Friday, December 25, 2009

apple pie from scratch

*

On a video tribute to
Carl Sagan and Stephen Hawking


Perhaps you know that geologists go to great lengths to find old rocks to analyze, to get a glimpse of the origins and early development of the earth. Anthropologists visit peoples isolated in remote jungles of Brazil, or the wilderness of southern Africa, to study what early human social life may have been like at the dawn of our history. Scholars seek out and study rare texts for the secrets of ancient wisdom, and an understanding of the origins of civilization. Some quests are scientific, some spiritual. Seemingly separate paths that mingle and intersect. All, as such, involve the pursuit of knowledge.

This video, strains of which I first heard playing on one of my sons' computers, is an amazing convergence of such threads - at once a product of the present and a flashback to our future and our past. A merging of science and technology, art and artifice. It combines elements of recent flourishes of technical creativity and brilliance in science with modern approaches to recording and remixing images and sounds into "songs".

Now, as this is a production found on YouTube, where much trash and non-sense abounds, purists may say this video is not art. But then, what is art?

Each may have their own answer to this question. Mine is this: Art is a creation, a perceivable expression of ideas formulated by a human spiritmind, in temporary or permanent forms, involving the conscious use by its creator/s of symbolic forms or gestures, and while it may be applied to ordinary purposes, it is generally created for purposes beyond the conduct of day-to-day human affairs or business. In other words, it may be viewed and appreciated by itself, and for what it is, in isolation and without attachment to other purposes. Art, as the creation of conscious beings, is distinct from naturally-occurring wonders, but just like any natural wonder, it may inspire a single person, or many, of those who pause to experience it.

In this instance and instant, I think we have a chance, from the comfort of our sofas and sitting rooms, to glimpse how human knowledge and aspirations, traditions and art, songs and music, may be intergrated, as they were in times past, to elevate the human spirit, in attempts by our ancestors and ourselves, to reach out to each other, or to an ultimate creator. It is a flashback to the earliest moments, when humans gathered round their fires to listen to the stories of their elders, or to carve images of their world upon the walls of the caves in which they lived.

I have transcribed the "lyrics" below, as they are difficult to pick up on a first listening. Even as "poetry", the words and ideas are amazing.

Enjoy, and best wishes for a happy, healthy and fulfilling new year in 2010.

L'hitraot,

Peter

P.S. - the video can be found at the bottom of the EC Forum webpage. Pause the "cadences" music-player first, as shown in this image on the right (which you can click on to see in an enlarged view.)

and PPS - and the beat goes on . . .

_________________________

A Glorious Dawn

(Sagan: )
if you wish to make
an apple pie from scratch
you must first
Invent the universe. Space is filled

with a network of worm-holes
you might emerge
somewhere else in space
somewhen else
in time

The sky
calls to us
If we do not destroy ourselves
We will, one day,
Venture
To the stars

A still more glorious dawn awaits
Not a sunburst
But a galaxyburst
A morning filled with 400 billion suns
Or the rising of the Milky Way

The cosmos is full beyond measure
Elegant truths
Of exquisite interrelationships
Of the awesome
Machinery of Nature

I believe our future depends powerfully on how
well we understand this cosmos
in which we float
like a point of dust
in the morning sky

But the brain does
much more than just
ReCollect
It intercompares
It synthesizes
It analyzes
It generates abstractions
"The simplest thought like the concept of the number one
is an elaborate logical underpinning"
The brain has its own language
for testing the structure
and consistency of the world

A still more glorious dawn awaits
Not a sunburst
But a galaxyburst
A morning filled with 400 billion suns
Or the rising of the Milky Way


The sky
calls to us
If we do not destroy ourselves
We will, one day,
Venture
To the stars

(Hawking: )
For thousands of years
People have wondered about the universe
Did it stretch out forever
Or was there a limit
From the BigBang to BlackHoles
From third matter
To a possible BigCrunch
Our image of the universe today
is full of strangeSounding Ideas

(Sagan: )
How lucky are we?
To live
In this time
The first moment
inHuman history
When we are, inFact,
Visiting
OtherWorlds

A still more glorious dawn awaits
Not a sunburst
But a galaxyburst
A morning filled with 400 billion suns
Or the rising of the Milky Way

A Still

more glorious dawn awaits
Not a sunburst
But a galaxyburst
A morning filled with 400 billion suns
Or the rising of the Milky Way

The surface
of the earth
is the shore of the cosmic ocean
Recently we have waded a little
WayOut
And the water seems inviting . . . .

*************************

Tuesday, December 08, 2009

Have you read Rabbi Ari Sytner's weekly email?

Try this one!

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Rabbi Avram Bogopulsky scheduled to be next Scholar at WAM


Rabbi Avram Bogopulsky, seen here at a Torah Dedication Ceremony, will be the next Scholar in Residence at the West Ashley Minyan in Charleston, SC on Shabbat of December 4th and 5th, 2009.

************
"My favorite aspect of the Rabbinate is to see people growing spiritually [and] emotionally . . . . There's really nothing so special or unique about what we do. We are just trying to help Klal Yisrael in our small way."

********
Shabbat Vayishlach, December 4th & 5th

WAM Welcomes
Rabbi and Leah Bogopulsky
back to Charleston

Friday Night (JCC) – Services 5:00 pm
Dinner 6:15 pm

Keynote Speech 8:00 pm

"CLIMBING THE LADDER & ACROPHOBIA"

Shabbat Morning - Pre-Mussaf Drasha (JCC)

"WHAT RUNG ARE YOU ON?"

