join “your temple family” · 10/10/2018 · (mitzvot) is compared to planting a seed. when a...
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TEMPLE ANSHE HESED
5401 Old Zuck Road Erie, PA 16506 814-454-2426
www.anshehesederie.org
October 2018 22 Tishri - 22 Cheshvan 5778
Temple Anshe Hesed Mission Statement:
Temple Anshe Hesed is a Reform Jewish congregation guided by Torah and dedicated to
perpetuating Judaism and its traditions through education, worship, and social action in a
welcoming and inclusive environment.
Friday
October 26
At
6:15 P.M.
Shabbat, Music, Family, Friends, Oneg And you! See you then for a Shabbat Shalom!
Join “Your Temple Family” for
From the President’s Backyard Gazebo
The High Holidays are over. We have confessed our sins, asked for
forgiveness, and atoned to G-D. We as Jews can start anew. While we
don’t forget what we have done in the past, we ask ourselves how can we do
better this year.
One of the fundamentals of our faith is that the Jewish way of life is
everlasting. It doesn’t matter where we are in space. We can be in the
Temple, at the beach or taking a hike. This is why the doing of good deeds
(mitzvot) is compared to planting a seed.
When a seed is planted, it disintegrates in the ground, losing its puny
identity to the nourishing soil and creative potential of mother earth. A
seedling sprouts, which will one day grow into a tall tree. In time, the tree will bear fruit, and seeds, which
themselves might become an orchard, and ultimately, a vast forest.
Likewise, a good deed takes root and sprouts in a nourishing eternity of good deeds and Jewish values. These
deeds and values give life to ourselves and our offspring that we too might one day grow into tall fruitful trees;
that our fruits might one day become orchards.
Every time we do acts of mitzvot, we are planting the seeds for the next generation. Not just for the next
generation of Jews, but for everyone. There is a saying from Pirki Avot: one mitzvah leads to another “mitzvah
goreret mitzvah”.
Let each of us strive to do at least one mitzvah a day. Together we can make a positive difference in our lives
and in the lives of those around us. In the next year, I look forward to being a part of our communities’ efforts to
take root and blossom in our new home.
Edie
Please be advised….
After Friday night services a few weeks ago, there was an incident whereby a congregant was walking to
their car and someone shouted an anti-Semitic remark from a car on the street. We believe this is an
isolated incident, as the neighbors have been more than welcoming and excited about having us in the
neighborhood.
However, because of this incident, the Worship Committee has decided to engage our Security firm for
Friday night services for a few months to monitor and will remain until the last congregant has left the
Temple.
We have had a busy start to our 5779 Gesher school year. Gesher participation started back in August on
the Historic day when our congregation brought the Torah Scrolls to their new home on Old Zuck Road. It
was a beautiful event that gave an opportunity for some of our students say goodbye to the Temple on
10th street. They continued the evening by dancing with the Torah Scrolls on the patio. A highlight of the
evening was when the time capsule was opened. It was full of historic information. Someone passed me a
typed document labeled “Teachers and Children of the Religious School of Temple”. It had over 80 names
of children. After I took a closer look I discovered that one of the teachers listed was Mrs. Henry L. Zacks
along with her children, Richard, Edward, and Rachel. Mrs. Henry L. Zacks, Goldie, was my father-in-
law’s grandmother…my children’s great, great grandmother! Edward, my husband’s grandfather was listed
as a student along with his brother and sister. It is hard to imagine them as young children, the future of the
Temple. I especially like the photo I captured of Lyman Cohen and Devin Levy going through the capsule
discovering treasures from the past. I was thrilled to see the number of families that attended the Family
Rosh Hashanah & Tashlich Service. It was a beautiful setting for the children to toss their breadcrumbs
into the creek and enjoy a snack. The first day of Gesher was a big success. Parents and students had time
to visit and catch up after the long summer break. We had a great kick-off with a “Honey Bee Program” for
the students. They also had time to settle in to their new classrooms and reconnect with their teachers.
