Showing posts with label human rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human rights. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2022

In This Moment: The Dreidel and America's Gambling Problem; A Tribute to Jewish Books

In This Moment


This Shabbat is International Human Rights Day, commemorating the signing of the Declaration of Human Rights on Dec. 10, 1948, still the UN's finest hour. Click here to see a poster celebrating all 30 clauses of the declaration. And click here for a Human Rights Shabbat info packet, complete with Jewish sources.

Shabbat Shalom!


A Tribute to Jewish Books


This will likely be the final Shabbat-O-Gram before the end of the calendar year, so I’m packing a little extra into this pre-Hanukkah edition.


This is Jewish Book Month, which for the past century has marked the time when American Jews celebrate our eternal love affair with books. Study, not prayer, is Judaism’s core religious act. We are, after all, known as "The People of the Book." A synagogue is often called a “Beit Midrash,” a house of study, rather than a “Beit Tefilla,” a house of prayer. To be Jewish is always to be engaged in learning - and to do it together.


Last week's Bar Mitzvah, Jonah Shapiro, loves to read, and he spoke about it in his d'var Torah (read it and watch it here). I highlighted the Book Month celebration with an impromptu Jewish Book Quiz during my Bar Mitzvah charge, which Jonah aced. The Jewish Book Council, organizers of Jewish Book Month designs original posters celebrating Jewish Book Month every year. I've included samples throughout this email.

As we celebrate, an ironic note. Part of our long range capital plan for the upstairs level of the synagogue is to convert the old library to a more modern "media center" and conference room. While the library has somewhat fallen into disuse and I'm sure the replacement will be lovely, it should give us pause to be exchanging all those filled bookshelves for... what? TV monitors? White boards? Cappuccino machines? Anyway, books have lost their centrality as vehicles of learning. I find myself doing 90 percent of my text work on the Sefaria app or website, rather than opening up bulky volumes of the Talmud. I've long been an advocate of online study - in fact, I wrote a book about it. So I am fully aware that while the technology changes - from stone tablets to Apple tablets, with papyrus and parchment in between - the content remains constant. But while we embrace new modes, we simultaneously treasure and preserve the old, which is why at services we still read Torah from a scroll rather than a book. Both are equally holy. When either a Torah scroll or a humash becomes tattered, we honor them equally by burying them rather than simply discarding - or heaven forbid, burning - them.


So what will become of those old books upstairs? And when our library will be no more, what will we tell the kids USED to be there? It almost feels like Frank Sinatra's old song, There Used to be a Ballpark:


And the people watched in wonder, how they’d laugh and how they’d cheer. And there used to be a ballpark right here.


Those books once brought wonder to the eyes of children, the epic adventures of Ktonton or All of A Kind Family. We’ve got to be sure that those books live on in some form, and that our building will always be a home for curiosity, inquiry and imagination, in whatever form the inspiration may take.

Religion and America's Gambling Problem


Hanukkah celebrates miracles of human heroism and divine providence. But it also celebrates incredible good fortune - pure luck - in life's game of chance; for the festival teaches that life is one continuous game of dreidel. You never know where you are going to land, but no matter what, you keep on spinning. Although this four-sided top has roots far removed from Judaism, the dreidel has landed on our space and has become a valuable means of teaching new generations of Jews to stay in the game.


But now a culture of gambling has overrun us and set our heads spinning faster than any dreidel can. It may be time to cash in our golden chocolate coins and look at the dreidel not as tool to counter assimilation but a reminder to fight addiction.


To gamble, in Hebrew, is l'hamer, which may derive from the three letter Biblical root heh-mem-resh connoting a torrent of gushing waters.


What a perfect metaphor. Gambling, like so many addictive activities, provides a rush every bit as exhilarating as those gushing waters, leaving us thirsty for more. Biblical editors could not have known about Las Vegas slot machines, where, as with playing dreidel, one minute you can be knee deep in jackpot winnings of golden coins, and then a minute later, the flood recedes and you're left standing penniless in a parched river bed. 


But more likely, the word comes from the three letter root mem-vav-resh, which speaks to the conversion of currency and money changing hands.

Note that there is no stigma attached to these transactions, and aside from the occasional oracle or lottery, gambling as we know it is not a prime concern in the Bible. Rarely is it the focus of opprobrium, divine or human. Sodom and Gomorrah were not destroyed because of a backroom poker game. But later authorities took the dangers much more seriously. And so should we.


