Category Archives: July
TORAH STUDY INVITATION
Rabbi Yanai: “whoever learns Torah from [only] one Rabbi will never find blessing in his study” (b. Avodah Zarah 19).
Rabbi Yannai (or Rabbi Jannai; Hebrew: רבי ינאי) was a Jewish sage, living during the first half of the 3rd century, and of the first generation of the Amora sages of the Land of Israel. He was a disciple of R. Judah haNasi – the sealer of the Mishnah. R. Yannai founded a Beth Midrash that was located near Safed in the Upper Galile, where he taught the Torah, and at the same time served as a dayan, religious judge, in the Beth Din, rabbinical court for the Sepphoris community.
His name is mentioned in the Babylonian Talmud 176 times, and in the Jerusalem Talmud 254 times.
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Congregation Beth Shalom’s Torah Study – Coveting & Craving
Sat, Aug 1, 9:30 am | 2 hr 30 min
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MT-A-001
REMEMBERING SIR NICHOLAS WINTON
Remembering the humble hero who saved hundreds of Czech children from WWII atrocities
Web site: http://www.nicholaswinton.com
AN ADDRESS BY DR. DAN SCHUEFTAN
Dr. Dan Schueftan is the Director of the National Security Studies Center at the University of Haifa, and a Senior Lecturer at the School of Political Sciences there, as well as at the Israel Defense Force’s National Defense College. For the 2012-13 academic year he was a Visiting Professor at Georgetown University in Washington DC. For the last four decades he has been a consultant to Israeli decision makers and to the top echelon of Israel’s Prime Minister’s Office, Foreign Ministry, Defense Ministry and The National Security Council. He is a regular source and interviewee for radio and television programs on the Middle East in Israel, the Arab world, Europe and North America.
Dr. Schueftan has been briefing and consulting with members of the US Senate, House of Representatives and their staff, as well as top professionals and key political appointees in the executive branch since 1977. He has been briefing ministers, parliamentarians, political leaders, senior officers, defense and intelligence officials and government advisors in Europe since 1975. He has regularly lectured at universities and research centers in the United States and Europe since the mid 1970s.
Dr. Schueftan has published extensively on contemporary Middle Eastern history, with emphasis on Arab-Israeli relations, Inter-Arab politics and American policy in the Middle East. His books cover a wide variety of topics: A Jordanian Option – Israel, Jordan and the Palestinians (1986); Attrition: Egypt’s Post War Political Strategy 1967-1970 (1989); Disengagement – Israel and the Palestinian Entity (1999). This last book, advocating disengagement, had a considerable effect on Israeli policy makers. Dr. Schueftan most recent book (2011) is Palestinians in Israel – the Arab Minority and the Jewish State.
At a benefit dinner on February 24, 2015, Dr. Dan Schueftan gave a keynote address to the Centre for Jewish Life in London on the current challenges facing Israel and the Jewish people. Although the speech is a bit long, thirty minutes or so, the speaker is not only entertaining but profound. Worth a listen.
Submitted by Helen Cherry
RABBI QUITS N.J. PULPIT; FINDS GOD AND COMMUNITY IN MONTANA
Rabbi Francine Green Roston and her family fell in love with Whitefish, Montana, on their first visit in 2010.
YAHRZEITS — JULY, 2015
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 Yahrzeit 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 |
| Dr. Charles (Chuck) Astrin | Jan 29, 2015 | 17 Sh’vat, 5775 | |
| Rose Gran | Oct 14, 2014 | 20 Tishrei, 5775 | |
| Irving Langsam | Jul 3, 1991 | 21 Tammuz, 5751 | Father of Helen Cherry |
| Alvin Magalnick | Jul 3, 2010 | 21 Tammuz, 5770 | Brother of Elliot Magalnick |
| Natalee Holly Kelman | Jul 10, 2013 | 3 Av, 5773 | Daughter of Evelyn Kelman |
| Beverly Espelin | Jul 12, 2007 | 26 Tammuz, 5767 | Mother of Dawn Schandelson |
| Hilda Schandelson | Jul 17, 1962 | 15 Tammuz, 5722 | Mother of Arnold Schandelson |
| Miriam Fischer | Jul 20, 1953 | 8 Av, 5713 | Mother of Robert Fischer |
| Elsie Cook | Mother of Helen Auch | ||
| Maurice Jacoby | Jul 27, 1976 | 29 Tammuz, 5736 |
WELCOME NIMBUS
On Sunday, June 29, Bruce breslauer left with his guide dog Glendale to go to California to retire her and train with a successor dog. Although she is otherwise very healthy, Glendale, who is 9-1/2 years old, has cataracts which are just beginning to be visible to the naked eye. So far, they have not affected her guide work in any way. Although they could technically be surgically removed and thus prolong her working life as a guide dog, Bruce has opted to retire her while she is still at the top of her game, and get a successor dog. He wants Glendale to enjoy a few good years of healthy retirement with the family who raised her as a puppy. She already knows and loves them and they her, so it will be good for all of them all around. Besides living a dog’s life, Glendale also has a promising future as a therapy dog in hospitals and nursing homes, for which she will be very well suited. She will be greatly missed.
