Parashat K’doshim and Vania’s Bat Mitzvah weekend

Friday Night Shabbat Services Tonight 5/13, at the special time of 6:30 PM.
Vania will celebrate her Bat mitzvah and invites you to a delicious pasta dinner immediately following.

Shabbat morning services are tomorrow at 9 A M.
We will continue our weekend of celebrating Vania’s simcha. Immediately following services, there will be a kosher Mexican kidish! We gratefully acknowledge Vania’s family for sponsoring the shabbat kidush lunch and Friday night dinner and wish them much nachas and blessings on this special day for Claudia, Yosef, Vania, Sofia and Nathan.

Candle lighting in Austin is at 7:59 PM

Cantor Ben Moshe’s Message
Our parshah this week, K’doshim, presents us with a challenge-“…be holy, for I, Hashem your God, am holy.” We are commanded to be like God, to the extent that this is possible for humanity. This is a high standard, to be sure, and we perhaps cannot completely live up to it-but we are obligated to try.
Last week, we read about the service of Yom Kippur as it was done in ancient times, which is also the reading for the morning of Yom Kippur itself. In many congregations, the beginning of Parshat K’doshim is the reading for the afternoon of Yom Kippur(instead of Lev. 18 with its list of forbidden relationships). When we have spent a night and a morning in repentance, the Holiness Code of our parshah this week is a good signpost to indicate the direction in which to move.
May the pursuit of holiness be our goal this and every week. Shabbat Shalom.
Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

COMMUNITY NEWS:
COME AND CELEBRATE YOM HAATZMAUT IN AUSTIN!
Saturday May 14 at 8 PM on the front lawn of the J. Come for an authentic Israeli sing a long! Bring blankets or lawn chairs, bug spray and your great voices. Guy Ben-Moshe and friends will be leading the shira ba tzibur.
Sunday School will be this Sunday at 10 AM with our super teachers Morah Anat, Shiry and Bev. We look forward to learning more about Israel’s Independence day.
And don’t forget to save the date: Sunday June 5 at 4:45 PM, Beth El’s Annual meeting and kosher BBQ cookout.
We would like to wish our very own Michelle a happy birthday and many, many happy returns!

Grandpa Abe : TODAY YOU WILL BE A WOMAN
It was many long years ago that a 120 pound kid was called to the bimah. He had been prepared for this day, with his proud mother and father at his side. At this point, this was his second most important event on his journey in Judaism. The first he can’t remember as he was only 8 days old. He was told that this was going to be the start of his Jewish journey. He was to become a man. In what shape or form he was to be, he had no idea. At 13 years old, not fully developed physically nor mentally, he was told he is now a man. What it meant was he was being trained to take care of himself and things he would encounter on his journey. As years have gone by, he now can understand and relate to being a man from that day on. He had responsibilities to study Torah, respect people and be a proud Jew in the community.
We have a young lady who is being Bat Mitzvahed. Her name is Vania. This lovely event is the equivalent of a Bar Mitzvah only it’s celebrated by girls generally at the age of 12 or 13, according to your custom. She will celebrate her Bat Mitzvah at services where she reads the week’s Prophetic portion aloud and is expected by that point on to assume the responsibilities of a young Jewish woman. From what I have seen, this young lady is certainly ready to take on these responsibilities. I am so happy to be able to comment on this joyous occasion. It’s not like she did not have the best teachers in getting her where she is now. Her dad and mom, who are two of the special people in our congregation, and along with the Hazzan taught her the foundations she needed to learn. With great pride, the congregation welcomes her into our family.
Dor L’Dor, Grandpa Abe

TUNE IN NEXT WEEK FOR ANOTHER INSTALLMENT FROM GRANDPA ABE.