Did you see recent the recent New York Times expose on sports gambling? It was one of those revelations that could be characterized as "shocking, but not surprising." Ever since the Supreme Court opened the door to widespread sports betting in 2018, an onslaught of wagering became inevitable, bringing with it a gambling culture that has turned America into a continental casino. What happens in Vegas no longer stays in Vegas. It's happening on every couch and easy chair and barstool in America. Every football game - no, every play - is making someone, somewhere, a lot of money.


Here are the key takeaways from the Times' series:



From the moral perspective, this passage from the series bites especially hard:


The sports-betting industry has been creative in devising ways to persuade people to keep betting even after they lose money, but tools to make it easier to quit — some run by gambling companies, others by states — do not always work. In Indiana, for example, people who sought the government’s help to prevent them from gambling found that they were still able to place bets. Dozens did so.


We were not prepared for this onslaught. It just appeared, suddenly. First there were all those cute ads with the Mannings and suddenly networks were cutting away from to offer in-game prop bets. The game itself has become secondary, part of the stage set, a background to the bets, a prop to the props.


Religious institutions were not prepared (and still are not) to play the role that we were designed to play, that of moral umpire. When the ball is hit, someone's got to cry "foul!" or everyone will just keep on playing. As of yet, no one has cried foul, and the weakest among us are the ones who are suffering, those least able to resist the temptations. While they are losing their shirt, we are throwing in the towel.


When Caesars struck deals recently with Michigan State and LSU, no one seemed to flinch about the corruption that is sure to appear on a campus near you.


OK, let's make sure all those students saddled with gazillions in loan debt will leave school with gambling debts to boot. Nothing bad can come of that!


Online gaming exploded in growth during the pandemic. Forbes reports that for the first half of 2022 revenue for sports betting totaled just over $3 billion compared to $4.3 billion for all of last year. Morgan Stanley forecasts revenue to reach $7 billion by 2025. Also, in 2021 Americans bet $57.2 billion on sporting events, a year-over-year increase of 165%. I am so glad that organized crime and political corruption ended so that none of this could be seen as a significant danger.


A recent Pew report indicates that addiction is hitting hard among those not yet legally allowed to bet. Keith Whyte, Executive director of the Council on Problem Gambling, says 4% to 6% of high schoolers are considered addicted to gambling. “We believe that the risks for gambling addiction overall have grown 30% from 2018 to 2021, with the risk concentrated among young males 18 to 24 who are sports bettors,” he said.


So when did religious institutions stop caring about this? Why have they been so slow to respond? If greed is one of the seven deadly sinsright alongside lust, anger and gluttony, why does it seem like some sins are more equal than others? The deadly sins are primarily a Christian thing, but there are Jewish parallels. So why does gambling receive such little attention when pastors go looking for their fire and brimstone?


Perhaps because some of these other societal issues have hit closer to home for religious groups, from the sex abuse scandals involving clergy (one database counts 6,000 Catholic clergy alone who have been implicated), to the excessive drinking encouraged in many synagogues (via those infamous behind-the-bima "Kiddush Clubsor groups luring underage students to boozy Shabbat dinners). It cuts across denominational lines. All too often, religious groups have been part of the problem rather than the solution.


That's also been true with regard to gambling, but the stakes were never this high. For decades, religious institutions have been sustained by Bingo games and other small-scale wagering, but those foibles seem quaint when compared to sex abuse, embezzlement, intolerance and other assorted hypocrisies.


Also, we clergy have tolerated gambling because, well, we can't oppose every form of pleasure. If we become morality police, we'll end up like the Morality Police itself, which the Iranian government just had to disband. Evidently even the mullahs don't like being disliked. If our entire culture is leaning toward a wholehearted embrace of gambling, which one of us wants to be the killjoy, putting the breaks on this high speed - high stakes enterprise? Better to simply lean back and enjoy the ride and not be the prophet calling out in the wilderness that this is going too far too fast.


Think of how things went for those clergy who tried to convince congregants that Covid dangers are still very real. Over the past several months, as Covid fatigue has set in, people in the pews have been stripping off masks with the liberating abandon of the cast of Hair. It's a perfectly natural response. And for the most part, religious leaders have been too exhausted to resist. These days, we're doing everything with abandon. So why not gambling? Why should clergy stand in the path of fun?


