bj bulletin - november - december 2020
TRANSCRIPT
חושך לגרש באנו
בידינו אור ואש
כל אחד הוא אור קטן
וכולנו אור איתן
We have come to banish the darkness
In our hands, light and fi re
Each person is a little light
And all of us together make a great light
Fall Issue November - December 2020 Cheshvan-Kislev-Tevet 5781
CONGREGATION
SHABBAT • HOLIDAYS • EVENTS NOV-DEC 2020
Daily Minyan ServicesMonday - Saturday 7:45am
Sunday 9:00am
Saturday Aft ernoon 1:00pm
Sunday - Friday 6:00pm
National Holidays Times vary
CONGREGATION B’NAI JACOB
(USPS 128-600) is published bimonthly for $1.00 per
year by Congregation B’nai Jacob,
75 Rimmon Road, Woodbridge, CT 06525-2098.
Periodical postage paid at New Haven, CT.
Subscription: $1.00 per annum
Bulletin Permit Number: 128600
Circulation: 400
CONGREGATION B’NAI JACOB
Rabbi Rona Shapiro
Cantor and Barbara Haimowitz
Religious School Director
Office Manager Lynn Ginzberg
Bulletin Editors Lynn Ginzberg
Jeanette Kuvin Oren
Congregation B’nai Jacob
75 Rimmon Road
Woodbridge, CT 06525
Telephone • 203-389-2111
Fax • 203-389-5293
www.bnaijacob.org
DAILY MINYAN SERVICES
Monday - Friday 7:45amMonday - Th ursday 6:00pm Sundays 9:00am, 6:00pmNational Holidays Times vary
SHABBAT SERVICES
Friday Schmooze 6:00pmServices 6:30pm
Saturday Bread & Torah 9:00amServices 10:00am
ZOOM & LIVESTREAMING
For the foreseeable future, all of our religious services will be on zoom or livestreaming. Some services and events will also be in person. Please make sure we have your email so we can alert you to links and passwords.
Do we have your email address?If you don’t receive our emails you could be
missing a lot of great programs. Send yours to
offi [email protected]@bnaijacob.org
Shabbat Toldot Nov 20-21 Candlelighting 4:10pm
Shabbat Vayera Nov 6-7 Candlelighting 4:22pm
Shabbat Chaye Sarah Nov 13-14
Movie Group Discussion Nov 15 Page 7
Candlelighting 4:16pm
Shabbat Vayeshev Dec 11-12 Candlelighting 4:05pm
Shabbat Vayetze Nov 27-28
Th anksgiving Interfaith
Service Nov 15 Page 7
Candlelighting 4:04pm
Shabbat Miketz Dec 18-19 Candlelighting 4:07pm
Shabbat Vayishlach Dec 4-5
Adullt Ed - Daniel Headrick Dec 6 Page 7
Candlelighting 4:05pm
Hanukkah begins the night of December 10Hanukkah Hop Dec 10-18 Page 9
Candlelighting 4:07pmShabbat Vayigash Dec 25-26
2
CONTENTS
4 RABBI
5 PRESIDENT
6 CANTOR / SCHOOL
8 ON THE CALENDAR
12 AT HOME
14 ADULT EDUCATION
15 SOCIAL ACTION
16 YARZEITS
18 DONATIONS
22 ADVERTISERS
3
So, I would suggest that all of us get a little practice in saying
how we really feel and not feeling as if we have to put a big
smiley face on it all the time. You don’t have to go into a
long story — just knowing that I feel “covish” or anxious or
frustrated — is enough.
I have noticed of late that many people oft en seem particularly
on edge right now — impatient behind the wheel, quick
to anger in mundane interactions, intensely frustrated or
disappointed with things that don’t seem as if they should be
such a big deal. My guess is that if we were less caught up in
putting a good face on things, and more willing to say, “I’m
having a hard time right now,” it might soft en the edges a bit;
we might not have so much bottled up frustration that ends up
bleeding everywhere, and we might be able to act with a little
less anger, fear, and frustration.
Our tradition makes a lot of room for expressing and sitting
with one another’s feelings. So many of our traditions around
death are about confronting the loss and not pretending things
are otherwise — we don’t pretty up the corpse and exclaim on
how beautiful he looks — we don’t cover the hole with fake
astroturf and pretend there is no grave there — we shovel earth
into the grave, forcing ourselves to perform this diffi cult act and
hear the heartbreaking sound of earth hitting the casket. When
someone sits shiva, we go and sit with them to be with them in
their pain — we don’t try to cheer them up, or tell them it will
end soon, or that everything is all right — we just sit with them
where they are.
It seems to me as if we could use some of that wisdom right
now. I want our synagogue to be a real place, a place where we
can be real about what is going on with us and not just a place
where we show up to look good. I am encouraging us all to be
more honest about how hard all this is, how scared we are, the
many losses we are grieving.
And I also am encouraging us all to have compassion for one
another and to be forgiving when someone fl ies off the handle
or gets upset. As the saying goes, “Be kind, for everyone you
meet is fi ghting a hard battle.”
Th ere are many ways that in our physical distance from one
another these last months we have grown closer together, or,
to say it diff erently, the strong cords that connect us are much
more visible now. I think that if we can be more real, more
kind, and more forgiving of one another, we will create an even
deeper sense of connection, and, in so doing, we will further
strengthen our community.
So, I hope you are doing great right now, but if you’re not, you’re
in good company! And if you’re feeling “covish,” say it proud!
RABBI RONA SHAPIRO
T he holidays are over; the skies are grayer; the days are
shorter, and the nights colder. I don’t know about you, but I am
feeling a little “covish.” Th at’s a new word I learned last week
to describe how many of us are feeling right now aft er seven
months of a pandemic with no end in sight — blah, grumpy,
irritable, frustrated, tired, angry, scared — “covish.”
I know that we all try to put a good face on things. And that has
its value — a quick, “How are you?” in the grocery store doesn’t
merit a full recounting of one’s troubles in response.
And we have all excelled at fi nding the silver linings — small
weddings can be very intimate; the birds and the trees are
enjoying cleaner air thanks to fewer airplanes; more quiet time
and time for refl ection is good for some of us; on zoom we can
visit with family and friends around the world or enjoy lectures
from Israel or California with the click of a button; it’s nice to go
to shul in my pajamas.
But sometimes, I think, we also just need to name it. Th is is
hard. Th is is anxiety-provoking. Th is is draining. Th is is scary. I
feel “covish.”
I watched a little youtube that a colleague sent me by a
psychiatrist named Dan Siegel. One of the techniques he uses in
his work with children, but it could be used by or with anyone,
is called, “Name it to Tame it” — that is by naming the diffi cult
emotion with which we are struggling, we oft en begin to feel
better.
He actually off ers some brain theory on how this works, and
although I am certain I am vastly oversimplifying things, he
suggests that there is the “upstairs brain” — the cerebrum,
where thinking and planning take place — above the cortex,
and the “downstairs brain” — the cerebellum and brainstem
below the cortex, where emotions, arousal states, fi ght or fl ight
instinct all take place.
When we are in the grip of a negative feeling — say “scared”
— our downstairs brain is running the show. If we are able
to say out loud, “I feel scared,” we literally send soothing
neurotransmitters from the upstairs brain to the downstairs
brain and calm it down. Words have that power. We kind of let
our upstairs brain in on the action instead of letting downstairs
run the whole show.
On top of that, when we not only name our feelings but have
our feelings refl ected by someone else, either because they have
heard and acknowledged what we said, or perhaps even shared
that they feel similarly, we feel even better. We feel seen and
heard. We feel not alone.
4
GLENN A. DUHL
What a tumultuous world is that in which we live. As we venture forward in a new year, I am confi dent that, together, we will make our future better than what we see in our rear view mirrors. We as a congregation and community have really provided for so many despite the challenges before us, and with your continued participation, we may exceed our expectations.
I commend you all for stepping up to the plate despite health and environmental challenges before us, as well as the increased antisemitism that we have unfortunately seen and experienced. As the late Congressman John Lewis said, "When you see something that is not right, not fair, not just, you have to speak up. You have to say something; you have to do something." I am proud to say that this has (for as long as I can remember) been the mantra of B’nai Jacob. We do not sit and watch – we speak and we act.
Here at B’nai Jacob, we are privileged to have so many lay leaders who devote their time and resources to our collective betterment. Some are more visible, while countless others work tirelessly behind the scenes. I would like to thank our devoted rabbi for guiding us through this challenging holiday season, and welcome wth gratitude Cantor Haimowitz, who has added her expertise to our congregation.
While we have been kept physically distant from each other for health and safety concerns, many congregation members and B’nai Jacob staff have spent countless hours keeping us all together – visually and spiritually - while maintaining the distance necessary for our health and well-being.
I reiterate my gratitude to our many congregation members in the medical community. A special thanks to Stephanie Green, Steve Fleischman and Dena Springer for your wisdom and guidance. Behind the scenes, you have protected us and our community. From the beginning of this pandemic, we have been in constant contact with our medical experts who have guided us to proceed across those bridges shown to be safe, and they have advised us accordingly to walk a little farther down the road (or avoid the trip entirely) where health risks are foreseen.
