High Holy Days are here
Young Chang
Children from Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach will send helium balloons
with paper promises tucked inside up to the heavens Sunday.
The promises, their Jewish New Year’s resolutions, include “I will be
kind to pets,” “I will not steal” and “I will be a better person.”
All week, the children have been working on the project, which is
their way of starting off fresh, Rabbi Marc Rubenstein said.
Adults will do the same this Rosh Hashana, which means “head of the
year,” by taking stock of who they’ve been and who they want to be.
The celebration marks the beginning of High Holy Days, which includes
Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, starting at sundown Oct. 8.
“It’s a time of introspection,” said Selma Sladek, director of arts
and culture for the Jewish Community Center in Costa Mesa. “It’s a time
of looking inward and setting goals for the new year and looking at what
you didn’t accomplish.”
Even singles and people who aren’t affiliated with a local temple had
a place to go Friday, the evening of Rosh Hashana. A singles service was
held at the center because this is a time of year when Jews like to come
together and celebrate their roots, Sladek said.
High Holy Days services at the center will continue through Oct. 9,
when a memorial service will be held.
Jews fast on Yom Kippur to ignore their physical desires and instead
concentrate on spiritual needs -- prayer, repentance and
self-improvement. A break-the-fast supper will follow the memorial
service, Sladek said.
The center plans every service according to the mahzor, the High Holy
Days prayer book, Sladek said. The center follows the order of services
and prayers according to the book’s instructions.
“It’s very much a time of prayer and making amends and asking that we
be inscribed for a life of goodness and justice and love and peace,” she
said. “The belief is that our fate is sealed for this time period, and
there is a communal confession of sins.”
Temple Isaiah has lined up an upbeat service, Rubenstein said, with
messages touching on such contemporary issues as the Olympics,
presidential and vice presidential candidates, the mapping of human
genes, and the right to life.
“That makes High Holy Days come alive for people, instead of just
prayers read out of a prayer book,” the rabbi said. “I certainly am
trying to be a catalyst of transformation to create a new spiritual
year.”
Friday night’s service included a festive Oneg Shabbat/Rosh Hashana
reception. Traditional morning services will take place today and Sunday.
On Oct. 8, a Holy Kol Nidre service will be held.
“Kol Nidre” means “all vows” and is the name of a liturgical formula
chanted by Jews on Yom Kippur.
The all-day Yom Kippur service will begin at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 9 and last
through sundown. A break-the-fast meal will also be served.
Rubenstein sums up Rosh Hashana by saying it’s about two things: hope
and reflection. People pray confessions and for forgiveness because
there’s a difference between error and sin.
“We put erasers on pencils,” Rubenstein said. “God doesn’t expect
anyone to be perfect.”
FYI
WHAT: High Holy Days services at the Jewish Community Center
WHEN: 10 a.m. today, and 7:30 p.m. Oct. 8 and 9 a.m. Oct. 9 for Yom
Kippur. A memorial service at 5:15 p.m. Oct. 9 will conclude High Holy
Days. A break-the-fast supper will follow.
WHERE: 250 E. Baker St., Suite C, Costa Mesa
CALL: (714) 755-0340
WHAT: High Holy Days services at Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach
WHEN: A traditional morning service at 9:30 a.m. today and Sunday. The
Holy Kol Nidre service will begin at 7 p.m. Oct. 8 and the all-day Yom
Kippur service will begin at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 9 and run through sundown. A
break-the-fast meal will be served.
WHERE: 2401 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach
CALL: (949) 548-6900
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.