This Shabbat - B`nai Jeshurun Congregation

Shabbat Shalom!
27501 Fairmount Boulevard
Pepper Pike, Ohio 44124
Tel: 216-831-6555 Fax: 216-831-4599
www.bnaijeshurun.org
Condolence/Event Cancellation Tel:
216-831-6556
Welcome to the David J. Moskowitz Sanctuary on behalf of
Rabbi Stephen Weiss, Rabbi Hal Rudin-Luria, Cantor Aaron Shifman,
Education Engagement Rabbi Josh Foster,
Rabbi Emeritus Stanley J. Schachter, Rabbi Emeritus Michael Hecht,
President Jody M. Katzner and Executive Director Jay Ross.
Our Mission is “To ensure the flourishing of Jewish life through educational,
social and Conservative religious experiences in a warm and dynamic community.”
Parashat Beha’alotecha
W§,Og©vC
June 5/6, 2015 - 19 Sivan 5775
Hertz Etz Hayim
Verse
Rishon
609
821
Num. 9:15 - 9:18
Sheni
609
822
9:19 - 9:23
Shlishi
610
822
10:1 - 10:7
Revi’i
610
823
10:8 - 10:10
Chamishi 611
823
10:11 - 10:20
Shishi
612
823
10:21 - 10:28
Shevi’i
612
824
10:29 - 10:34
Maftir
612
825
10:32 - 10:34
Haftarah 620
837
Zachariah
2:14 - 4:7
Thank you to our Torah readers: Ezra, Sheldon,
Jon, Darby, Len, Lily and Max Steiger. Thank you to
Max Steiger for chanting the Haftorah.
DAILY MINYAN
MONDAY - THURSDAY 7:00 am & 7:30 am & 6:00 pm
FRIDAY
7:00 am & 7:30 am & 7:00 pm*
SATURDAY
9:00 am & 6:00 pm
SUNDAY & HOLIDAYS 8:00 am & 6:00 pm
*service held outdoors, weather permitting
Your presence adds to the joy of our service!
The flowers on the bima are a gift from Darby & Jon Steiger
in honor of their son’s Bar Mitzvah.
FRIDAY
Mazal tov to everyone who is celebrating a birthday this month!
Thank you to our Board member on the bima, Richard Berkowitz, and our
greeter, Lynn Wasserman.
Following the Benediction, please join us for an oneg in Gross Atrium,
Atrium
sponsored by the Officers and Board of Trustees.
SATURDAY
Our Starbucks, Bread & Torah teacher this week is Rabbi Paula Sass. Thank
you to Abraham Kay for preparing the refreshments.
Thank you to the women who prepare the Oneg and Kiddush refreshments:
Fay Blumenthal, Carolann Cohen, Ruth Dobres, Joann Eisenberg, Laura
Katzner, Harriet Mann, Paula Schaffer-Polakof, Cheryl Spira, Nancy Tresser
and Pnina Wiesel.
Thank you to our greeter, Bernice Rothman and our ushers: David Cohen,
Maury Greenstein, Dan Jacobs, Nelson Pole and Henrik Sperling.
Today’s Torah portion, Beha’alotecha, was dedicated in the New Torah Scroll
by Amy & Stephen Hoffman in honor of Jessica Hoffman.
Following the Benediction, please join us for kiddush and a light lunch in
Gross Atrium,
Atrium sponsored by Susan Miller in honor of her grandson’s Bar
Mitzvah.
Mazal tov to Max Steiger on celebrating becoming
a Bar Mitzvah, and to his parents, Darby & Jon,
sister, Lily and grandparents Karen & Ezra Steiger
and Susan Miller.
We remember with love Max’s grandfather,
Dr. Herbert Millerk z.
For his Mitzvah Project, Max is organizing a team
for the Race for the Place and raising money for
the Gathering Place.
The concert will end at approximately 8:30 pm and there will be no
intermission. After the concert, stay to watch the rest of the Cavs game
on our big screen in Nickman Chapel.
