News & Schmooze

Shabbos Parshas Nitzavim/VaYeilech Av 24-25 Elul 5770 | September 3-4, 2010

Shabbos Parshas Nitzavim/VaYeilech Av 24-25 Elul 5770 | September 3-4, 2010

News & Shmooze
1851 Noriega St. (at 26th Ave.) San Francisco, 94122 | 415.564.5665 | www.adathisraelsf.org

Upcoming Events

We welcome our new members:

 

1. David Schach

2. Alex and Masha Rudakov and family

3. Mendel Weinstien

4. Alex Weinstien

 

We look forward to a long relationship together, and welcome to the community!


The Eruv is up this Shabbos

 

  1. First Night of Selichos

Saturday Night 11:30 PM

Join us for Selichos this Saturday night at 11:30 PM as we prepare ourselves

 

  1. Mikvah Schedule for Men

Erev Rosh Hashanah Sept. 8th 7 AM to 2 PM

Erev Yom Kippur Sept. 17th 7 AM to 2 PM

The Mikvah will be open for men on Erev Rosh Hashanah and Erev Yom Kippur. Remember to bring your own towel, and the charge is $20 per person.


  1. Rosh Chodesh Women’s Program

Sunday October 10th at 8 PM


The women of Adath Israel are starting a monthly Rosh Chodesh program at the Makany home. For more information or to RSVP contact Julie Makany at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or Bethany Strulowitz at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

  1. High holiday Schedule and Seats

 

Our full High Holiday schedule is now online and can be viewed here. If you have not signed up for seats or membership, you can sign up online here.

 

We will have kids programs for children ages 0-11 on both days of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur:

Schedule for Children's Programming:

There is a charge of $10 per child pere day for children ages 0-5:

Rosh Hashanah September 9th and 10th

Ages 0-1: 10:00 AM-1:30 PM social hall play area.

Babysitters will be available for infants in the play area. Lunch and snacks will be served for the older children.

Ages 2-5 10:00 AM-1:30 PM Preschool Building 1836 Noriega Street

Our program for preschoolers and Kindergarten will be held directly accross the street in the preschool building (on Noriega between 25th and 26th Avenue). Their will be an educational program separated by age       group from 10:45-11:30 AM. Lunch will be served, and the children will have time in the preschool playground.  Only a parent or grandparent will be allowed to pick up children.

Ages 6-8: 10:30-1:30 PM

10:30-11:30 Learning and Tefillah program held in the library

11:30-12:15 Lunch in the social hall

12:15-1:30   Board Games and Reading in the Library, Play Area in the Shul's backyard.

Ages 9-11 10:30-1:30

10:30-11:30 Learning and Tefillah program held in the Berenstien Chapel

11:30-12:15 Lunch in the social hall

12:15-1:30   Board Games and Reading in the Library, Play Area in the Shul's backyard.

  1. Classes on Rosh Hashanah with the JSN


The Rabbis of the JSN will be teaching classes on the first day of Rosh Hashanah at 10 AM and noon. There is no charge. Click here for details.

 

  1. New Wednesday Night Class Starting October 20th


The Wednesday night class will resume October 20th with all new topics. Click Here to see the new list of topics.


Shabbos Schedule

Minchah/Kabbalat:                           7:00 PM

Candle Lighting                                7:18 PM

Shacharis:                                9:00 AM

Kiddush                        11:45 AM

R’Strulowitz’s Pre-Selichos Class     6:00 PM

Minchah:                                6:45  PM

Shabbos Ends:                                   8:15  PM

There is not yet a sponsor for Kiddush or Shaleshudis


Daily Minyan

Shacharis: Sunday 8 AM, Mon and Thur 6:50, T,W,F 7:00 AM


Upcoming classes

1.       Wednesday Night at 8 PM: Resumes October 20th

2.       Monday Night at 7:45 PM: Rabbi Traub’s Talmud class

3.      Tuesday at 8:00 PM: Resumes the first week of October

4.      Sunday at 8:45 AM: Coffee and learning with Rabbi Strulowitz.

 

Covenant and Conversation

by Rabbi Jonathan Sachs, Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom

At the end of his life, Moses gave the people the penultimate command - the 612th of the 613 that comprise the Torah. It was a command of far-reaching significance. The Israelites were about to cross the Jordan, and enter and take possession of the promised land. There they would begin life as a self-governing nation under the sovereignty of G-d.

