Australia and the World Wide Wrap

Wrapping Down Under: Australia’s Jewish Community Joins the World Wide Wrap

by Evan Rumack

This coming Super Bowl Sunday, thousands of men and women will take part in the World Wide Wrap, sponsored by FJMC. Most in the northern hemisphere will be shedding winter coats as they enter the synagogue and photos of the event will show wrappers in midwinter attire. It is late summer in southern-hemisphere Australia, however, where two kehillot (communities) join in the FJMC World Wide Wrap. Those of us in the northern hemisphere feel a pang of jealousy when we see the photos of wrappers around the pool or in shorts and t-shirts!

Eric Lundberg reports from Sydney for Emanuel Synagogue:

The synagogue hosts many “streams” in a pluralistic community, with the Masorti (Conservative) stream forming about 25 percent of the congregation. The Masorti minyan was formed nearly 20 years ago.

In 2011 the wrap included b’nai mitzvah candidates, first-time wrappers, and old hands. Rabbis Jeffrey Kamins and Paul Jacobson helped participants learn about the mitzvah of tefillin and led the shacharit service. Afterward, all retired to the board room for a brunch and discussion of how each participant personally relates to the mitzvah of tefillin. They agreed that the Wrap is a way for people to reclaim this important mitzvah, which gives a direct yet personal connection with our tradition. Additionally, the World Wide Wrap is a wonderful way to spread the word that we can be both egalitarian and traditional at the same time in our Jewish practice.

From Melbourne, John Rosenberg writes about Congregation Kehilat Nitzan:

This Masorti minyan formed in 1994 as an offshoot of the Reform synagogue Kehilat Emanuel and over the years it has grown to become a congregation of 250 families. The congregation is pleased to have Rabbi Adam Stein as its full-time rabbi and is awaiting the renovation of its own building. The Melbourne community has participated continuously since the first World Wide Wrap in 2000. Attendance has ranged from 12 to 30 men, women, and members of the younger generation and the Wrap is considered an integral part of the calendar. All members of the kehillah are actively encouraged to attend, particularly those in their bar/bat mitzvah year. The Wrap, which has been held at the home of Bev and John Rosenberg just about every year, is followed by a brunch of bagels and fruit.

Both Emanuel Synagogue and Kehilat Nitzan are looking forward to participating in the 2012 World Wide Wrap and extend a yasher koach to FJMC for its leadership in organizing this event.

To register your club or synagogue and get more information about the February 5, 2012 World Wide Wrap, please go to www.fjmc.org.

Evan Rumack is a past president of FJMC Midwest region and now is on the CJ editorial committee.

 

(This article appeared in the magazine  CJ: Voices of Conservative/Masorti Judaism,  Winter 2011-2012 issue)

 

Posted
 

Torah scribe wields her quill against segregation of women

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 In some places in Israel, the "woman's voice" is being heard loud and clear.

 

Schechter Rabbinical graduate Rabbi Hanna Klebansky is one such voice: Israel's only active "soferet stam"- Torah scribe. A recent front-page article in Ha'aretz describes her important work:

  

haaretz
 13/1/2012 Nir Hasson

  

klebanskyOn a small desk, squeezed between a closet and a wall, the writing of the first women's Torah scroll in Israel began a few weeks ago. The scribe, Hanna Klebansky, says she hopes the writing and reading of the scroll will send a message contradicting that of the segregation of women.

 

Klebansky is hardly the stereotypical Torah scribe. She is 39, born in Georgia in the former Soviet Union, and was ordained a Conservative rabbi in Israel. A musician by training, she is also an instructor in courses for chaplains to the terminally ill. After her five children go to sleep, she begins her scribal work, line after line, column after column......(READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE)

 

Schechter Institute | 4 Avraham Granot St. | POB 16080 | Jerusalem | Israel | 91160 | Israel
 

Masorti Women's Study Days: Feb 14, 22, 26

women


Tuesday, Feb. 14, at Hod V'Hadar, Kfar Saba

 

Wednesday, Feb. 22, at Kibbutz Hanaton

 

Sunday, Feb. 26, at Eshel Avraham, Beersheva

 

3:45 pm - 8:45 pm

 

Lectures by top feminist scholars (including Schechter faculty) on Jewish Women and Gender Studies, in three different locations in Israel.

 

Study in four languages: Hebrew, English, Spanish, Russian. click here to see full Lecturer List.

 

For more information and registration contact: wleague@masorti.org

 

Save the Date. Tell your Friends.

Join us for quality learning for women that has become a tradition.

 

Organized by Women's League for Conservative Judaism in cooperation with the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies and the Masorti Movement, with the generous support of the JUF of Greater Metropolitan Chicago and the Dorot Foundation.



Schechter Institute | 4 Avraham Granot St. | POB 16080 | Jerusalem | Israel | 91160 | Israel
 

: Intl. Holocaust Remembrance Day

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Masorti Olami | 18 Ha'uman St. | Jerusalem | 93420 | Israel
 

MOMENT MAGAZINE

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE PRO ISRAEL TODAY?

A Moment Symposium

 

David K. Shipler

It seems obvious to say that being pro-Israel means supporting Israel’s survival, security and well-being as a just and prosperous society. Nobody would disagree. Where people part company is over how best to achieve those goals: Territorial compromise or an unyielding hold on every inch of land? A shared Jerusalem or undiluted Israeli sovereignty? A measured military response to terrorism or punishing air strikes against civilian areas?

There was once a quaint notion that land could be traded for peace. Israel tried it in 2005 by withdrawing unilaterally from Gaza, and Hamas answered with rocket attacks. Nevertheless, 70 percent of Israelis, in a recent poll by Hebrew University, still favor a Palestinian state.

That suggests Israelis might want to see most of the West Bank become Palestine one day, if they can get a reliable peace in exchange. If so, then Israel might do well to keep open the possibility of withdrawing instead of slamming doors in its face by continuing to build Jewish settlements there.

For decades, Israel has been narrowing its options by expanding settlements. By my reckoning, therefore, being pro-Israel means favoring policies that maximize Israel’s flexibility and keep open various exits from the current stalemate. It is not pro-Israel for its leaders to lock the country into the conflict and to impose irreversible decisions on future generations.

David K. Shipler, former New York Times Jerusalem bureau chief, is a Pulitzer Prize-winning author. His latest book is The Rights of the People: How Our Search For Safety Invades Our Liberties. He writes online at The Shipler Report.

 

Judea Pearl

Jews are a nation bonded by a common history and a common historical narrative. If we forget that narrative, gone is our Jewishness. Throughout our history, the driving engine of survival has been the hope for returning to sovereignty in the birthplace of our history—Eretz Israel. The State of Israel is the culmination of this dream, and also the crucible in which Jewish heritage attains its full expression and comes to life through the resuscitating touch of normalcy.


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