Category Archives: Events
THE BAR MITZVAH IS ALMOST HERE
Friends and Family;
I would like to first apologize for sending a group email, but there is a lot to do before the Bar Mitzvah this coming Saturday! We are looking so very forward to seeing all of you. Wendy and I wanted to send out a brief note summarizing all the activities we are planning between now and Sunday. I know that all of you won’t be coming to all of the events, but we did want to get something out confirming times and logistics!
• Max’s Bar Mitzvah service will be on the morning of Saturday, December 28 at 10am in the Panorama Room upstairs at the Great Falls International Airport. Please park in the short-term parking lot, you will receive a parking validation token that will allow you to leave the lot free of charge. Lunch will follow in the same room.
• Max’s Bar Mitzvah project is a food drive for the Food Bank/East Middle School Food Pantry. If you like, please bring items of canned or boxed food to donate to the lunch.
In addition to the Bar Mitzvah itself, we are organizing and hosting several other get-togethers:
• There will be a short kabbalat shabbat service in the meeting room at the La Quinta Inn on Friday, December 27 at 4:30pm. There will be very limited seating in that room, but please feel free to come if you like.
• At 6pm on Friday, December 27 we will be hosting a dinner at Maple Garden Restaurant, 5401 9th Ave S. The dinner will be a chinese buffet, with plenty of vegetarian options.
• On the evening of December 28, there will be a dinner in honor of Max’s accomplishment at the Hilton Garden Inn, 2520 14th Street SW at 6pm.
• Sunday, December 29 will a fun day of skiing and other activities in the Little Belt Mountains! There are a number of recreational activities in the Little Belt Mountains. In addition to downhill skiing at Showdown, there are snowshoeing and cross country skiing opportunities. There is also a wonderful hot springs in the town of White Sulphur Springs.
After the Showdown lifts close at 4pm, we will be hosting a pizza party in the T-bar at Showdown. We hope you will join us then!
For those of you who want to ski, I have arranged for group rates at Showdown. You can let me know if you want to ski as late as Saturday evening, but I will need your payment by then. The options are as follows:
Group Lift Tickets
Adult All Area (13-69) $34
Jr All Area (6-12) $20
Sr All Area (70+) $25
Beginner Lift Only $20
5 & under Free
Magic Carpet Only Free
Group Rental
Skis, Boots and Poles, Full Day $18
Snowboard and Boots, Full Day $30
Group Lessons
Learn to Ski $30 or Learn to Snowboard $40
2 Hour Group Lesson $10
Daily at 10:30 or 1:30 (Skiers 7+, and Snowboarders 11+)
The “Learn to Ski or Snowboard” package includes a lesson, beginner chair lift ticket and your rentals. It is designed for first-timers.
We are so thrilled that you will be joining us to help mark and celebrate Max’s simcha!
B”Shalom,
Aaron and Wendy
CANDLELIGHTING AT STATE CAPITOL
The Channukah lighting will take place at the State Capitol in Helena tomorrow, December 2 at 12 noon. Candle lighting will take place in the old Supreme Court Room, #303, not in the rotunda. (There was a previously scheduled World Aids Day event that will be setting up in the rotunda.) The governor is scheduled to address us at 12:15. The room is available starting at 11 and I plan to be there at that time.
A board meeting will take place in room 152 following the ceremonies. Please let me know if you plan to be there and if not, whether you want to participate by conference call.
Thank you and see some of you tomorrow.
Bert Chessin
406.531.5193
CALENDAR OF UPCOMING EVENTS
Please mark your calendars to remind you of these upcoming events.
- Wednesday, 11/27/2013—Thursday, 12/05/2013: Chanukkah.
- Wednesday evening, 11/27/2013, 5:30 P.M.: Erev Chanukah. Lighting the first candle of the Diane Kaplan Memorial Chanukkiah at the Civic Center. If you come at 5:30.30, you’ll probably miss it, especially if it is cold. We will light each successive candle on each successive night of Chanukah at precisely 5:30 P.M.