It is going to be a great year!
Shana Tova!
Kendra
GREETINGS FROM GESHER
\
As fall is fast upon us, we are returning to our regular 3rd
Thursday meetings in Panera’s.
Please join us Thursday, October 18, 2018, 5:30 p.m. at Panera Bread (Peach & Liberty)
JCC OF ERIE SENIOR LOUNGE October 18, 2018
at noon at the new Temple
5401 Old Zuck Road
Guest Speaker: Dr. Leslie Alexander
Kitchen Herbs:
Supporting Health and Wellness with Everyday Medicinals
Please RSVP to 814-455-4474 by October 12th
#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • With richly layered characters and a
gripping moral dilemma that will lead readers to question everything they know
about privilege, power, and race, Small Great Things is the stunning new page-
turner from Jodi Picoult.
Ruth Jefferson is a labor and delivery nurse at a Connecticut hospital with more than
twenty years' experience. During her shift, Ruth begins a routine checkup on a newborn,
only to be told a few minutes later that she's been reassigned to another patient. The
parents are white supremacists and don't want Ruth, who is African American, to touch
their child. The hospital complies with their request, but the next day, the baby goes into
cardiac distress while Ruth is alone in the nursery. Does she obey orders or does she
intervene?
With no easy answers, this is sure to bring about lots of good discussion. You can join in the conversation
even if you haven’t read the book. We are still planning our next books. Stay tuned for more information
about November books. Thanks to the many who have given us some great recommendations. We are always
ready to hear others. Please forward them to Janice Wittmershaus at [email protected]
The Kuperman Fund Minnetta Kuperman was a beloved member of our congregation. She dedicated her life to children and education. Her devotion to our congregation’s children continues to live on through the Minnetta Kuperman Educational Endowment Fund. The Kuperman Fund provides financial assistance for programs such as Jewish day camps, overnight camps, youth group camps, trips to Israel, and other Jewish activities. Students may apply for funding assistance in specific amounts from the Kuperman Fund at any time during the year. Applications are available in the Temple office and can be requested by email [email protected]. Applications for summer funding must be submitted to the Temple Office no later than November 7, 2018. Applicants will be notified by Dec 1, 2018.
Adult Beginner’s Hebrew Class
Starts October 14th If you’re an absolute beginner when it comes to He-
brew, or you’d like to move away from following the
transliterations and take the next step, or perhaps
gain confidence—then this is the class for you!
Classes will be held in the Temple conference room
(in the main office area, down the hall from Mary’s
office on the right) while Gesher is in session.
Day: Sundays during Gesher, October 14, 2018 -
May 5, 2019
Time: 10:00 –11:00 a.m.
Cost: $50 plus purchase of Aleph Isn’t Tough: An
Introduction to Hebrew for Adults
Email Leslie Alexander to express interest, or with
any questions.
Update on 10th & Liberty Temple: We are moving forward with the sale of the Temple to Gilgamesh Tchoupitoulas, LLC as we discussed at our Congregational meeting on August 2, 2018. Randy Shapira and the buyer’s representative are still working through some of the details. We hope to have everything completed by mid-October. As we get closer to a final closing of 10th & Liberty, we still have books, Judaica and other items remaining. Please review the steps below in helping us to close the Temple.
Any questions feel free to contact Jackie Breakstone [email protected] or
Ina Fisher at [email protected].
Dates Time Event Description of event at 10th & Liberty
September 30th
1:00 -3:00
Congregant Walk-Through
Congregants are welcome to walk-though one last time and take books, Judaica or any items they would like for their home.
October 1 & 2 9:00-2:00
Non-Profit Walk-Though
We are inviting non-profits to walk through the Temple and take any item that would be useful for their organization.
Late October -early November
No time set
Items to be buried in the Genizah
We have prayer books and other sacred items that we will want to bury in our Genizah at Anshe Hesed Cemetery.
