Category Archives: 5776
D’VAR TORAH SHABBAT B’SHALLAH
D’var Torah Shabbat B’Shallah Jan. 25, 1997 Ruz Gulko
From out of B’Shallah, the Song, Shiraht HaYahm, calls to us. Ancient, bold, majestic – it leaps off the Torah parchment, telling in poetry the climactic episode of our deliverance from slavery. It is a story as vivid and dramatic as that of Sinai, as mystical and mysterious as Creation itself.
The Shirah held an important place in the Temple’s service, and then in the Siddur’s. It contains one of our oldest liturgical fragments, Mi Hamoha, and its response;” YHVH yimlokh l’olam va’ed.”
The siblings Miryam and Moshe play the leading roles here in, as Cantor Jeff Klepper calls it:
”…this grand opera of history, fantasy and faith. It is Moses’ voice that begins the song and it is Miriam’s that ends it, but it is their finest moment as a duo. Miriam is so much more than a cheerleader after Moshe’s song. Just as she helped save his life at another body of water, again she supports Moshe as only a sibling can. Yes, Moshe writes and presents the script, words and music, but it is Miriam who adds movement, rhythm and colour to the work of art. Ever the free spirit, it is she who takes the liturgical text to the next level, as her right brain creativity offers a perfect counterpart to Moshe’s left-brain logic. But her contribution is under-appreciated in the text.”
In fact, how many times do you think Miryam’s name is written in the whole book of Shemot? Only twice! And both times are in two consecutive sentences, here in Ch. 15, verses 20 & 21. Everywhere else she is “his sister” or “the maiden”. And when the family’s genealogy and names are presented in Ch. 6, Miryam is not even mentioned.
And yet we know Miryam is a Ne’viah, a prophetess. In verse 20 we read:” And Miryam, the prophetess, the sister of Aharon, took a timbrel in her hand…” Why is she only identified here as the sister of Aharon, and not also as the sister of Moshe, the central human figure of the whole story? Because, the Midrash teaches, it was as a young child, before Moshe was born, that Miryam’s gift of Ne’vi’ut, prophecy, was established. Their father, Amram, had divorced their mother Yoheved, advising all Israelite men to do the same, as a disheartened response to Pharoah’s murderous degree against all newborn sons. Miryam rebuked her father, accusing him of condemning to death all Jewish babies by leaving them unborn, and of losing faith. “And Miryam prophesied: ‘My mother is destined to give birth to a son who will save Israel’, and when the house was flooded with light at the birth of Moshe, her father arose and kissed her head and said:’ My daughter, thy prophecy has been fulfilled.’” (Midrash Rabbah). And yet, only a single verse of Miryam’s song at the Sea was recorded in the Torah, and even that is a direct quote from her brother’s song. The scholar Ellen Frankel asks: “Is it possible that this imbalance reflects later editing, and not Miriam’s second-class status in her own time? Some of us believe that Miriam’s song was censored or lost, due to a later generation’s uneasiness with female leadership.”
In ancient Near Eastern cultures, women frequently sang battle songs, and there is compelling evidence in clay from ancient Mediterranean cultures of a widespread women’s performance tradition, usually involving the three arts of song, drum, and dance. Clearly, women’s participation and leadership in these arts were an established, honoured tradition in our history.
We are indeed blessed to be the descendants of a woman like Miryam. Those of us gathered here today are free to lift our voices in prayer and in song, free to wrap ourselves in fringed garments, and free to read the Torah on behalf of the assembled congregation. We know that this was not always so. We owe an enormous gratitude to those courageous women who came before us, and stepped forward to claim for themselves and for us our rightful place as full and equal participants in all aspects of Jewish life.
The Baal Shem Tov teaches: “The dances of the Jews before the Creator are prayers.” And may our voices continue to soar with all women and all men who come before God with open hearts to pour out their hearts in prayer. Ken Y’hee Ratzon! Shabbat Shalom!
PLEASE MARK YOUR CALENDAR FOR THIS SPECIAL EVENT: THE U.S., ISRAEL, AND THE EVER CHANGING MIDDLE EAST
Congregation Beth Aaron is sponsoring a presentation by Mr. Gregg Roman on “The U.S., Israel, and the Ever-Changing Middle East.”
The presentation will take place at CBA, 2031 Broadwater Avenue, on Monday, February 8, at 7:00 PM. It is admission-free, and is open to CBA members, friends, and the community at large. A reception will follow the presentation.
