May 2 - 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.”
Parashiyot Acharei Mot/Kedoshim
May 1/2, 2015 - 13 Iyar 5775 oh¦a«s§e/,«un h¥r£j©t
Hertz Etz Hayim
Verse
Rishon
486
687
Lev. 17:8 - 17:12
Sheni
487
687
17:13 - 17:16
Shlishi
488
688
18:1 - 18:5
Revi’i
489
689
18:6 - 18:21
Chamishi 492
691
18:22 - 18:30
Shishi
497
693
19:1 - 19:3
Shevii
498
694
19:4 - 19:14
Maftir
500
695
19:11 - 19:14
Haftarah 509
706 Amos 9:7 - 9:15
Thank you to our Torah readers: Madison Jackson,
Alberto Sardon, Rachel Cohen, Max Wiznitzer,
Amanda Banchek, Ruth Dobres and Howard Willen.
Thank you to Howard Willen 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
Your presence adds to the joy of our service!
The flowers on the bima are a gift from Sherrie & Abraham Kantarovich in
honor of the (Mincha) Bar Mitzvah of their son, Isaac Kantarovich.
FRIDAY
Mazal tov to everyone who is celebrating a birthday this month!
Thank you to our Board member on the bima, Mark Doris, and our greeter,
Amy Berman.
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 Michael Hecht.
Thank you to Judy Riga 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 Board member on the bima, Barry Feldman, our greeter,
Amy Berman, and our ushers: David Cohen, Maury Greenstein, Dan Jacobs,
Nelson Pole and Henrik Sperling.
Today’s Torah portion, Acharei Mot, was dedicated in the Holocaust Torah
Scroll by Suellen & Larry Kadis in honor of Alex Kadis’s birthday; and in the
New Torah Scroll by Marion Rosek z in memory of her son, Kenneth Rosek z.
Following the Benediction, please join us for an extended kiddush in Gross
Atrium,
Atrium sponsored by The Bessie Hershey Religious School and the
Congregation in honor of Alan Goldweber.
Mazal tov to:
David Shifrin who will be presented with his presidential tallit during the
Shabbat morning service.
Alan Goldweber who will be honored for his 37 years of dedicated service
to the synagogue as a teacher, as we celebrate his retirement at Kiddush.
PJ Library® Shabbat with the East Coast Custard Truck
Friday, May 15 • 6:15 pm • Abraham Family Courtyard
Come join Rabbi Hal and Rabbi Foster for pre-Shavuot
activities, Shabbat stories, songs and fun. For families with kids birth
through 2nd grade; older siblings welcome. $5 per family provides ice
cream for all! Register and pay on the BJC website.
Thank you to Zamir Choir and Sheri Gross, Director,
for participating in the Friday evening service:
Rebecca Abramovich
Josh Berman
Ava Gross
Emily Kurland
David Levine
Sam Polikoff
Emma Robbins
Bradley Rothschild
Jacob Rudin-Luria
Aden Schloss
Abigail Siff
Emma Berlin
Libby Ettinger
Lawrence Huston
Sara Kurland
Eden Millmond
Shira Polikoff
Sam Roter
Melissa Rothschild
Alayna Sanders
Abby Shifman
Rachel Wolf
Abby Berman
Noah Greenberg
Samuel Juli
Morgan Leeson
Tal Millmond
Max Ricanati
Joshua Rosenberg
Ari Rudin-Luria
Gabriel Sanders
Shaina Shifman
Open Tent Minyan
Saturday, May 2 • 9:45 am • Halpern Hall
A song-filled, participatory lay-led minyan that welcomes experienced
davenners and those newer to prayer who are looking for a more intimate
service. Opportunities are available to lead services, Torah discussions
and chant Torah; if interested, please contact Rabbi Hal Rudin-Luria. Open
Tent Minyan meets the first Shabbat of every month.
Thank you to our Torah readers: Rabbi Hal Rudin-Luria, Shani Kadis,
Stuart Meyer, Michael Milgrom, Amanda Banchek, Sylvia Kugelman and
David Bardenstein. Thank you to David Bardenstein for chanting the
Haftorah and Judy Schiller for giving the D’var Torah.