Jews in the News
ERIE, Pa. (JTA) — There was some debate about
putting the old synagogue building up for sale
and moving to a new, smaller building, but not
much. When a major pipe burst at Temple Anshe
Hesed in 2012, the cost of repairing the nearly
century-old building convinced the small but re-
silient congregation that it was time to move.
But as in any such move, the task was daunting:
How do you pack a congregation’s history and its
thousands of objects into a building one-third the
size of the old one?
Last Friday, members of the Reform temple here
gathered in their building one last time. At an
event advertised as a “de-consecration,” some 60
men and women, along with a few children,
joined under the sanctuary’s dramatic dome to
say goodbye to the structure that has served as
the congregation’s spiritual home since 1929.
The reflective, serious atmosphere was mixed
with a celebratory tone as members removed the
five Torah scrolls from the ark and carried them
out of the building, embarking on a fresh chapter
in their congregation’s history. Boarding two old-
fashioned trolley buses rented for the occasion,
the group traveled together to its new home locat-
ed five miles east on Old Zuck Road in Millcreek
Township.
I took part in the event as part of my research into
what congregations do with their belongings
when they merge, shut down or downsize.
Like other Rust Belt cities, Erie’s population has
been on a steady decline for decades. It peaked in
1960 with 138,440 residents, and today numbers
just under 100,000.
The city’s Jewish population has followed the
same pattern. Erie was once home to 3,000 Jews
and three synagogues, one for each of the major
The following article appeared in the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on September 5, 2018.
Alana Cooper joined us as we moved our Torahs to our new Temple home.
denominations. By 2007 the Jewish population
there had decreased to 700; by 2013 it was at 480.
In preparation for the move, a Judaica Committee
and an Arts and Archives Committee were formed
to make decisions about what to keep, what to sell
or give away, and what to discard. The group
agreed to digitize 90,000 pages of documents that
dated back to the temple’s founding in 1862. The
new home also included an archive room where
every single dedicatory plaque is stored, as stipu-
lated by one major donor.
The heavy wooden carved doors – which graced
the front of the building the congregation occu-
pied before it moved in 1929, and which were
displayed on a wall of the social hall in the 1929
building – have also been mounted in the archive
room. The bulky bronze ark, which does not fit
the aesthetic of the new space, will be
reconfigured as a sculpture that will sit in the
outdoor patio area.
The most difficult dilemma involved the 12
stained-glass windows situated around the drum
of the dome, and the tripartite arched window
above the balcony at the back of the sanctuary.
Their vibrant colors and ephemeral quality served
as a defining feature of the building’s grand
prayer space, which seats 350. One elderly mem-
ber said that some even regarded the windows as
“embodying the soul of the congregation.”
Moving them, however, would be costly and
complicated. Walter Harf, 89, who grew up in the
temple, estimated the cost for removing each
window at $2,000, not including the cost of
patching up the holes left behind or mounting
them in the new, smaller sanctuary. Some
members – devoted to remembering the
congregation’s long and rich history, as well as to
a contemporary design that reflects current sensi-
bilities – devised a creative solution. Only the
middle panel of each window
was taken out and patched up with a clear
window, leaving behind the lower stained-glass
panel and the arched one at the top. All 12 middle
panels were refurbished, and each one placed into
a wood case that is backlit with electric bulbs,
allowing the colors to glow even at night.
Together, the 12 of them line the back of the new
social hall in a subtle but aesthetically pleasing
statement about Anshe Hesed’s enduring
connection to its past.
The window at the back of the sanctuary was
fully removed. Artist Bonnie Cohen will crush the
glass and recycle the pieces, using them to create
a colorful custom-made ark for the new sanctuary,
which seats 70. Cohen devised this solution when
working with the Conservative synagogue Beth
El in Akron, Ohio, which went through a similar
process of downsizing and moving in 2012.
Anshe Hesed congregants also took with them the
cornerstone of their 1929 building. When it was
removed as part of the de-consecration ceremony,
an old iron box was found tucked inside. Some-
one handed it to Lyman Cohen, 94,the oldest
member of the group.