It would not be easy. With his prophetic eye turned to the furthermost horizon of the future, Moses had been warning the people throughout Devarim that the real dangers would be the ones they least suspected. They would not be war or famine or poverty or natural disaster. They would be ease and affluence and freedom and prosperity.

That is when a nation is in danger of forgetting its past and its mission. It becomes complacent; it may become corrupt. The rich neglect the poor. Those in power afflict the powerless. The people begin to think that what they have achieved, they achieved for and by themselves. They forget their dependence on G-d. At the very height of its powers, Israelite society would develop fault-lines that would eventually lead to disaster.

No one has set out the terms of survival of a civilization more starkly than Moses in Deuteronomy. Nations begin to die from within. Affluence leads to overconfidence which leads to forgetfulness which leads to decadence which leads to lack of social solidarity which leads in the end to demoralization - the prelude to defeat. Israel's very existence, said Moses, would depend on memory, mission and morality - remembering where it came from, what it is called on to do, and how it is called on to do it. Hence the great 612th command, known as Hakhel, or national assembly:

At the end of every seven years, in the year for canceling debts, during the Feast of Tabernacles, when all Israel comes to appear before the Lord your G-d at the place He will choose, you shall read this law before them in their hearing. Assemble the people-men, women and children, and the strangers living in your towns-so they can listen and learn to fear the Lord your G-d and follow carefully all the words of this law. Their children, who do not know this law, must hear it and learn to fear the Lord your G-d as long as you live in the land you are crossing the Jordan to possess. (Deut. 31: 10-13)

Once every seven years, on the second day of Sukkot in the year after the sabbatical year, the king was to gather the people together in the Temple courtyard and read to them from the Torah - specifically, selections from Deuteronomy itself (the details are set out in Rambam, Hilkhot Chagigah, chapter 3). Hakhel was a re-enactment of the covenant ceremony at Mount Sinai (Rambam ad loc. 3: 6). It was intended to remind the people of their history, the laws they are called on to keep and the principles they must live by. It was to be a ceremony of national rededication - a renewal of their inherited and chosen destiny, a reminder of the duties they owed to their ancestors, their descendants not yet born and, primarily, to G-d Himself.

We do not know how this command was carried out in practice. Yet one thing is clear from the biblical record. It is what the leaders of the nation did at critical junctures in their history. Joshua did so at the end of his life (Joshua 24). King Josiah did so when the Torah was rediscovered during a restoration of the Temple:

Then the king called together all the elders of Judah and Jerusalem. He went up to the Temple of the Lord with the men of Judah, the people of Jerusalem, the priests and the prophets-all the people from the least to the greatest. He read in their hearing all the words of the Book of the Covenant, which had been found in the Temple of the Lord. The king stood by the pillar and renewed the covenant in the presence of the Lord - to follow the Lord and keep His commands, regulations and decrees with all his heart and all his soul, thus confirming the words of the covenant written in this book. Then all the people pledged themselves to the covenant. (II Kings 23: 1-3)

Ezra did so for the generation that saw the return of exiles from Babylon:

So on the first day of the seventh month Ezra the priest brought the Law before the assembly, which was made up of men and women and all who were able to understand. He read it aloud from daybreak till noon as he faced the square before the Water Gate in the presence of the men, women and others who could understand. And all the people listened attentively to the Book of the Law. (Nehemiah 8: 2-3)

Hakhel has a significance that goes far beyond its specific details. It belongs to a unique form of politics - covenantal politics. Philip Selznick, in his The Moral Commonwealth, explains: "The compact creates a self-conscious moral order. Most vividly at Sinai, the agreement with G-d is an agreement to uphold a code of responsible conduct. G-d's commands are obeyed by fulfilling obligations to family and community; a social ethic is the linchpin of the covenant" (ibid., 478-9). Covenantal politics are moral politics; they involve ideas of duty and obligation. They are also interwoven with a particular view of the history of the nation, whose fate is seen as a reflection of its success or failure in honouring the terms laid down by its founders.