Pre-Mincha Class - Rabbi Bogopulsky 3:45 (JCC)

"CHANUKAH -
BEIT HILLEL and BEIT SHAMMAI

GOING UP AND GOING DOWN"

Melava Malka – 7:30 pm (Home of Robyn & Randy Cohen)

"SATURDAY NIGHT!" or "MOTZEI SHABBAT"?
by Rabbi Bogopulsky
"EMPOWERMENT THROUGH JOY"
by Rebbetzin Leah Bogopulsky

*******

Dinner reservations for Friday night -
please send your check to
Arlene Rosenthal,
"Attention: Dinner reservations"
2221 Portside Way
Charleston, SC 29407

Thursday, November 05, 2009

ORT Brunch Sun Nov 8; 10:30 am











ORT Charleston Presents
the Annual Scholarship Brunch

Sunday, November 8, Brunch and Reception 10:30 am

At the Charleston Jewish Community Center,
1645 Raoul Wallenberg Drive

ORT will be honoring David Odle
recipient of ORT America's 2009
Community Achievement Award.

The special guest speaker is Hilly Panovka of ORT Atlanta.

Dietary Laws Observed.
Couvert: $36 per person. The couvert covers the cost of the brunch and is not tax-deductible.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Next Scholar in Residence at WAM










“Behold, a ladder stood
on the earth, the top of it
reached to heaven;
and behold,
angels of G-d were ascending
and descending on it”







The West Ashley Minyan
Presents
Another “Climbing the Ladder” Event
Shabbat Vayera – November 6th and 7th

Rabbi and Mrs. Nosson Kaiser
Jacksonville, Florida

Program of events:

Friday Night Nov 6th 2009
Carlbach Shabbat and Dinner* (all at JCC)
Mincha at 5 pm
Ma'ariv at 5:15 pm
Dinner 6:30 pm
Keynote Address at 8 pm
An ‘I’ for an ‘I’: Exploring the Hidden World of the Self
* * *
Shabbat Morning Nov 7th
Pre-Mussaf Shabbat Drasha (JCC)
The Most High and I: Finding G-d’s Love in the Dow Jones

Women’s Class - Rebbetzin Kaiser 2:30 pm
at Linda Kirshstein’s home
Empowerment through Prayer

Shalosh S’eudos (JCC)
When the Sun Gets in Your “Aye”:
Finding Inspiration & Opportunity by Cutting through the Glare

Melaveh Malka 8:00 pm
(at home of Arlene & Peter Rosenthal)
The South Shall Rise Again:
Building a Torah Community below the Mason-Dixon Line

*For reservations for the dinner
or to volunteer contact
Arlene at arleneshawinsky@yahoo.com

RABBI NOSSON KAISER

A native of Toronto, Canada, Rabbi Nosson Kaiser has been Rabbi of Etz Chaim Synagogue in Jacksonville, Florida since 2001. He helped to found Torah Academy of Jacksonville, where his wife, Rebbetzin Orit Kaiser, was the founding principal. An alumnus of the Talmudical Yeshiva of Philadelphia and Jerusalem's Mir Yeshiva, Rabbi Kaiser served previously on the faculties of the Miami Beach Community Kollel and Mechina High School of South Florida. His accomplishments in Jacksonville have been recognized by the National Council of Young Israel, which gave him its Young Rabbinic Leadership Award in 2005. He has taught and lectured in three languages and is a popular guest speaker and scholar for synagogues, schools and national organizations. Rabbi Kaiser is also a trained cantor and is a past winner of the Canadian Mathematics Competition. The Kaisers are the proud parents of six children.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Redefining "Kibbutz"

And two cases of Jewish Geography from the media

My boyz like to tell me that everything I know I learned in Habonim. Growing up in SA, Habonim was my second family, and in terms of influences I was conscious of, it was probably even my first. My madrichim and my peers played a big role in providing me with a sense of myself within the framework of the Jewish people. If you were to ask me today, who were the biggest influences in my life, I would reflexively select people from that phase of my life. Not some figure from history, or some mentor in medicine, but the people I looked up to when I was growing up. Such is the power of youthful memory, that we cling to notions that provide us with a sense of belonging. In truth, there have been others who have played greater roles - influencing who we are, and what we have done with our lives. Go figure, as they say, one more example of the triumph of legend over logic.

Well, with that said, I had two very recent "encounters" from that past through reports in the media, both connected with Habonim. The first was in the New York Times on Sunday, where a short note from Britain mentioned a report by Michael Skapinker, who was a friend of mine when I was about 13. The second, listed below, was the snippet of an interview with historian Muki Tzur on NPR that I heard as I drove home today. The name "Muki Tzur" rang a really loud bell. I want to say he was a Shaliach in SA, either to the SA Zionist Federation, or to Habonim itself (*1).

Anyway, I thought this short report on new trends in Israel's communal frontiers might be of interest: the urban kibbutz - on NPR

Aleh u'Vaneh, Go up and build!
______________________________
(*1) I finally found confirmation on a web posting that Muki Tzur was indeed a shaliach to SA. Could there possibly be more than just one Muki Tzur?

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

A current batch of interesting reading . . .

Leonard Cohen performed in Israel, a trancendant event, reviewed by editor of the Jerusalem Post, David Horovitz - Editor's Notes: "A blessing welcomed, a blessing spurned"

More to come . . .