Summer Reading Roundtable in the Courtyard with Rafi
Tuesdays, June 30 & August 4 • 2 pm
This is a new and exciting opportunity to share good books with fellow
readers. We ask that books presented have a Jewish theme or content;
fiction, non-fiction or biography may be chosen. Enjoy a glass of cold iced
tea in the Linden Family Courtyard (will be held indoors in case of
inclement weather). No charge, but reservations requested through the
synagogue website or by leaving a message for Rafi at ext. 114. Books
will also be available to borrow for summer reading.
Tee it up at B’nai Jeshurun’s
4th Annual Golf Outing •Monday, July 13
(Rain Date - Monday, July 20)
Punderson State Park Golf Course
11755 Kinsman Road, Newbury, Ohio 44065
Pro Shop Phone: (440) 564-5465
12:00 pm - Lunch • 1:00 pm - Scramble Start
$50 by June 22 • $60 after June 23
Includes: Kosher Boxed Lunch • 18 holes of Golf & Cart
Variety of Contests & Prizes
REGISTER ONLINE: bnai.jeshurun.org/golfouting
Questions? Contact Julie Berman.
*please indicate foursome or individual*
Please join us at our
Annual Tribute Dinner
this year honoring
Hedy & Michael Milgrom
Sunday, June 28 • 6 pm
Cocktails & Dinner • Auction • $90/person
Both Hedy & Michael have served on the boards of Beth Am and B’nai
Jeshurun, and Hedy is a past officer of B’nai Jeshurun. They are the
parents of Natan (Kate), Ari and Ben, and proud grandparents of Ellie.
Hedy has been on staff at the Jewish Federation of Cleveland since 1998,
currently as Chief Development Officer. She sits on Cleveland’s Advisory
Board of the Foundation Center, is involved at Gross Schechter Day
School and is a newly elected trustee at B’nai Jeshurun. She also plays
violin in the Cleveland Women’s Orchestra. Michael is a recently retired
staff attorney in the Cleveland office of the Federal Trade Commission, a
position he held since 1978. He is a frequent Torah reader and teacher.
He has served on the board of the Siegal College of Judaic Studies and
was Chairman of the Akiva Advisory Committee.
All reservations must be made in writing or submitted online to
bnaijeshurun.org/tributedinner. Please RSVP by Monday, June 15.
The Barking Blessing
Friday, June 12
Cookout Dinner: 6 pm; Service: 7:30 pm
Sing with our furry family friends at B’nai Jeshurun’s
Annual Canine Shabbat. Celebrate with a picnic
dinner and awards, followed by service and oneg. All
are welcome!
$10/adult; $5/child; $30/family max. Dogs beg for dinner. BYOB (bring
your own bags for cleanup!) Dinner by reservation only; please RSVP to
the synagogue office by June 8. Please bring blankets, towels and
cleaning supplies to donate to local animal shelters.
Join Us Under the Stars
Friday, June 19 • 6 pm
Please join us at the Shifrin Plaza in
the Linden Family Courtyard as we
dedicate the new Ark, Torah Reading
Table and Pulpit, designed by Israeli artist Jeremy Kimchi, as well as new
pavers and other dedications. We are thrilled that Mr. Kimchi will be
joining us for this exciting celebration. Then, stay for Shabbat Rocks!
under the stars (we will move inside if there is inclement weather).
Casual Shabbat
2nd Shabbat of the month: June 13, July 11, August 8
Weather permitting, we will hold services outdoors as well. Please
remember that although this will be a more casual dress, Shabbat
decorum still needs to be observed. Please no jeans, shorts, tank
tops or the like.
Honoring our Youth & Teachers
Saturday, June 13
A group honor will be offered during the Shabbat morning service to those
who:
• are B’nai Mitzvah tutors, or
• participated in the National Bible Contest, or
• are going to overnight camp or other Jewish summer programs, or
• are teachers in our school
No RSVP necessary; please notify an usher when you arrive.