Only one nation in modern times has constructed its politics in terms of a covenant, namely the United States, whose Puritan founding fathers were saturated by the ideas of Deuteronomy, and which has continued, to the present day, to see itself in these terms. Some years ago, writing my Commentary to the Haggadah, I made a remarkable discovery (helped by the insights of American sociologist Robert Bellah: see his Beyond Belief and The Broken Covenant). Something like Hakhel still exists. It is called an American Presidential Inaugural Address.

What an American President does in an Inaugural Address is recognizably in the tradition of Josiah and Ezra in biblical times. He recapitulates the nation's history. He speaks of the principles and ideals on which it is based (most famously, of course, in a speech that was not an Inaugural, Lincoln's Gettysburg Address: "Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent, a new nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal"). He reviews the challenges the nation faces if it is to stay faithful to those ideals. And regardless of whether the President is personally religious or not, the speech will be religious in tone, biblical in language, and include, explicitly or implicitly, reference to G-d.

Here for example is John F Kennedy in 1961:

The world is very different now. For man holds in his mortal hands the power to abolish all forms of human poverty and all forms of human life. And yet the same revolutionary beliefs for which our forebears fought are still at issue around the globe-the belief that the rights of man come not from the generosity of the state, but from the hand of G-d.

And this, Lyndon Baines Johnson in 1965:

They came here-the exile and the stranger, brave but frightened-to find a place where a man could be his own man. They made a covenant with this land. Conceived in justice, written in liberty, bound in union, it was meant one day to inspire the hopes of all mankind; and it binds us still. If we keep its terms, we shall flourish.

Here is Ronald Reagan, in 1985:

History is a ribbon, always unfurling; history is a journey. And as we continue our journey, we think of those who traveled before us . . . For all our problems, our differences, we are together as of old, as we raise our voices to the G-d who is the Author of this most tender music. And may He continue to hold us close as we fill the world with our sound-sound in unity, affection, and love-one people under G-d, dedicated to the dream of freedom that He has placed in the human heart, called upon now to pass that dream on to a waiting and hopeful world.

And this, George W. Bush in 2005:

America's vital interests and our deepest beliefs are now one. From the day of our Founding, we have proclaimed that every man and woman on this earth has rights, and dignity, and matchless value, because they bear the image of the Maker of Heaven and earth. Across the generations we have proclaimed the imperative of self-government, because no one is fit to be a master, and no one deserves to be a slave. Advancing these ideals is the mission that created our Nation . . . History has an ebb and flow of justice, but history also has a visible direction, set by liberty and the Author of Liberty.

In no other country do political leaders speak in these terms (the closest is Václav Havel, President of the Czech Republic). American Presidential Inaugurals from 1789 to today are best understood as a continuing commentary to the Book of Deuteronomy, and as a secular counterpart to the command of Hakhel.

Today the State of Israel faces formidable problems. So, in different ways, do Britain and the rest of Europe. Terror threatens freedom across the globe. There is nothing inevitable about the survival of great powers: the pages of history are littered with tales of their decline and fall. Few indeed are those that have defeated this almost inevitable cycle. Moses must surely rank as the greatest political leader of all time (Jean-Jacques Rousseau said so, in a note discovered after his death), and the institution of Hakhel was central to his vision.

What Moses understood so clearly is that a nation that loses its sense of purpose cannot survive. Purpose does not come from nowhere. It is shaped by historians and prophets; taught in schools and homes; rehearsed in prayer; symbolically enacted in rituals; and recalled periodically in Hakhel-type moments. It is essentially religious, for if not, then it becomes (as the late Yeshayah Leibowitz never failed to remind us) idolatry - a nation worshipping itself. It may sound strange, yet I truly believe, that finding a contemporary equivalent of Hakhel is our most pressing task if free societies are to survive.

 
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Congregation Adath Israel
is San Francisco's premier
modern orthodox shul.

1851 Noriega St.
San Francisco, CA 94122 map
415.564.5665
office@adathisraelsf.org

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