity

 

2013-11-09 15.12.11
“Heritage’ discussion led by Olga Markus

Our Adult Education programs this year revolve around the theme of Exploring Our Jewish Identity. Events include a Speaker Series, a Scholar in Residence, and Shabbat Afternoon Conversations.  TE members and friends are invited to attend any and all of these events.

Saturday, Jan. 11,  3-4:30 PM:  Humanity and Ethnicity

Our relationship to others who are not part of the Jewish people. How does a sense of particularism relate to the universal themes and teachings of Judaism?

Coordinators:  Peter Stolzman & Jean Silk.  At the home of Chris and Monte Radler

Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing: Worthwhile or Risky? Sunday, October 20, 10:00 AM

Direct-to-Consumer Genetic Testing: Worthwhile or Risky? Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) genetic testing companies market genetic tests directly to the public and often claim that testing is for entertainment purposes only. rachel barnettHowever, some information gained from DTC testing may significantly impact medical care. This talk will address some of the controversy around DTC testing and whether results of such testing are clinically accurate and allow us to engage with this very pertinent topic with a help of an expert in the field, Rachel E. Barnett.

Rachel E. Barnett, MS is a Senior Genetic Counselor specializing in cancer genetics at the Yale Cancer Center, Yale School of Medicine. She earned her Master of Science at the University of North Carolina Greensboro, is board certified by the American Board of Genetic Counseling, and joined Yale in 2004.  She has provided lectures to many professional and public groups in Connecticut and is an author on several articles about hereditary cancer syndromes.

Bagels and coffee at 9:45 AM; talk and Q&A from 10:00 AM until 11:45 AM.

Weekly Torah study at Temple Emanuel – starting Sept 28 at 10:30 am

Plaut TorahThe Torah is the Tree of Life, the Blueprint for humanity. A most revered book in Judaism. It’s stories are among the best known world over, and yet if you try to read the Torah as a book, from beginning to end, you might find yourself easily confused by the narrative.  For centuries the Jewish people have engaged with the words of Torah every week, one small portion at a time. Studied the narrative, searched for interpretation and deeper understanding of the lessons it teachers us. One generation after the other our ancestors added commentaries to the Torah text, often arguing with each other across time and space, searching for better ways to understand the scripture.

At Temple Emanuel, we have always taken this sacred tradition seriously. Every Shabbat morning a group of TE members comes together to discuss the weekly Torah portion, to learn from our ancestors and to offer our own take on the traditional text. No previous knowledge is required (but always welcome!:) Simply come, enjoy coffee, Torah and conversation in a good company – and your Shabbat morning will never be the same again!

 

This week’s new Torah cycle begins on Saturday, September 28th at 10:30 am in TE library.

(Please check the calendar for this week’s time and details).