Matt Frankel will speak during the
Shabbat morning service on June 13
Matt will speak about his experience with peace-building
initiatives between Israelis and Palestinians including the
Arava Institute of Environmental Studies, Seeds of Peace
International Camp, and his experience with Israel
advocacy at OSU.
Matt recently graduated from The Ohio State University
with a degree in environmental engineering, was active in Hillel, and
served as President of Buckeyes for Israel this past year. He is the son of
Diane & Jesse Frankel.
Shabbat Rocks!
Friday, June 19 • 7 pm
We hope you’ll join us at our popular musical
Friday evening service. Shabbat Rocks! combines
the flowing poetry of Psalms with a live band
playing some of today’s hottest Jewish music. This
unique liturgical experience will make your heart
sing, your hands clap and your feet dance. Listen
to and download tracks from our website.
Future dates: July 17 and August 21.
Parashat Beha’alotekha
June 6, 2015 – 19 Sivan 5775
Annual (Numbers 8:1 – 12:16): Etz Hayim p. 816; Hertz p. 606
Triennial (Numbers 9:15 – 10:34): Etz Hayim p. 821; Hertz p. 609
Haftarah (Zekhariah 2:14 – 4:7): Etz Hayim p. 837; Hertz p. 620
Prepared by Rabbi Adam Rosenbaum, Charleston, SC
God briefly explains the details for the menorah in the Mishkan, then turns
attention to the Levites' purification ceremony. These men, who are allowed
to serve from ages 25-50, are responsible for assisting the priests and
helping ensure the Israelites will not succumb to plagues.
The Israelites are reminded of their responsibility to offer the Passover
sacrifice, and learn that those who are rendered impure after having contact
with a corpse will be allowed to observe Passover one month later.
The people finally resume their journey in the wilderness, following a
protective fire-cloud that directs both their movement and the places and
times to make camp. When a new march begins, the Israelites are called to
attention by two silver trumpets, then walk in tribal groupings. They are
joined by Moses' father-in-law, Hobab, as Moses recites a standard phrase
each time they begin and end each leg of their journey.
The Israelites complain twice -- generally at first, then specifically
demanding meat. Moses asks God to kill him, but God sends the people
quail instead, then strikes them with a devastating plague.
Aaron and Miriam complain to God about Moses's marriage to a Cushite
woman. God afflicts Miriam with leprosy, but Moses humbly requests that
she be healed; God eventually grants the request.
Theme #1: What About Hobab?
Moses said to Hobab son of Reuel the Midianite, Moses' father-in-law, "We
are setting out for the place of which the Lord has said, 'I will give it to you.'
Come with us and we will be generous with you; for the Lord has promised
to be generous to Israel." "I will not go," he replied to him, "but will return to
my native land." He said, "Please do not leave us, inasmuch as you know
where we should camp in the wilderness and can be our guide. So if you
come with us, we will extend to you the same bounty that the Lord grants
us." (Numbers 10:29-32)
We are treated to a snippet of conversation between Moses and his father-in
-law, yet we don't clearly know the outcome.