While the Covid crisis threw us into uncharted territory, the silver lining was our ability to maintain connections with our members no matter where they were situated, as well as to meet new friends online. I have seen so much increased participation by so many in online minyan, for example, where we not only log in for our religious needs, but we see and speak with each other, making sure that everyone has what they need, whether it be just a smile or if someone knows whether an item is available at the grocery store. Th rough our various events, we have looked aft er each other to ensure we remain safe and sound.
Aside from the Covid challenge, we once again fi ght the disease longstanding disease that has not yet been rightfully eliminated and threatens our religious freedom and our very existence: antisemitism. Th is is central to our cause. You may have heard that silence is complicity. Here, our silence allows the disease to spread. We have seen this throughout our lives. Th e time has come, yet again, to stand up
against it and stop it. We must act and act now. We simply cannot walk away from antisemitism and leave it for others to combat. Consistent with our spiritual and moral fabric, each of us, as Jews, individually and collectively as this B’nai Jacob community, must confront it head-on. When someone recently painted a swastika on the JCC property here in Woodbridge, it raises memories of what has for too long been so very wrong. An attack such as this against the JCC is an afront to us all. Let us not ignore it. While we have various law enforcement personnel and a vigilant Anti-Defamation League, let us not simply leave it to others to address. To this date, the problem has not been fi xed.
While we have various synagogues throughout southern Connecticut, in varying denominations, we all have a unity of interest. Th e Jewish Federation and JCC provide us with valuable resources. We are best and most eff ective when we share our resources. We should not be separately siloed entities. We are a singular people who must work together.
I ask that we push back against the bigotry that targets our people. I ask that we stand together, unifi ed. Let us tell the world that we will not tolerate further antisemitism. We must act here and now.
How may we do this? Educate our youth. Educate our peers. Educate all. Let us change the way the world views us by presenting our best selves to the world each and every day. Inspire others to do the same. Remember that asking others to be inclusive requires being inclusive ourselves – let us not make assumptions about those whose backgrounds diff er from ours, but rather, let us inquire of those who are diff erent from us and ask them to tell us their stories. Our Jewish fabric is knit by the telling of stories, so let us intertwine with all of humanity so that the fabric may become more familiar and warm us all. Let’s make the next outbreak our overt kindness to others!
Our adult education and other community programs have set the example of lift ing up every member of the Jewish community and educating about other diverse communities. By this, we lead by example. Let us remain united in our goals of bettering our common existence and future so our children and grandchildren may come to synagogue and elsewhere without fear.
Despite Covid, our online and telephonic outreach integrates and educates those around us. Let’s improve the narrative of those who have preceded us, who we now are, and those who will follow in our footsteps.
I continue to welcome your ideas and suggestions. Please let me know how we may succeed together.
Best, Glenn
5
RELIGIOUS SCHOOL
We are well over a month into our new CBJ Religious School Year! We have had three Sunday mornings on ZOOM, since the holidays, with Morah Irma in K through 2, Morah Rashi (with Alex Klee as her teaching assistant) in grades 3 through 5, me teaching grades 5 through 7, and Rabbi Shapiro teaching 7th later in the morning. On Wednesdays, Morah Revi teaches 5th grade and Morah Lauren teaches 7th.
We are working on Hebrew review, synagogue and tefi lah skills, some fun sprinkled in (such as Torah Kahoot quizzes and Parasha Puzzles). We recently had our fi rst virtual trip to Israel, led by our wonderful Israeli tour guide Rotem Shahar, to Jerusalem, visiting the Western Wall (Kotel HaMa’aravi), the City of David (Ir David) and the shuk in the center of town, the Machaneh Yehudah. In a few weeks, we hope to gather in person for a Mezuzah workshop in the social hall. Lastly, we are reviving the Madrichim program based on the teens’ interests and skills as virtual virtuosos.
We are also working toward future B’nai Mitzvah profi ciency. Th e B’nai Mitzvah are among the pride and glory of a shul. It is always a very proud moment to see the Bar/Bat Mitzvah called up for the fi rst time for their aliyah, surrounded by family and friends, whether on ZOOM or in person.
Half of my week - perhaps more - I have individual teaching time with CBJ’s upcoming B’nai Mitzvah. We review verse aft er verse of Haft arah or Torah; we chant Kabbalat Shabbat and Shacharit morning tefi lot. Th e fi rst few weeks into this process, the new students are a bit bewildered - this is diff erent from what they have ever done before in Religious School, and now they are accountable for their own success.
Within a few weeks, they adapt; they chant; they read; they practice. It is a happy experience for a Cantor, to see this steady progress toward the Bar/Bat Mitzvah. To help ensure that they are comfortable, confi dent, clear, and capable. Th e 4 C’s of B’nai Mitzvah preparedness, the same way you evaluate diamonds on their quality and shine. And shine they do, the CBJ B’nai Mitzvah.
In the runner-up years, the 5th, 6th and 7th graders get a fl avor of what it means to read a Haft arah. We just divided the Shabbat Shirah Haft arah (January 30th, 2021), so that all the 5th, 6th and 7th graders can chant a verse (or two). During this time, with a lack of connectedness, this is one of our Religious School’s ways to be a team. We literally all “take one for the team,” and together we chant our way through the liturgical year. Please let me say that it is a pleasure to work with your children. I greatly appreciate their resilience, their drive and motivation to work on their B’nai Mitzvah and Religious School progress during these pandemic times. Th ank you, parents!
Best regards,Cantor Barbara
CANTOR BARBARA HAIMOWITZ
Afew weeks ago on Simchat Torah we had a band. It was an impromptu band with Congregation B’nai Jacob members of all ages and all experiential levels. We had never practiced and it all came together beautifully for the Hakafot. A joyous moment on a busy and well-attended Sunday morning Holiday tent service, as we rolled back the Torah from v’Zot HaBracha to Bereishit. A moment of light and joy. Layehudim hayetah orah vesimkhah vesason vikar, ken tihyeh lanu (Megilat Esther, chapter 8, verse 16)! Translated, the Jews of old had light and happiness and joy and love — may it be so for us!
Fall and winter are months in which we have to fabricate our own sunshine, our own light and joy. Perhaps that statement was never more true than it is now, as we are again facing the formidable pandemic foe. Shared Havdalah and Hanukkah family ceremonies, Broadway sing-alongs, perhaps a Spelling Bee revue video, a shared yet virtual L’Chayim, a cooking class, a book club, a song, a smile, a conversation, a check-in. Building blocks of community connection.
I look forward to being with you, to getting to know you better over these cold and lonely winter months and to sharing my musical skills to bring you light and joy into your living rooms and on our CBJ grounds!
6
ON THE CALENDAR
Jewish Movie Club Discussion Matinee
Sunday, November 15, 4pm on Zoom
Four Seasons LodgeDiscussion led by ELAINE EMERY, child of Holocaust survivors, and DR. BECCA LEVY, Yale expert on
psychology of aging. Th e movie is available for viewing before the event on Amazon Prime, and on Kanopy, with a few copies available at local libraries.
Released in 2008, “Four Seasons Lodge” focuses on one of the bungalow colonies in the Catskills, entirely owned and occupied by approximately fi ft y families of Holocaust survivors, most of them child survivors of the horrors of the Shoah. Th e documentary is directed by Andrew Jacobs of the New York Times. Th e documentary begins as the residents pack up their homes in Queens and elsewhere and head up to the Catskills, with great anticipation and excitement, to begin another summer at the Four Seasons Lodge. Th e movie refl ects the genuine and deep aff ection they have for each other, who have become surrogate family because most of them lost their entire families in the concentration camps, as they enjoy their many summer activities together. Th e documentary ends at the High Holidays, when the residents must vote on whether to continue the lodge, as they are all in their late 80’s or 90’s, and operating and maintaining the premises has become increasingly diffi cult with each passing year. Th e resiliency of the main characters, in the face of all the adversities they have faced and in light of their declining health, is inspiring. Th ey laugh; they cry; they celebrate; they go on, against all odds. ZOOM LINK WILL BE POSTED IN UPCOMING EMAILS.
Please join us outdoors on the Woodbridge Green
for this year’s Woodbridge Community Interfaith
Th anksgiving ServiceMonday
November 23, 2020 (Time TBA)
In order to gather together safely,
we are planning an outdoor candlelight service.
Meet near the gazebo on the Woodbridge Green. Please join us for this unique program of thanks and community
Co-sponsored by Congregation B’nai Jacob, First Church of Christ, Trinity Evangelical Church,
Our Lady of the Assumption Church, Church of Latter Day Saints.
7
ON THE CALENDAR
Th e committee has been very active over the past few months with a number of Zoom meetings as well as regular visits to our properties. We all agree that capital improvements are absolutely necessary over the coming years. It is going to take time and money to upgrade the properties to where we all would like them to be. Over the coming months, the committee will be creating a 5-year capital plan from which a fundraising initiative can be launched.
Aft er extensive market research, prices will be going up as of January 1, 2021 to be more in line with other facilities. Grave prices will be $1,300 for members (up from $1,000) and $3,000 for non-members (up from $2,000).
Th e committee is also hard at work updating our bylaws to refl ect our current practices. When that is complete, they will be posted on a new page on B'nai Jacob's website that is dedicated to the cemetery.
