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]).
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