JCC Denver Resource Guide 2023 - 2024

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DISCOVER VIBRANT SENIOR LIVING A fully personalized experience is waiting for you at Sunrise at Cherry Creek. In addition to exceptional care and a focus on your wellness, you’ll find fun social events, programs based on your passions, and fresh cuisine tailored to your tastes. To learn more about our community, call 303-333-1166 or visit SunriseCherryCreek.com . ©2023 Sunrise Senior Living Sunrise at Cherry Creek 251 S Colorado Boulevard Denver, CO 80246 Assisted Living Memory Care Short-Term Stays CH ER RY CR EE K
CONTACT Blair Becker Engagement Program Manager 303.316.6320 bbecker@jccdenver.org Daniel Siegel Engagement Program Manager 303.316.6418 dsiegel@jccdenver.org TABLE OF CONTENTS Arts & Entertainment P1 College & Adult Education P1 Jewish Community Organizations P4-5 Kids & Teens P5 Medical Professional P5 Restaurant & Beverage P6 Senior Services P6-7 Socializing & Networking P7 Social Services P7

Volo Sports

3821 N Steele Street, Unit 1414

Denver, CO 80205

402.630.7713

nate@volosports.com

volosports.com/Denver

Sports level the playing field. They unveil our determination, perseverance, and heart, pushing us to our limits, striving to be the best we can be.

But we can’t play alone. Sports surround us with teammates, captains, coaches, teaching us teamwork, compassion, and how to express sportsmanship.

That’s why we believe sports make better humans and deliver interactions to deepen our compassion for others. Through sport, we find our own humanity and perhaps, a new perspective. Volo’s mission is to create the opportunity for a fulfilled life through genuine communities and access to activity.

Golda Meir House Museum on the Auraria Campus

1148 9th Street Denver, CO 80204

303.475.9964

lena.fishman@ahec.edu

Center for Judaic Studies

2000 East Asbury Ave., #157

Denver, CO 80210

303.871.3020

cjs@du.edu

Holocaust Awareness Institute

2000 East Asbury Ave., #157

Denver, CO 80210

303.871.3021

hai@du.edu

Kabbalah Experience

3540 South Poplar Street, Unit 104

Denver, CO 80237

303.337.0959

admin@kabbalahexperience.com

Rocky Mountain

Jewish Historical Society

2000 East Asbury Ave., #157

Denver, CO 80210

303.871.3016

Jeanne.Abrams@du.edu

P1 JCC Resource Guide 2023 - 2024 jccdenver.org/resource

ROSH HASHANAH YOM KIPPUR SUKKOT SHEMINI ATZERET & SIMCHAT TORAH HANUKKAH TU BISHVAT PURIM

PASSOVER YOM HASHOAH YOM HAZIKARON YOM HA’ATZMAUT SHAVUOT TISHA B’AV

ROSH HASHANAH YOM KIPPUR SUKKOT SHEMINI ATZERET & SIMCHAT TORAH HANUKKAH TU BISHVAT PURIM

PASSOVER YOM HASHOAH YOM HAZIKARON YOM HA’ATZMAUT SHAVUOT TISHA B’AV

ROSH HASHANAH YOM KIPPUR SUKKOT SHEMINI ATZERET & SIMCHAT TORAH HANUKKAH TU BISHVAT PURIM

JEWISH HOLIDAYS

PASSOVER YOM HASHOAH YOM HAZIKARON YOM HA’ATZMAUT SHAVUOT TISHA B’AV

ROSH HASHANAH YOM KIPPUR SUKKOT SHEMINI ATZERET & SIMCHAT TORAH HANUKKAH TU BISHVAT PURIM

PASSOVER YOM HASHOAH YOM HAZIKARON YOM HA’ATZMAUT SHAVUOT TISHA B’AV

Rosh Hashanah

Rosh Hashanah is the Jewish New Year, one of the “High Holidays” in the Jewish calendar. Rosh Hashanah occurs every year during the Hebrew month of Tishrei and is celebrated over a two-day period. Traditionally, it is both a time of celebration and of serious introspection, a time to rejoice in the completion of another year while also taking stock of one’s life.

Traditional worship in a synagogue includes reciting prayers from the machzor (from the Hebrew root “to return.”) During the service a shofar (ram’s horn) is blown to symbolically awaken the listeners in the congregation and inspire them to atone and rejoice before the Judgement Day of Yom Kippur, the next upcoming Jewish Holiday.