Rabbi Tarlow’s Weekly Parashah From The Center for Latino-Jewish Relations:
In year’s past I have dedicated the weekly parashah that comes immediately before Yom Ha’Atzmaut (Israel Independence Day) to Israel’s many accomplishments. This year, I will dedicate my commentary to just one special accomplishment: how Israel helps the world. The Youtube section will provide several videos on how Israel in its short history has lived up in so many ways to the Biblical injunction of being an “Or la’Goyim – A Light unto the Nations”.
The term, “Or la’Goyim” comes from the Book of Isaiah where it is written: “Yea, He saith, Is it too light a thing for you to be My servant, to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and to restore the offspring of Israel? I shall give you as a light to the (other) nations, that My salvation (doings/blessings) will reach the ends of the Earth” (Isaiah 49:6). Ever since Abraham brought us to the land of Israel over 3,000 years ago we have understood that Israel as a nation has an obligation to act with compassion, justice and charity. To be an “Or la’Goyim” is to help others when needed and to seek to make the world a better place.
Like all nations, Israel, being composed of human beings has not always lived up perfectly to this ideal, but few nations have been so generous and done so much for the world with scant resources as has modern Israel. Here are just a few examples of how Israel during the last 68 years has strived to make the world a better place:
Israel is the world’s leader in water technology. From drip irrigation to waterless toilets, Israel has found ways to conserve water and to purify wastewater. It has become the world’s superpower in water technology and an example to nations around the world on how to turn deserts into farmland.
When earthquakes stuck Haiti, Japan. Nepal, Turkey and most recently Ecuador, other nations talked about what they would do. Tzahal’s (Israel Defense forces) medical teams were on the ground almost immediately and having set up field hospitals. While the world talked, Israel did.
Across Africa Israeli specialists are helping Africans to have an assured food supply and how to hold onto the grain that they have already harvest.
Israeli scientists are teaching their American and European counterparts how to use algae to turn carbon dioxide emitted by power plants into fuel and nutraceuticals.
Israeli medical techniques are world famous and among the best in the world. Israel is not only the only nation that permanently opens its arms to children sick from radiation caused by the Ukrainian nuclear disasters, but the only nation to receive sick children and soldiers from an enemy nation, Syria, and save their lives.
Airports around the world are a great deal safer now, thanks to a technology developed by Israel’s XSight Systems, which detects foreign object debris (FOD) on the runway – that is birds, small animals and fragments that break off planes.
The list of Israel’s accomplishments is almost endless. These are just a few of the ways that modern Israel has continued to be more than the land of the Bible, It is also working to make Biblical principles into realities. Perhaps that is why Israel’s national anthem is called:Ha’Tikvah/Hope.

Chag Yom Ha’Atzmaut Sameach! Happy Independence Israel!

 

Parashat Achrei Mot

Special shiva minyan 7 AM Friday morning, May 6. Please join us in a short morning service and shiva minyan for Cantor Ben-Moshe’s late father.

Friday Night Shabbat Services are at 6:45 PM. We will have another shiva minyan, followed at 7 PM by regular Friday night services.

Candle lighting in Austin is at 7:54 PM
Parashat Achrei Mot – Nisan 28

Another thank you to our lay led service leaders last weekend who came together in a special and touching way to enable us to have a meaningful service and Yizkor. We are immensely grateful to our Beth El community! May you all go from strength to strength.

The meymuna last Sunday was amazing. Over a hundred people enjoyed delicious Moroccan delicacies and lively music! As with all Beth El events, we couldn’t have done it without our precious volunteers! Shiry Turjeman – you are unbelievable for initiating this and the countless hours you spent baking goodies. Huge shout out to Idit, Claudia, Tamar, Shay, Mary, Genevieve, Rinat, Mirit and all the others who helped cook and clean up after both on the day and the week before. This may have to be an annual chagigah!

THERE WILL BE NO SUNDAY SCHOOL THIS SUNDAY, MAY 8th. Talmidim (students), please thank your moms!

One week away from Vania’s Bat Mitzvah, Friday May 13. PLEASE let us know if you can help with the kidish crew for this special event, this Sunday morning, May 8th at 9 AM, Thursday May 12 at 6 PM onwards and Friday morning at 9 AM. Claudia would greatly appreciate the help.