Horeb does not seem to lie within Midianite territory, since Moses must drive
his Midianite father-in-law’s flocks into the wilderness to arrive at the sacred
spot. Further proof of this follows from Numbers 10:29-33, in which Jethro
(also known as Hobab and Reuel) announces that he will return to his native
land and not accompany Israel in her march from the Sinai into Canaan, the
promised land. Mount Sinai may be near, but it is not within Jethro’s
territory. -- Jon D. Levenson,Sinai & Zion
Since Moses makes his request with regard to the future, it seems
reasonable that he is thinking of the future on the basis of his experience of
Hovav in the past. According to the simple sense of the text, Hovav has
already proved himself as a guide who is acquainted with the region. It is
possible to insert here the homiletic explanation that he knew of the
miracles wrought by God on behalf of the Israelites, which he had seen with
his own eyes during his stay with them. His knowledge both of the region
and of God’s ways enable him to serve as “eyes” for the people, that is, to
provide leadership. Going by the context, “eyes” constitutes a description of
a quality possessed by Hovav as a leader, a guide who is blessed with the
ability to be eyes for the Israelites -- eyes which look steadily at the
countryside and give orders to the brain as to how to march and how and
where to advance. -- Avraham Gottlieb, “And You Can Be Our Guide,” from A
Divinely Given Torah in our Day and Age, Volume I
He is Jethro, as it says, “from the sons of Hobab, Moses’s father-inlaw” (Judges 4:11). Why, then, does it say, “They came to Reuel their
father” (Exodus 2:18)? It teaches that young children call their father’s
father “father.” He had many names: Jethro, because he caused one more
passage of the Torah; Hobab [which means “lover”], because he loved the
Torah. -- Rashi on 10:29
Questions for Discussion:
Levenson presumes that Hobab doesn't want to continue venturing with
Moses because he would be leaving familiar territory. Whether the reasons
are more political or personal, Hobab does not want to leave his comfort
zone. What does it take for us to escape our comfort zones? What prevents
us from doing so? Is there a benefit to leaving our comfort zones even if the
goals for doing so are unclear?
According to Gottlieb, Hobab has the "eyes" to provide insight to the
Israelites in ways that might escape an Israelite from birth. In this way,
Moses sees Hobab as a potential "consultant" for the Israelite journey. How
valuable are outside perspectives when embarking on new journeys? On
what basis should we listen to them, and to what extent might they distract
us from what we know is right in our hearts?
Rashi teaches us meanings to Hobab's several names. If the meaning of
Hobab's name is instructive to us, how does this illuminate the passage in
today's portion? Is it possible for Hobab to teach Moses lessons of love while
simultaneously declining to accompany him? Can we conclude that Hobab's
desire to allow Moses to walk on without him is an act of love, since he
enables Moses to make his way on his own?
Theme #2: On The Road Again
They marched from the mountain of the Lord a distance of three days. The
Ark of the Covenant of the Lord traveled in front of them on that three days'
journey to seek out a resting place for them; and the Lord's cloud kept
above them by day, as they moved on from camp. (Numbers 10:33-34)
The Israelites begin their journey from Sinai, leading some to wonder about
their state of mind as their feet begin moving.
This teaches us that they immediately put three days between themselves
and Sinai, like children running away from school when class is over. -Midrash Yelamdeinu
Until this moment, they had not so much as budged from the foot of the
mountain. -- Rashbam
One of the [Ark’s] functions was to accompany the Hebrews into battle to
ensure their victory. On one occasion, when neither Moses nor the Ark
accompanied the Hebrews, defeat ensued (Numbers 14:44). The term “Ark
of the Covenant” implies that the tablets inside it were in some way
connected with the document of the contractual relationship established in
the Wilderness. The Ark was housed in a tent, sometimes called the
“Tabernacle” and sometimes the “Tent of Meeting.” While biblical accounts
relate what happened to the Ark after the immigration into Palestine, there
are no comparable accounts of the Tabernacle. -- Samuel Sandmel, The
Hebrew Scriptures
Questions for Discussion:
Midrash Yelamdeinu seems to evaluate the Israelites negatively, saying that
they couldn't wait to flee from the place where they had received the
commandments. Is this a fair evaluation? If indeed the Israelites are eager
to continue on their journey, is this an indictment of their attitude regarding
Mount Sinai, or is it a praiseworthy statement of their eagerness to
approach the Promised Land? Or are they simply restless after a long
stretch of camping in one place?
Rashbam's commentary might be understood as a contrast to that of
Midrash Yelamdeinu, perhaps implying that the Israelites had grown
comfortable at Sinai, and needs to be nudged to move forward. Might the
three days' journey be a strategic ploy to make sure that the Israelites don't
get tempted to return to Sinai, lest they risk becoming stagnant? Or is it
possible that the Israelites hadn't moved from Mount Sinai because of their
fear of God, or fear of the unknown?