Maybe it's time for synagogues to start selling ad space to Caesars too, like LSU and Michigan State. Maybe it's time to hold services at Foxwoods.


Hey, what could be so bad? Some of our best jokes are about gambling. And Jewish sources do not prohibit pleasure, but they are all about moderation. Natural urges like hunger and lust are not considered in themselves evil, and in fact often yield positive results.  Without lust, for instance, there would not be procreation.  A little gambling shouldn't hurt anyone, right? Is it wrong to play dreidel? For Jews in the shtetls of Europe, gambling on Christmas Eve was part of the annual "Nittel Nacht" celebration - their version of going out for Chinese food and a movie to wile away the loneliest night of the year.


While few rabbinic authorities have a problem with recreational dreidel games, one rabbi suggests that all winnings must be given to tzedakkah (charity) for it to be kosher. Quite often, the charity is the synagogue itself, but most Jewish sources do not endorse gambling as a means of fundraising. Many rabbis through the ages, including the venerated commentators Rashi and Maimonides, have considered it to be a form of robbery, since the losing party to a bet gives up their money against their will.


The Talmud posits that those who gamble should not be allowed to serve as witnesses. One opinion states that this is true only in the case where the gambler has no other occupation and contributes nothing useful to the world. Another sage suggests that since gambling is a form of robbery, even an occasional gambler cannot serve as a witness.


Rabbinical Assembly responsum on the topic urges rabbis "to be alert to the evils of gambling in general, and to oppose not only the more obvious problems of involvement with individuals or groups making a profession of gambling within the synagogue, but even more so the subtle and decidedly unwholesome consequences of gambling as a mainstay of synagogue fiscal management."


Other clergy leaders have been vocal in their opposition as well. In a 1987 address, Mormon Elder Dallin H. Oaks echoed some of the Talmud's points in saying:



Gambling is a game of chance that takes without giving value in return. Gambling puts money or other things of value into a pool and then redistributes it on the basis of a roll of the dice, a spin of the wheel, or a drawing of a number. Nothing of value is produced in the process. What does gambling do to its participants? The attitude of taking something from someone else in order to enhance our own position—the essence of gambling—leads us away from the giving path of Christ and toward the taking path of the adversary. The act of taking or trying to take something from someone else without giving value in return is destructive of spiritual sensitivities.


Many other religious groups concur with this message (with Native Americans being a notable exception)and so does law enforcement. Gambling is still considered a "vice," right alongside prostitution, illegal drugs and porn. But few government officials seem inclined to speak out against its unprecedented and unrestrained growth.


Corruption still very much exists, but what has nearly disappeared, aside from religious, judicial and political resistance, is local investigative journalism. So religious institutions need to fill in for the gaping holes where judges and journalists used to tread. We've all dropped the ball on gambling, just as we did with alcohol, greed and lust. But we can change things.


I’m not advocating that we clergy all vie to be the next Bible thumper in “Footloose,” but religious leaders in America have a morality problem. Our moral integrity has been compromised so often that it dilutes our ability to call out society's moral shortcomings. Yes, there is a slippery slope when it comes to holding high moral standards. Some slip down the slope leading to intolerance and vindictiveness. But others slide into acquiescence, into a world with no moral standards at all. I realize that my concerns regarding sports betting reflect the positions of those found on a side of the political spectrum where I don't usually dwell. But I don't feel this should be a partisan issue. It's not an all-or-nothing thing. Sports betting is here to stay. But it needs to be checked and balanced by those few societal forces with the power to do so.


So what can religious groups do about it? For one thing, stop glorifying betting. Be a counterpoint. Be a pain in the neck to authorities and even to our own congregants. If we are promoting small-change gambling at our events, let's include disclaimers. Let's put out information for recovery support services on a table in the back. It might make us a little less "cool" but I'll take that exchange, if it will enable us to fulfill our obligation as a voice of an ancient tradition that promotes good health practices and moderation - and values taking care of our neighbors who have vulnerabilities.


But we also need to roll up our sleeves and take on some of the big boys, for the sake of those college kids at Michigan State and LSU who are about to lose their shirt.