CEMETERY COMMITTEE NEWS
Over the years, many have inquired about purchasing granite benches that people see at other cemeteries. Th is is now permitted with strict guidelines on size, color, and inscription as well as the amount of unused space required next to the grave so that vendor equipment will still have easy access and not risk damaging any benches.
Additionally, we will be replacing the four benches currently around the traffi c circle as you drive down the main entrance. If you are interested in purchasing one of these benches, please contact the synagogue offi ce.
Th e committee has a diverse group of skills. Between Jimmy Shure's professional expertise, Rick Epstein's institutional knowledge, Lynn Estra's operational comprehension, and Gary Leibowitz's prowess of buildings and grounds, we are well-positioned, but always seeking to add more volunteers.
On behalf of the committee,Paul Schatz
Havdalah HarmonicsIntroducing new twice-per-month zoom gatherings
Th ese sessions will be 20-30 minutes to say hello, make havdalah, and enjoy some time together. We will theme each one. Starting in December we will also feature musical guests!
November 14 —
Broadway Havdalah Sing-a-long w/ Cantor
Haimowitz (send song requests in advance to cantorbarbh@gmail.
com)
November 21 -
Pajama Havdalah — come in your pj’s, break out some
milk and cookies, and we’ll make havdalah, tell some
stories, and sing some songs!
Join Zoom Meetinghttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/81582871091Meeting ID: 815 8287 1091Passcode: RIMMON
Shabbat Morning WalksNov 21 & Dec 19 • 8:30am
Join Rabbi Shapiro for
a thoughtful, prayerful,
meditative walk in the
woods. We will meet
at our usual spot, the
entrance to the Blue Trail,
behind the church in
Woodbridge Town Center.
Wear comfortable walking
shoes. Hope to see you there!
Weather permitting. Health recommendations
permitting.
Tuesday Tea with Rabbi Join the rabbi for tea on zoom every Tuesday at 4pm starting November 10.
Pour yourself some tea and grab a cookie too! Come to connect with each other and share comfort, counsel and cheer! From time to time the rabbi will host special guests in conversation.
Topic: Tea with the RabbiTime: Th is is a recurring meeting, 4pm on Tuesdays
Join Zoom Meetinghttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/89875486645
Meeting ID: 898 7548 6645Passcode: RIMMON
8
ON THE CALENDAR
FUNDRAISING LOOKING AHEAD
Our community is strong and as we brace ourselves for a Zoom winter, B'nai Jacob is here with fun and exciting ways for our community to
come together. Please mark your calendars for our upcoming ZOOM events. Prices and details to follow.
We'll start the year with our Healthy CBJ Community Challenge.
Signups start December 1 and the event starts January 1. We ask
participants to set goals for their health, whether that is for physical,
spiritual or emotional well being for yourself or your entire family.
We'll have checkins and motivational exchanges and will highlight
our eff orts in our weekly Happenings. Let our CBJ community
support your quest for better health. A healthier you and a healthier
CBJ for 2021.
Power of Ten Fundraiser ( Zoom interpretation)
Events are being planned for the week-end of January 23-24. We
will have special entertainers, speakers, singers, and demonstrations
throughout the week-end with some surprises! Th ere will be family
events available as well. We are really excited about our line-up.
In February, join us for Trivia and Bingo Night February 27 on Zoom.
We have hired professionals to lead the two events on the Saturday
night of Purim week-end. Join us for a rousing evening of fun and
competition.
Our annual Shalach Manot sale begins February 1!
Rosh Hashanah Day 2Yoga Journey thru the High Holidays
Hanukkah Hop!
Light candles with B’nai Jacob `every night of
Hanukkah! Locations will vary.
We kick off the holiday with another drive thru goodie bag pickup day on
Tuesday, December 8.
We light the fi rst candle on Th ursday night, December 10. Everyone is
invited to the Bnai Jacob parking lot — drive up, stay in your car or join
us outdoors for lighting of the big menorah, singing, and a treat!
Friday night, December 11, before Shabbat begins , we will light
together at Whitney Center at 4:00pm.
Saturday night, December 12, hop on zoom for Havdalah, Hannukah and SingAlong at 5:30pm.
Sunday-Th ursday, December 13-17, we are planning that each night we will light our big menorah in someone
else’s yard in a diff erent neighborhood. Every night will include lighting, singing, and treats!
More information will be in BJHappening emails and our website. Times listed here are tentative.
9
SIMCHAT TORAH HONORS
When I fi rst came to Bnai Jacob, I thought there were many Laurens — well actually there are — but there was one particular Lauren Miller who was here, there, and everywhere. With Jacqueline always at her side, she was running the gift shop with Joanna, heading the religious school board and, more recently, the cantor search committee with Leslie, vice president of the board, active at Federation, volunteering in the offi ce, always there on Sunday morning to help with school — I am sure I left out a few things. It seemed as if it was the work of at least 3 or 4 people, but I learned it was all the same Lauren. She is that “somebody” at the synagogue who is the somebody who gets everything done — you know, “somebody will take care of it” — she is that somebody! If she didn’t exist, we would have had to invent her. I know that if I ask Lauren to do something, not only will she say yes, but I know with certainty that the thing is off my plate, taken care of, perfectly executed, better than I would have done or thought of.
Sometimes, Lauren doesn’t value her contributions highly enough, and she worries that she won’t say it right or know the right answer. But having worked more closely with her over the last year, I have been deeply impressed by Lauren’s wisdom, her insight about situations, and her ability to fi nd a way to say something that is honest without hurting someone else’s feelings. Lauren, we want you to value your contributions as much as we do and to know how appreciated you are.
Scott is the strong and quiet presence by her side. I love when Scott is around because Scott is the kind of person you always want to have around. You can always engage him in an interesting conversation about a scientifi c topic, or anything, for that matter. Scott always has something interesting to say and a unique perspective to add. Of course, you all know that he is a distinguished scientist, holding the Irene duPont chair in chemistry, admitted just this year to the National Academy of Sciences, a huge honor. I tried to get online and read a little about Scott’s research, but I gave up at the title of the papers. Suffi ce it to say it is impressive.
In addition to shuttling kids back and forth, Scott also reads Torah at Bnai Jacob. We know from his sweat — literally — that this is a very diffi cult task for him, and he’s kind of busy guy. But neither lack of time nor diffi culty deters him. He just keeps at it again and again, adding verses, learning more, growing in skill and competence. Kol hakavod.
Together they have raised 3 fabulous children.
As we look to the future of our synagogue at this fi rst aliya of the new Torah year, we look to Lauren who will be our president in less than a year. We look forward to her leadership and to Scott’s steadfast support of her as she takes the reins. Th ey infuse our synagogue with their goodness in the same way that sunshine makes a day so much brighter. All of us owe them a debt of gratitude. Th ank you for your tireless support.
Joanie and Stuart are among the few people about whom I would say that I always knew that to ask them a question is to receive wise counsel.
Th ey were among the fi rst people I met here — Friday night regulars, even if Joanie was oft en late from working so hard. Quickly, they let me know how much they appreciated the rejuvenation of Friday night, and they became proud sponsors of the Shabbat Schmooze, a ritual I look forward to returning to.
Both of them are old New Haven. Stuart always has stories of his youth, the JCC on Chapel, Legion Avenue. An accomplished lawyer, Stuart helps more people who are in diffi cult situations, without ever charging them. He is a mentsch.
Joanie fi nally hung up her robes at the court aft er a lifetime of devoted service. Th eir loss is our gain. She and Stuart have had the time to be much more active in the synagogue — that is when they are not traveling to DC, Boston, or Moldova — to be with their children and their grandchildren about whom they are completely over the moon. I understand that Joanie was scheming on how to kidnap the little one and keep him here aft er his monthlong stay during the pandemic, but his father, for some reason, insisted on taking him home. Joanie has been an invaluable asset to our personnel committee and, of course, both of them give generously of their time and fi nances. More than that, they give generously of themselves — they are quick to praise, slow to criticize, judicious in their speech, and ready with wisdom, humor, or comfort, as the situation requires.
We are all better people, and we are a better community because they are here.
JOAN AND STUART MARGOLIS
LAUREN FAITH AND SCOTT MILLER
Hatan and Kallat Torah and Bereshit are special honors given
out on Simchat Torah to the individuals who have the last aliya
at the completion of the Torah and the fi rst aliya at the beginning.
Th is year we honored Joan and Stuart Margolis with Hatan
and Kallat Torah, and Lauren and Scott Miller with Hatan and
Kallat Bereshit. Honorees approached the Torah under a chuppah,
like the brides and grooms they are. Please join me in saluting
their contributions to our synagogue and join me in person next
Simchat Torah to celebrate next year’s honorees!
-Rabbi Shapiro
10
On Yom Kippur, the High Priest is presented
with two goats. One is sacrifi ced on the altar
to God; the Priest lays his hands on the other
goat’s head, confesses the sins of all the
people of Israel, and sends the goat out to
the wilderness. A session of Goat Yoga pre-
holidays was a fun and unique expeerience
for all who attended.
Our Shofar Service this year was held outdoors, drive-in
style, On a beautiful afternoon, we sat in, on, and near
our cars, listening to the sounds of the Shofar welcome in
the new year. 59 cars parked in the lot for this very special
gathering, which allowed us to come together safely.
