The Voice of the Lehigh Valley Jewish Community
www.jewishlehighvalley.org
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Issue No. 441
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March 2021
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Adar/Nisan 5781
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Check out how we honored our local heroes on Super Sunday p12-13
From Zooms to escape rooms, find fun holiday ideas in our Passover special section
FROM THE DESK OF JERI ZIMMERMAN p3 LVJF TRIBUTES p7 ANNUAL CAMPAIGN HONOR ROLL p8-9 JEWISH FAMILY SERVICE p11 JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER p14-15 JEWISH DAY SCHOOL p16-17 COMMUNITY CALENDAR p23
Clergy group hopes COVID anniversary service will provide healing By Stephanie Goodling HAKOL Editor The Lehigh Valley Jewish Clergy Group is planning a healing service to mark the one-year anniversary of the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. This service will take place on Thursday, March 11, at 7:30 p.m. via Zoom, and is co-sponosored by the Jewish Federation. Clergy from various denominations are involved and the whole community is invited to participate. Rabbi Moshe Re’em of Temple Beth El says that there are a lot of goals that the clergy group wants to accomplish through the evening. “Marking a year since isolation and social distancing started I think is really important,” said Re’em. “In Genesis 2, we’re told it’s not good for a person to be alone, and for this past year many of us have been separated from loved ones and family. Many of us know people
who are sick or have been sick or who have died. We’re social animals. As humans, we need to be in touch with each other. We need to shake hands, we need to give each other a hug, and we’ve been deprived of that through social distancing.” Rabbi Melody Davis of Congregation Bnai Shalom said that “the main purpose of the service is to create a communal space where we can acknowledge the specter of COVID-19, the change it has inflicted upon us, and what we have to look forward to, a new beginning and a new normal.” Cantor Ellen Sussman of Temple Shirat Shalom added that, “First and foremost, the service is to remember those who have lost their lives to the pandemic and pray that we can learn from the experience.” Re’em emphasized the need for the service in light of not only the lives lost, but those impacted in a variety of ways.
“There’s been a major increase in depression and family violence and suidice rates. People have lost jobs and are under economic stress and pressure. There really needs to be a space for those who are crying out, and for healing and for comfort. And I think that by organizing this service that we can accomplish that,” he said.
There’s no doubt that everyone has grief in one form or another to process after the last year, so all are welcomed to attend. To register to attend the service, please visit
www.jewishlehighvalley.org/ virtualevents/covidhealing or contact your local synagogue.
Bnai Shalom looks to future after selling former TCP building
בני שלום
CONGREGATION BNAI SHALOM By Stephanie Goodling HAKOL Editor Now that Bnai Abraham Synagogue and Temple Covenant of Peace have officially
merged into Congregation Bnai Shalom in Easton, they are housed in the former Bnai Abraham Synagogue building. The former Temple Covenant of Peace property on Northampton Street has been sold to Life Church, who officially made it their Easton campus on Feb. 14. Though initially there was the possibility of selling the property to 7-Eleven, plans changed and the historic building will live on as a house of worship as it was intended. Bnai Shalom Co-President Dr. Marc Abo says his congregation
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and Life Church may team up to do charitable outreach in the city in the future. Abo and his wife, Aliette, were integral in the process of handing over the keys of TCP to the church. While Marc has spent the past two years dealing with administration, Aliette volunteered for nine months with the preparations of cleaning out both buildings, which are both approximately 14,000 square feet. And in the final weeks before the move, she worked several hours a day to photograph and catalog over 150 Judaica items and ensure the movers had the proper labels for each carefully wrapped package. Forgotten treasures were uncovered from family prayer books to letters from two past U.S. Presidents. Some of those items were returned to their families of origin and some will be lovingly hung in the new building, while still others are destined for a future exhibit at the Sigal Museum in Easton. “Due to the pandemic, we could not risk anyone’s health. It was an Herculean
effort from an amazing small group of people. We had a handful of people, including myself, cleaning and organizing our home. I felt like it was Pesach for nine months. We still have a lot of work to do. This is an enormous task, but it will get done with a great deal of respect. There is a home and a place for all of our artifacts,” said Aliette. One item that will be displayed prominently at the new joint building is the 600-pound olive branch which bedecked the outside of the former TCP synagogue. That symbol was incorporated into the new Bnai Shalom logo along with the outline of the former Bnai Abraham building, which now is home to the merged congregation. Marc considers the completed merger, after the third attempt over at least 40 years, a miracle. He considers the fact that they were able to sell the building another miracle. With the two congregations, who each had their own struggles, to get together and support each other “was like a marriage made in heaven.”
Aliette added, “In spite of financial crossroads and decrease in members, a wonderful, vibrant and excited congregation has created a dynamic partnership. Our founders had a dream, inspiration and hope for a Jewish identity in a Jewish community. It is ironic that on Nov. 21, 2019, I was one of the co-chairs through Federation of the Hatikvah 6 concert, the last gathering of 400 people in our community since the pandemic. Hatikvah means hope. Unity in the community was our theme, and I only hope that our legacy continues in Easton. We will be praying, singing and dancing together. There is a story to be told from the past and now a new story will unfold with the next generation. I have such faith in our youth!” Harvey Cartine, Bnai Shalom’s other co-president, said, “After a very hectic January with the logistics of moving, we are looking forward to the end of the pandemic so that Bnai Shalom Continues on page 22