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Yom Kippur 2009

*** ALL services, evening and morning, except Sunday Mincha, will be held at the Jewish Community Center ***

Sunday, Sep 27, Erev Yom Kippur
3:00 pm Mincha at BSBI
6:53 pm Candlelighting & fast begins
7:00 pm Kol Nidrei

Monday, Sep 28, Yom Kippur
9:00 am Shacharit
11:30 am Torah Reading
12:30 pm Yizkor
1:00 pm Mussaf
5:00 pm Mincha
6:30 pm Neilah
7:54 pm Yom Kippur ends

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Rosh HaShanah 2009

*

L'Shanah Tova . .

Shabbath and Rosh HaShanah Service Times:

ALL services, evening and morning, will be held at the JCC

Friday, Sep 18, Erev Rosh Hashanah
7:05 pm Candlelighting
7:10 pm Mincha

Saturday, Sep 19, Shabbat & First day Rosh Hashanah
8:00 am Shacharit
11:00 am Mussaf
7:00 pm Mincha/Ma'ariv
Candlelighting after 8:07 pm

Sunday, Sep 20, Second day Rosh Hashanah
8:00 am Shacharit
10:30 am Shofar
11:00 am Mussaf
7:10 pm Mincha/Ma'ariv
8:05 pm Havdalah

L'shanah tovah tikatevu v'techatemu!
May you be inscribed and sealed (in the Book of Life) for a good year!

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Teach your children . . .

I want to share with you all a tribute to the late Hessie Gordon, who passed away recently after an unexpected illness.

While most of you may not have known her, many of you do know her son Brian, his wife Lynn and their children. The Gordon family, and Lynn's parents, lived in Charleston for several years, and left a lasting impression on us and upon the Jewish community in general. They moved to Atlanta about 7 years ago, and Charleston's loss has been Atlanta's gain.

Brian's brother Antony authored the tribute to their mother. It is short, very touching, and filled with essential wisdom.

May Hessie's family be comforted, and may we all be inspired to incorporate these lessons into our lives.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Scholar-in-Residence August 2009




Rabbi Yehoshua Steinman
of Boca Raton, Florida

Sponsored in memory of
Celia and Sol Cohen
by the Cohen families



A brief synopsis by Nathan Kirshstein

The first of the monthly Scholar in Residence Program of the West Ashley Minyan at the JCC was a resounding success. Rabbi Steinman, who has a Masters degree in Special Education, gave three talks, one during services Shabbos morning, a women’s class in the afternoon, and d’var torah at Shalosh Seudos.

For me, the most challenging of the discussions was at Shalosh Seudos, where he talked about leaders in the community. It is not only the job of leaders to inspire the community but (for) the community to inspire the leaders. We all too often hear of a “lack of leadership” in a community but it is also the congregation’s responsibility to “push” the leaders to movement. It takes good followers to make good leaders and it takes good leaders to make good followers; it is a symbiotic relationship.

The best part of the first “Climbing the Ladder” series was the camaraderie of the “WAM” (West Ashley Minyan); in fact, that is what makes every Shabbos at WAM so meaningful. Rabbi Steinman fit right in. The food was terrific, with the best Cholent (next to my wife’s - she might be reading this!) prepared by Marcie Rosenberg and her sou-chefs.

This would all have been impossible without the foresight of Arlene Rosenthal, who came up with idea of a monthly luncheon after Shabbos services.

The first monthly scholar-in-residence program was sponsored by the Sol and Celia Cohen Foundation, who were instrumental in Jewish education in Charleston, and through their foundation’s generosity, The West Ashley Minyan at the JCC was able to get a great start to the “Climbing the Ladder” Series. Also, thanks to Nick Muzin for asking Rabbi Steinman to come in and for hosting him.

I can’t wait for the next one . . .

It is only going to get better.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

WAM announces . . . .



Scholar-in-Residence

WAM has confirmed August 29th as their first
Scholar-in-Residence Shabbat.

Rabbi Yehoshua (Scottie) Steinman will be coming from Boca Raton, Florida, to spend Shabbat with WAM. He will participate in Saturday morning services and give a short sermon. There will then be kiddush followed by lunch, with an address from Rabbi Steinman during desert. If there are any specific topics you would like to hear, please let Nick (nickmuzin@gmail.com) know.

In order to keep costs down for the lunch, WAM's event organizers are again asking for volunteers to help shop, prepare and cook. We are trying to determine when would be most convenient for this - either Thursday afternoon (between 1:00pm and 3:30 pm) or Friday morning (between 8:30 and 11:00am.) The more volunteers we have, the quicker we will get through the work. Please let Arlene (arleneshawinsky@yahoo.com) know what your preference is.

Your check will be your reservation - $10 per adult and $5 for children between 4 and 13, capped at $25 per family. Make your check out to
Arlene Rosenthal and mail it to
2221 Portside Way, Charleston, SC 29407.

Thanks and looking forward to everyone participating.

Arlene, Edie, Janet, Marcie, Nick and Randy

Sunday, August 02, 2009

Snookered for Breakfast (past due)









July 2009



Dear friends and family,

Before I speak, I would just like to say a few words. Over the long course of the history of the Jewish people, many congregations have found themselves buffeted by the waves around them. ("Buffeted" means "bumped, or knocked about", not to be mixed up with how food is served at simchas.) Many a congregation has seen its numbers decline as population shifts and the tides of history have swept their membership to other places, even to other shores. At such times, the leadership of the mother-ship has to take a long hard look at the currents, and bravely steer a new course.

All too often, the sweep of history has turned too quickly for our people. But there have also been long periods of calm and prosperity that have none-the-less brought their own perplexing challenges. Aging congregations have seen their younger folk leave for larger cities and newer harbors in the suburbs, leaving the mothership aground on sterile sandbanks, with discomforting views of a sea of green.