SAVE THE DATE: Our annual “state of the shul” meeting will be held on Sunday, June 5, at 4:45 pm followed by a Kosher cookout. We plan to discuss shul business and elect officers for the upcoming year.

Passover VIII and Meymuna next week!

Friday Night Shabbat Services are at 7 PM.
Candle lighting in Austin is at 7:50 PM

Shabbat morning services are THIS SATURDAY morning – Pesach VIII, Saturday, April 30, at 9 AM. Please join us for this lay led shabbat service. The kosher for Passover kidish has been generously sponsored by Javis Howeth in memory of her beloved mother, Ruby Lee Campbell Howeth, a.k.a. “Judy” of blessed memory. There will be a Yizkor service.

Meimuna, THIS SUNDAY, May 1st, at 4 PM – a joyful celebration to mark the end of Passover.
Bring yourselves, your friends and community. Shiry, Claudia, Mary, Genevieve, Idit, and others, have been working tirelessly to make the delicious pastries and mufleta. Come and enjoy. You may bring dried fruits and nuts, cold drinks (kosher please), fresh fruit or paper goods if you like.

The Passover seder was truly one incredible evening. We had a full house of over a hundred people and I know people enjoyed it immensely. We will also always treasure the memories of that special evening with the Chazzan and his lovely family, including his father Milton, z’l.
Here is just one quote from Herschel that pretty much sums it up:
“We really enjoyed the Seder. It was one of the best we have ever attended. You did a fantastic job. You and the Cantor, should put this on a road show. We also feel lucky to have all of you as part of our family.”

WE HAVE SUNDAY SCHOOL THIS SUNDAY, MAY 1ST, 10 AM!

Thank you to all our Passover helpers!!! Many many folks helped us. Jared, Gracie, Mary, Sarah, Genevieve, Rachel, Larry, Elaine, Doris, Yosef, Kevin, Iris, Sara, Bob, Yesenia, Carmen, Scott, Art, Rinat, Claudia, Javis, Tamar, Anat, Lori and David. Many others helped on the night and please forgive if your name is not on the list – everyone really did lend a hand.

Dvar Torah from Rabbi Peter Tarlow of the Center for Jewish Hispanice relations:
This weekend marks the end of the Passover holiday and the return to eating chametz. During the last week, we were to think about the meaning of freedom and when we lacked both national freedom and also personal freedom. One of this holiday’s aspects that makes Passover so unique is that it is a time when we are “chametz-free”.
The term chametz is not easy to translate. We often translate it as “leavening”, or something that makes food rise. Thus, Jews around the world refrain from eating most bread products and beers throughout the holiday. Can we see Passover as the first “gluten-free holiday”?
In reality, as almost every Jewish person knows, translating the word chametz for someone outside of Jewish culture is not an easy. The word conveys a sense of “puffed-up” and of “self-importance”. Thus, it has booth a food-science meaning and a spiritual and national meaning. Chametz reminds us that we are free but only within the confines of society. The term also reminds us that each of us is just one small dot in the scheme of history, that to rid oneself of self-importance is another way to rid oneself of perpetual slavery.
The word “chametz” is not only used, however, with the holiday of Passover. Thus, in chapter 2 of Leviticus we read: “No meal offering that you offer to the Lord shall be with leaven (chametz), for you shall burn no leaven (se’or) or honey in any fire offering to the Lord.” (2:11)
And again in chapter 6 of Leviticus we read: “… its remainder (of the meal offering) shall be eaten by Aaron and his sons; it shall be eaten as unleavened cake (matzot) in the sacred precinct … It shall not be baked with leaven …” (6:9-10). Does being chametz-free here symbolize the unfinished, the work that has yet to be done to complete a task?
As we finish the holiday of Passover we remember that the search for freedom and human dignity is also an unfinished business. To be chametz free then represents the beginning of a yet-unfulfilled process. Now that we are about to end the Passover holidays and enter the comforts of the chametz world, it is our responsibility to remember that our journey to collective and personal freedom is not yet complete, that all too many of us have become spoiled and at times selfish. How do each of us remember the lessons of Passover and the meaning of freedom throughout the rest of the year? What do you think?