HIGH HOLIDAY MOMENTS
GOAT YOGA
SHOFAR SERVICE
11
AT HOME
WELCOMEnew members of b’nai jacob
Michael Buxbaum & Laurel Graeber
Steven & Ilene Radin
Regina Mooney
MAZEL TOV
Marlene & Jerry Schweitzer on the birth of their new
great grandson, Harrison Jerome Landsman.
Audrey & Paul Greenberg on the engagemennt of their
son, Jeff rey.
Rabbi Rona Shapiro and David Franklin on their 25th
wedding anniversary.
Lynn & Jeff Ginzberg on their 30th wedding anniversary.
Judy & David Skolnick on their 50th wedding
anniversary.
Susan & Jimmy Millen on their 55th wedding
anniversary
Elaine & Jack Lawson on their 60th wedding
anniversary.
Liz Edelglass on her new award-winning book,
published online in Sixfold, aft er winning the 2019
Reynolds Price Fiction Prize. “First Th ey Came for the
Torahs” will be reprinted this fall in CCAR Journal: Th e
Reform Jewish Quarterly.
Dianne & Ike Goodrich on the birth of their new
grandson, Elijah
Barbara & Mal Rashba on the wedding of their
granddaughter, Yaella.
Hyla & Barry Vine on the baby naming of their
granddaughter, Willa Rose.
Aimleee Laderman, proud to share that works of her late
husband, Ezra, will be released in the form of a CD by
Albany Records, Chamberworks of 2002-2013
B’naiJacob
12
WE REMEMBERRecent deaths of loved ones
Bonnie Karp Schwartz
Daughter of Joel and Iny Karp
Gail Zik
Wife of Howard Zik
Larry Hoff man
Husband of Debbie Hoff man
Father of Karen Zeid
Rita Benjamin
Mother of Cary Benjamin
Doris L. Shulman
Mother of Carol Lubin
Howard S Rubenstein
Father of Jennifer Zigun
Elliot Brause
Susan Babbitz
Wife of Stephen Babbitz
Mother of Mara Ginsberg
BLESSING FOR HEALING
MI-SHEBERACH LIST
Please call the offi ce at 203-389-2111 to add or delete a
name on our Mi-Sheberach list. Names remain on the
list for one month. Aft er one month we need to hear
from you: Should the name be renewed? If we don’t hear
from you, we may have to remove the name from the list.
Please just let us know how long you need the name to be
on the list.
AT HOME
HIGH HOLIDAY GIFT BAGS
at home
13
KIDDUSH SPONSORS
Todah Rabah for sponsoring or co-sponsoring a
Kiddush in September or October:
Judy and David Skolnick
Stacy and Adam Dworkin
Barry and Hyla Vine
Rabbi Rona Shapiro and David Franklin
It takes a village to hand out Machzors and gift bags! Many thanks to all of those who volunteered to plan, carry, paste, stuff , tie, sort, assemble, deliver and greet including
Ros Sperling , Joanna Cooper , Mara Ginsberg, Dana Schwartz, Melissa Lawson, Barbara Berg, Judy Cooper, L. Faith Miller, Adele Messina, Carol Shanbrom, Ken Campbell, Robyn Teplitzky, Dena Springer, Sami Merit, Kate Ezra , Abby Silbert, Sue Skope, Ana White, Paul Schatz, Miriam Sivkin, Yoram Lirtzman, Suzanne Sugarmann, Debbie Sachs, and Jen Bayer.
Special thanks to Celin Garcia- our caretaker, greeter, and baker extraordinaire for baking the delicious honey apple cakes, and to Jimmy Shure for donating the yahrzeit candles; to Jodi Seidner for baking her famous cookies for out of state congregants, and our own fabulous artist Jeanette Kuvin Oren for making everything look fantastic!. We were thrilled to personally greet a majority of congregants, hand out hundreds of Machzors and provide over 200 gift bags- and we even made the evening news! Stay tuned for our next project! - Stacey Perkins
Please don’t forget to return any borrowed High Holiday prayer books to the offi ce.
We are pleased to introduce two new members of
the B’nai Jacob offi ce staff :
Barbara Goldstein is our new offi ce administrator. Hers is the warm and friendly voice on the phone, and the welcoming smile at the window. She keeps the offi ce organized and streamlined, and also handles cemetery matters.
Audra Tagliamonte is our new bookkeeper. She is in the offi ce Mon, Tues, and Th ursdays. Feel free to reach out to Audra with any questions about your account or to set up a payment plan.
Th ey are both great additions to our B’nai Jacob family!
ADULT EDUCATION
BREAD & TORAH Every Shabbat morning 9:00am on zoom.
MONDAY EVENING CLASS7:30pm on zoom
A Bride for One NightNovember,16,30, December 7, 14, 21, January 4, 11
In her engaging book, A Bride for one Night, Ruth Calderon rewrites talmudic
tales as richly imagined short stories, aff ording the reader an entrance into the
fascinating world of this core ancient text. We will embark on an imaginative
journey into the world of the Talmud and get to know it in new and surprising
ways. No background or Hebrew necessary. All are welcome.
Zoom Meeting ID: 857 8629 6869
Spring 2021
HENRY KOPEL
DANIEL HEADRICK
Interactive workshop for us all, led
by award winning teacher of the hearing impaired.
Hearing Loss: Listening and Communication
DEBRA SACHS
LEARN WITH RABBI SHAPIRO
Almost all scientists, most political leaders (outside the
United States), and much of the public, especially young
people, agree that climate change is real, that it is caused
by anthropogenic greenhouse-gas emissions, and we must
start doing something soon to reverse it. Yet, the amount
of emissions continues to grow. In this talk I will argue that
and two powerful forces – developmentalism (or the love
of economic growth) and consumerism (and our way of
life) – stand the way of meaningful action. As a result, even
well-meaning people (like me) cannot help contributing to
the problem.ZOOM LINK WILL BE POSTED IN UPCOMING EMAILS.
Sunday, December 6, 10am
“Climate Change: A New Perspective”Th is talk draws on Professor
Headrick’s book, “Humans
Versus Nature: A Global
Environmental History.”
War on Hate
Federal attorney Henry Kopel will present from his new book on “how to stop genocide, fi ght terrorism and defend freedom.”
Class starts December 1 online, 7-8:30pmRegister at cmi.shulcloud.com/form/ITJ5781$72 for area synagogue members; $180 for non-membersEach student must have a rabbinic sponsor
14
SOCIAL ACTION
JUDAICA SHOPPE SCRIP
“It’s a Mitzvah to Shop - Online!”
As we continue to spend more time at home - in front of our
devices- we have a brand new way to shop AND support B’nai
Jacob.
Th e Judaica Gift Shoppe is now online!All of our appreciation goes to Adam Fleischman who brought
our full selection of beautiful Judaica, gift items, jewelry and
books live on our new website:
https://bnai-jacob-gift -shop.myshopify.com/
Please visit us from home ANYTIME! If
there’s a gift item you don’t see on our
website, call the synagogue offi ce and the
Shoppe Girls will be happy to assist you.
Call the synagogue offi ce 203-389-2111 to
make an appointment.
Please buy Scrip cards and use AmazonSmile!
Th ese are easy and free ways to support B’nai Jacob.
Questions? Judy Taylor [email protected]
Stay warm and healthy this season of gift giving. Use the CBJ
Scrip program to purchase gift cards for everyone on your list.
Some cards can even be emailed for immediate access. We can
also mail actual cards for you. Go to bnaijacob.org for a list of
vendors. B’nai Jacob makes a percentage of every card sold.
Contact Judy Taylor.
One of the ironies of the COVID19 pandemic is that it has greatly increased the need for social action at the same time that it also limits
the ways in which we can help. A dozen B’nai Jacob congregants met on Zoom on the second day of Rosh Hashanah to discuss social
action and came up with a plan to meet this challenge: each month until next Rosh Hashanah, we will promote an action that you can
take to repair some of the broken pieces of our world. In light of COVID19, many of these actions can be done safely from your home,
but we will also include some that can be done communally, with proper precautions. Acting together, even if apart, magnifi es our
impact and strengthens our community.
Plans are already in the works for our November action, which will be donating frozen turkeys
and canned and boxed foods to the Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen for Th anksgiving dinners
for people experiencing food and housing insecurity. We are living through a moment when the
call to social action is stronger than ever. We welcome your ideas and experience in planning
future actions. Please contact Kate Ezra at [email protected] if you want to be involved.
Th anksgiving will be diff erent this yearMany of us will have smaller gathering this year but still have room in our grocery carts and hearts to make sure that all who are hungry can enjoy a holiday meal. Th e CBJ social action committee would love for you to donate to the Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen (DESK) so that they can provide holiday meals.
Th anksgiving Shopping List• Frozen Turkeys (Drop off only Sunday, Nov. 15 DIRECTLY to DESK, 311 Temple Street, New Haven, 11am-4pm.
Th e following may be dropped off at B’nai Jacob anytime between Nov 2 - Nov 17.• Reusable Shopping Bags • Stuffi ng (boxed) • Green Beans (canned)• Cranberry sauce (canned) • Yams (canned) • Corn (canned)• Broth (turkey, chicken, or vegetable)
DESK is also accepting monetary donations. Checks noted ‘Th anksgiving’ may be mailed to address aboove.