Sandmel tells us that the Ark not only is a place of storage, but also a key
sign of God's protection in the face of obstacles that face the Israelites. How
does this compare or contrast with our approach to the Ark in a synagogue
sanctuary today? Does the open Ark evoke a sense of security like it did for
our ancestors? If not, what other emotions are present when we are in front
of the Ark?
MISHABERACH
VALERIE KARBELING
JAYDEN BARBER
MOSHE BARUCH BEN RIVKA
DOVID BEN STANLEY
BEN-TZION PESACH BEN YETTA
YITZHAK MICHAEL BEN DINAH
AVRAM DAVID BEN DINAH
FRUMA BAT JANETTE
MALKAH BAT MORDECHAI
YISRAEL BEN MEIRA
MATANA DVORAH BAT SARAH
BAYLA RIVKA BAT HANA LEAH
CHAYA BAT VARDA
ZELIG BEN DOROTHY
DAVID BEN MICHAEL HAKOHEN
LIBA RUCHEL BAT BAYLAH
DINA RIVKA BAT LEAH
GITTEL CHANA BAT ESTHER
MASHA TSIRIL BAT BASHA
TZIPORAH BAT YENTA
SHANDEL BRACHA BAT ESTHER
DYLAN CHAIM BEN PESIA HINDA
AVIGAYIL BAT HADAR MIRIAM
LEAH BAT YEHELET
YEHELET SEVIA BAT BRINA
AVRAHAM BEN MALKA
YITZHAK MORDECHAI BEN
SARAH RACHEL
YAKOV BEN MIRIAM
RONI BEN RACHEL
TOVA ELKA BAT RAISEL MALKA
TOVA BAT SARAH GITTEL
YISRAEL BEN FRIEDA
MICHAL VERED TOVA BAT SARAH GILA
LEAH BAT RAIZEL
YONIT ABRA BAT HAYA
HAYA TZIPPORAH BAT ITTA
YOHANANA BAT HAYA YITTA
DANYA MICHEL BAT CARI
YAKOV ELIYAHU BEN GALIA
ZUCHA LAYB BEN BRACHA BRANDEL
DONNA ROSEN
TZURI BEN SARAH
MASHA BAT HEINCHA
ZEV TZVI BEN SARAH MALKA
AHUVA RAYA BAT KALYA
HADAR MIRIAM BAT ESTHER
AVRUM REUVAIN BEN NAOMI
YISROEL MOISHE BEN HENDEL
DAVID BEN SHMUEL
SARAH GILA BAT LEAH
SHAINA LIEBE BAT CHAVA MIRYAM
SHIFRA BAT GITEL
SHMUEL BEN OSNAT
RACHEL BAT SARA
MIMI DORF
BONNIE POLSTER
PEREL BAT YENTA
MOSHE BEN ZELDA
YAKOV BEN SARA
SURA TOBA BAT JOSEF ZWI
ZALMAN SHMUEL DOV BEN
RUVENA SHIFRA
BRACHA BAT SIMA
YEHUDA BEN ESTHER
KETURAH BAT SARAH
SARAH BAT ESTHER
MICHLI BAT CHAYA LEAH
MESHELEM BEN RACHEL
KASEEL YEHUDAH BEN SARA
HANA RUCHEL BAT FAIGEL
MEIR BEN SHLOIMO HA'LEVI
MORDECHAI DOVID BEN LEAH
MAYER BEN HELEN
BARBARA ROSENBLUM
NOACH YA’ARI BEN SARAH
YEHUDIT BAT SARAH
ADIRA BAT RUCHEL
RIVKA BAT CHAVA
DAVID BEN MIRIAM
GERSHON BEN RITA
PINCUS BEN SHAYNA HAYA
KIM BAILES
MOSHE CHAIM BEN EMILY
RACHEL HAVIVA BAT RUT
PINHAS SIMCHA BEN PNINA
ADIN RONEN BEN SARAH GILA
PINCHAS BEN LEAH
MINAH MINDEL BAT PESAH MALKA
MASAHIRO UENO
RACHAV BAT RUT
CHANNA EETA BAT FIVAL