Some have created grand theories to explain this phenumenon. I have heard it called the "Edifice Complex", which I think is a referrence to some construction on De Nile. Some have looked to Hollywood for inspiration, chanting "build it and they will come!" And then some die-hards have hatched elaborate schemes to create new enclaves, all the while blowing furiously into the wind.

The piece below is inspired by real events at a synagogue not far from here, but just a bit too far for me to walk there on Shabbos. The circumstances you will encounter when you read this piece are real. They reflect a desperate attempt, some forty years after the exodus began, to turn back time. But as we all know, tide and time wait for no-one. Still, they try!

You know, it reminds me of another story, from when I was doing my resident training in South Africa. This won't take very long, I promise. I was examining an x-ray of a patient's hip and saw something I felt needed to be explained before I finished my report. I left the reading room to ask the radiographers where the patient was. In response to my question "where is Mr Coetzee?" the reply came that "she" was in the next x-ray room.

I stumbled, mentally, you know?, on getting that answer, and insisted I was definitely "looking for a man". The radiographer assured me that the patient was indeed a woman, even though she had a man's name. Now I'm not the world's most innocent guy, but it seemed that growing up in the northern suburbs of a big sophisticated city had not really taught me everything yet, if you know what I mean!

I entered the x-ray room and approached the patient. As it turns out, she was just an ordinary-looking, regular, middle-aged lady. "Hullo, I am looking for Stephanus Coetzee?" The patient said that was she.

"But you have a man's name!" I didn't say this, of course. My Yecke upbringing has left me classier than to blurt out such exclamations! But I was very curious.

So, exercising great self-control, I steered the conversation to the medical issues and my questions arising from the x-ray. With the additional information, I was able to tell her what I saw on her x-ray and how this tied in to her present complaint. As we finished up the "professional" conversation, I asked, very politely, what people called her, did they call her "Stephanus"?

"No, they call me Stephanie." (What a relief!)

"So, may I ask why you were named ‘Stephanus’?"

Well, that was the name her father had put on the certificate when he went to register her birth, "but they did call me Stephanie right away." Her father, you see, had really, really wanted a boy. He used to say that since the first three were all girls, and he had been a patient and caring father, he thought he finally deserved a boy. Having faithfully played his part, he finally used the name he had been patiently waiting to use for all those years and all those children.

"and Never mind the Facts! " I thought to myself. (Again, I was resolutely restrained enough not to actually say this!)

"and I just never changed my official name," said Stephanie, and she really seemed quite content with this. So who am I to go making waves? We ended the conversation, said goodbye, and I left the x-ray room.

As I walked by the radiographers, I was still somewhat bemused, and I told them I could not really believe it, that I had just met a woman with a man's name!

Now, we have all heard the song about a "Boy named Sue", and it must be really hard to grow up with a name that clearly was meant to be applied only to members of the opposite sex, and I shudder to think of the impact of such things on a young person's soul, but (and this was without a pause) one of the radiographers piped up, "oh, that's nothing! My grandmother's name was DIRK!"

Look, I was already in my thirties, I had been to the army and to medical school, I had worked in the UK and traveled all over the world, how could I have missed this trend? Why was I still so unprepared?

You know, in retrospect, it's a miracle that change in South Africa was comparatively peaceful in the end, considering that the culture in power had been, so often, willing to decide things without regard to the facts on the ground. I guess that shows that time and again, history will just trip you up.

But I digest, I mean, digress. (Why are there so many words that look and sound so alike? And why are there some words with more than one meaning? Have you ever thought about these thinks?)

Anyway, I promised I wouldn't keep you long. Change comes slow in the humidity of the south, and just because you're old and declining, doesn't mean you can't try out a new model, business or otherwise. So, now that you know that the background is what to do about a declining shul, go ahead and read the piece. By the way, you will see I have signed it with a fictitious name. It's not that I have something to hide, I was just thinking, you know? Everyone needs a gnome de guerre . . .
___________



Snookered for Breakfast!

Not so SHY! or Retiring!

It's like this, you know? I had every intention of taking care of the things I have been putting off for awhile now. I had decided, when I got home that evening, I was finally going to get these things done. Not fixing a cabinet door, or cleaning out the garage, or applying for some insurance, but things I have been avoiding that needed to be done!

Then, just after I got home, my wife brought in the mail, and there was this offer. Look, with the economy the way it is, we probably won't be retiring for at least another 20 years, but it's never too early to think about your retirement . . . ask the punndits, that's what they say.

So the offer is for a place in a neighborhood, part of a development around a synagogue. It really is an exciting offer, so we had a bite to eat and got right down to it, filling out the application. On the spot . .

At the top of the questionaire it says -

Check all options that apply or fill out additional information where appropriate.

So we did!

We started with what we (meaning "she") want/s in the

Kitchen

Check all appliances / elements that you want in your kitchen. (Please specify gas or electric; give brand names/types if important).

[X] Range / Oven combination

[X] Cooktop (Type - induction, coils, etc) - we want gas, please!

[ ] Eye-height oven (no thanks, we want the one we checked above!)

[X] Sink (How many? Type of material ie stainless steel or porcelain) - 2 please!

[X] Combination refrigerator/freezer (Side by side? Freezer top? Icemaker?) Freezer below, and Icemaker, and with ice and water dispenser in the door!

[X] Dishwasher (How many?) - 2 please

[X] Microwave oven (Built in? Freestanding?) Built in, thanks

[X] Countertop (What material? i.e. granite, butcher block, etc) Silestone, please.

Hmm. That looks good, now onto the room for

Dining

1 Do you want one eating area (breakfast and dining combined) or more than one for different purposes (i.e. dining room for fine dining, nook for breakfast?)

more than 1; And . . . isn't that "snook! for breakfast"?