149th Annual Meeting • Sunday, May 3 • 7 pm
Mazal tov to our honorees:
Bernice Rothman
Recipient of The Joseph P. Lomberg Award for
Outstanding Individual Service
Carolann & Martin Cohen, Rifka Claypool, Rachel & Joel Heiser
Recipients of The Rabbi Rudolph M. Rosenthal Award for
Outstanding Family
Alan Goldweber
Recipient of the Paul M. Koret Distinguished Teacher Award
Voting will take place from 9 am - 12:00 pm
Getting Paid to Be Philanthropic…
and Other Innovative Ways to Leave Your Legacy
Thursday, May 21 • 7:30 pm
Did you know there are charitable giving tools
that can provide you with an income stream (gift
annuities and similar tools)? That a gift of as little as $5,000 can create a
fund that will last forever (well, basically)? And that you can bequeth a
percentage of your estate, rather than a set amount, to provided added
assurance for your loved ones?
Learn about these charitable giving tools and more as we come
together for a wine & cheese reception, presentation and discussion
with congregant and financial advisor, Cynthia Chaiten of Merrill Lynch
Wealth Management. Learn more and RSVP at
bnaijeshurun.org/EnsuringTheFuture.
CHESED at B’nai Jeshurun
Sunday, May 10 - Mother’s Day • 8 am
Take part in a FAMILY CHESED
opportunity! This year, B’nai
Jeshurun will be taking part in Cleveland’s 12th annual
“the race” at Legacy Village. Sign on to be a part of
Team B’nai Jeshurun when your register for the run or
walk at DoTheRace.com.
$20/adult; $15/child. Cost includes shirt, face painting, balloon artists,
kids’ crafts and a bounce house. If you can’t participate, you can still
make a donation online under B’nai Jeshurun. Proceeds from this year’s
event will support breast cancer research at University Hospitals Seidman
Cancer Center. For more information, contact Shani Kadis.
Support Nepal Earthquake Relief
JFNA Jewish Federation Emergency Mailbox
http://www.jewishcleveland.org/news/blog/nepal_support/
AJWS (American Jewish World Service)
https://secure.ajws.org/site/Donation2?
df_id=8880&8880.donation=form1
Tevel B’Tzedek
https://life.indiegogo.com/fundraisers/urgent-israeli-relief-to-nepaltevel#home/share
Parashiyot Aharei MotMot-Kedoshim
May 2, 2015 – 13 Iyyar 5775
Annual (Leviticus 16:1 – 20:27): Etz Hayim, p. 679; Hertz p. 480
Triennial (Leviticus 17:8 – 19:14): Etz Hayim, p. 687; Hertz p. 486
Haftarah (Amos 9:7 –15): Etz Hayim, p. 706; Hertz p. 509
Prepared by Rabbi Adam Rosenbaum, Charleston, SC
Returning to the immediate aftermath of Nadav and Avihu’s deaths, Aaron is
disallowed from entering the Holy of Holies at will. God instructs Moses to
guide his brother and remaining nephews in a ritual for the Day of Atonement.
Included in the ritual are two goats, one designatd for “Azazel,” which carries
the burdens of the people’s sins. Yom Kippur is defined as a day of self-denial
to make expiation for all Israelite sins.
General guidelines for sacrificing are detailed, including the need to present
slaughtered animals to the Tabernacle, and to avoid consuming blood.
In an effort to avoid Egyptian or Canaanite laws, the people are instructed to
steer clear from improper sexual relations, including incest and bestiality, lest
the Promised Land become defiled.
One of the Torah’s seminal chapters, Leviticus 19 exhorts the Israelites to be
holy because God is holy. Holiness is achieved, in part, by honoring our
parents, protecting our children, rejecting idolatry, giving to the poor, offering
sacrifices sincerely, and dealing with strangers and neighbors with decency
and fairness.
The second part of the portion, Leviticus 20, returns to some of the same
themes, focusing heavily on sexual ethics and avoiding idolatry.