SARA CHAYA BAT DEVORAH
SHIMALA ALTA BAT LEAH YOSEF
TOM LAMARCA
ROCHEL CHAYAH BAT DVORAH
ELIAHU BEN NAOMI
PINCHAS BEN RUCHEL
BRACHA HANNA BAT SARAH
TZVI BEN ESTHER
LOMENIA GAMBLE
HENDEL LIEBE BAT RIVA
RUT BAT ELKEH
SIMCHA MELECH BEN SORA
ILANA BAT LEAH
PEREL SARAH BAT DVORAH
SIMCHA TZOFIA BAT HAYA ELANA
AVRAHAM BEN CHAIM HA'LEVI
KATHY BICKART
DANIEL BEN LEAH
SHULAMIT ESTHER BAT SIMA LEAH
RAANAN BARAK BEN SHULAMIT
EZRA SHAMIR BEN SIMCHA
PHIL HARBAUGH
ILANA BAT FRUMA VITAL
ESTHER RIFKA BAT YEHUDA
ZLATA FEIGA BAT HAYA
BAYLA RIVKA BAT RACHEL LEAH
HERSHEL BEN SHAINIE
LAIB BEN CHARLOTTE
JONAH BEN HAVA ATARA
GERSHONA BAT MAYER
AMBER JONES
MOSHE SIMCHA BEN FAIGA
SHIRLEY BAT BLUMA ZISSEL
BARUCH BEN CHANA
RUCHEL CHAYA BAT MIRIAM
AVRAM SIMCHA BEN DONNA
DENNIS WILLIAMS
NIVA BAT JANET
May He who blessed our ancestors
and is the source of all healing bless
and heal those who are ill. May the
Holy One Praised Be He mercifully
restore them to vigor and lift the
burden of anxiety from their loved
ones and friends.
On this (Sabbath, Festival, Judgment
or Penitence) day we pray that they be
spared further pain. May God grant
them health of body and health of
spirit and mind. May we speedily be
privileged to greet their return to good
health by welcoming them once again
into our midst. Let us say: Amen.
Anyone wanting to add a name to the
list should contact Diane Shalom
(216-831-6555 ext. 104 or
[email protected]) by
Thursday afternoon at the latest for
inclusion in that Shabbat’s program.
We will also pause during the prayer
for people to recite additional names.
Our religious school and library
are pleased to bring back…………..
Barbecue & Books
Thursday, June 25 • 6 pm
featuring a story hour, games and prizes!
6:00 pm Supper (vegetarian available upon request when making
reservation)
6:45 pm Fun games with Rabbi Josh
7:15 pm Special summer bedtime story hour with Rafi
Both libraries will be open so everyone has a chance to borrow books.
Door prize drawing for all who attend. Reservations required by Monday,
June 22; $6 per person; $18 family max. Please RSVP through the
synagogue website, by e-mail ([email protected]) or phone
(216-337-6490 - leave a message) and indicate name and number of
attendees. Payment will also be accepted on the night of the event.