The next time you see a new commercial involving any of the Mannings - even Cooper - just turn it off. We need to pay attention to the growing dangers around us and deal ourselves in to a game with far higher stakes than a four sided Hanukkah top. When it comes to being a check on our society’s moral excesses, we should be relentless. We should never stop spinning that dreidel.


And one more thing. if you are ever offered a wager on the length of my sermons, always take the “over.”


Read and share this article on Substack

Recommended Reading


Parsha Packet Picks for Va-Yishlach

Why are there dots over this word in our Torah portion (and visible in every Torah scroll, as you can see here)? The word, from Genesis 33:4, is "And he kissed him," referring to Esau ending his blood feud with Jacob. Rashi comments: Dots are placed above the letters of this word, and a difference of opinion is expressed in the Baraitha of Sifré (בהעלותך) as to what these dots are intended to suggest: some explain the dotting as meaning that he did not kiss him with his whole heart, whereas R Simeon the son of Johai said: Is it not well-known that Esau hated Jacob? But at that moment his pity was really aroused and he kissed him with his whole heart. So was Esau's smooch a "true love's kiss" or a kiss of death? We don't know, but the question that arises from this is whether every kiss is a little bit of both? See more below in the packet, "Waging Peace."

What's in a (Jewish) Name? (and why we change them) - Exploring the significance of Jacob's name change to "Israel." Everyth8ng you ever wanted to know obout Jewish names. Plus a celebrity name change quiz.

Waging Peace: Jacob and Esau; Building a Shared Society, One Community at a Time - Excerpts from "Tractate Shalom" plus many quotes and commentaries on the importance of peace, in light of Jacob and Esau's reconciliation.

Genocide and the Imperative of a Jewish Response - Resources on Darfur, pain and genocide, in light of Rachel's suffering and her naming of Benjamin, "the son of my suffering."

Dina: Midrash and Legend - Ever since the publication of Anita Diamant's novel,"The Red Tent," there has been a fascination with Jacob's only daughter, Dina. While the biblical text objectifies her and portrays her primarily a victim, the rabbis depicted her as possessing many positive qualities. Dina was our first "#MeToo" case - and one of the saddest.

Human Rights Shabbat Packet - See how each of the 30 articles of the Declaration of Human Rights corresponds to Jewish values and sources. Additionally, see this Human Rights Shabbat packet prepared by Rabbis for Human Rights, filled with prayers, essays and divray Torah connecting this commemoration with Vayishlach.

Hebrew Front Page of the Week


  • The top headline speaks of the deal to give radical right leader Betzalel Smotrich authority over the territories. Bottom right celebrates a "Carnivale at the World Cup" (Brazil's victory) and last but not least, on the left side you see the horrific news that the price of Hanukkah sufganiot is going way up. "Not just the special fillings, but jelly too!" Now that's a crisis!
  • Time's 2022 PERSON OF THE YEAR VOLODYMYR ZELENSKY: Zelensky’s success as a wartime leader has relied on the fact that courage is contagious. It spread through Ukraine’s political leadership in the first days of the invasion, as everyone realized the President had stuck around. If that seems like a natural thing for a leader to do in a crisis, consider historical precedent. Only six months earlier, the President of Afghanistan, Ashraf Ghani—a far more experienced leader than Zelensky—fled his capital as Taliban forces approached. In 2014, one of Zelensky’s predecessors, Viktor Yanukovych, ran away from Kyiv as protesters closed in on his residence; he still lives in Russia today. Early in the Second World War, the leaders of Albania, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Greece, Poland, the Netherlands, Norway, and Yugoslavia, among others, fled the advance of the German Wehrmacht and lived out the war in exile...That experience (as an improv actor) turned out to have its advantages. Zelensky was adaptable, trained not to lose his nerve under pressure. He knew how to read a crowd and react to its moods and expectations. Now his audience was the world. He was determined not to let them down. His decision to stay at the compound in the face of possible assassination set an example, making it more difficult for his underlings to cut and run.




And in Florida news...







  
LinkedInShare This Email
Temple Beth El
350 Roxbury Road
Stamford, Connecticut 06902
203-322-6901 | www.tbe.org
  
A Conservative, Inclusive, Spiritual Community

Thursday, December 9, 2021

In This Moment: Dec 10: Living Amphibiously, Growing from Tragedy, Accepting Uncertainty


In This Moment
TBE seventh graders at their mock brit milah last Sunday.
See more photos in our 7th Grade lifecycle album.
Screen Grab of students participating in last Friday's fabulous Hanukkah service.