Theme #1: Don’t Walk Like an Egyptian
You shall not copy the practices of the land of Egypt where you dwelt, or of the
land of Canaan to which I am taking you; nor shall you follow their laws. My
rules alone shall you observe, and faithfully follow My laws: I the Lord am your
God.(Leviticus 18:3-4)
God challenges the Chosen People to remain unique, even when surrounded
by those whose practices are completely different.
During the reign of Czar Nicholas I of Russia, a decree was issued by the
government that Jews were required to wear hats with visors (or brims) just
like Gentiles. This created a storm among the Jews: “A Gentile law” -- “Let him
be killed rather than transgress.” [During times of persecution people can die
even over something as trifling as a shoelace.] Chasidim sat in the study
house of Rabbi Menachem Mendl of Kotzk in heated and furious debate.
Some were religiously strict, others lenient. Suddenly, the rebbe opened the
door and asked, “Why the commotion? What has happened?” They replied to
him that the government had issued a decree that Jews must change the way
they dress, and clothe themselves like Gentiles. “The clothing of Jews is only
tallis and tefillin,” snapped the rebbe. And he closed the door as he left. -Menachem Mendl of Kotsk
The passage should be interpreted in its plain sense. If you follow the practices
of the Egyptians -- for what purpose did I bring you out of Egypt? If you follow
the practices of the Canaanites, why should I expel them for your sakes? On
this condition did I bring you out of Egypt and on this condition did I drive out
the Canaanites -- that you should not emulate their deeds. -- Be’er Yitzhak
Those non-Jewish practices and insights which strengthen Jewish survival,
which sensitize us as a people, which teach us how to be loving, caring, and
sensitive, which increase our understanding of Judaism and prompt us to
practice it fully, pose no threat to our Jewishness. On the contrary, we benefit
from their inclusion. An openness to learn, however, should not be mistaken
for the blind adoption of all Gentile standards. … Much in modern life deserves
our opposition. But insights that strengthen Torah, that make Jewish identity
vibrant and central, deserve our study and our adoption. -- Rabbi Bradley
Shavit Artson, The Bedside Torah
Questions for Discussion:
In the story above, Menachem Mendl of Kotsk feels that rules regarding
"Jewish fashion" are irrelevant, as long as Jews are allowed to continue
wearing ritual garments at the appropriate times. Do religious freedoms
supersede the freedom to express our Jewish culture? Or are they one and the
same? Is Menachem Mendl's reaction helpful to those who have just had a
sense of independence taken away from them?
Be'er Yitzhak notes that Jewish independence and Jewish uniqueness go hand
in hand. But is it important to act differently than other nations just for the
sake of remaining different? Are there matters of style that do not impact
religious observance?
Rabbi Artson attempts to strike a balance between the adoption of sensible
non-Jewish practices and simply doing everything that non-Jews do for the
sake of convenience. Can we safely adopt the idea of "When in Rome, do as
the Romans do" in modern society better than we have been able to in the
past? What is the line that separates sensible non-Jewish practice and
watering Judaism down so much that it is unrecognizable?
Theme #2: Hello Mudda, Hello Fadda
Speak to the whole Israelite community and say to them: You shall be holy, for
I, the Lord your God, am holy. You shall each revere his mother and his father,
and keep My sabbaths: I the Lord am your God. (Leviticus 19:2-3)
In Leviticus 19, perhaps the ultimate treatise on holiness in the Hebrew Bible,
imitating God begins with revering one's parents.
What is the relationship here between revering parents and keeping Shabbat?