15
NOVEMBER YARZEITS
Shirlee Abrams
Anita Abrams
David Abrams
Jean Govrin Alderman
Charles Allman
Fannie Alpert
Sherman Alpert
Bernice Auerbach
Herman Babbitz
Ruth Babbitz
Elsie Badmann
Isadore Badmann
Esther Bailey
Morris Barez
Harry Bawarsky
Boris Becker
Sylvia Beckerman
Evelyn Bell
Nathan Beloff
Louis Bennet
Beatrice Bergstein
Anne Berk
Elihu Berke
Ralph Berkowitz
Louis Berkowitz
Rosalyn Berkson
Edward Bernstein
Richard Bersohn
Raymond Birdwhistell
Chris Birnie
Julia Blecher
Susan Fast Bloch
Irving J. Block
Marjorie Botwinik
Phillip Brisgalsky
Gloria Brodsky
Fannie Brodsky
Beatrice Brody
Bill Brogadir
Herman Brown
Sarah Brumel
Allan M. Campbell
Fay Campbell
Gertrude Caplan
Rochel Dvorah Caplowitz
Ella Casher
Bernard Chaffk in
Esther Cohen
Jacob Cohen
Samuel Cohen
Mollie Cohen
Anna Cohen
Sherwood Cohen
Daniel Michael Cohen
Gertrude Cohen
Nathan Cohen
Sidney Comen
Abraham Cooper
Ruth Cooper
Herman Copelon
Herman Cutler
Sadie Danzig
Irving Dauber
Sarah Davis
Michael Dermer
Joan Skidmore Detwiler
George Dickstein
Edith Doebrick
Eva Doff
Anna Dolin
Rebecca Dorman
Rebecca K. Drabkin
Louis Drazen
Anne Drutman
Arthur Eric Duchen
Michael Dunn
Samuel Egalka
Marshall Eisenberg
Benjamin Estra
Minnie Fabricant
Richard Factor
Irving Fannick
Sarah Farber
Solomon Feigina
Symee Ruth Feinberg
Stanley Feinberg
Helen Feinberg
Norman Fineberg
Abraham Finkelstein
Naomi Diamond Finn
Sidney Fishbein
Richard Fiske
Edward Franford
Allan Frankel
Hyman Freedman
Julius Friedenson
Fannie Friedenson
Samuel Friedenson
Mildred Gallen
Bruce Garber
Ida Gaynor
Susan Gell
Nora Ellen Gimbel
Bernard Abraham Ginsberg
Hannah Ginsberg
John Glassman
Bess Glazer
Sidney Glucksman
Harry Goldberg
Raymond Goldfarb
Sol Goldfeder
David Israel Goldstein
Rita Goldstein
Martin Gordon
Jeff rey Gordon
Bernard Gorenberg
Rhoda Gorenberg
Morris Gorenstein
Lea Spivak Gould
William Greenberg
Anita Greenberg
Elaine Greenberg
Jack Greengarden
George M. Grey
Jay Grossman
Frances Halper
Irwin Harrison
Max Hartzman
Emmy Heinrich
Zilli Heinrich
Lena Hillman
Kate Hirsch
Charles Hirschey
Milton S. Holiner
Frederic Hollander
Harold W. Hoos
Lillian Hordes
Nellie Horowitz
Sarah Horowitz
Max Horowitz
Abraham Horwitz
Paul Horwitz
Dora Hourwitz
Anne Van Hoven
Sidney Hurwitz
Isadore Hyman
Paul Isacoff
Samuel Isbit
Sara Israel
Morris Israel
Samuel Jacobson
Jerome Johnson
Ruth Josephs
Sarah Kadsivitz
Justin Kahn
Anna Kane
Louis Kaplan
George Kaplan
Janice Kapleau
Burton Kapleau
Jay Katz
Dora Katz
Martin Katzman
Pearl Katzman
David Kaye
Frances Ellen Keller
Pearl Kier
Morris Klein
Bernice Kliman
Klara Koenigsberg
Jack Konowitz
Jacob Korrick
Sarah Krevolin
Kate Krevolin
Charlotte Kroogman
Esther Labott
Eleanor Ladin
Fred Laiken
Saul Lappen
Irving Lasky
Anna Lazaroff
Bernard Lazaroff
Minnie Lebowsky
Benjamin Lebowsky
Nathan Ledewitz
Minnie Lefshetz
Harry Leibowitz
Helen Lendler
Harry Leopold
Ida Lesnik
Arthur Lesser
Fannie Levine
Seymour Levine
Julius Levine
Harold Levine
Morris Levy
Carol Lewis
James Lichtman
Ann Liebowitz
Benjamin Lipka
Evelyn Lipsher
Pauline Litsky
Mary Lurie
Fay Marcus
Julius Maretz
Arnold Markle
Grayce Markow
Gertrude Medvedow
Minnie Merberg
Freda Merriam
Edward Millen
Stanley L. Miller
Phillip Miller
Rebecca Miller
Burton Miller
Louis Mirsky
Anna Montlick
Rhea B. Morse
Richard Moskowitz
Herman Moss
Gregory Moss
Th elma Muff s
Isadore Murnick
Lucine Mutaw
Sarah Mutchnick
Ludwig Nadelmann
Florence Nash
Herbert Neitlich
Helen Newman
Asher Nicklesberg
Rose Offi tzer
Anne Krevit Orloft
David Parizer
Mollie B. Pearlman
Charles Perkins
Lawrence Perkins
Richard Perlman
Harry Perlman
Samuel Perlman
Samuel Philipson
Benjamin Pisetsky
Robert Pite
Pearl Podolsky
Ingeborg Poger
Fanny Polinsky
Morris Pollack
Blanche Potash
Jacob Press
Michael Rakieten
Helen Rakieten
Abraham Rappaport
Abraham Rashba
Bernard Reis
Elsie Resnik
Freda Kasowitz Rosen
David P. Rosen
Muriel Rosenberg
Jonathan Rosenberg
Max Rosenblatt
Dorothy Rosenblum
Faye Rosenkrantz
Grete Rosenweig
Sarah Rosner
Joan Rossner
Herta Roth
Lillian Rothberg
Jack Rubin
Morris Sachs
Rivilyn Salzburg
Louis Salzburg
Francisco Sanchez
Th eodore Satin
Molly Satin
Morris Savelewitz
Herbert Savitt
Alan Schaps
George Scharmett
Emil Schneelicht
Rose Schneider
Edward Schnitman
Rywa Schochat
Arthur Schpero
Max Schulman
Sylvia Schulman
Irving Schwartz
Charles F. Schwartz
Sarah Schwartz
Sydelle (Feinman) Schwartz
Harry Seymon
Lillian Shapiro
Leon Shapiro
Sidney J. Shapiro
Dorothy Sherman
Harold Shlensky
Marjorie Shore
Sandra Shulman
Sylvia Shulman
Robert Shulman
Betty Siegel
Dorothy Silverstein
Abraham Simon
Isaac Simon
Maytie Sivkin
Louis Sklar
Anne Skope
Esther Skowronek
Samuel Slifer
Sam Smith
Abe Smith
Pauline Sneideman
Max Sobel
Minnie Spector
Heidi Spector
Leonard Squinto
Esther Malka Stambler
Henry Stein
J. Maurice Stein
Walter Stier
Sarah Still
Mortimer Still
Leslie Stock
Lillian Snyder Stoltz
Esther Sutton
Rose Svirsky
Jenny Tapper
Abraham Tapper
Frank Teitelman
Max Teitelman
Celia Tendler
Sally Tenner
Louis Tenner
Samuel Teplitzky
Marvin Teplitzky
Jack Tepper
Benjamin Topf
Edith Toplitsky
Jennie Troyanksy
Samuel Vine
Rose Virship
Elia Giacomo Vitale
Cesar Vitale
Martin Vogel
Esta Vogel
Florence Wallack
Sue Allen Warren
William Weinberg
Joseph Weiner
Leonard Weiner
Jacob Weinstein
Eva White
Frieda L. White
Solomon Yoss
Bat-Sheva Zaretsky
Ben-Tzion Zaretsky
Golde Zaretsky
Huddel Zaretsky
Reuven Zaretsky
Ethel Zeluck
Sondra Zik
Martha Zik
Ruth Zimmerman
Stanley Zimmerman
Ella Burres Zitser
Abraham Zitser
Sidney Zolot
Rhoda Zommick
Harold Zuckerman
David Zudekoff
At our Daily and Shabbat Services the following Yarzeits will be observed from
November 1, 2020 to November 30, 2020 - 14 Cheshvan to 14 Kislev 5781.
16
DECEMBER YARZEITSAt our Daily and Shabbat Services the following Yarzeits will be observed from
December 1, 2020 to December 31, 2020 - 15 Kislev to 16 Tevet 5781.
