Winter Bulletin 2020

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Winter ISSUE

Chanukah Purim Edition IN THIS ISSUE R A B B I C H A I M S T E I N M E T Z 1 R A B B I E L I E W E I N S T O C K 4 R A B B I H A S K E L L O O K S T E I N 5 R A B B I M E Y E R L A N I A D O 6 R A C H E L K R A U S 8 UP COMING EVENTS 10 I N TH E COM M U N IT Y 12 H O L I D AY S 3 0 CL ASSES 38 W I T H I N O U R F A M I L Y 4 0 IN MEMORIAM 45 B N E I M I T Z VA H 4 6 ZMANIM 52

VO LU M E XC , N U M B E R 1 N OV E M B E R 2 0 , 2 0 2 0 4 KISLEV, 5780

Highlights 10 Annual Dinner 2020 16 Farewell to Rabbi Weinstock 24 Featured Articles 30 High Holiday Recap 32 Chanukah 41 KJ Website & Brochure R abbi C haim S teinmetz

HOW DO I GET THROUGH THIS? BY RA B B I C H A I M S T E I N M E T Z

I was counseling a friend, a stay-athome mother with two children, who was going through the dual crisis of bankruptcy and divorce. The question she asked me is one that still reverberates in my mind: “How do I get through this?” Rabbis hear this difficult question all too often. There’s the couple whose young son got an ear infection on Friday and whose funeral was the next Tuesday, and the person who went for a regular checkup and found out that she has a frightening disease. Standing at the threshold of a crisis, these people wonder if they will be able to cope with what lays ahead. In the past year so many of us have been wondering: How do I get through this? While the Torah is not a psychology textbook, it does help us wrestle with the existential questions of life; and the texts of the Jewish tradition offer a great deal of guidance on how to navigate a crisis. Humanity confronts its

first crisis right at the beginning of the Bible, in the second chapter of Genesis, when Adam and Eve are exiled from the Garden of Eden; and from there on, the texts of the Jewish tradition tell of generations of strugglers, people who grappled with personal and communal challenges. The spiritual response to crisis recognizes that our spiritual lives are organized around different relationships. The Maharal of Prague, in his commentary to the beginning of Pirkei Avot, explains that there are three such relationships: between man and God, between man and his fellow man, and between man and himself. Man must always look inward, outward, and upward for inspiration; and all three relationships can help us overcome challenges. We must look inward to find courage. One of the great Biblical lessons about courage comes from our ancestor Jacob. The Bible describes the moments before he is about to confront his brother Esau. The twin brothers have not seen each other for 20 years; and the last time they did see each other, Esau vowed that he would murder Jacob. Jacob gets up in the middle of that night to move his family, and then an


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Winter Bulletin 2020 by Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun - Issuu