What’s Coming Up
Tuesdays 10:30 am Torah Study with Susan Wyner
Thursdays 12:10 pm Lunch & Learn @Commerce Park IV (Chagrin/Green)
Fridays 10:15 am Kinder Shabbat & Open Playroom
Saturdays 9:00 am Starbucks, Bread & Torah
———————–————————–————–————————————————-—————————
Saturday, June 6
9:00 am Service; Max Steiger Bar Mitzvah
Sunday, June 7
7:00 pm Come, Let Us Sing - free concert hosted by Cantor Shifman
Tuesday, June 9
7:30 pm Kidney Donation Outreach Program at a private home;
[email protected] or 718-431-9831
Wednesday, June 10
10:00 am Playground Playgroup
Friday, June 12
6:00 pm The Barking Blessing
7:00 pm Service
Saturday, June 13
9:00 am Service; honoring Youth & Teachers; Matt Frankel
speaking; Casual Shabbat
Wednesday, June 17 - Rosh Hodesh Tammuz
Hazak going to Ohio Light Opera
Thursday, June 18 - Rosh Hodesh Tammuz
10:00 am Sophie Glueck Bat Mitzvah
Friday, June 19
6:00 pm Courtyard Bima Dedication
7:00 pm Shabbat Rocks!; Anniversary Shabbat
Saturday, June 20
9:00 am Service
9:45 am Open Tent Minyan
Sunday, June 21 - Father’s Day
Thursday, June 25
6:00 pm BBQ & Books
Friday, June 26
7:00 pm Service
Saturday, June 27
9:00 am Service
Condolences to:
Linda Malka & family on the death of her mother, Mayra Perez
Yahrzeits: June 6 - 12, 2015
Rebecca Betty Abrams
Michael J. Amsel
Katie Ausdeutcher
Zeineth Awarski
Helen Barazone
Morton Bauman
Jacob Bauman
Frieda Baxt
Sylvia Bernstein
Earl Botkin
Edward Braverman
Gilbert Broida
June Brunswick
Margaret Cohen
Elizabeth Cohen
Sarah Cohen
Max Cohen
Norman Colie
Phillip Covitt
Harold Davis
Morris Ehrlich
Minnie Ehrman
Louis Epstein
Henche Farkas
Dorothy G. Feldman
Frances Feldman
Lucy Erenberg Fierer
Jerome S. Frankel, MD
William Friedman
Jennie B. Gibberman
Benjamin Gild
Dr. Robert Gilman
William Glaser
Nettie Glick
Sol Goetz
Edward Goldstein
Yetta Goldweber
Phoebe Savransky Golub
Louis Goodman
Sarah Goren
Bernard Greenbaum
William Gross
Mollie Herman
Robert I. Hershey
Ida Herzbrun
Mary Holzer
Carlos Simon Holzer
Ethel Horvitz
Victor Horwitz
Sarah Horwitz
Lily Sarah Hyman
Jacob Israel
Harry Jaffe
Fay Kadis
Samuel Kaiser
Gertrude Forstein Kalmon
Alfred N. Kaplan
Samuel S. Kaye
Ignatz Kichler
Lilly Kinstlinger
Lillian Klang
Jennie Pollock Klein
Carl Kalman Kleiner
Martin Knell
Ada Kolko
Caroline Lanes
Arthur (Archie) Laufer
Max Lebovitz
Charles Bruce Levin
Joseph Levin
Dr. Leslie Lowenthal
Diane Lowy
Max J. Lustig
Albert C. Marks
Leonard Meinwald
Charles Mintz
Henry Moss
Margaret Moss
Mildred G. Nash
Anna Paris
Ben Parsons
Helen Peters
Kenneth Pitluk
Stanley Plonski
Morris Polinsky
Fania Reuther
Emanuel E. Rickman
Manuel S. Riff
Irving D. Robinson
Nathan Robinson
Constance (Babe) Rosenberg
Mildred Rosenberg
Irving H. Ross
Harry Rothenberg
Blanche Rothkopf
Dorothy Rubin
Berek Rywes
Sallie Schaeffer
Ellen Schiffer
Betty Lee Schwartz
Selma Vicki Segal
Isadore G. Shaw
Gitel Simkovitz
Sigmund E. Simon
Mary Sperling
Irwin Suid
Cady Summerfield
Ruth Tannenbaum
Rubin Tepper
Sophie Tucker
Irene Zagorski Vincent
Dora Weidenbaum
Sholam Weidenbaum
Label Weidenbaum
Adasa Weidenbaum
Fania Weidenbaum
Manes Weidenbaum
Max Jimmie Weinberg
Adolph Weinberger
Lillian R. Weinstein
Arnold Weiss
Frieda Weltman
Doris West
Lilyan Wiener
*Alex S. Wintner
Dr. William Witt
Albert Wohl
Beatrice Zelvy
Ida Zuckerman
*past president
If you would like a name read from this week’s yahrzeit list and have not
already informed the office, please notify one of the ushers.
We welcome your children in the Main Sanctuary!