Shabbat Shalom!

I hope you will be able to join me this evening, as I will be a panelist at the "Shared Roots, Divergent Paths" program with the AJC and Iona College. Tonight's interactive, online program will explore the intersection of faith and civil discourse and feature discussion on the following questions: In a time of extreme polarization in every facet of human life, do our faith traditions contribute to bridging partisan divides? Is there a role for interreligious dialogue in mending the breaches in our attitudes and action toward each other? How can interreligious dialogue contribute to your local community? Click here for Zoom link.

Tomorrow (Friday) night. we'll hear from Fran Ginsburg, who will discuss the sacred work of Stamford's Chevra Kadisha (Burial Society), and on Shabbat morning, Rabbi Gerry Ginsburg will give the d'var Torah for the portion of Vayiggash.

Mark your calendars for next Friday night (Dec. 17), when we will have as our special guest speaker at services, Abdallah Salha. Abdallah is a Palestinian from the Gaza Strip who is involved in multiple peacebuilding programs including the Jerusalem PeaceBuilders and Creating Friendships for Peace. He's now studying in the US after finishing high school in Norway and spending two gap years first in Senegal and then in Gaza. He is the Director of Communications of the Leonard Education Organization (LE-O), which provides scholarship assistance for under resourced Palestinian youth.

And for the next class in our "New Jewish Canon" series this Tuesday at 7, here are the assigned readings:



Here are some of this week's most intriguing stories:










  • Here's another gift: Hadar has assembled brief video lectures by the great rabbi, Yitz Greenberg. Rabbi Yitz Greenberg began thinking and teaching about the Jewish value of human dignity and the image of God in the late 1950s. These theological ideas transformed the landscape of Jewish thought, helping to pave the way for contemporary ideas of tikkun olam, egalitarianism, and social justice in the Jewish community.

Watch the trailer here, and then the brief talks follow.
Trailer: Conversations with Rabbi Yitz Greenberg
Living Amphibiously

As we prepare to turn the page to 2022, it has become clear to us that life has changed irrevocably. While there is no doubt that our lives improved during 2021 – the successful roll-out of the vaccines and preservation of our democracy after the failed coup of January 6 are two enormous reasons why – still, we feel a sense of unease, with uncertainties abounding. Covid, in all its varying forms, is not going away any time soon, and neither are the anti-democratic fires stoked by the insurrection and Big Lie. Add to that the very real fires (and floods) of climate chaos, which only escalated this past year.

Living with uncertainty becomes possible when we grow from our life experiences. We see that in this week's portion of Vayiggash. Joseph's brother Judah uses his personal tragedy to grow into a person able to risk his own life to save his brother's - at the beginning of the story he participated in nearly killing his brother. Rabbi Neil Loevinger writes:

This is the measure of Judah’s greatness: that he didn’t remain mired in his pain but grew spiritually out of it, taking tragedy and using it as the soil for empathy, compassion, forgiveness, and self-sacrifice. He was the one to step forward when the hour demanded it because he was the one who knew that to redeem himself out of his own past mistakes and accumulated grief, he had to extend himself for the redemption of others.

How, then, can we learn to live with Covid, accepting a degree of risk that appears permanent? So how do we do that? 

Not like those proverbial frogs in the pot slowly coming to a boil, closing their eyes to the intensifying dangers (although that boiling frog thing turns out to have been an urban legend). We need to be more like the Israelites in Egypt, who had to bear the impact of another plague involving frogs, and then grow from it.

Yes, our ancestors in Egypt had to survive the plague of frogs.

The Torah tells us that some of the Ten Plagues bypassed the Israelites (I believe the expression is “passed over”), but not the first three. The bloody Nile was no less bloody for our ancestors (Ex. 7:21). The frogs were no less froggy, covering the “whole land of Egypt” (8:2). Same holds for vermin (8:13). It says explicitly that the vermin affected “all of Egypt.”

We first hear that the Israelites were spared a given plague only when the fourth plague is announced: "And in that day I will set apart the land of Goshen, in which My people dwell, that no swarms of flies shall be there, in order that you may know that I am the Lord in the midst of the land" (Ex 8: 22). Thank God, no flies. For subsequent plagues, the Israelites are often spared, most famously for the death of the first born. But for blood, frogs and vermin, the Israelites had to endure and adapt.