- Thursday, 11/28/2013: Thanksgiving, and the first day of Chanukah. We will light the second candle at precisely 5:30 P.M.
- Sunday, 12/01/2013, 2:30 P.M.: Thanksgivukkah party at the home of Stuart and Hilary Lewin, concluding with the 5:30 lighting of the fifth candle of the Diane Kaplan Memorial Channukiah at the Civic Center.
- Monday, 12/02/2013, 12:00 noon: MAJCO Candle lighting at the State Capitol in Helena.
MAX’S BAR MITZVAH IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER!
Can you believe it has been over 2 years since Sarah’s bat mitzvah? Max’s bar mitzvah is just around the corner – December 28th, 2013. You should have received your invitation in the mail by now. If not, please call or e-mail Wendy (wendy@weissman.com or 727-4098). We will need to know what events you are coming to so that we can give counts to the caterers.
As his community service project, Max will be collecting canned food and making baskets out of them to use as table decorations at the luncheon for his bar mitzvah. After the lunch, the baskets will be donated to the East Middle School food pantry.
We are asking, if you are able and willing, to donate food and/or baskets, bows, ribbon and wrapping. We also will need help assembling the baskets. Assembly will be at the Washington School at 4 PM on Monday, December 23rd. Please call or e-mail Wendy (wendy@weissman.com or 727-4098) to donate items or to help. We will be serving pizza during the assembly of the baskets so please let me know if you are coming so that we have enough food.
We look forward to seeing you all at the bar mitzvah!
In the meantime, Happy Hanukkah!
Wendy
MORE ABOUT THANKSGIVUKKAH
Hanukkah and Thanksgiving Take Place at the Same Time This Year, So Celebrate Thanksgivukkah
John Farrier
From Neatorama
In 167 B.C.E., Antiochus IV Epiphanes, the ruler of the Seleucid Empire, tried to compel the Jews in Judah to give up their religious customs and values. They rose up in rebellion for seven years in what became known as the Maccabean Revolt. Once they liberated Jerusalem, they set about purifying the Temple. This eight day event is marked by the Jewish festival of Hanukkah.
This year, Hanukkah lasts from November 27 to December 5. The American Christian (albeit secularized) holiday of Thanksgiving marks a 1621 feast celebrated by the colonists at Plymouth, Massachusetts. It falls on November 28 this year. For the first time since 1888, the two holidays overlap. Some Americans have taken to calling November 28 “Thanksgivukkah.” The event is inspiring creative responses among celebrants:
Not to be outdone is Asher Weintraub, a 9-year-old New Yorker who has created what he dubs the Menurkey—a menorah, the candelabrum that is the centerpiece of the holiday, in the shape of a turkey. With help from his filmmaker parents, Asher funded his project with a successful $25,000 campaign on Kickstarter, a fundraising website, over the summer (it netted $48,345). The family is now hoping to sell as many as 2,500 of his creation in versions both ceramic (for $150) and plaster ($50).
The Weintraubs are also expanding on the concept in other ways, from a Menurkey iPhone app to a Menurkey theme song. Sample lyric: “Thanksgiving and Hanukkah, come light the Menurkey. Once in a lifetime, the candles meet the turkey.”
Part of what’s driving the Thanksgivukkah fervor is that Hanukkah is a holiday “with room for creativity,” says Jennie Rivlin Roberts, founder of ModernTribe.com, an online store that specializes in contemporary Jewish items. Ms. Roberts own contribution? A game called No Limit Texas Dreidel that she started marketing in 2007—it is a modern take on the holiday pastime of spinning the dreidel, a kind of Hanukkah-themed top. […]
Synagogues and Jewish organizations are also joining in the Thanksgivukkah chorus. In Boston, Combined Jewish Philanthropies, a local fundraising group, has created a website, ThanksgivukkahBoston.com, to promote the holiday and suggest ways to celebrate it (one example: making Hanukkah-themed corn-husk dolls). As project director Jeff Levy explains, the occasion is too significant to go unheeded. “This is like the new millennium,” he says.