2 Will dining area be used during non-meal times? (If so, for what? I.e. as a work table, computer/laptop station?)

No

3 Do you want to see the kitchen from the eating area(s)? From any other areas?

(Here we had a bit of a difference. I said "no", but my wife said "yes".
I was filling the form out, so I wrote down . . ) "No!"

4 What kind of storage do you need near the dining area?

Access to the garage would be nice! (where else do you keep your spare freezers and refrigerators?)

With that done, we moved on to the

Living Room

1 Would you like a combined living- and dining-room or separate spaces?

combined

2 Describe the qualities you would like to experience in the living room?

Love and sensitivity; and my wife wants also "a view!"

3 How many people will be using the living room? Maximum number of people you would accomodate?

Everyone who gets invited! Do you want to come for Shabbos?

4 Will the living room accomodate a tv, extensive sound system and/or media center?

No, all of that will be in the family room!

The next heading was:

Home Office

1 Do you intend on working from home?

No, we intend on retiring.

2 Do you need space for office equipment?

No

3 How much space would you ideally need? (I.e. A whole room or an office nook)

. . . there's that ”nook" again?

and now, on to the coolest room in the house - the

Bathroom

1 How many full bathrooms would you ideally like? How many powder rooms?

bathrooms x 3, all en-suite, and powder room x 1 (to keep your powder dry!)

2 What sort of tub and shower arrangement do you prefer - separate or combined?

Separate, and don't use up all the hot water already!

Now we come to where you get your ZZZZZs, the

Sleeping Areas

1 How many bedrooms would you ideally like?

she says she wants 4

2 How big of a closet do you need in or near the sleeping area?

About 10 ' x 6', but bigger sometimes, it depends how big of a klutz you are!

3 Will most of your clothing be stored in the closet or in dressers/armoires?

In the closet, thanks!

Now to be practical! in the

Utility Room

1 Would you like space for a washer and dryer? (please specify full size or stackable). Do you need a sink?

Yes, full-size; Sink? I sink so!

2 Do you need storage space? Do you need space for ironing?

Apparently - "yes, yes, and yes!" (let's see Verizon sue me! bring it on! )

Transportation

How many parking spaces would you ideally like? Do you need space for a bicycle or motorbike?

Parking spaces x 4, and space for 2 bicycles; (parking is scarce downtown, we can use 2 and rent 2 out, like a new business model!)

and finally, the space you're longing and waiting for!

Community Space!

Would you like there to be exercise equipment?

Huh? In the Shul?

Would you like there to be space to use for a party, for tv viewing, meetings, etc

What about the social hall?

_________________________

Well, that wraps it all up. I tell you, this is so exiting! If you need a copy to fill out, please let me know. What are you doing for your retirement?

I can't wait ... Now you's all come back'n seeyus!

Shalom, shalom

from: Doug Phishman, MP

___________________

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Tisha B'Av observances

Tisha B'Av is observed this week begining Wednesday evening, July 29, through Thursday evening, July 30th.

Some previously published times for the Charleston community were incorrect. Below are the correct times to observe.

The fast of Tisha B'Av begins Wednesday at 8:20 PM

BSBI service times for Tisha B'Av:
Wednesday July 29
, Mincha is at 8:10 PM
Thursday July 30
- Shacharit 8:30 am
- Chatzot 1:25 pm
- Video Presentation 6:15 pm
- Mincha 7:40 pm

The Fast ends Thursday at 8:55 PM

Friday, July 17, 2009

President addresses NAACP

Report of President Obama's address to the NAACP - reflecting on the present while looking back 100 years.

"Teach your children" videos on deezer.com

Listen to CSNYs classics on their official web page.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

WAM meeting Wed 15 th

West Ashley Minyan meeting at 7:30 pm in the Sherman House Recreation Room

Subject: Following up on the long range planning resolution adopted in Feb 2009

All WAM participants should attend

Sunday, July 05, 2009

"When you've fallen awake . . ."










Have you ever fallen awake with that odd sensation that you just visited another dimension? You had still been you, but in another context, with maybe different people, different relationships, in a different place or time, and with a whole other mindset in place as you dealt with "other-worldly" challenges.

Dreams can be strange things, and our brains seem to process them with all of our sensorial sound-tracks playing. That's what makes our dreams seem so real, when we are dreaming them.


And have you noticed how the feelings of that "other world" can stay with you for a while? Why is this so?

The transporting of our emotions and frame of referrence also occurs when we follow a story with our imaginations - whether in a book, a movie or a play. Have you ever woken up the next day, and felt the echos of that experience softly sounding in your head, or touching at your heart?

Why do these things happen? Why do the emotions persist?

Well, there are several answers to this. First, our emotions tend to bounce around inside us, as if within an echochamber. This takes place in a part of the brain called the limbic system. There are loops in the limbic system.

Most of the time, the echoes slowly fade. In post-traumatic stress conditions, the echoes may persist, or can be suddenly fully re-instated (a.k.a. "flashbacks"). In the course of life, our interaction with the real world resonates in this same place, and it serves as a store of memory, context and identity that help us negotiate the paths of our lives each day.

So, on this level, most of the time, the resonance of our experience is adaptive, and it is easy to imagine how it protected us way back on the savannah, or when our ancestors lived in caves. If you had an encounter with a predator one day, your chances of surviving the next day are improved if you maintain a record of the encounter - that thing called "experience", including the perception and fear of danger, in your consciousness and make your plans accordingly.

The question is, is there any value to being able to step into "another world", to encounter, experience and react to a different reality?

