Michele Marr Sunset on Friday will mark...
Michele Marr
Sunset on Friday will mark the start of Rosh Hashana, the Jewish
New Year, and signal the beginning of the High Holy Days -- a 10-day
period of reflection and renewal that will conclude with Yom Kippur,
the Day of Atonement, on Sept. 16.
Rabbi Stephen J. Einstein of Congregation B’nai Tzedek in Fountain
Valley described the holidays as a time to look to the eternal
verities that keep people going throughout their lives year after
year.
At Congregation Adat Israel in Huntington Beach, Rabbi Aron David
Berkowitz expects to see more Jews than ever this year coming to the
synagogues for the holidays, to pray, find meaning and to seek
guidance.
“The last year has unleashed an anti-Semitism that has not been
seen since the Holocaust,” he said. “Since Sept. 11, the world has changed. People are afraid, uncertain and nervous. Israel has lost
hundreds of its people.”
The holidays for Berkowitz are a time when his congregation can be
refreshed by the words of the Torah that teach life, kindness and
truth, a time to find strength to live in troubled and troubling
times.
“You can’t stop living. You have to be courageous,” said Einstein.
“But you also have to be wary. And you have to be of assistance. The
spirit we saw on and immediately following 9/11 needs to be something
that becomes part of our everyday life.”
Berkowitz has encouraged his congregation to attend the High
Holiday services in order “to hold hands with your fellow Jews.”
The Orange County Israel Solidarity Task Force and the Jewish
Community Relations Council have worked to create another bond with
Jews in Israel during these Holy Days. With a project called “Honey
for the Holidays,” they hope to send this message: We are with you in
sweetness and sorrow.
Preparation for Rosh Hashana began with the observance of S’lichot
on Aug. 31. Congregation Adat Israel will begin its program at 11:30
p.m. followed by a service at 1 a.m. Congregation B’nai Tzedek will
begin its program at 8:30 p.m. followed by a service at midnight. The
highlight of Rosh Hashana is the sounding of the shofar, a ram’s horn
that is blown to get attention.
“There is no question that what happened on 9/11was a tremendous
sounding of the shofar,” Berkowitz said. “It did catch everyone’s
attention, but after one is stunned, what does one do afterwards? How
do we change our live as a result of it?”
That, he said, is the question.
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