An explanation may be found in Leviticus Rabbah 14:5, which reads: “King
David said before the Holy One, ‘Lord the Universe, did my father, Jesse, have
the intention of bringing me into being?’ Wasn’t his intention really just his own
pleasure? And you know that this is so because after they had satisfied their
desire, he turned his face in one direction and she turned her face in the
other! … And this is what David meant when he said in Psalm 27:10, “Though
my father and mother abandon me, the Lord will take me in.” “Though my
father and mother abandon me” seems to imply here that their only function
was the beginning of life; and “the Lord will take me in” implies that afterward
one grows up and understands about God’s plan. Now Shabbat is the
culmination of the work of creation. And if we were supposed to preoccupy
ourselves only with the beginning, we would logically sanctify Sunday, since it
is the first day of creation. But if this is so, it seems that commandments
about Shabbat and honoring parents contradict one another. The explanation
is that with the honoring of parents, we are commanded regarding revering
the importance of origins, while with the keeping of Shabbat, we are
commanded regarding the goal of creation. And for this reason we are
commanded to both honor parents and keep Shabbat. -- Chatam Sofer
You must honor your parents not only while you still look to them for your food,
clothing and support but even when you are a “man” and no longer dependent
upon them. -- Ketav Sofer
When looking at [this verse] … Rashi also questions the use of the
singular ish for man with the plural form of the verb “fear.” His answer to the
problem reflects his own bias. He says “a man has it in his power to do, but a
woman has the authority of others over her.” … When [Rashi] explains why the
verse places the word mother before father, he claims that it is because a son
naturally fears his father more than his mother. Having exempted women from
this obligation, Rashi speaks only of what a son must do. Women, daughters,
are not included in his interpretation. -- Rabbi Rachel Esserman, “Who Shall
Be Holy,” from The Women’s Torah Commentary, Rabbi Elyse Goldstein, ed.
Questions for Discussion:
Chatam Sofer says that the link between honoring parents and Shabbat is that
both have to do with creation; in our parents' case, the creation of a person,
and in the case of Shabbat, the creation of the world. Does the importance
that Judaism places on being fruitful and multiplying indicate that creating a
new human being is like imitating God? Is new human life the ultimate
example of the merging of God's creation and humanity's creation?
Ketav Sofer notes that our responsibility to place our parents in a primary role
of our lives does not end when we have become adults. Rather, we are to
continue to show our gratitude to them for all they have done for us. Can we
understand Shabbat in a similar way? Even though adults are able to
understand the value of taking periodic breaks from the everyday, is honoring
Shabbat a way of revering God even if we might not need Shabbat to remind
us of God's presence?
Rabbi Esserman notes that Rashi's commentary does not consider a
daughter's role in honoring her parents. While egalitarian communities
certainly expect both sons and daughters to honor their parents, is it possible
that a daughter can appreciate her parents in a way that is unique compared
to how a son appreciates his parents? What do both genders offer when it
comes to honoring their parents?
MISHABERACH
VALERIE KARBELING
JAYDEN BARBER
MOSHE BARUCH BEN RIVKA
DOVID BEN STANLEY
DARYN BROWN
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
YEHUDA SHLEMA BEN ZLOTI
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
ZLATEH BAT MACHLA
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
HANA BAT SARAH
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
SUSAN NORVAL
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
BARUCH ELIEZER BEN ADDIE
SIMCHA MELECH BEN SORA
ILANA BAT LEAH
PEREL SARAH BAT DVORAH
SIMCHA TZOFIA BAT HAYA ELANA
ZLATE FEIGE BAT CHAYA
AVRAHAM BEN CHAIM HA'LEVI
KATHY BICKART
HENDEL LIBA BAT RIVA
LAZAR CHAIM BEN ZEHAVA
EPHRIAM JONATON BEN RUT LEAH
SAM ABRAMSON
REIZEL DAVIDA BAT SHAINDEL ROCHEL
LYNN NIELSEN
DANIEL BEN LEAH
SHULAMIT ESTHER BAT SIMA LEAH
GITTEL PESSI BAT 'HANNAH LEAH
DAVID PERKINS
LUCY ELANA BAT GALI
DINA BAT ESTHER
SHLOMO FEIVEL BEN KAYLA
SHLOMO BEN KADYA
SHLEMA ZALMAN BEN LEAH
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.
Sisterhood Women of Valor Luncheon Program
Sunday, May 17 • noon
Honoring Harriet Rosenberg Mann and Amy Berman
We are delighted to honor these two outstanding
women, who give so much of their time to
Sisterhood, to our synagogue and to the community at large. $15 per
person. RSVP by May 10 to Paula Schaffer-Polakof, c/o the synagogue.
Questions or dietary requests? Call Paula at (216) 469-9688.
Shabbat Rocks!