Again, many answers could apply. For one, our imaginations allow us to explore, in our consciousness, the impact of a given decision or action, without necessarily taking a definitive step in the real world. We can imagine continuing as we are, or making some change, and compare the outcomes, and how they might make us feel. We can bring rational arguments to the decision/s, and the consider the emotional responses that may accompany them. And we can then weigh up their impact holistically, in rational terms, and in terms of their potential effects on our psyche.

But these responses may not always be adaptive. From the current news comes a case in point - the case of Gov. Mark Sanford. As Maureen Dowd's article so cleverly points out, Sanford has come unstuck trying to merge two incompatible realities. The article is hilarious, and Sanford's quandry is full of irony, and large measures of sublime (divine?) justice. But the phenomenon he is dealing with is very instructive.

The lessons for the rest of us are many. For one, we should use our capacities for imagining other possibilities to the full, but beware the consequences of action, or inaction, as the case may be. There are boundless possibilities, some creative and transformative*, others run deep with the risk of self-destruction. For those seemingly locked inside painful realities, such as an abusive relationship, with the sense that there is no way out, that things cannot be changed, that there can be no other reality, one must learn that there are possibilities for change and for hope.

Most importantly, we must recognize that our "realities" are fragile. We should exercise due caution and our best judgement at all times, and not let the fragility of our world make us fearful. This is how I understand the song we sing on Shabbat: "the world is (like) a narrow bridge, and the key is not to be afraid".

Decide carefully, for the betterment of yourself and those who depend on you,

Shavuah Tov, have a good week.
________________
Links to explore:

* a transformative example - Johnny Clegg

the world is a narrow bridge - songs by Craig Taubman

"fallen awake" - Jethro Tull Lyrics:



Life Is A Long Song

When you're falling awake and you take stock of the new day,
and you hear your voice croak as you choke on what you need to say,
well, don't you fret, don't you fear,
I will give you good cheer.

Life's a long song.
Life's a long song.
Life's a long song.

If you wait then your plate I will fill.

As the verses unfold and your soul suffers the long day,
and the twelve o'clock gloom spins the room,
you struggle on your way.
Well, don't you sigh, don't you cry,
lick the dust from your eye.

Life's a long song.
Life's a long song.
Life's a long song.

We will meet in the sweet light of dawn.

As the Baker Street train spills your pain all over your new dress,
and the symphony sounds underground put you under duress,
well don't you squeal as the heel grinds you under the wheel.

Life's a long song.
Life's a long song.
Life's a long song.

But the tune ends too soon for us all.
_______________________________

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Healthcare reform - where the US squanders its dollars

Did I say there was a lot going on?

Here is a look at regional healthcare - a comparison of major centers around the country, in a recent article in Time by Michael Grunwald.

The title is:

More Data + Less Care = Lower Cost + Better Health

It includes a comparison of major hospitals around the country, and highlights tremendous differences in costs, quantity, quality and outcomes.

The Mayo Clinic has the lowest costs overall, and who would doubt the quality of the care the Mayo system provides? On the one hand, why is Mayo so much less costly than other centers? On the other, Mayo loses almost 50% on the dollar of the care it provides for Medicare services. This gives you some idea how far from sustainability healthcare in the US is as presently funded.

Then there is the practice of charging medical insurers more to subsidize the care provided at a loss. All hospitals do this, and it represents a "stealth tax". Who bears the brunt of this "tax"? Businesses do, and the employees who are nowing picking up more of their own premium costs as businesses pull back.

Critics of healthcare reform say the government should stay out of healthcare. Too late, really, and also not very fair. If you consider that the federal goverment already funds medicare, medicaid and the VA, nearly half the country is already on the government tab. It seems unfair to have the government responsible for one half, and not the other, especially when the insured segment is subject to that stealth tax. That stealth tax not only provides for the losses due to underpayment by medicare, but it covers the care of the uninsured across the system.

In one respect, Healthcare reform is not about raising taxes, but shifting from a system of "secret taxes" to one in which there is fair coverage and fuller transparency. A system that is fairer to all citizens, and where dollars are spent on healthcare, not insurance administration, a large part of which is geared to refusing payment for care already provided.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Monday, June 15, 2009

Lots of action, lately . . .

*
Can't keep up with this all.

Here is just a short list:

An interesting turn in the elections in Lebanon, mentioned in 2 articles by Thomas Friedman. The most recent is "Winds of Change", an overview of current suprising trends in Lebanon, Iraq and Iran. Before that, "Ballots over Bullets", on the Elections in Lebanon. One point that comes out is that there has been a backlash against extremism in several places. In regard to Lebanon, the population has taken a second look at Hizballah and the way it incited a war with Israel, to the detriment of the Lebanese at large.

There is a current backlash against the Taliban in Pakistan too.

Then there is Colbert in Iraq, just tune in to comedy central online. Best line - Obama's "big e" response on the first night.

Then there is the problem of domestic terrorism, whether it is at the Holocaust Museum or an abortion clinic, the fringe right is spiralling out of control. This is not good, and good people need to be heard on these matters.

Last, but not least, there is the peace process - Obama from Cairo, Bibi on a "two-state solution". And other perspectives abound: Klein in Time - "talking to Hamas".

Don't forget to take out the trash, and feed the dog.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Lion in a garage . . .

*
Look, man, it's enough to give you a Skrik!



