Category Archives: 2013
WHAT IS MAJCO?
Montana Association of Jewish Communities (MAJCO) is an umbrella organization that represents Jewish communities across the length and breadth of the great state of Montana. Membership in MAJCO is open to any Jewish community; whatever the denomination; within Montana.
Small Jewish communities in rural areas do not exist in a vacuum. Over two decades ago, the Jewish communities throughout the state created MAJCO, an association of all the organized Montana Jewish communities. Through MAJCO, we keep in touch and have created a community throughout this great big beautiful state.
The Jewish communities in the Big Sky, from East to West, include:
- Congregation Beth Aaron, Billings
- Congregation Beth Shalom, Bozeman
- Congregation Aitz Chaim, Great Falls
- Helena Jewish Community, Helena
- Congregation B’nai Israel, Butte
- Congregation Har Shalom, Missoula
- Congregation Bet Harim, Kalispell
- Synagogue of the Northern Rockies, Whitefish
- Chabad Lubavitch, Statewide
SHANA TOVA!
Dip your apple in the honey, and carry the sweetnesss with you all through the year. May this new year be a good year for all of you! from Bruce and Joy
5774 YOM KIPPUR SCHEDULE
Todah Robah to the following Congregation members who have offered their hospitality to Student Rabbi Bess Wohlner during Yom Kippur.
Airport Pickup: Marty Foxman
Dinner host for Erev Yom Kippur: Don and Helen Cherry
5774 YOM KIPPUR SCHEDULE
The address of the Bethel is 1009 18th Avenue southwest. Click here for map and directions.
ROSH HASHANAH WISHES
I got this from the Hadassah web site. Hope you enjoy the recipe and have a wonderful year to come.
Love
Jerry & Nadyne
Rosh Hashanah: More Than Just a Happy New Year
As we wish everyone a “sweet New Year” and snack on delicious apples dipped in honey, we might be tempted to believe that Rosh Hashanah is strictly a holiday of happiness and celebration. But in truth, the Jewish New Year, observed on the first and second days of Tishrei, is actually a dual-natured holiday – at once joyous and solemn, celebratory and introspective. Indeed, while the community certainly rejoices at the beginning of a new calendar, the holiday is rife with customs encouraging more serious introspection and personal change. Rosh Hashanah ushers in the Ten Days of Repentance, culminating in Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. According to tradition, it is during these days that God considers our actions and judges us. Throughout this period, we are encouraged to conduct a heshbon hanefesh, or to take personal stock, by honestly evaluating the choices we have made over the past year and making resolutions for improvement. Rosh Hashanah is about giving ourselves the time and opportunity to think about our actions and improve ourselves through acts of repentance, prayer, and good deeds. Ultimately, we can strive to renew ourselves along with the renewal of the yearly cycle.
Taiglach – for a Sweet New Year!!
Ingredients:
4 eggs
2 cups flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
½ cup sugar
4 ½ lbs. honey
Dash of ginger
Marachino cherries cut up
Ground walnuts
Mix eggs, flour, baking powder.
Roll out on floured board – like small tubes
Cut into small pieces
Boil all honey, all sugar, and ginger in a large pot on low heat. Be careful it does not boil over the top.
Bring to a brisk boil, throw in cut pieces – judge the right amount at one time, don’t throw all in at once.
Take out pieces with a slotted spoon (drain off honey) once they are like small balls and a medium tan color.
Put balls onto an aluminum foil pie plate, making a mound of the balls, sprinkling nuts and cherries in between each level.
SOME INTERESTING ROSH HASHANA RECIPES
EDITOR’S NOTE: These recipes are from an article in the Hadassah magazine, and reflect the mixed traditions of cookbook author and chef Louisa Shafia, the daughter of a Persian Muslim father and a Jewish Ashkenazic mother. Contributed by Nadyne Weissman.
When I met up with Brooklyn-based author and chef Louisa Shafia, she was on her way to an East Village restaurant to prepare for a dinner she was cooking in support of her latest book, The New Persian Kitchen (Ten Speed Press). Tall, slender and elegant, Shafia’s long fingers were tipped by a true kitchen habitué’s unvarnished nails. “I’ll be rolling pastries all day if you need to find me,” she said with an easy smile.