“Were you here then, when the box was sealed
up?” he was asked.
Cohen chuckled, responding that he cannot
remember that far back. Riding in the procession
to the new building, he held the box on his lap
like a treasure.
After a religious service in the new sanctuary,
people gathered around to open the box. The
documents inside included letters of
congratulations on the congregation’s new
building, as well as a list of donors who supported
its construction. Almost a century has passed, but
the sentiments around constructing a new
congregational home, moving in, and the hopes
for a financially stable and vibrant community life
remain the same.
(Alanna E. Cooper is director of Jewish Lifelong
Learning at Case Western Reserve University
and an adjunct assistant professor in its
Department of Anthropology.)
CONGREGANT CORNER
Lorette B. Snider’s daughter, Karen Snider and son, Mark Snider are holding a committal service and the unveiling of the headstone on Friday, October 19 at 11:00 am at Laurel Hill Cemetery. They are hoping that congregants who knew their parents can attend. Lorette B. Snider passed away peacefully on May 16, 2017 at the age of 93 in Yonkers, New York. Born on June 9, 1923, daughter of Marta (nee Bollag) and Rudolph Aufhauser, she was preceded in death by Dr. B. Leonard Snider, her husband of 52 years in 1996. She is survived by her daughter Karen and her son Mark, both of New York City, extended family in Switzerland, many nieces and nephews, and dear friends. Friends may attend a committal service and unveil her headstone on Friday, October 19, at 11:00 a.m. at Laurel Hill Cemetery. The Burton Funeral Home, 602 West 10th Street is in charge
of arrangements.
Ella Spangenthal passed away Wednesday, September
12, 2018 at Springhill Senior Living.
Born in Wawern, Germany, she was a daughter of the late
Leo and Frieda (Kaufmann) Wachsmann.
She worked as a seamstress for many years, both at home
and for Frank's Cleaners.
She was an active member of Temple Anshe Hesed and
the Jewish Community.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
her husband, Heinz J. Spangenthal and two brothers, Jacob
and Lutbert Wachsmann.
She is survived by two children, a son, Bert L. Spangenthal
and his wife, Debbie of Sylvania, Ohio and a daughter,
Debbie Hurwitz and her husband, Marvin of Williamsport,
Pa.; four grandchildren, Jason (Amy) and Megan (Stacie
Tassos) Spangenthal and Jason (Victoria) and Jeremy
(Anya Poukchanski) Hurwitz and four great-grandchildren,
Maya and Max Spangenthal and Ari and Ziva Hurwitz.
Mazel Tov to Phil Friedman for taking 2nd place in his
division of the World Triathlon event in Australia.
Congratulations Phil!
Herb and Jessie Rubinfield have moved! Their new
address is: Oakmont Village of Davie
8201 Stirling Road, A 327
Davie Florida 33328
Their home telephone number is 954-595-2441.
Call for Donations Temple Anshe Hesed’s Tikkun Olam Committee is taking donations to benefit children who are receiving services from SafeNet, Erie’s free, confidential domestic violence agency. For children facing the stresses that come with domestic abuse situations, a warm pair of PJ’s and a bedtime story can provide much needed comfort.
Please consider donating a pair of NEW pajamas (any size except infant/toddler) and a story book. Donations can be brought to Temple through October 31st. Please contact Rachel Kroner, Tikkun Olam / Social Action Chair with any questions by emailing [email protected] Thank you in advance for your generosity! Together, we can repair the world.
I’d like to offer a very special thank you to all the
people who made the High Holy Days so special this year.
So far, it has been an amazing year of firsts! All of you
have made such a difference in allowing us, as a family, to
move forward so smoothly. We have had volunteers step
up to help us move, clean, organize, accept honors,
beautify and of course, to feed us. Thank you.