Harry Abdirkin
Benjamin Adler
Belle C. Alderman
Hyman Alpert
Joseph Alpert
Charles Amerling
George Arch
Selda Awerman
Gilbert Banever
Rebecca Eve Davis BarDayan
Marion Barnett
Dora Beloff
Lipman Bench
Esta Beresner
Roberta Lee Beresner
Isaak “Itch” Berkman
Max Berkowitz
Rebecca Bernstein
Clare Brause
David Steven Braverman
Gussie Breg
Anna Brenner
Shirley Brodner
Louis Brogadir
Abraham Brownstein
Joseph Brumberger
Sam Brumel
Viola Bryant
Evelyn Burnston
Henry Bushman
Sidney Cabin
Joseph George Canter
Murray Caplan
Ruth Caplan
Albert Caplan
Abraham Caplan
Janet Carpenos
Ruth Chargar
Doris Chartoff
Bessie Chevlin
Leonard Christenfeld
Benjamin Cleman
Helen Cobden
Sipora Cohen
David Cohen
Rose Cohen
Margarete Cohn
Miriam Cooper
Richard Cooper
Leo Cooper
Rose Margolis Croog
Kate Cutler
Ida Cutler-Benjamin
Louis Debin
Albert Detwiler
Lillian Dibner
Phillip Dinerstein
Lena Drazen
Norman M. Dube
Shirley Ehrlich
Alfred Eichenbaum
Mollie Eichenbaum
Natalie Eisenberg
Lester Elias
William Emery
Meir Engel
Claire Engleman
Helen Epstein
Samuel Estra
Ida Evans
Alexander Faigel
Jennie Fannick
Anne N. Fast
William Benjamin Feen
Herman Felix
Bruce Feuerstadt
Fannie Finkel
Hyman Fleischner
Beatrice Forman
Hannah Freedman
Kate Friedenberg
Richard Gallen
Samuel Gandelman
Edith Gandelman
Alex Gedansky
Rose Gedansky
Lillie Geller
Robert Gelman
Kay Cohen Gelman
Vera Hyatt Gerard
Ida Gershman
Fannie Gillette
Beatrice Gimbel
Lena Ginsberg
Harriet Ginsberg
William Glass
Eric Gofstein
Frank Gold
Morris Gold
Morton Goldberg
Ava Goldberg
George Goldberg
Louis Goldblatt
George Goldman
Albert Goldslager
Ethel Goldstein
Marian Goldstein
Mary Goldstein
Edmund E. Goodmaster
Michael Gordon
Charles Gordon
Esther Gordon
Jacqueline Greenberg
Alexander Greenberg
Rose Greenberg
Jacob Greenberg
Irving Greene
Albert Grodd
Deborah Gimbel Gross
Barbara Grossman
Isadore Grundfast
Minnie Hadelman
Robert Hess
Harold Himmel
Linda Hirsch
Aaron Hirsch
Pearl Hirshfi eld
Harold Hoder
Samuel Hoff man
Leonard Horwitz
Sherman Horwitz
Robert Hurowitz
Ruth Hyman
Lillian Hyman
Philip Jacobs
Max Jacobson
Samuel Jacobson
Max Jacobson
Adele Jacoby
Clarence Joseph
Sonya Kagan
Abraham Kahan
Cliff ord Matthew Kahn
Doris Kalter
Rose Kanowitz
Gertrude Karp
Natalie Karp
S. Samuel Kasden
Samuel Kasowitz
Rose Kasowitz
Edith Kaufman
Rosalyn Kaye
Paul Kent
Frederick Kessler
Th eodore Kittay
Ada Klein
Aaron Klein
Janet Kopel
Frieda Kornberg
Toba Krevit
Ida Bolton Krevolin
Helen Krosnick
Mary Labovitz
Nathan Laden
Maxine Larrison
Alvin Lazaroff
Gertrude Leben
Patricia Lee
Rose Lefk ofsky
Martin Leibowitz
Selma Leibowitz
Sophie Cohen Lerea
Paul Lerman
Barbara Lerner
Seymour Lesnik
Laurence Levin
Benjamin Levine
Samuel Levine
Hyman Levine
Minnie Levine
Pearl Levy
Henrietta Lewith
David Marc Lichter
Nathan Lichter
Anna Lipkin
Lowell P. Lippman
Benjamin Lipsher
Aladar Lowi
Abraham H. Lubowitz
Rose Lupion
Moe Maretz
Sarah Maretz
Leonard Margolis
Louis Marmitt
Isadore Medvedow
Leon Medvedow
Harry Meier
Ida Meltzer
Ethel Merberg
Daniel Meunier
Irving Meyerson
Shimson Millen
Philip Miller
Michael Mininberg
Anna Mirsky
Jordan Mitchell
Nora Morris
David Moss
Ida Mostow
Peter Myers
Kate Myers
Naft ale Nerenberg
Joseph F. Nitkin
Violet Nudelman
Meyer Nudelman
Ethyle Rubin Okrant
Aaron Ostroff
Jack Padroff
Mollie Parizer
Nathan Passell
Samuel Passell
Rosaline Passell
Herman Patashnik
Frances Perlman
Dora Pite
Irving Polayes
Shirley Ponn
Milton Potash
Ruth Jacobson Powell
Jerry Ravski
Robert Rayack
Alexander Reger
Minnie Resnick
David Resnick
Edward Resnik
Myra Rochow
Larry Rosen
Abraham Rosenberg
Sarah Rosenberg
Anna Rosenbloom
Sonia Rosenholtz
Yisroel Rosenstone
Louis Rosoff
Eva Ruda
Arthur Sachs
Bernard Salmonson
Hyman Salzberg
Shirley Salzman
Laura Savelewitz
Lorraine Schaefer
Hilda Schaff er
Samuel Scharr
Rose Scherr
Gerald Schine
Jennifer Schine
Joseph Schnirman
Shirley Schnitman
Jane Schnitman
Henrietta Schurowitz
Herbert Schurowitz
Joseph Schwartz
Benjamin Schweitzer
Morris Scott
Milton Seavey
Reuben Seidman
Maxim Seltzer
Fanny Shames
Walter Shanbrom
Henrietta Shapiro
Rose Shapiro
Seymour Shapiro
Joseph Sharpe
Sidney Sheiman
Manuel Shiff rin
Lena Shlank
Mary Shure
Harry Shure
Frances Siegel
Abraham Silverman
Sidney Silverstone
Estelle Silverstone
Oscar Sisken
Herman Slifer
Nathan Smernoff
Dorothy Smernoff
Marvin Smirnoff
Hilda Snyderman
Sondra Soloway
Ella Soloway
Shirley Spencer
Ken Sperling
Blanche Spinner
Julius Stein
Gladys Steiner
Irving Stier
Frank W. Stock
Phil Stone
John Stott
Harry Sviridoff
Lena Taylor
Albert Taylor
Jack Tevolitz
Angelo Tommasini
Henry Tulchin
Seymour Turk
Jerome VanHoven
Viola Vitale
Ann Lipsher Waitze
Lester Wasserman
Stanley Watsky
Marion Weinstein
Ida Weinstein
Lena Weisman
Pauline White
Gertrude White
Anna Widman
J. Arthur Winthrop
Morris Witten
Pearl Wiznia
Sidney Wolfe
Joyce Wolff
George Wolk
Muriel Wood
Rebecca Zamkov
Solomon Zamkov
Leon Zamkov
Myrna Zaret
Maxwell Zeidenberg
Hope Zimmerman
Frank Zolot
Eva Zudekoff
William Zwickler
YARZEIT INFORMATION
If you have recently
lost a loved one,
please contact the
offi ce 203-389-
2111 with the
information for
yarzeit calendaring.
Provide the exact
time and date so that
we may be certain
the yarzeit is set up
properly. Please
supply the English
name (and Hebrew
name if you know
it) and how he or
she is related to you.
At our evening and
morning services, we
read a list of yarzeits
observed on that day.
If you would like the
name of a loved one
read on the Shabbat
evening before the
yarzeit, please contact
the offi ce.