A celebrated practitioner of vegetable-based cuisine, Shafia—whose first book, Lucid Food (Ten Speed Press), explored the seasonality of nature’s bounty—uses her sophomore effort to reconnect with a powerful yet partially unexplored part of her heritage. The daughter of a Persian Muslim physician father and Ashkenazic Jewish librarian mother, the Philadelphia-born Shafia grew up in a house of mixed traditions, though she identifies as Jewish.
In addition to an Ashkenazic repertoire that included standards like latkes and chicken soup, Shafia’s mother learned to cook colorful, flavorful Persian dishes, occasionally serving them for holiday meals and special occasions. Distinguished by heady flourishes like tart-sweet pomegranate, fragrant rose petals, musky saffron and pucker-inducing dried limes, Persian cuisine is often considered the most sophisticated in the Middle East, reflected in a near-obsession with fresh ingredients and the copious use of herbs and produce.
In her newest book, Shafia sheds light on the Persian Jewish community’s 2,500-year history in Iran, making it the oldest outside Israel. In 539 B.C.E., Cyrus the Great emancipated Persia’s enslaved Jewish population, facilitated their return to Israel and funded the rebuilding of the Holy Temple.
Similar to many Jewish cuisines with roots in North African and Arab countries, Persian Jewish specialties often hew close to the originals, adopting a Jewish patina with a small change, such as the omission of yogurt or the occasion on which they are served; the fact that Muslims eschew pork makes the food even more practical for kosher cooks.
Shafia’s recipe for Sweet Rice with Carrots and Nuts would be a welcome addition to your Rosh Hashana table, as would Fesenjan, the classic Persian sweet-and-tart stew made with pomegranates, walnuts and chicken.
Sweet Rice with Carrots and Nuts
Serves 6 to 8.
2 cups white basmati rice, soaked in cold water for 1 hour
3 cups water
Sea salt
2 TBs butter or unrefined coconut oil, at room temperature
3 TBs unrefined coconut oil
1 yellow onion, finely diced
2 scant cups grated carrots (about 3 large carrots)
1/2 cup slivered or coarsely chopped almonds, toasted
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp ground cardamom
1/4 tsp ground turmeric
1/2 cup pistachios, coarsely chopped, plus 1 TB for garnish
Grated zest of 1 large orange
1/4 cup honey
1/2 tsp saffron, ground and steeped in 1 TB hot water
1. Drain the rice and rinse under cold water until the water runs clear.
2. In a stockpot, combine the 3 cups of water and a pinch of salt and bring to a boil. Add the rice, return to a boil, then turn down the heat to its lowest setting. Cover and cook for 20 minutes. Turn off the heat and let the rice rest for 5 minutes, then dot with the butter or coconut oil and fluff with a fork. The rice should be dry and fluffy.
3. While the rice cooks, heat a small skillet over medium heat and sauté the onion in the coconut oil for about 15 minutes, until lightly browned. Add the carrots, almonds, cinnamon, cardamom and turmeric, and cook, stirring often, for about 10 minutes, until the carrots are tender. Add 1/2 cup pistachios, the orange zest and the honey and cook for about 2 minutes, until heated through. Season to taste with salt.
4. Scoop the rice into a large bowl. Add the carrot mixture and drizzle in the saffron. Mix gently and season with salt. Garnish with the remaining 1 TB pistachios.
Fesenjan
Serves 4.
1 TB grapeseed or vegetable oil
Salt
2 lbs bone-in chicken legs or breasts, skinned
2 onions, finely diced
1 cup walnuts, finely chopped
1/2 cup pomegranate molasses (widely available online)
2 tsps salt
2 cups hot chicken or vegetable stock
1 cup peeled and grated raw red beets
Pomegranate seeds for garnish
1. Heat a large, deep skillet over medium-high heat and add oil. Sear chicken until well browned, 6-7 minutes per side. Transfer to a plate.
2. Add onions to skillet and cook on medium heat until lightly browned, 15 minutes. Stir in walnuts, pomegranate molasses and salt, to taste.
3. Add stock, bring to a boil and return chicken to skillet. Reduce heat to low, cover and simmer until chicken is cooked, 25 minutes. Uncover, stir in beets and cook until thickened an additional 15-20 minutes. Season to taste with salt.
4. Remove chicken with tongs and cut into halves or thirds. Place on a platter and cover with sauce. Garnish with pomegranate seeds.