Yom Kippur

Yom Kippur, The Day of Atonement, is the Jewish Holiday that occurs 10 days after Rosh Hashana. Between the two holidays, Jews observe the 10 Days of Repentance, a time where those who practice can reflect on the opportunity for change in the coming year. It is a time to make amends with those you have wronged and ask for forgiveness.

Yom Kippur starts in the evening with a service called Kol Nidre. During this service a prayer is recited as a declaration annulling any vows made before God. During the 25-hour observance of the Yom Kippur Holiday, a customary fast occurs. The practice of fasting is intended to allow a person to be in a state of reflection and repent rather than indulge.

The Yom Kippur holiday ends with a service called neilah in which congregants stand before the open doors of the ark and ask for the final opportunity of forgiveness. The open doors of the ark symbolize the open gates of heaven. A long blast from the shofar signifies the end of the holiday, and thus the closing of the gates and the inscription in the Book of Life for the coming year.

Sukkot

Sukkot begins five days after Yom Kippur. Sukkot is named for the sukkah, a walled structure covered with organic material. On the holiday of Sukkot, Jewish people

spend time in the sukkah, evoking the temporary dwellings the Israelites inhabited on their way out of Egypt after escaping from slavery. The festival of Sukkot is one of the three great pilgrimage festivals of the Jewish year. During Sukkot, Jews also take and wave the Four Kinds while reciting a blessing. The Four Kinds are an etrog (citron), a lulav (palm frond), three hadassim (myrtle twigs), and two aravot (willow twigs).

Shemini Atzeret & Simchat Torah

Shemini Atzeret & Simchat Torah come at the conclusion of Sukkot. Shemini Atzeret means the “Eighth Day of Assembly,” while Simchat Torah means “Rejoicing in Torah.” Simchat Torah conveys a clear message about the centrality of Torah in Jewish life. It is both a source of Jewish identity and a precious gift from God.

Hanukkah

Hanukkah, or the Festival of Rededication, celebrates the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem after its defilement by the Syrian Greeks in 164 BCE. “Hanukkah” directly translates to “dedication” in Hebrew. The eightday festival of Hanukkah is also known as the Festival of Lights, and we light the menorah or hanukkiah (candelabra) on each night of the festival. The message of Hanukkah is one of Jewish resilience and commitment to maintaining a culture and peoplehood. During Hanukkah, you may also see people playing the game of dreidel. Dreidel is a gambling game that was used as a façade so Greek soldiers did not see Jews studying. The dreidel has a Hebrew letter on each side – nun, gimel, hey, shin. These letters represent the saying, “nes gadol haya sham,” translating to, “a great miracle happened there.”

Tu Bishvat

Tu Bishvat is the Jewish holiday occurring on the 15th day of the Hebrew month of Shvat. It is also called the New Year of the Trees. In contemporary Israel, the day is celebrated as an ecological awareness day and trees are planted in celebration.

jccdenver.org/resource P2 JCC Resource Guide 2023 - 2024

Purim

The holiday of Purim is celebrated every year on the 14th of the Hebrew month of Adar. It commemorates the salvation of the Jewish people in ancient Persia from Haman’s plot “to destroy, kill and annihilate all the Jews.” To celebrate, Jews will attend synagogue to hear the reading of the megillah (Book of Esther), eat a festive meal, get dressed in costume, and eat hamantaschen. Hamantaschen are triangular pastries filled with jelly, chocolate, or poppy seeds. These sweet cookies are symbolic of Haman’s hat, which was known to be triangular.

Passover

Passover is one of the three major pilgrimage festivals of ancient Israel. The holiday celebrates the liberation of the Israelites (before they we were known as Jews) from slavery in Egypt by way of a leader, named Moses. This famous story is told in the Book of Exodus in the Torah. To celebrate, Jews around the world gather for the ritual meal, or seder, to retell the story of the Exodus. Moses went to the Pharoah, saying, “Let my people go.” The Pharoah refused. Therefore, God unleashed a plague on the Egyptian people. Moses returned to the Pharoah, again saying, “Let my people go.” The Pharoah refused him yet again. God unleashed another plague. This pattern continued until ten horrible plagues befell the Egyptian people - the Nile River turned into blood, frogs, lice, diseased livestock, boils, hailstorms, locusts, darkness, and finally the slaying of the firstborn sons of the Egyptian people. The Israelites marked their doorframes with lamb’s blood as protection, so the angel of death “passes over” their homes and does not harm them. This is where the name for this holiday comes from.