17
Estelle AbrahamsBy June & Leon Baboff & Family
Moira AronsBy Marvin Arons
Joseph BernblumBy Bennett Bernblum
Newton D. BrennerBy Charlotte B. Brenner
Paul BrownBy Jay Brown
Edward CazesBy Lawrence & Joya Marks
Rabbi Arthur ChielBy Kinneret Chiel
Frances CroogBy Steve Croog
Willard FreedmanBy Ruth H. Freedman
Miriam GoldbergBy Ruth Frohman
Sara GoldmanBy Diane Levey
Etta GoldsteinBy Ruth Jacobson
Harriet GoldsteinBy Ruth Jacobson
Harold GreensteinBy Jackie Ertel
Sophie HarrisBy Ruth H. Freedman
Sibbie Hoff manBy Diane Olin
Hyman HolzmanBy Arnold Holzman
Anna HorenbeinBy Lillian Felix & Family
Louis JacobsBy Susan & Stephen Skowronek
Minnie KaletskyBy Th e Kaletsky Family
Jennie KoslowBy Andrew & Barbara Hodes
Henry KrystalBy John & Bonnie Krystal
Henry KrystalBy Esther Krystal
Burton LeveyBy Diane Levey
Samuel LippmanBy Alice Lippman
Josephine LipsherBy Julian Lipsher
Hyman LupionBy Blanche Shaft el
Sarah MininbergBy Andrea B. Robinson
Harriet NoretskyBy Barbara & Andy Hodes
Howard D. OldermanBy Rich Olderman
Samuel E. OldermanBy Richard Olderman
Morris OlmerBy Arleen Ganter
Fannie PotashBy Arnold & Madeline Potash
Gary RashbaBy Malcolm & Barbara Rashba
Abraham RendelsteinBy Barbara Fitzgeral
Michael Riff By Madeline & Arnold Potash
Stanley Rimland By Dale M. CohenSophie RitchBy Richard Simon
Julius RosenbergBy Arthur Rosenberg
Irwin RudichBy Lynn Rudich
David RudnickBy Amy Rudnick & Michael Zeldin
Lila RudnickBy Amy Rudnick & Michael Zeldin
Bessie SamuelsBy Dr. & Mrs. Natkin
Sadie SelkowitzBy Mara & Robert Friedman
Bill ShemitzBy Paula Shemitz
Hannah ShieldBy Marvin Arons
Irvin & Jeanne ShinerBy Jayne & Michael Shiner
Joseph ShulmanBy Carol, Charles, Jack & Elizabeth Lubin
George SkolnickBy Barbara & Andy Hodes
Hyman SpectorBy Barbara Fitzgerel
Isadore SpectorBy Barbara & Andy Hodes
Leon SteinBy Rose Rudich
Selma Th alenBy Julie Th alen, Stanley Th alen, & Paula Marker
Marilyn UngerBy Robert Unger
Abraham WeissBy Suzanne Weinstein & Marjorie Weinstein Kowal
Sadie WeissBy Jayne & Michael Shiner
Samuel Weiss By Jayne & Michael Shiner
Paul WhiteBy Steven & Ana White
Al WinnickBy Gillie Winnick
Bertha WinnickBy Gillie Winnick
Andy WolfBy Jimmy & Melanie Wolf
Herman (Harry) ZitserBy his 3 grandchildren
Herman (Harry) ZitserBy Suzanne Zitser
Sophie Zudekoff By Sue & Stu Rosenholtz
Adult Education FundIN HONOR OFTh e Rabbi’s 25th Wedding AnniversaryBy Roz & Stephen Atkins
Lauren Miller receiving the Shem Tov awardBy Peter Kaufman & Elanna BernsteinBy Betty Lou & Joe Blumberg
IN MEMORY OFGail ZikBy Roz & Stephen Atkins
Susan BabbitzBy Peter Kaufman & Elanna Bernstein
Michael & Joshua Atkins Endowment FundIN HONOR OFTh e birth of Jaime & Cindy Gerber’s grandsonBy Roz & Stephen Atkins
IN MEMORY OFSusan BabbitzBy Roz & Stephen Atkins
Elana Marcy Bell Memorial FundIN HONOR OFEllie Sophia RosenBy Linda & Leonard BellBy Janet & Brian Rosier
Jonathan Bell & Deborah Fernbach and the birth of their granddaughterBy Judy Cooper
BJ PlayersIN HONOR OFTh e birth of Abraham Grant GerberBy Howard Reiter & Jody Ellant
Lauren & Scott Miller being honored at B’nai JacobBy Ros Sperling
Joan & Stuart Margolisbeing honored at B’nai JacobBy Ros Sperling
IN MEMORY OFSusan BabbitzBy Th e Sperling Family
Marion BixonBy Ros Sperling
Elliott & Judy Brause Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFElliot BrauseBy Beverly & Robert LitskyBy Sarah-Ann & Hillel AuerbachBy Rhoda & Barry MyersBy Lillian & John ResnickBy Marcie & Richard SugarmannBy Madeline & Arnold PotashBy Rick & Debbie EpsteinBy Lois & Ed GogliaBy Pamela ReisBy Geb Slocum
Stan & Mindy Brownstein Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFLibby MandellBy Mindy & Stan Brownstein
Campbell Family FundIN MEMORY OFFaggie BrisgalskyBy Patricia Shure
Cantors Discretionary FundIN HONOR OFLeslie ZackinBy Lauren & Scott Miller
Chesed FundIN HONOR OFBarbara & Mal Rashba’s granddaughter’s wedding By Caryl & Michael Kligfeld
Abraham & Dorothy Cohen Memorial TrustIN MEMORY OFAbraham CohenBy Linda & Kenneth Cohen
Alan & Judy Cooper Endowment FundIN APPRECIATION OFJudy CooperBy Ana & Steven White
IN MEMORY OFHoward Rubenstein, Jennifer Zigun’s fatherBy Judy Cooper
IN HONOR OFJaime & Cindy Gerber and the birth of their grandson, AbrahamBy Judy Cooper
DONATIONS YARZEITContributions made from JULY 23, 2020 thru OCTOBER 16, 2020
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DONATIONS
Stuart & Joan Margolis Endowment FundIN HONOR OF Stuart & Joan’s Simchat Torah HonorBy Cindy & Jaime GerberBy Betty Lou & Joe Blumberg
Music FundIN MEMORY OFBenjamin, Lillian, and Martin Sachs By Joel Sachs
Susan BabbitzBy Nick and Debby AretzBy Marlene & Jerry SchweitzerBy Th e Goodless-Sanchez FamilyBy Miriam Kohn EdbergBy Th e Moritz FamilyBy Barbara BergBy Sami Merrit & Joshua DemskyBy Louise & Irwin EpsteinBy Th e Lubin FamilyBy Carol & Jim ShanbromBy Gary & Patricia GinsbergBy Rick and Debbie EpsteinBy Jewish Family ServiceBy Th e Bitterman FamilyBy Th e Duhl FamilyBy Joan & Kenny KreigerBy Seth & Barbara CohenBy Richard & Francee Sviridoff By Lauren & Scott MillerBy Sandra Jean RubinBy David & Elaine EmeryBy Amy & Steven RashbaBy Sean & Elizabeth FlahertyBy Barry & Hyla VineBy Louis EagleBy William & Sandy Carlson
Peter & Rhoda Myers Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFSidney FreedmanBy Rhoda Myers
Th e Olin Family Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFElliot StoneBy Diane Olin
Sue Cohen’s brotherBy Diane Olin
Mimi SetlowBy Diane Olin
Rabbi’s Discretionary FundIN APPRECIATION OFRabbi ShapiroBy Vivian KaplanBy Sheldon NatkinBy Audrey & Paul GreenbergBy Lauren & Scott Miller
Rabbi Shapiro & Cantor HaimowitzBy Betsy Fiske
IN GRATITUDE By Th e Babbitz family
IN MEMORY OF Max TeitelmanBy Pamela & David Teitelman
Richard LubowitzBy Sue Cohen
Albert & Esther Dennis FundIN MEMORY OFAlbert DennisBy Linda & Kenneth Cohen
Ditman Family Endowment FundIN HONOR OFTh e wedding of Bruce Ditman & Katie GoldenBy Lynne Ditman & Richard GoldbergBy John & Liz EdelglassBy Audrey & Paul Greenberg
IN HONOR OFAdam & Stacy Dworkin’s High Holiday Honors By Lynne & Richard Goldberg
IN MEMORY OFRuth KornreichBy Lynne & Richard Goldberg
Melvin DitmanBy Lynne Ditman
Mabel LearBy Lynne Ditman
Th e Edelglass Family FundIN MEMORY OFFannie RotetBy Patricia EdelglassPercy Rotet By Patricia EdelglassSarajane Edelglass HershBy Patricia Edelglass
IN GRATITUDE OFTh ose that ran the technology that enabled our beautiful virtual servicesBy John & Liz Edelglass
Richard & Debra Epstein Endowment fundIN MEMORY OFHoward S RubensteinBy Rick and Debra EpsteinGail Zik By Edith Goodmaster
David & Lillian Gandelman Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFLillian Schnirman GandelmanBy Betsy Fiske
Rebecca SchnirmanBy Betsy Fiske
Fred RosenBy Betsy Fiske
Mimi & Mitchell Garber FundIN MEMORY OFMimi Garber SetlowBy Betty Lou & Joe Blumberg
General Donation IN APPRECIATION OFTh e Jewish New YearBy Bruce & Zara BenjaminBy Judy CooperBy Alan & Bonnie WunschBy Dorothy PolayesBy Dr. Stanley Babit
Cantor Barbara HaimowitzBy Stephen & Susan SkowronekBy Jennifer & Benjamin Zigun
Rabbi Rona ShapiroBy Jennifer & Benjamin Zigun
IN HONOR OFSteven & Andrea Fleischman, Samantha, Julie, Zoe & AdamBy David Fleischman
Harrison Jerome Landsman, their new great grandsonBy Marlene & Jerry Schweitzer
Susan & Jimmy Millen’s 55th wedding anniversaryBy Howard & Martha Taubin
IN MEMORY OFBonnie Karp SchwartzBy Dan Oren & Jeanette KuvinBy Harold & Dana Schwartz
Susan BabbitzBy Harold & Dana SchwartzBy Nimrod & Rebecca Lavi
Gail Ann ZikBy Harold & Dana Schwartz
Elliot BrauseBy William SugarmannBy Pamela Reis
Augusta BrownBy Spencer & Rochelle Lauer
Yvette NatkinBy Spencer & Rochelle LauerBy Peter Depascal
Howard S RubensteinBy Jennifer & Benjamin Zigun