At Temple Beth Sholom in Santa Ana, Calif., synagogue member Hollis O’Brien, a caterer, is leading a Thanksgivukkah cooking class at the end of October, replete with recipe tips for such hybridized holiday dishes as sweet-potato latkes and a Jewish-style brisket with a cranberry glaze. And since doughnuts are also popular at Hanukkah as part of the holiday’s emphasis on oil and fried foods, Ms. O’Brien has plans to showcase them as well. “Usually, I fill them with strawberry jelly, but this year, I’m going to use pumpkin cream,” she says.
Published: Friday, 11 Oct 2013 | 9:20 AM ETBy: Ben Popken
Jim Seida | NBC
Hanukkah and Thanksgiving mashup to create ‘Thanksgivukkah’
Chefs prepare a special “Thanksgivukkah” menu in the kitchen at Kutsher’s Tribeca in New York City to celebrate the rare convergence of Hanukkah and Thanksgiving.In a once-in-a-lifetime convergence of calendars, Hanukkah and Thanksgiving fall on the same day this year. But rather than choose between which holiday to celebrate, some families are saying “more please” to both. That means sweet potato latkes and challah-stuffed turkey is getting served up beside a cornucopia overflowing with chocolate gelt, lit by the flickering of a turkey-shaped menorah.
Happy “Thanksgivukkah!”
Because the Jewish and Gregorian calendars aren’t calculated the same way, Hanukkah shows up at a different times each year. Usually the eight-day Jewish Festival of Lights happens in December, but this year, it falls on Turkey Day. The convergence has only happened once before, in 1888, and won’t be seen again until 2070 and again in 2165, according to calculations by Jonathan Mizrahi, a quantum physicist at the Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico. After that, the two holidays aren’t set to overlap until 76,695.
So if you ever wondered what turkey would taste like if it had a little more “schmaltz” — rendered chicken fat, a staple of traditional Jewish cuisine —— this is the year.
Trish Meyers, a 41-year old stay-at-home mom in Brandon, Fla., already has in mind to put together eight turkey-shaped tapers in her house to create a crossover menorah. She was brought up Christian and her husband is Jewish. Normally the Meyerses and their two daughters, 12 and 19, observe Hanukkah at home, and then visit family for Thanksgiving. This year, they’re hosting both for all 20 guests. It will be the first time Trish’s side of the family has experienced a Hanukkah celebration.
Besides dreidel spinning and songs, bourbon sweet potato kugel, cranberry brisket sliders and challah-stuffed turkey are on order, combining cuisines from both menus into single dishes.
Meyers sees the stories of the Maccabees and Pilgrims as natural compliments.
“They were both being religiously persecuted,” she said, “both celebrate overcoming a struggle…and being thankful.”
Not to mention, “both involve an incredible amount of food,” said Scott Goldshine, general manager of Zabar’s specialty Jewish and luxury food store. The combined demand will definitely leave his workers tired at the end of the week, he said. “We’ve been discussing the whole thing for months, everyone is concerned.”
In the kitchen at Kutsher’s Tribeca in New York City, flames sprang over pan-fried turkey and a sous-chef ladled schmaltz on chopped challah stuffing. Owner Zach Kutsher said dinner reservations are already filling the books for its special “Thanksgivukkah” menu. The three-course meal features sliced turkey and brisket, sweet potato latkes with sour cream and cranberry compote, pumpkin shlishkes, cranberry-raspberry jelly-filled sufganiyot with chocolate “gelt” sauce, cheesy spaetzle kugel, and challah chestnut stuffing.
Instead of individual composed plates, the dishes will be served family style, said Kutsher, to encourage his diners to say, “Oh can you pass this,” just like at home.
Food purveyors aren’t the only ones getting in on the entrepreneurial action surrounding the holiday combo.
A 9-year old boy from New York City invented the “Menurkey” and raised $48,000 on Kickstarter to get production going for his Turkey-shaped menorah. There’s also greeting cards, posters, and a Woodstock-inspired T-shirt featuring a turkey on a guitar neck proclaiming “8 Days of Light, Liberty, & Latkes.”