Yom HaShoah

Yom HaShoah is the Day of Remembrance. It is a commemorative day in which the victims of the Holocaust are remembered. It is marked on the 27th day in the month of Nisan.

Yom HaZikaron

Yom HaZikaron is on the fourth of Iyar, the day preceding Israel’s Independence Day. It was declared by the Israeli Knesset (parliament) to be a Memorial Day for those who lost their lives in the struggle that led to the establishment of the State of Israel and for all military personnel who were killed while in active duty in Israel’s armed forces.

Yom Ha’Atzmaut

Israel’s Independence Day is celebrated on the fifth day of the month of Iyar, which is the Hebrew date of the formal establishment of the State of Israel. On this date in 1948, members of the “provisional government” read and signed a Declaration of Independence in Tel Aviv.

Shavuot

Shavuot commemorates when the Jews received the Torah at Mount Sinai after the Exodus from Egypt. To celebrate Shavuot, Jews will attend synagogue and enjoy a festive meal with cheesecake, cheese blintzes, and cheese kreplach.

Tisha B’av

Tisha B’av, the ninth of the month of Av, is a day of mourning for Jews. Tisha B’av is the holiday that commemorates a series of catastrophes in Jewish history. Most notably, this holiday is to remember the destruction of the first and second temples and the sacking of Jerusalem in 586 BCE and 70 CE. Tisha B’av is a collective and communal sadness that is meant to be shared.