Well, if you look at it quickly, you might get a skrik, but if you look longer, you might see it is a bit small, you know, maybe a pigmy lion!
But the truth is simpler. A shop owner in Brakpan, South Africa, was tired of people breaking into his yard, so he came up with the idea of shaving his dog like a lion.
Everyone in SA knows a lion! when they see one.
So now he has no problem with break-ins! That's South African ingenuity – as the saying goes, " 'n Boer maak ‘n plan ” (A farmer finds a solution.)

Ek se vir jou nou, my vriend! Don't go looking at me in that tone of voice!

***


PS - and so, from a wild dog to a wild goose

Monday, April 13, 2009

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

News from the Gidmeister!


Volunteering At The Cartoon Museum

Our advertisers hard at work!


Vandelay Advertising is proud to announce the start of their recent project with the Israel Museum of Caricatures and Comics. Founded at 9:40 a.m. in the Bat Yam office by Year Course participants, Gideon Rosenthal ( Charleston , SC ) and Adam Hauptman ( Jersey ), Vandelay is dedicated to the promotion of the museum worldwide. The co-entrepreneurs recently visited the museum and observed a guided tour by Dorit Maya-Gur, 28. The Israeli born artist spent some time in New York where she invented the Israeli cartoon character, Falafel Man, who has the ability to throw deadly falafel balls. "Meeting with the creator of one of Israel 's cartoon artists was really interesting, and it was great to learn that comics are gaining popularity here," says Hauptman.



While his co-President in PR was excited about the lighter cartoons, Rosenthal was moved by the political cartoons the museum had to offer. "The night before going to the museum we watched "Waltz with Bashir" (the Israeli animated documentary on the 1982 Lebanon ), which got me focused on the political and social affect cartoons can have. In the museum they have an entire section dedicated to political satire, including a wall for Gilad Shalit which was relevant because of the rally we recently attended in support of his release." For now, the dynamic duo is working on just getting the word out to the public through various outlets such as Facebook and street flyers. They could tell you all that is in store for the museum, but then of course, they'd have to release Falafel Man on you. Hooray!

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Yiddish on the BBC !

A program on the fortunes of the Yiddish language -

A Struggle for Survival

And a slideshow inspired by Yiddish and its influence on American culture, especially on music in turn of century New York in the 1900's

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

. . take a walk by the old school . .

For those who think now is a good time to go back to school, maybe you should consider a masters degree in Beatlemania.

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Haman - noise!

some real purim fun

Purim Sameach to you all

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Friday, February 20, 2009

" . . this deficit . . "

worth watching - again and again

Obama addresses the reasons for urgency in getting "stimulus" package into law

Monday, February 16, 2009

Sunday, February 08, 2009

WAM and the Long Range Plan







WAM! 3 years on

We are in that period of the year when we celebrate (or ignore) the anniversaries of some interrelated events. On the last Sunday of January 2006, BSBI had a meeting to decide its location issue. It was a tumultuous event, and a good many good people were very offended and disheartened at its outcome.

In reaction to this, and to the need to find a place to pray without distressing distractions, you know, like memories of the meeting, a group began holding Shabbat services in a private home in the vicinity of Charleston's JCC. The first such service was held a week or two into February. That group became the New West Ashley Minyan, aka WAM, which will be 3 years young by the end of this week.

The growth of this group has been a special experience. WAM is more than anyone thought it might be. But as we reach this milestone, there is a shadow hovering over us.

In order to shed light on the issues at play, I present here the letter I wrote to the Long Range Committtee that was set up recently to investigate options for WAM's direction. The purpose of the committee was to provide a detailed appraisal of WAM's potential, and review scenarios of its future, in order to optimize what we are doing in the here-and-now. Such proceedings are always fraught with risk. You see, it's really about the "Hear-and-Now"!

Editor's note: I was requested to soften some of my remarks regarding BSBI. I have complied with this request, and have noted changes from the original text with this [device].

*****************************
Dec 14, 2008

To my Dear Fellow Wammers,

Here follow some thoughts I have on the matter of long-range plans.

First, I offer a vote of thanks to Ken for chairing these deliberations. Let's hope the discussions take place in a spirit of reaching a clear understanding of the different thoughts circulating among us. I believe the general options under consideration have been framed as the following:

1) nurture WAM as is,
2) expand and form a new shul, or
3) reconcile with and rejoin BSBI.

I do not see these as mutually exclusive options. It's more a matter of sequence and timing, and in my view the order is just as it stands above.

I have chosen not to participate directly in Ken's committee for two main reasons - personal time constraints, and the sense that we are really best positioned to maintain WAM as it is.

Maintaining WAM as it is at present is nothing to be scoffed at. First, I feel privileged to be part of this group, and to be helping provide the framework for Sabbath observance in the JCC area. I would have loved to have had this when my boys were growing up, and I take personal pride and joy in seeing other young families enjoying this opportunity. In addition, both those who are observant, and those who are not, have given others the opportunity to buy homes, and settle into the community in ways that were previously unavailable to them. Expanding Jewish choices in Charleston is a win-win for all.

In fact, a key element in this process is that WAM has drawn a range of people, of different levels of observance, to participate. Slowly but surely, new people are showing up at our services. All the while, everyone has been left to define (or redefine) their relationship/s with BSBI, each as each sees fit. Just as there is no compulsion to participate - participation in WAM is, first and foremost, by individual choice; so too, there should be no compulsion regarding BSBI - no compulsion to remain members of BSBI, and no compulsion to resign your membership. That flexibility is a very important piece of WAM's uniquely cohesive, living-jigsaw-puzzle. WAM must be nurtured and cultivated with the same care one provides all living things. So, in my estimation, we are in phase 1 - maintaining and growing WAM.