Synagogues are also joining in the fun. At the Temple Isiah in Los Angeles, Cantor Tifani Coyot is writing Thanksgivukkah mashups for the choir to sing the Friday night after Thanksgiving, mixing together lyrics between traditional Jewish songs and spirituals that have a theme of giving thanks.
“We’re trying to bring in some themes of gratitude and giving thanks into the Shabbat service Friday night and combine the values of both holidays,” said Coyot.
However, the combined celebration poses the threat of a jam for businesses trying to accommodate both holidays.
Amtrak spokesman Cliff Cole said the day before Thanksgiving is usually their busiest day of travel, which is also the start of the eight nights of Hanukkah. “We encourage those who are planning on using Amtrak for the Thanksgiving/Hanukkah holidays to reserve their seats well in advance of their departure dates,” said Cole.
Families looking to save travel hassle might be well advised to leave that Tuesday, said Tom Parsons, CEO of bestfares.com. For those flying, leaving the Monday before and coming back the following week on a Tuesday you’ll find the lowest fares and fewest crowds.
Meanwhile, Goldshine said his customers at Zabar’s have been peppering him with questions about how the store will handle serving both celebrations at once.
“They’re all nervous. ‘Are you going to do one or the other?’ We’re going to do them both,” said Goldshine. “It’s a great week for us — and a terrible week.”
—By NBC TODAY.com’s Ben Popken.
CALENDAR OF UPCOMING EVENTS
Please mark your calendars to remind you of these upcoming events.
- Sunday, 11/03/2013: Daylight Savings Time ends.
- Wednesday, 11/27/2013—Thursday, 12/05/2013: Chanukkah.
- Wednesday evening, 11/27/2013, 5:30 P.M.: Erev Channukkah. Lighting the first candle of the Diane Kaplan Memorial Chanukkiah at the Civic Center. If you come at 5:30.30, you’ll probably miss it, especially if it is cold. We will light each successive candle on each successive night of Chanukkah at precisely 5:30 P.M.
- Thursday, 11/28/2013: Thanksgiving.
- Sunday, 12/01/2013, 2:30 P.M.: Thanksgivukkah party at the home of Stuart and Hilary Lewin, concluding with the 5:30 lighting of the fifth candle of the Diane Kaplan Memorial Channukiah at the Civic Center.
- Friday, 12/27/2013–Sunday, 12/29/2013: The week end of the Bar Mitzvah of Max Weissman, to be celebrated on 12/28/2013.
- Sunday, 03/09/2014: Daylight Savings Time Begins.
- Sunday, 03/16/2014: Purim.
- Friday, 03/28/2014: Week end with Student Rabbi Bess Wohlner.
- Monday, 04/14/2013—Tuesday, 04/22/2013: Passover.
- Tuesday, 04/15/2014: Aitz Chaim Community Passover Seder, Second Night of Passover, place and time TBA.
- Sunday, 05/18/2014: Lag B/omer (bonfire)
- Tuesday, 06/03/2014: Erev Shavuot.
- Wednesday, 06/03/2014—Thursday, 06/05/2014: Shavuot (reading the book of Ruth)
- Early or late Summer, 2014: MAJCO Shabbaton, hosted by Aitz Chaim, place and time TBA.
WEEK END OF OCTOBER 11, 2013
Here is the schedule for the week end of October 11, 2013.
- Friday evening, 7:30 P.M.: Shabbat Services led by Student Rabbi Bess Wohlner at The Bethel. Oneg to follow.
- Saturday morning, 10:00 A.M.: Torah study led by Student Rabbi Bess Wohlner at the Bethel.
- Saturday evening, 5:30 P.M.: Community milchig Potluck and Adult discussion led by Student Rabbi Bess Wohlner at the bethel. Please bring a dairy dish to share.
The address of the Bethel is 1009 18th Avenue southwest. Click here for map and directions.