Friday, May 15 • 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: June 19, July 17, August 21
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, May 2
9:00 am Service
9:45 am Open Tent Minyan
4:30 pm Isaac Kantarovich Bar Mitzvah
Sunday, May 3
9:00 am - 12:00 pm Annual Meeting Voting
11:00 am Kitchen Orientation
2:00 pm The Book Club @ BJC
2:00 - 5:00 pm Preston’s Hope Grand Re-Opening (JCC); $15 pp
7:00 pm Annual Meeting
Monday, May 4
7:30 pm Men’s Club meeting
Wednesday, May 6
9:45 am Someone Special & Me
7:00 pm Confirmation Class Night
7:30 pm Jewish Genealogy Society Meeting @ Menorah Park with
Sean Martin, WRHS, Working with Yiddish Sources
Thursday, May 7 - Lag B’Omer
Friday, May 8
7:00 pm Service; Baccalaureate for high school seniors
8:00 pm Oneg followed by Irwin Kula talk
Saturday, May 9
9:00 am Service; Marcus Fellows Graduation; Rabbi Irwin Kula
10:30 am Shabbat b’Yachad Family Service
10:30 am Shabbat Shelanu
12:30 pm (time approx.) Rabbi Irwin Kula talk
5:15 pm Jason Loeb Mincha Bar Mitzvah
Sunday, May 10 - Mother’s Day; Last Day of Sunday School
8:00 am the race @ Legacy Village
Wednesday, May 13
9:45 am Someone Special & Me
Thursday, May 14 - Last Day of Bet Limmud
Yahrzeits: May 2 - 8, 2015
Pearl Adler
Jennie Berg
Louis Bloch
Alfred Breen
Bernard Chernin
Leah Davis Cohen
Joseph Cohen
Samuel Colton
Alexander Cousins
David Dietz
Dr. Dudley S. Dinner
Johanna Dreyfuss
Milton A. Eisenberg
Benno Falk
Sadie Fisher
Minnie Fogelson
Sadie Friedman
Pat Gelman
Robert Giora
Anna Goldstein
Harriet Greenberg
Bessie Cohn Greenberg
Edward Greene
Isadore Gross
Annette Haarburger
Rabbi Jack J. Herman
Mildred Hoffman
Larry Holsman
Ann F. Candy Jacobson
Isaac Jacobson
Gussie Kaplan
Sigmund Kaplan
Sol Karner
Harry Katz
Benjamin Kest
Julius L. Klanfer
Kate Klausner
Agnes B. Klein
Lillian N. Kline
Joseph Kohn
Claire Koral
Helen Kritzer
Helen Kumin
Albie Kumin
Edith Leeb
Sol C. Levine
Louis J. Marcus
Anna Marshinsky
Rose Neuman
Ann Nowak
Leon Nusbaum
Ruth J. Palkovitz
Abraham Popovsky
Moses Prives
Nathan Rapaport
Sidney S. Roberts
Hyman Rose
Dr. David S. Rosenbaum
David Roth
Stuart Sable
Frances Sacks
Libbie Samuels
Ike Savitt
Hilma Schlam
Esther Burstyn Schneider
Samuel E. Schultz
Ruth Schwarz
Abraham Segel
Rella Sevin
Irwin R. Siegal
Milton Silver
Rose K. Simon
Sidney D. Stein
Lillian Steinberg
Dr. Frank M. Stern
Johanna Summerfield
Sanford Tabor
Morris Tenney
Hortense Tesmer
Irving Tiktin
Abraham Treinish
Mollye Wakser
Bertha Wasserman
Rebecca Resnik Waxer
Sophia Weinbaum
Emil Weinberger
Tillie Weiner
Herman West
Rose Yabroff
Rebecca Yaspan
Ben Perry Zamok
Sol Zimm
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.
It is customary to make a donation to the Aliyah Fund when
honored with an aliyah. Thank you for your support.
Wine & Cheese Oneg
Friday, May 15
service at 7 pm; oneg immediately following
Come and see for yourself all the music, fun
and dancing that takes place at Shabbat Rocks!
Then, stay and schmooze with your friends at a special oneg. RSVP to
Elyse or Elana ([email protected] or [email protected]).