This weekend (September 22/23) we brought a new
tradition to the Old Zuck Road Temple. We built a
Sukkah on the patio. Special thanks to everyone who
helped in the planning and building of our Sukkah.. Using
recycled materials from our previous Sukkahs, we were
able to build a simple, beautiful structure perfect for
Sukkot! Thanks to Dom Comi, Steve Wood,
Craig Reynolds, Dennis Vidmar, Joe Graziano, Cynthia
Leopold, Leslie Ford, Ted Kobierski, Shauna Hodgson,
Lauren Gardner, Kendra Zacks and the Gesher students.
From the URJ: 10 Ways to Create a Welcoming Culture in our Congregation
By, April Baskin and Carly Goldberg
Here are a few practices our community can embrace in order to create a welcoming culture.
Smile. A friendly face can go a long way in helping everyone feel that they can participate fully in congregation-
al life. As Shammai, the Talmudic Rabbi taught, “greet every person with a cheerful face” (Pirkei Avot 1:15).
Widen your circle. Greet everyone you pass or everyone who comes within a few feet of you. A simple “hello”
or “Shabbat Shalom” will do the trick.
Take five. Spend the first five minutes after the conclusion of a program or service talking to people you don’t
already know, whether they be newcomers or longtime members with whom you’ve yet to connect. At times,
informal schmoozing can be awkward for anyone who doesn’t have a friend by their side – and this is espe-
cially true for newcomers to your community. The transition time between the end of a program or service
and an informal coffee hour or oneg is when people are likely to dash for the door. Encourage people to stay
and help them feel more comfortable by spending time talking with them.
Mention names. Not sure where to begin? Try a straightforward, “Hi, I’m... What’s your name?” Repeat their
name back to them to be sure you heard it correctly and to help it stick with you. If you’re sure you’ve met
this person before but you’re not sure of their name, honesty is the best policy. Preface your introduction
with, “I’m sorry, I’ve forgotten your name…,” or “Tell me your name again…” If their name is difficult for
you pronounce, admit it, apologize, and practice until you get it right.
Greet thoughtfully. Not sure if someone is new to the community or just new to you? Begin your introduction
with, “I’m not sure if we’ve met before…,” or ask, “Have we met before?” When you’re introduced to some-
one, try, “Nice to see you” rather than “nice to meet you,” just in case you’ve actually met before.
Just listen. Don’t assume you know or can tell someone’s gender identity, family make-up, Jewish identity, or
religious, racial, or cultural background. Rather, take a curious stance, allowing time and space for people to
share more about themselves on their own terms – when they want to, what they want to, and in the way they
want to.
Share something positive or neutral. Not sure what to say next? Consider offering a small piece of relevant
information about yourself and the congregation. For example, “I’ve been a member here for a long time. I
love our rabbi,” or, “I moved here about a year ago.” You can also try an innocuous statement like, “I love
when the choir participates.” Share something positive or neutral. Please don’t bond over a shared com-
plaint!
Introduce. Introduce the person with whom you are speaking to someone else you know, or offer to introduce
them to lay leaders or your rabbi or cantor. You can ask, “Have you met our rabbi? Would you like me to
introduce you?” And, yes, it’s OK if they decline your offer.
End the conversation with a positive remark. After you’ve had an initial conversation, give space to the per-
son with whom you were talking by saying “nice to talk with you,” or something similar, as you leave.
Follow up. Next time you see this person, say hello. Refer back to one or two details of your initial conversation
to remind them who you are. You can ask a warm and friendly question such as, “How is your child liking
her new school?” or “How did you find Shabbat services last week?” Being remembered and seen goes a
long way to building a culture of connection and belonging.
SERVICES
We want to hear from you and love sharing all
the special events in your lives with other mem-
bers of our Temple family through the Temple
Topics and the Templegrams.
Please contact the Temple office to share your
good news!
DONATIONS
Ruth Blick Silver Fund
In Memory of Edward Levy
Susan Furr
New Building Fund
In Memory of Edward Levy
Larry Lechtner
In Memory of Harvey Shapiro
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn J. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Chad Lyter
Mr. and Mrs. John Bachstrum
In Honor of Rabbi John and Joanna Bush
Phil Friedman
In honor of Renee Goldberg’s 85th birthday.