Gregg Roman is the Director and Chief Operations Officer for the Middle East Forum, based in Philadelphia. Mr. Roman previously served as director of the Community Relations Council for the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh. In 2014, he was named one of the 10 most inspiring global Jewish leaders by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. He previously served as the political adviser to the Deputy Foreign Minister of the State of Israel and worked for the Israeli Ministry of Defense. Mr. Roman has spoken to venues around the world about the Middle East and often appears on television and in print. He attended the American University in Washington, DC, and the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya, Israel, where he studied national security studies and political communications.
We hope to see you on Monday, February 8, at 7:00 PM.
a wonderful legacy
EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the obituary for Marjorie Feldman’s father, who passed away on January 5 at the age of one hundred. A former congregant of Aitz Chaim, Marjorie now lives in Roseberg, Oregon, with her husband Howard, a physician. Many of us remember them both fondly from their time here. Our condolences to Marjorie and her family. What a wonderful legacy her father has left to her and the rest of the world.
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/hartfordcourant/obituary.aspx?pid=177230800
YAHRZEITS — JANUARY, 2016, TEVET-SHEVAT, 5776
,Dr. RAM’S HORN POLICY FOR LISTING YAHRZEIT MEMORIALS:!
Yahrzeit memorials are listed by consecutive Gregorian month, date, and year, if known, or at the beginning of the list for one calendar year following the date of passing.
Compiled by Aitz Chaim over many years, this list is maintained by the Ram’s Horn. Please send any corrections or additions to editor@aitzchaim.com
May the source of peace send peace to all who mourn, and comfort to all who are bereaved.
| Name of Deceased |
English Date of Passing | Hebrew Date of Passing | Deceased Relationship to Congregant |
| Beverly Tatz | Dec 8, 2015 | 26 Kislev, 5776 | Mother of Janet Tatz |
| Sarah Barrett | Jan 1, 1968 | 30 Kislev, 5728 | Grandmother of Nadyne Weissman |
| Gene Charnes | Jan 1, 2003 | 27 Tevet, 5763 | father of Joe Charnes |
| Cynthia Boyd | Jan 10, 2009 | 14 Tevet, 5769 | Mother of Stephen Boyd |
| Emma Betteti | Jan 11, 1994 | 28 Tevet, 5754 | Aunt of Meriam Nagel |
| Alexander Fischer | Jan 13, 1983 | 28 Tevet, 5743 | Father of Robert Fischer |
| Daniel E. Fischer | Jan 18, 2004 | 24 Tevet, 5764 | Brother of Robert Fischer |
| Bess Cherry | Jan 23, 1995 | 22 Sh’vat, 5755 | Mother of Don Cherry |
| Edith Wasserman | Jan 24, 1992 | 19 Sh’vat, 5752 | Mother of Miriam Wolf |
| Perle Weissman | Jan 26, 2008 | 19 Sh’vat, 5768 | Mother of Jerry Weissman, Dr. Irving L. Weissman, Lauren Weissman, and Dr. susan b. Weissman |
| Dorothy Barer | Jan 26, 2009 | 1 Sh’vat, 5769 | Mother of Michael Barer |
| Alfred Breslauer | Jan 27, 1971 | 1 Sh’vat, 5731 | Father of Bruce Breslauer |
| Dr. Charles (Chuck) Astrin | Jan 29, 2015 | 17 Sh’vat, 5775 | |
| Fanny Litvin | Jan 30, 1991 | 15 Sh’vat, 5751 | Aunt of Donald Nyman |
GFIA MEETING MINUTES — DECEMBER, 2015 — TEVET, 5776
EDITOR’S NOTE: This is taken from the December 3, 2015, minutes of the Great Falls Interfaith Association, submitted by Stephen Boyd.
Those present:
Pastor Ray Larson, Benefis Health care
Stephen Boyd, GF Hebrew Association
Jim Kizer, Great Falls Rescue Mission
Marla Wilkins, 1st Presbyterian Church
Chastity Roofner, Opportunities, Inc.
Dusti Zimmer, Center for Mental Health
Pastor Andre Murphy, Living Grace Church
Lt. Andrea Reedy, Salvation Army
Michael Key, Kairos Youth Services
Cherrie Kelly, Opportunities Inc.