Glassman/Resnik Endowment FundIN HONOR OFWishing Bob Glassman a speedy recoveryBy Sara-Ann & Hillel Auerbach
Th e Goodrich Family Endowment FundIN HONOR OFTh e birth of ElijahBy Audrey & Paul Greenberg
Paul & Audrey Greenberg Endowment FundIN HONOR OFTh eir son, Jeff rey’s engagementBy John & Liz Edelglass
Hesh & David Greenblatt Minyan FundIN MEMORY OFHesh GreenblattBy Debbie Tendler
Robert & Rena Grodd Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFDavid FlaumBy Rena & Robert Grodd
Halprin Family Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFCharlotte Halprin GreeneBy Th e Halprin FamilyBy Shirley Halprin
Marion BixonBy Th e Halprin Family
Iny & Joel Karp Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFBonnie Karp SchwartzBy Debbie & Rick EpsteinBy Sue CohenBy Paul SchatzBy Barbara BergBy Betsy FiskeBy Howard & Martha Taubin
Harold & Shirley Kasowitz Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFMarion BixonBy Shirley Kasowitz & Family
Kiddush FundIN GRATITUDE OFLeslie Zackin’s Challah Baking Class By Carol Shanbrom
IN MEMORY OF Norman RashbaBy Kinneret Chiel
Gail ZikBy Dan Oren & Jeanette Kuvin
Howard RubensteinBy Joshua Dembsky & Sami Merit
IN HONOR OFJudy & David Skolnick’s 50th Wedding Anniversary
Th e Rabbi’s & David’s 25th Wedding AnniversaryBy Kinneret ChielBy Rhoda Myers & George Olshin
Elaine & Morris KleinEndowment FundWISHING A SPEEDY RECOVERY OFFran PonchikBy Elaine Klein, Lisa Klein & Mark Putney
IN MEMORY OFAllene GoldmanBy Elaine Klein & Family
Elliot StoneBy Elaine Klein & Family
Sherman & Evelyn Krevolin Endowment FundIN MEMORY OF Elliot StoneBy Evelyn Krevolin
Library FundIN HONOR OFLiz Edelglass receiving the 2019 Reynolds Price Fiction PrizeBy Lynne & Richard Goldberg
Dianne & Ike Goodrich’s new grandson, ElijahBy Susan Buxbaum
Contributions made from JULY 23, 2020 thru OCTOBER 16, 2020
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DONATIONS GENERAL
DONATIONS ISAIAH’S FAST
Th elma Parker By Susan Parker Schachtel
Rabbi David CedarbaumBy Jesse & Linda Cedarbaum
IN HONOR OF Th e Rabbi’s & David’s 25th Wedding AnniversaryBy Richard WurtzelBy Chana & Michael BaronBy Linda & Lenny BellBy Rhoda Myers & George OlshinBy Judy CooperBy Betty Lou & Joe BlumbergBy Paul & Teri SchatzBy Lauren & Scott Miller
IN HONOR OFDr. Jeff rey Bitterman’sspecial birthdayBy Randi, Josh, Andrew, & Adam Grimes
Malcolm & Barbara Rashba Endowment FundIN HONOR OF
their granddaughter, Yaella’s weddingBy Judy Cooper
Religious School IN HONOR OFAlex Klee’s Bar MitzvahBy Marc & Lynn Estra
Lauren & Scott Miller’s Simchat Torah honorBy Cindy & Jaime Gerber
IN MEMORY OFSusan BabbitzBy Paul & Audrey GreenbergBy Scott & Joanna Cooper
Howard RubensteinLauren & Scott Miller
Norma A. & Marvin H. Schaefer Endowment Fund
IN MEMORY OF Bonnie Karp SchwartzBy Alan & Francine Ponchik
Nathaniel & Selma Scott FundIN HONOR OFElaine & Jack Lawson’s 60th anniversaryBy Tina & Dick Brogadir
Bertha Kahn’s birthdayBy Tina & Dick Brogadir
Rosh Hashanah honor opening the ArkBy Tina & Dick Brogadir
Jim & Carol Shanbrom Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFTh ea MaitinskyBy Sidney & Elinor Shanbrom
Charles & Sandra Sterling Endowment Fund
IN MEMORY OFAlex SterlingBy Charles Sterling & Norma Pisetsky
Robert SterlingBy Charles Sterling & Norma Pisetsky
Paula & Elliot Stone Endowment FundIN MEMORY OFElliot StoneBy Betty Lou & Joe Blumberg
Richard & Marcie Sugarmann Endowment FundIN HONOR OFthe birth of Milo Edward SteinlaufBy Marcie & Richard SugarmannBy Philip & Lenore Weisinger
Peter Weinstein Endowment FundIN MEMORY OF Ellen Casper By Sara-Ann & Hillel AuerbachBy Susan & Jimmy MillenBy Myrna & Peter Weinstein
Congregation B’nai Jacob, we did it! Together we raised $2,836 for supermarket scrip gift cards and collected 749 pounds of food! All of the gift cards are going to help families with food insecurity have a wonderful Th anksgiving dinner. Th e 749 pounds of food is already on the shelves and will be distributed this week!
But, who does JFS serve? Before the pandemic, the JFS food pantry served over 30 families each week in the greater New Haven area. However, since the start of the pandemic, JFS has sadly doubled the number of families they serve. Th ey are now giving away over 3000 pounds of food a week. Th anks to your generosity, we have made a diff erence!
Th is Isaiah’s Feast Food Drive, CBJ donated more than we ever have before surpassing our previous record of 2069 pounds of food and exceeding my goal of 3000 pounds or dollars combined. Th ank you! Specifi cally, I would like to thank the Parsons for helping us schlep the food and weigh it in at the JFS pantry and Mara Ginsberg and Lynn Ginzberg for helping us every step along the way. I hope that everyone knows that this was a community eff ort and that your support really made a diff erence.
!הבָּרָ הדָ וֹת- Alex Klee
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DONATIONS ALL INCLUSIVE MEMBERSHIP COMMITMENTS
Amudim / Pillar
$10,000 and above
Bell, Lenny and Linda
Epstein, Richard & Debra
Fleischman, Steven & Andrea
Lauer, Spencer and Shelly
Bonim / Builder
$7,500-$9,999
Grubman, Eric & Green, Stephanie
Perkins, Hap & Stacey
Reiter, Howard & Ellant, Jody
Sperling, Ros
Tzadikim / Benefactor
$5,000-$7499
Atkins, Stephen & Rosalind
Bell, Jonathan & Fernbach, Deborah
Bergman, Stanley
Bobrow, Samuel & Paulette
Campbell, Kenneth & Barbara
Caplan, Michael & Burger, JoAnne
Cohen, Kenneth & Linda
Gerber, Jaime & Cindy
Gorelick, Adam & Judy
Hass, David & Lauren
Hirsch, Gerald & Seymon-Hirsch, Barbara
Kaufman, Richard & Susan
Lipson, Allen & Cheryl
Sapire, Joshua & Sara
Schatz, Paul & Teri
Schwartz, Dana & Harold
Shanbrom, James A. & Carol
Skolnick, David & Judy
Vine, Barry & Hyla
Watsky, Kalman & Fried, Deborah
Atkins, Stephen & Rosalind
Bedford, Andy & Levy, Becca
Bell, Jonathan & Fernbach, Deborah
Bell, Leonard & Linda
Bergman, Stanley
Bobrow, Samuel & Paulette
Campbell, Kenneth & Barbara
Caplan, Michael & Burger, JoAnne
Cohen, Kenneth & Linda
Cooper, Scott & Joanna
Epstein, Richard & Debra
Fleischman, Steven & Andrea
Gerber, Jaime & Cindy
Goodrich, Isaac & Dianne
Gorelick, Adam & Judy
Grubman, Eric & Green, Stephanie
Halprin, Gail
Hass, David & Lauren
Hirsch, Gerald & Seymon-Hirsch, Barbara
Jacobson, Ruth
Kaufman, Richard & Susan
Krystal, John & Becker, Bonnie
Lauer, Spencer & Rochelle
Lipson, Allen & Cheryl
Miller, Scott & Lauren
Nuland, Sarah
Perkins, Hap & Stacey
Potash, Arnold & Madeline
Reiter, Howard & Ellant, Jody
Reznik, Alan & Elizabeth
Saltzman, Stephen & Mary Beth
Sapire, Joshua & Sara
Schatz, Paul & Teri
Schnittman, Steven & Stock, Elyse
Schwartz, Dana & Harold
Shanbrom, James & Carol
Shapiro, Rabbi Rona & Franklin, David
Silbert, Jonathan & Abby
Skolnick, David & Judy
Sperling, Rosalyn
Taylor, Mark & Judy
Vine, Barry & Hyla
Watsky, Kalman & Fried, Deborah
Weinstein, Suzanne
Zaret, Barry & Drell, Renee
CHAI SOCIETY
As of OCTOBER 28, 2020
21
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Judyy Cooperr ABR,, CNE,, CRS,, GRI,, PSCS,, SRESS
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ABRR Accreditedd Buyerr Representative:: Sincee 19999 CNEE Certifiedd Negotiationn Expert:: Sincee 20100 CRSS Certifiedd Residentiall Specialist:: Sincee 19999
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C.E.U.. Harvardd Laww School;; Advancedd Programss off Negotiationss && Mediationn Programs:: 1994,, 1996,, && 19988
MAA Universityy off Pennsylvaniaa -- Comparativee Politics:: 19644 BAA Douglasss College,, Rutgerss University,, Phii Betaa Kappa:: 19633
203-605-51288 (mobile) 203-392-33177 (office)
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Coldwelll Bankerr •• 2700 Amityy Rd,, Ste.. 1288 Woodbridge,, CTT 06525
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