Ina and Ed Fisher
In memory of Nathan and Harvey Chestner and
in honor of the New Temple
Marian Chestner and family
Remembrance Fund
In Memory of Edward Levy
Elliot and Judith Goldman
In memory of Ella Spangenthal
Greta R Shaffer
Eugene and Alice Weiss Fund
In Memory of Isador Nathan, Hans Nathan and
Melly Nathan
Lorraine and Tom Donaher
Gesher Education Fund
In Memory Of Harvey Shapiro
Terri and Alan Goldman and Family
Temple General Fund
For the Recovery of Lisa Mallis
Marilyn Wyman
Prayer Book Fund
In memory of Edward Levy
Ina and Ed Fisher
The Caring Committee
In memory of Ella Spangenthal
Barb Shapiro
Friday, October 5
6:15 P.M. Shabbat Service
Saturday, October 6
10:00 A.M. Shabbat Morning Service
11:00 A.M. Torah Study
Friday, October 12
6:15 P.M. Shabbat Service
Saturday, October 13
10:00 A.M. Shabbat Morning Service
11:00 A.M. Torah Study
Friday, October 19
6:15 P.M. Shabbat Service
Saturday, October 20
10:00 A.M. Shabbat Morning Service
11:00 A.M. Torah Study
Friday, October 26
6:15 P.M. Friday Night Live
Shabbat Service
Saturday, October 27
10:00 A.M. Shabbat Morning Service
11:00 A.M. Torah Study
To help defray the cost of the Aug. 31st
Dinner
Lyman Cohen
Very Special New Year’s greeting from Eta
and David Howell. While they are no longer
in Erie, they are definitely thinking of the
Temple Anshe Hesed congregation.
Congregant Calendar
Birthdays
October 2 Janice Wittmershaus, Kenny Zacks
October 3 Melissa Romero
October 4 Patrick Callahan
October 5 Marilyn Silin
October 6 Kenneth Chinsky
October 8 Kendra Zacks
October 12 Henry Fox, Vera Chervatskay
October 14 Ron Levey
October 17 Barbara Rider
October 19 Molly Wolf
October 21 Gary Levine, Matthew Skornick
October 22 Dominick Comi,
Brandon Skornick
October 23 Marcia Coblitz, Ruth Zak
October 25 Donna Bostaph
October 27 Edward Engel
October 28 Yael Fogle-Broverman
October 31 Carol Zacks
Anniversaries
October 3
Yvonne and Warren Levy
October 4
Ellen and Jack Anon
October 8
Lisa and Kenny Chinsky
October 9
Lauren and Bob Unger
October 10
Marci and Noel Bradley
Judy and Elliot Goldman
October 12
Janice and Bruce Wittmershaus
October 14
Eleanor and John Pless
October 15
Diane and Jay Kallor
October 18
Tara and Matthew Krotzer
October 22
Carol and Harvey Insler
October 29
Sharon and Richard Levick
October 30
Sue and Gary Levine
Yahrzeits
October 5/6
Arlene Breakstone, Isaac J. Garcon, Samuel Frank,
A.P. Silverstein, Isaac Rosenzweig, Franklin Fox,
Max Federman, Rose Schoenberg, Moses Levy,
Samuel Golden, Adolph Platowsky, Martha D.Platt,
Florence Goldstein, Isador Simon, Celia Schwartz,
October 12/13
Rosa Kline, Minnie Schuster Waxelbaum,
Bert Cohen, Louis J. DeRoy, Joseph Stern,
Myer Davidow, Erna Selig, Molly Peal, Rose Frank,
Henry Zacks, Frieda Rosenthal, Meyer Nast,
Freida Reichert Rosenberg, Maxine Kallman,