Mark Jones, Northwest Family Fellowship
Jackie Sloak, CMR Food Pantry
Pastor Natalie Faltin, St. John’s Lutheran Church
Joshua Trosper, Northwest Family Fellowship
Rebecca Cloutier, Alliance for Youth
Chris Crooks, Church of Christ
Kristie Stroop, Alliance for Youth
Lee Barrows, New City Church
Sharon Odden, Family Promise
Anna Merritt, Our Saviors Lutheran Church
Laurie Jungling, Redeemer Lutheran Church
Focus: Middle, Secondary Schools & General Youth Assistance
Jackie – CMR Food Pantry – 19 Schools in Great Falls have food pantries, with the 5 middle and high schools having the largest. 912 students being served, 7,000 lbs. of food per month. 200
boxes distributed each holiday from just the five largest pantries. More than 4,000 kids in Cascade county are classified as “food insecure”. The city-wide needs seem to be increasing every year. Kids “shop” the food pantries every week. They get what they want instead of a box of food they may not use. Holiday food is distributed in pre-made boxes. There is supervision, they have to take vegetables as well as cake mixes. Funded by the Great Falls Public Schools Foundation. They don’t limit families from “shopping” every week. The whole family can be fed through the school program. It’s a city, county, and state problem.
Good ways to help include shopping for the food, distributing the food, and paperwork. There is also a constant need to replenish the Great Falls Food Bank. Food donations directly to the schools are very needed.
Church Partnerships: Andre – Calling the school principals and checking in helps a lot. Not just food, sometimes they need clothes, long pants, underwear, socks, gloves, it all helps.
Lee – They provided lunch for the kids in Lewis and Clark who couldn’t afford lunch.
Dusti – Youth Crisis – Been working on Youth Crisis for 3 years. Trying to keep kids at home, with their families, and helping the whole family as a unit. The crisis home is designed as the place they can go before getting institutionalized. The goal being to keep kids close to home in their own communities. The Youth Crisis home is now complete at 625 Central Ave. West. It’s an old renovated hotel. The top floor and basement was given to Dusti, and through a grant, they were able to transform it into a livable space. The Optimist group provided the furniture, lighting, etc… It is being licensed for ages 6-18. Younger youth on the West end, and older on the East end. They have hired a supervisor for the home, and are in the process of hiring group home workers – seven shifts available. You can apply on their web site, or at
http://montana.jobs/youth-crisis-group-home-worker/jobs-in/great-fall/montana/usa/jobs/assistantjobs/new-jobs/?sort=date
Before youth are admitted, they will have a full clinical exam to make sure they are appropriate for the home. Right now it’s grant funded, sustainability is very important, and will hopefully come in year two of the home’s operation. Right now, the closest similar place is in Helena. The most alarming statistic is that 82% of the first 108 kids they served were suicidal.
Kristie – Youth Mental Health – First Aid training is available for free to any church, school, or community organizations. Much like regular First Aid, but more training focused to identify and see the signs and symptoms related to Mental Health/Suicide Prevention. Amy this that “you don’t talk to a suicidal person about it for fear it would make it worse”. This is NOT the case, talking to them actually DOES help. People with mental health issues are more likely to wait for others to approach them to talk about it.
Sharon – Christmas party for the 16 families who have graduated from the Family Promise program, and are in need of gift cards so the parents can shop for their kids for Christmas.
Mike – Always in need of anything, donations gratefully accepted.
Jim – Last year the Rescue Mission shopped for 900 kids, We can help through the Ornament of Hope program, they need UNWRAPPED gifts by the 16th. They will have a giftwrapping party afterwards.
December is suicide month. This month is known as the season of hope, but if you don’t have a family to celebrate with, or are from a broken home, you don’t feel very hopeful. These people need help. Reach out to people in need, let them know that there IS hope!
Ray adjourned the meeting. See you all next year! Next meeting is January 28th at Benefis West.
Submitted by Stephen Boyd
RABINICAL STUDENTS COMING TO GREAT FALLS TONIGHT
CHABAD-LUBAVITCH OF MONTANA INVITES YOU TO…
PLEASE JOIN ELI & BEREL, THE VISITING YESHIVA STUDENTS, WHO WILL ATTEND THE GRAND MENORAH LIGHTING @ THE CIVIC CENTER
TONIGHT DEC. 10, 5:30 PM
SUFGANIYOT FROM NEW YORK WILL BE SERVED
UPDATE: The road conditions for these young men were just too great to overcome. After the meetings and funeral in Helena, Nadyne, Aaron and Jerry returned in time to assist in lighting the Menorah in front of the Civic Center. We gave out the Sufganiyot from Brooklyn and they were enjoyed. The final box of these sugared jelly filled fried pastries were taken to Paris Gibson Square and given to them for their art opening on Thursday evening by Mimi and Gary Wolf.