In memory of Milton Mann z’l

Dear Congregants,

Below is the obituary for Milton Mann, z’l, father of our dear Cantor Yitzhak Ben-Moshe and friend to us all at Beth El. His funeral will be held today at 1PM in Jacksonville, Florida. Again, we would like to extend our heartfelt condolences to the entire family.

“HaMakom yenachem et’chem b’toch shar avay’lay Tzion ve’Yerushalayim.
May the Omnipresent comfort you among the mourners of Zion and Jerusalem.”

In Memory of Milton Bernard Mann
February 23, 1931 – April 25, 2016
Dr. Milton B. Mann, age 85, passed away on Monday, April 25, 2016. He was born in Fayetteville, North Carolina in 1931 to Israel and Ruth Mann. He is survived by his beloved wife of 56 years, Clara; his loving children, Yitzhak Ben-Moshe and Irene (John) LeJeune; his grandchildren, Ilan and Eden Ben-Moshe; future daughter-in-law, Shereen Canady; his devoted sister, Shirley Goldman, as well as many nieces and nephews who loved their Uncle Milton.
He was a graduate of the University of North Carolina Medical School and practiced Psychiatry in Jacksonville for 33 years at Baptist Medical Center and the Veterans Administration, and was loved by the many patients he helped over the years. He was a life member of the Duval County Medical Society, the Jacksonville Jewish Center where he served on the board for many years, as well as a long-time volunteer medical advisor to the Jewish Family and Community Services, and a proud member of the American Legion. Milton had a wonderful sense of humor and vibrant personality, and he made friends wherever he went. He was passionate about his family, his work, travel, history, archaeology, and the State of Israel.
A graveside funeral service will take place on Thursday, April 28th at the New Center Cemetery (Evergreen Cemetery) at one o’clock in the afternoon. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Stronger Than Stigma or the Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America.

Passover weekend

No Friday Night Shabbat Services tonight as it is the first seder. This is the only time of the year we don’t have Friday night services.

Candle lighting in Austin is at 7:45 PM

Shabbat morning services are TOMORROW morning
Saturday April 23 at 9 AM. Please join us for this special and beautiful service in which we sing Hallel.

Saturday April 23 at 7:00 PM is our wonderful 2nd night at Beth El.

This month, we are adding a special shabbat morning service on the fifth shabbat, Saturday April 30, with a special Yizkor service.

Cantor Ben-Moshe’s Message
This Shabbat is of course Pesah, Passover. We celebrate the liberation of our ancestors from slavery in Egypt with the ritual of the Seder-the most observed of all Jewish rites. It is notable that the main character of the Exodus story does not appear in our Haggadah-the name of Moses is never mentioned in the entire Seder. Our Tradition thus teaches us not to idolize any human, great though he may have been. Our reliance is on God alone-the real hero and worker of our deliverance. Leaders may come and go, but God’s lovingkindness is everlasting, as we sing in the Hallel. May we all feel truly free, may all of humanity be free, and all of us feel God’s kindness in our lives. Shabbat Shalom and Hag Kasher v’Sameah.
Hazzan Yitzhak Ben-Moshe