HOLIDAYS BEGIN AT SUNSET THE PRECEDING EVENING

Rosh Hashanah

6:54 pm, September 16-17

Yom Kippur

6:43 pm, September 25

Sukkot

6:31 pm

September 30-October 1

Shemini Atzeret

6:20 pm, October 7

Simchat Torah 6:19 pm, October 8

Hanukkah 4:22 pm, December 8 - 15

Tu B’Shevat 4:50 pm, January 25

Purim 7:00 pm, March 24

Passover (Pesach) 7:32 pm, April 23-30

Yom HaShoah

7:43 pm, May 6

Yom HaZikaron

7:54 pm, May 13

Yom Ha’Atzmaut

7:54 pm, May 14

Shavuot

8:15 pm, June 12 - 13

Tisha B’av

8:05 pm, July 27

P3 JCC Resource Guide 2023 - 2024 jccdenver.org/resource

Anti-Defamation

League Mountain States

1120 Lincoln Street, Suite 1301

Denver, CO 80203

303.830.7177 mountainstates@adl.org

BMH-BJ Congregation

560 S Monaco Parkway Denver, CO 80224

303.388.4203 info@bmh-bj.org

Congregation Beth Shalom

303.505.9236 shalom@cbsdenver.org

Congregation Rodef Shalom

450 South Kearney Street Denver, CO 80224

303.399.0035 amy.berkowitzcaplan@rodef-shalom.org

Ekar Farm

6825 East Alameda Avenue Denver, CO 80224

860.716.9231 ekar@ekarfarm.org

Hadassah Greater Denver

303.321.7430 denverchapter@hadassah.org

Hillel of Colorado University of Denver

2390 South Race Street

Denver, CO 80210

303.777.2773

lily@hillelcolorado.org

JCC Denver

350 South Dahlia Street Denver, CO 80246

303.399.2660 info@jccdenver.org

Jewish Fertility Foundation

720.463.3989 eryn@jewishfertilityfoundation.org

Jewish National Fund USA

303.573.7095 rachael.solomon@jnf.org

JEWISHcolorado

300 South Dahlia Street Denver, CO 80246

303.321.3399 marketing@jewishcolorado.org

JUDAISM YOUR WAY

303.320.6185 askus@judaismyourway.org

JCC Mizel Arts and Culture Center

350 South Dahlia Street Denver, CO 80246

303.316.6360 boxoffice@jccdenver.org

Moishe House

704.512.0409 comm@moishehouse.org

National Council of Jewish Women Colorado

PO Box 460892

Denver, CO 80246

303.332.7637 ncjwcolorado@gmail.com

Temple Emanuel

51 Grape Street Denver CO 80220

619.550.7155 swall@emanueldenver.org

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Temple Sinai

3509 South Glencoe Street

Denver, CO 80237

(303) 759-1827

mail@sinaidenver.org

The Blue Dove Foundation

6300 Powers Ferry Road, NW Suite 600-304 Atlanta, GA 30339

404.490.2391

info@thebluedovefoundation.org

The Jewish Experience

399 South Monaco Parkway Denver, CO 80224

303.316.6412 info@theje.com

The Mizel Institute

300 South Jackson Street, Ste 350 Denver, CO 80209

303.844.4000 details@mizelinstitute.org

Family Tree Private Care

3600 South Yosemite Street, Suite 320

Denver, CO 80237

303.791.3155

Demetrea.Kinnermon@familytreecares.com

Milestone Pediatric Therapy Services

695 South Colorado Boulevard, Ste 20

Denver, CO 80246

303.360.0727

milestonedenver@healthpro-heritage.com

Streamline Physical Therapy

350 South Dahlia Street, Suite 103

Denver, CO 80246

303.578.6404

Joelcrandall@getstreamlinept.com

B-Elite Soccer Academy

720.272.0290

info@belitesoccer.com

Denver Academy of Torah

6825 East Alameda Avenue Denver, CO 80224

720.859.6806

info@datcampus.org

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P5 JCC Resource Guide 2023 - 2024 jccdenver.org/resource
you turning 65? Call your local licensed Humana sales agent. Ben Torrez 720-501-7912 (TTY: 711)
humana.com/btorrez
Are
btorrez@humana.com

Zaidy’s Deli & Bakery

600 South Holly Street, #114 Denver, CO 80246

303.333.5336

joel@zaidysdeli.com

ACOYA Cherry Creek

301 South Harrison Street Denver, CO 80209 720.601.7992

alaforte@cadencesl.com

ACOYA Cherry Creek offers a social, safe, and elegant lifestyle for seniors who want to live their best lives. A full-service restaurant, large apartments, and endless engagement opportunities are just a few reasons to check out ACOYA!

Humana

6300 South Syracuse Way, Suite 555 Centennial, CO 80111 720.501.7912

btorrez@humana.com

Julie Freshman with Integrity Health Advisors

303.868.6088

julie@ihabroker.com

Health insurance broker specializing in Medicare products and Anxillary Coverage: Travel Insurance, Dental / Vision, etc... Personalized, professional services to meet your needs. There are no costs asociated with my service. Licensed in 24+ states.

P6 JCC Resource Guide 2023 - 2024

Kavod Senior Life

22 South Adams Street Denver, CO 80209

303.399.1146

Info@KavodSeniorLife.org

Shalom Park

14800 East Belleview Drive Aurora, CO 80015

303.680.5000

Cindy.Silverman@shalompark.net

Sunrise at Cherry Creek

251 South Colorado Blvd Denver, CO 80246

303.333.1166 cherrycreek.dos@sunriseseniorliving.com

Jewish Family Service of Colorado

3201 South Tamarac Drive Denver, CO 80231

303.597.5000 centralintake@jewishfamilyservice.org

Denver Jewish Chamber of Commerce

PO BOX 371516 Denver, CO 80237

720.707.1612

admin@denverjewishchamber.com

Honeymoon Israel

347.292.8809

info@honeymoonisrael.org

P7 JCC Resource Guide 2023 - 2024 ADULT DRILL CLASSES TOP DOG DOUBLES JUNIOR TENNIS ACADEMY JCC TENNIS CENTER
your tennis skills with first class instruction, skill-enhancing games and drills. Register at jccdenver.org/tennis J C C F I T N E S S & A Q U A T I C S C E N T E R J O I N T O D A Y ! E v e r y B o d y W e l c o m e ! 3 0 3 . 3 1 6 . 6 3 2 5 J C C D E N V E R . O R G H I I T S t u d i o P e r s o n a l T r a i n i n g G r o u p F i t n e s s / Y o g a I n d o o r / O u t d o o r P o o l
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The 28th annual Denver Jewish Film Festival returns in March 2024! Keep an eye out for the lineup to be announced in January 2024, with tickets and passes going on sale

January 22!

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