Again thanks to Lubavitch Montana for providing.
Condolences
EDITOR’S NOTE: Our condolences to Janet and her family.
http://www.helenafuneralhome.com/obituaries/beverly-tatz-age-90-of-helena/
Happy Hanukah
Rabbi Kalman Packouz (Originally a Reform Jew from coastal Oregon) and now the sender of Aitz Ha Torah, sent this out today. I like the Latke beginning and am reminded of a young Jewish recruit to the US Army in WW II, who went to the Army Doctor and told him that he was dying. “Why “asked the Doctor, “Well”, he replied,” I have been eating the Army food for two months now and my fire has gone out!”
Jerry Weissman
Mikeitz (Genesis 41:1-44:17)
GOOD MORNING! A friend of mine told me that as he grows older he experiences a personal miracle on Hanukah. He eats one potato latka — and it burns for eight days.
I share with you this week two stories about Hanukah — my Hanukah gift to you!
I heard the following story years ago when I lived in Israel and to the best of my knowledge it is true. Before the USSR let the Jews leave for Israel, Jews used to hire a guide to smuggle them out of Russia. One Hanukah a group of Jews were playing “cat and mouse” with a Soviet army patrol as they approached the border. When the guide thought they had lost the patrol, he announced an half-hour break before continuing the trek. One of the escapees, hearing the “magic” number of “one-half hour” — the minimum time a Hanukah candle must be lit to fulfill the mitzvah — pulls out his menorah, sets up the candles, says the blessing and starts to light the candles. The other escapees immediately pounce upon him and the menorah to put out the candles — just as the Soviet patrol moves in and completely encircles them!
The head of the army patrol speaks: “We were just about to open fire and wipe you out when I saw that man lighting the Hanukah candles. I was overcome with emotion; I remember my zaideh (grandfather) lighting Hanukah candles …. I have decided to let you go in peace.”
There is a verse in the Book of Psalms, (chapter 116, verse 6), “The Almighty protects fools.” Should he have lit the candle? NO! The Talmud tells us (Ta’anis 20b), “One should not put himself in a place of danger saying, ‘Let a miracle happen.’ ” So, while the story is one of action, adventure, suspense … the real lesson is not to rely upon a miracle to save you from danger … but to be thankful if the Almighty performs one to save you!
The second story was sent to me years ago. I was never able to verify it, but I love the story. I offer a prize of $100 to the first person who can prove it true! The story: Young private Winneger was with the U.S. Army as it marched through Europe at the end of World War II. His unit was assigned to a European village with the orders to secure the town, search for any hiding Nazis and to help the villagers any way they could.
Winneger was on patrol one night when he came across a young boy with an ornate menorah. The menorah was his only possession and his only remnant from his family. The boy had survived a concentration camp and was mistrustful of all men in uniforms. He had been forced to watch the shooting of his father. He had no idea what had become of his mother. Winneger calmed the boy, assured him that he himself was Jewish and brought him back to the village.
In the weeks that followed, Winneger took the young boy, David, under his wing. As they became closer and closer, Winneger’s heart went out to the boy. He offered to adopt David and bring him back to New York. David accepted.
Winneger was active in the New York Jewish community. An acquaintance of his, a curator of the Jewish Museum in Manhattan, saw the menorah. He told David it was a very valuable historic, European menorah and should be shared with the entire Jewish Community. He offered David $50,000 for the menorah.
But David refused the generous offer saying the menorah had been in his family for over 200 years and that no amount of money could ever make him sell it.
When Hanukah came, David and Winneger lit the menorah in the window of their home in New York City. David went upstairs to his room to study while Winneger stayed downstairs in the room with the menorah.
There was a knock on the door and Winneger went to answer. He found a woman with a strong German accent who said that she was walking down the street when she saw the menorah in the window. She said that she had once had one just like it in her family and had never seen any other like it. Could she come and take a closer look?
Winneger invited her in and said that the menorah belonged to his son who could perhaps tell her more about it. Winneger went upstairs and called David down to talk to the woman … and that is how David was reunited with his mother.