I will now briefly address phase 2 - Expanding and building a new shul. In very simple terms, this is also a simple sequence, based on the notion that the key to what you can do depends on your ability to sustain your regular operations. The core functions of a shul begin with regular Shabbat services. Once you have the basis to cover those costs, the next cost-effective step is to hire a rabbi. In this framework, you need to be sure you will have sufficient money to run your operations for between 3 and 5 years. If you want to build a shul by putting up a building, you need to know that you can sustain running it for 10 to 15 years. That is why renting space and holding services comes way before building, and why hiring a rabbi comes before committing to a building as well.

A quick look around shul at WAM, and you will see that we have about 24 family units at present. How many do you need to hire a rabbi? I would say at least 40, but preferably 50. So I would be very careful about doing this in the wrong order (i.e. building first) or doing it too soon - before you have something like the numbers above. The last thing we need is to paint ourselves into a corner, where we have to hunt around and beg for money to run something we set up that is beyond our means. In a word, we must hold to that which is sustainable.

So for me, phase 3 is rejoining BSBI. As with everything, there is a kernel at the heart of the matter. In the case of BSBI, that kernel is the notion that "process" speaks to the "spirit" of the institution. [ With regard to ] BSBI's governance [there is much that needs to be redressed.] BSBI no longer provides meaningfully for the Sabbath observances of its core contingent - the Sabbath observant. In so doing, BSBI fails to comply with its own mission statements. Until such time as BSBI gets back in sync with its own mission, there is no sense in striving for reconciliation.

Those who seek to reconcile with BSBI as their primary goal for WAM need to recognize the facts as they are. The fault that prevents WAM and BSBI from reconciling is not within WAM, but within BSBI. I do not wish to discourage anyone from seeking reconciliation. I respect their right to work as hard as they can to achieve their goals. They can remain members of BSBI, and participate in all its functions as much as they choose. They can encourage others to do the same, but there should be no coercion. All that I do ask is that they recognize in which forum their efforts must be exercised. The fault lies [with] BSBI, so please address this and correct it within BSBI. WAM should not stoop to rejoin a flawed, dysfunctional [ ] institution.

In contrast, within WAM, we are building something fresh, something new and something integral and true. To succeed and to preserve this essence, we must not rejoin BSBI until BSBI is fixed. Dragging WAM into BSBI before BSBI is fully healed is simply not an option now. We do need to keep an eye out for when that change comes, but we know it will not be soon.

Now, just a brief comment on how we sustain ourselves financially, and cover WAM's operating costs. At about the time we began renting space at the JCC (2 and a half years ago), I was contacted and asked if I was willing to pay a regular amount to the JCC to support that rental, which I have done. I believe others were asked as well. This issue needs to be revisited by WAM, possibly within the long range committee discussions, but certainly at the next general WAM meeting. Pledges for WAM's rental and other expenses need to be renewed soon, and preferably annually.

By way of closing, let's always keep before us the recognition that WAM is almost what it is sometimes called - a "family". Families strive to stay together, and members of families try to care for, and respect each other, so that all feel valued, nurtured and encouraged to grow. Let us be duly cautious about any changes we embark on in this context.

Respectfully,


Peter Rosenthal

Thursday, January 22, 2009

"We are one!"

Washington sunrise - Photograph by David Taylor Jr.
_____________________________

Time for a change up. I have added a new song to the Forum playlist, in honor of the presidential inauguration. It is a small world we live in, and our dreams are shared.

The song is by Johhny Clegg, originally with Sipho in the band "Juluka", but other versions followed. I hope you like it. It pulses with energy, optimism and hope:

Scatterlings of Africa
(An excerpt from the lyrics here)

Ancient bones from Olduvai
Echoes of the very first cry
"Who made me, here and why? --
Beneath this copper sun."
My very first beginnings
Beneath the copper sky
Lie deeply buried
In the dust of Olduvai

And we are scatterlings of Africa
Both you and I
We are on the road to Phelamanga*
Beneath a copper sky
And we are scatterlings of Africa
On a journey to the stars
Far below we leave forever
Dreams of what we were


and links to more will follow:
If you missed the special on HBO,
you can still watch it online:
* Phelamanga, where the world began

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Cease-fires in Gaza

Cease-fire shaky. Rockets still being fired

Story Highlights
NEW: Cease-fire covers all armed Palestinian factions, CNN reports

Gaza militants launch rockets at Israel hours after Israel announces cease-fire

Israeli spokesman: No one injured in latest attack

For the latest from the Jerusalem Post

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

The Case For . . .

. . . Learning from Europe?

You can't be serious! Well, maybe McEnroe can't, but yes, we can!

Here is the key quote from Jeffrey Sach's article in Time -

The case for Bigger Government.
The European strategy, with levels of taxation and government spending roughly 8% to 10% of GDP higher than in the U.S., has many successes to show for it: less costly and more reliable health care, the elimination of hard-core poverty, solid educational achievements, and social services that ensure better care for children and more flexibility for mothers and the elderly.

As we sit in the hole dug with the tools of trickle-down economics, let's finally sober up. The true measure of our society's values is how well we care for those among us who are most vulnerable.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Vaccines and the Halachah

from the most recent "Jewish Action" from the OU

The Torah gives license to the physician to heal the sick, but does it give him license to bestow illness upon the healthy, albeit for an ultimate cure?
For the full article, use this link: Edward Reichman MD.

(This article is good for 1 hour CRE*)

Op - Ed from Leah in the Post and Courier

This past weekend's offensive was exactly what Hamas wanted. By deliberately refusing to honor and abide by the understanding negotiated by Egypt, they caused a conflict that Israel did not seek.

for the full article, click on this link: Leah Chase