Isaac Sherman, Julius Aaron, Rosa Samler,
Rachel Gage Zacks, Irvin Goldman, Samuel Sobel,
Minnetta Kuperman, Joseph Schwab, Jonas Adler
October 19/20
Robert Cohen, Betty Jean Kay, Rachel Davis,
Stanislaw Wiczyk, Miriam Goodman, Alec Fisher,
Balbina Oppenheimer, Kate Jacobs, Jack Blumberg,
Charles Shulman, Fishel Currick, Milton Nadworny,
William Morris, Milton L. Tenenbaum,
Klara Kallman, Joseph Falk, Eva Ostrow,
Lillian Davis, Richard Goldberg, Abraham Levi,
Millie Weil, Samuel W. Rose, Joseph Pessin
October 26/27
Mirrel Davis, Miriam Sunstein, Isadore Rosin,
Jessie Cosel, Adolph Kraus, Fannie Jacobson,
Maria Wiczyk, Bella Schuster, Israel Shapera,
Abraham Lechtner, Isador Sobel, Rudolph Voss,
Max Solomon, Benedikt Levy, William S. Rich,
Jane Kramer Buchanan, Celia Tanenbaum,
Herman Herskovitz
November 2/3
Mina Eisenberg, Emma Voss, Malke Fainstein,
Sarah Levey, Lewis Goldman, I. Jerry Cohen,
David Einhorn, Ludwig Sender,
Beckie Ehrlich Obernauer, Regina Weitzenkorn
November 9/10
Moses Eisenberg, Max Jacobs, Jacob Roberts,
Herman King, Sarah Baer, Robert Friedberg, Alfred
Silberman, Louis Goldsmit, David Kuperman, Meyer
Landberg, Ida Harf, Jean Gusky, Saretta Rein,
Frances Schuster, Edward Steinberg,
Maxwell Emerman
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3
4
5 6
7 8 Columbus Day
Office closed
9 10 11
12 13
14 15 16
17
18 19 20
21
22 23
24 25 26 27
28
29
30
31
October 2018
14 Cheshvan 12 Cheshvan 13 Cheshvan
26 Tishrei
3 Cheshvan
10 Cheshvan
2 Cheshvan 1 Cheshvan 30 Tishrei 29 Tishrei 28 Tishrei
11Cheshvan
17 Cheshvan
8 Cheshvan 9 Cheshvan 6 Cheshvan 7 Cheshvan 5 Cheshvan
19 Cheshvan 20 Cheshvan
18 Cheshvan
6:15 P.M. Shabbat Service Service Leader: Rabbi John Bush
6:15 P.M. Shabbat Service Friday Night Live Service Leader: Lisa Nathanson
16 Cheshvan 15 Cheshvan
6:15 P.M. Shabbat Service Service Leader: Dennis Vidmar
4 Cheshvan
21 Cheshvan
6:15 P.M. Shabbat Service Service Leader: Jack Marcus
22 Cheshvan
23 Tishrei 24 Tishrei 25 Tishrei 27 Tishrei
Yizkor
7:00 P.M. Board Meeting
9:30 A.M. Gesher 11:30 Hebrew 11:00 A.M. - Noon Camp Day!
22Tishrei
12:00 P.M. Senior Lounge at TAH
No Gesher
9:30 A.M. Gesher 11:30 Hebrew
No Gesher
Baby Naming
For Ina and Ed
Fisher’s grand-
daughter,
Josephine Yurick
5:30 TAH Book Club At Panera on 38th and Liberty
10:00 A.M. Shabbat Morning Service 11:00 A.M. Torah Study
10:00 A.M. Shabbat Morning Service 11:00 A.M. Torah Study
10:00 A.M. Shabbat Morning Service 11:00 A.M. Torah Study
10:00 A.M. Shabbat Morning Service 11:00 A.M. Torah Study
Please Remember:
In order to allow students to apply and be
awarded grants in time to qualify for early bird
prices for camp, the Kuperman Committee
moved up the application process.
Applications for the Kuperman Award are due
no later than November 2, 2018! Thank you.