Bruce is now in San Rafael, near San Francisco, in training for two weeks with a successor dog, a male yellow lab named Nimbus, who is about eighteen months old. They are getting to know each other, sorting out who is the alpha dog, learning current guide dog training methods, and beginning the bonding process which will only get stronger as their working life develops. There are five others in his training class, four of whom are receiving guide dogs for the first time. Through donations, the school pays for the students’ air fare to and from campus, and provides dormitory housing and meals for them while they are there. Training a guide dog costs somewhere around $54,000.00, and something like sixty percent of them don’t make it through the program. Called “career change” dogs, they sometimes go on to be another type of service or therapy dog, or they may become someone’s wonderful pet. There is no shortage of people who would love to have a career change dog or a retired guide dog in their lives.
Every day the students are expected to study and review several hours of information regarding what-if scenarios and how-to procedures, so that they can use the techniques they are learning in real life situations as they arise. During training, the dog-person team is exposed to many situations that might be encountered in everyday life, such as coping with city traffic; taking busses or other forms of mass transit; crossing busy intersections or those with blended curbs or unusual configurations; walking safely down sidewalkless country roads; navigating stairs and escalators; finding entrance and exit doors; maneuvering through obstacle courses, crowded streets, or shopping malls; going to restaurants or through cafeteria lines while carrying a tray of food and drink; going to grocery stores; finding elevators; finding and activating pedestrian walk signal buttons; learning how to navigate college campuses, office buildings, conference rooms, or medical facilities; going through airport security and boarding airplanes. There are several times during training where the dog will be called upon to maneuver their blind or visually impaired partner out of the way of a silent car coming suddenly and unexpectedly toward them. One of the most fun outings toward the end of training is a trip to Muir Woods, full of wonderful sights, sounds, and smells. In addition to all this, the dog is learning to depend on his new partner for feeding, watering, and relieving, the person is learning to trust and follow their dog and to depend on the dog to follow directions and make intelligent decisions, and they are each learning to trust each other and to communicate with each other.
Toward the end of the training, the emphasis changes from focusing on more generalized life experiences to customizing and fine-tuning the training to the specific environment to which the team will be returning. The point of the training is not necessarily to cover every conceivable situation a dog-person team might face, but to teach them skills and techniques they can use in whatever situation they find themselves to optimize their safety, efficiency, and confidence as a good working team. building the partnership into a well-oiled machine can take several months, often with a few bumps in the road along the way, and in some ways resembles building a marriage. A successful team will continue fine-tuning their relationship throughout the working life of the team.
At the end of two intense weeks of training, Bruce and the others will go through a graduation ceremony, which is open to the public, during which the families who raised the dogs from puppyhood will formally turn the dogs over to their new partners. Then they have the opportunity to receive a new potential guide dog puppy to start the whole thing all over again. The graduation experience is often a time for laughter and tears for both students and puppy raisers alike.
For more information, please visit http://www.guidedogs.com
YAHRZEITS — JULY, 2014
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 Yahrzeit 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 |
| Marvin Langsam | Oct 27, 2013 | 23 Cheshvan, 5774 | Brother of Helen Cherry |
| Irving Langsam | Jul 3, 1991 | 21 Tammuz, 5751 | Father of Helen Cherry |
| Alvin Magalnick | Jul 3, 2010 | 21 Tammuz, 5770 | Brother of Elliot Magalnick |
| Natalee Holly Kelman | Jul 10, 2013 | 3 Av, 5773 | Daughter of Evelyn Kelman |
| Beverly Espelin | Jul 12, 2007 | 26 Tammuz, 5767 | Mother of Dawn Schandelson |
| Hilda Schandelson | Jul 17, 1962 | 15 Tammuz, 5722 | Mother of Arnold Schandelson |
| Miriam Fischer | Jul 20, 1953 | 8 Av, 5713 | Mother of Robert Fischer |
| Elsie Cook | Mother of Helen Auch | ||
| Maurice Jacoby | Jul 27, 1976 | 29 Tammuz, 5736 |