From Rabbi Peter Tarlow of the Center for Jewish Latino Relations:
Passover Prohibited Foods/Alimentos prohibidos durante Pésaj
A number of people have asked for a definition of “Chametz” and which foods belong to the “chametz” category” To help here is a good partial list.
Varias personas han pedido que les demos una lista de los alimentos que se clasifican como “Jametz”. Para ayudarlos, aqu’ hay una lista.
“Chametz” is classified as: Se clasifica “jametz” como:
1) all foods made with leavening/todo hecho con levadura;
2) cereals/cereales;
3) The following grans/los granos que siguen:
a) wheat/trigo
b) oats/avena
c) barley/cebada
d) smelt/centeno
e) corn/maiz (precise definition unclear/no hay ninguna definición precisa)
4) For some: What is called Kiniyot/Lo que se llama kiniyot.
These include/Incluyen
Legumes, green beans, lentils, chickpeas, beans, peas soya,
Legumbres, porotos, lentejas, garbanzas, habas, arvejas (guisantes), soya
Things derived from the above: pasta, beer, wisky
Todo lo que se deriva de los alimentos de arriba: masas, cerveza, whisky
Sephardic Jews reject the idea of the kiniyot and tend to eat:
Los sefarditas rechazan el concepto de los kiniyot y comen:
Green beans/porotos
Peas /arveja (guisantes)
Lentils/lentejas
Rice/arroz
Sesame seeds/semillas de sesamo
Sunflower seeds/semillas de girasoles
Peanuts/maní (cacahuete)
Most US Jews eat peanuts/ La mayor parte de los jud’os norteamericanos consumen cacahuete.
Quinoa is kosher for Passover/Quinoa es kasher l’Pesaj
Passover’s laws go into effect around midday April 22 until the sighting of
three stars on April 30tth.
Las leyes de Pesaj se empiezan alrededor de mediod’a 22 de abril hasta la
vista de tres estrellas por la noche de 30 de abril.

Thank you to all our helpers!!! Many many folks helped us get ready – whether you climbed the roof to clean gutters, cleaned, cooked, changed balasts and more, we are extremely grateful: Jared, Gracie, Mary, Sarah, Genevieve, Rachel, Larry, Elaine, Doris, Yosef, Kevin, Iris, Sara, Bob, Yesenia, Scott, Art, Rinat, Claudia and Javis.

We have a first for Beth El at the end of Passover! We are going to have a traditional Moroccan Meimuna. This promises to be a great new and meaningful and extremely delicious event, one that is enjoyed by Jews in Israel and soon, by us here. Sunday evening, May 1. Yesher Koach to Shiry for organizing. Let us know if you want to help cook.

Happy birthday this week to Gabbai Bam, Yosef Aguilar, David Henderson and Larry Butler!
Let us know your special occasion and we’ll give you a Mazal Tov!

From Phil and Keren who recently moved to Israel:
“Shalom to our dear friends at Beth El,
We wish you all a Chag Pesach Samech! All is well here in Ariel. Our container arrived last Sunday so we have spent the last week unpacking some boxes and moving others to our upstairs attic for storage until we do our renovations. Today was a good day and we got a lot done. I got to finally set up my kitchen! Yeah! I now have more than 2 pots to cook with and I have all my spices! Tomorrow we will be up early for a final clean up of the floors and entry way and a quick trip to the market before Pesach. We are looking forward to a day of rest! Baruch Hashem Phil has been feeling great and has been strong with all this moving of boxes. It truly is a land blessed by God and being here we feel very blessed too. We have not started Ulpan yet so we have been using Google translate to help us communicate. We live in an apartment building with 4 units. Two of the units are Russian families so we will eventually learn Hebrew and perhaps a little Russian too! They are all very nice people and have been very kind to us. And we are getting along OK without a car. Learning the bus system was a little challenging at first but we have learned and are doing fine now. Doing a lot of walking too which is good for us! Our dog, Ruby has adjusted pretty well and is very fascinated by the native turtle that lives in the yard below us! She also enjoys watching the cats and occasionally has to bark and harass them! But there is a lovely park nearby to take her to play frisbee when there is no one else around so she still gets her exercise.
The streets of Ariel are lined with banners for Pesach and the kids get a 3 week vacation this year! Pesach is a big deal in Israel!
Chag Sameach,
Keren and Phil”