A LETTER FROM THE EDITOR
Greetings, Aitz Chaim congregants and friends.
I trust you have had a wonderful hot summer. One of the highlights of mine was spending two weeks in Billings with my daughter and her three kids and two of my dearest friends. One of my dearest friends was one of my neighbors in Billings, and we had kids of similar ages so we “adopted” each other’s kids. The wife ran a daycare out of her home which I took advantage of when I worked days, and I watched her kids and often fixed dinner for us all during the gap between the time she went to work as a waitress and the time her husband came home from work. When their kids grew up and left home, the parents decided to revive an old dream which they had b.k. (before kids), and “run away from home” and become team truck drivers and see the country, which they have been doing for five or six years now. I picked my vacation to coincide with a time when they would be home for a couple of weeks. Both my husband and my son said I’m not allowed to take vacations alone anymore. I got a kick out of that. That probably won’t stop me, though.
With the High Holidays fast approaching, this is a good time to renew or increase your dues to Aitz Chaim. For more information or to fill out a donation form, please click here Thank you for making this a priority in your life.
Last year, we had a meet-the-new-student-rabbi potluck at the Bethel before services. Do we want to do something like that again?
Does anyone have a recipe or anything else they would like to contribute to the upcoming issue or any issue of the Ram’s Horn? This is your newsletter, and as one of the editors I would rather not see it degenerate into just a calendar of events and an old joke repository. Thanks in advance for all your moral support and your contributions.
Looking forward to another happy and sweet new year for Aitz Chaim.
Shana Tova
Joy Breslauer
editor@aitzchaim.com
ROSH HASHANA SCHEDULE
Todah Robah to the following Congregation members who have offered their hospitality to Student Rabbi Bess Wohlner and to provide the oneg for Erev Rosh Hashana:
Airport pickup: Marty Foxman
Dinner host: Jerry and Nadyne Weissman
Wednesday evening, 09/04/2013, 7:00 P.M.: Erev Rosh Hashana Services led by student Rabbi Bess Wohlner, at the Bethel. Oneg to follow.
Oneg: Jerry and Nadyne Weissman
Thursday morning, 09/05/2013, 10:00 A.M.: Rosh Hashana Morning services led by student Rabbi Bess Wohlner at the Bethel.
Tashlich to follow at Giant Springs, 4600 Giant Springs Road.
Meal to follow Tashlich at maple Gardens, 5401 9th Avenue South.
The address of the Bethel is 1009 18th Avenue Southwest. click here for map and directions.
SAD NEWS

Evelyn Kelman’s daughter Natalee passed away unexpectedly while on vacation in Branson, Missouri July 10, 2013. The funeral will be at 1:00 PM on Monday, July 15, at the chapel at Croxford’s mortuary, 1307 Central Avenue, with Rabbi Chaim Bruk officiating. Internment will follow at Mt. Olivet Cemetery.
For further details, please see the Great Falls Tribune for July 12, 2013.
The Jewish community wishes to extend sincere condolences to the Kelman family.
MEET OUR STUDENT RABBI FOR 5774
EDITOR’S NOTE: Adapted from an e-mail.
I am thrilled to be serving as the student rabbi in Great Falls next year. I want to introduce myself to the Great Falls Hebrew Association community.
Immediately below you will find a brief introductory paragraph.
Bess Wohlner, a rabbinic education student in the Rhea Hirsch School of Education at Hebrew Union College on the Los Angeles campus, is currently in pursuit of her Masters in Jewish Education and will be ordained as a rabbi in May 2015. She grew up in Shawnee, Kansas and earned her BA in Judaic Studies from the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Before beginning her studies at HUC, Bess worked as the Assistant Educator and Youth Director at Temple B’nai Shalom in Fairfax Station, Virginia. Since being at HUC she has served as a student rabbi at Congregation Havurim in Temecula, California (2010 – 2012), an education intern at University Synagogue in Los Angeles (2012 – 2013). Next year, in addition to the time she’ll spend in Great Falls, she is also the rabbinic intern at Temple Akiba in Culver City, California. When not studying or working, Bess can be found playing her guitar, traveling, and video chatting with her six-year-old niece.
I am very excited to be joining your community next year. Looking forward to meeting you in person in September.
L’shalom,
Bes