So how does one adapt to a plague. Here’s a hint:

Ribit. Ribit

We fight the frogs by becoming like frogs. By living amphibiously.

We have to learn how to live amphibiously. We need to get used to a hybrid existence, maintaining our social networks both online and in person, because if we have learned one thing over the past two years, it’s that we need social connections, even when physical ones are not possible.

As I write this, the Connecticut Covid infection rate has risen to its highest level in ten months (8.3 percent), this despite a vaccination rate that in Stamford approaches 95 percent (which is also true of TBE). But of course, now we need to look at the rate of booster shots too, along with the infection rate of the new variant, knowing that as long as the large pockets of the world remain unvaxxed and vulnerable, there will be still more new variants to come.

Covid here, Covid there, Covid jumping everywhere!
 
How do we deal with this? Neither by burying our heads in the sand nor our bodies in the basement. We need to find a sensible medium, which means that we need to be both in-person and online, and able to shift between the two effortlessly. We need to become hybrid creatures. In a word, amphibious.

Right now all our services and most educational events are available online, and Friday night services are also in-person. In the winter, the hybrid option gives us an additional advantage – we never have to cancel due to weather! So, it’s important for you to check our email announcements every week for last minute changes and links. Right now, we are on live stream rather than Zoom for Friday nights, but if we go all-virtual (say, during a blizzard), we’ll switch to Zoom, which means there will be a different link. But you’re used to adapting on the fly by now, right?

For Shabbat morning, we remain all-virtual, but I lead from the synagogue, so that we can use the Torah, which gives the service more authenticity. We use a Zoom format, which allows for more interactivity and participation. For b’nai mitzvah, the service is both in person and on live stream or Zoom, so check your local listings the week of the event. If you want to attend in person, you’ll need to contact our office to find out how.

We are looking to shift to a hybrid service for Shabbat morning in the near future. But that will require a more advanced Zoom set up than we currently have. We are working on it – let me know if you are interested in helping out. It will also depend on trends regarding the infection rate and variants.

Our daily 1 PM minyan will continue to be on Zoom. It has been one of the most successful and important programs since Covid began, bringing comfort and support to so many. But we are also looking to expand to a more hybrid format here. Beginning on January 23 at 10 AM, a hybrid morning minyan will be held weekly – on Sundays only for now – which will take place in our sanctuary and on Zoom.  People are welcome to join us (and bring tefillin if you’ve got ‘em) in person and online. The morning service takes a little longer than mincha, but it will be nice to get back to it. This will replace the 1 PM Zoom-only service on Sundays. The rest of the week will remain at 1 PM and on Zoom only. 

If anyone with a yahrzeit is looking to have an in-person or online morning minyan, especially if your work schedule does not allow you to come to a service at 1 PM, by all means let me know and we’ll try to work it out for that day (it would be helpful if you have 10 people committed to attend, but even if not, we’ll try to find them). We would still have our regularly scheduled 1 PM Zoom minyan that day, but there’s no reason we can’t have more than one service on a given day! 

For the time being, my Jewish Canon adult ed class will continue online – it’s just much more convenient on cold winter nights, and we have people participating from out of state; some other classes and discussions will be in-person. Hebrew School will continue to be both – and it’s so wonderful that most of the kids are now vaccinated. And finally, should you wish to set up an appointment with me, whether for a specific reason or just to shoot the breeze, we can do that either on Zoom or in-person. Email me and we’ll set it up!

Yes, the book of Exodus will have a special meaning for us this year. Life is complicated these days, but it was never easy being green. If we learn to live amphibiously, there will always be frogs here, frogs there, frogs everywhere – which reminds us that we’re the folks who turned a plague into a children’s song.

Plague of frogs? Been there, done that.

Whatever comes, we’ll deal with it!

We can be inspired by this, found in today's New York Times:
Answer to Last Week's Quiz Question:
Can You Identify These?
Our students, assisted by artist Jennifer Levine (and sponsored by TBE sisterhood) produced these graphic depictions of the prayer Hashkivenu and Matisyahu's "One Day." They will be displayed opposite the library in our upper lobby.

Finally, Friday is Human Rights Day. Our Jewish community used to mark this important anniversary with a public ceremony at Government Center each year. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was signed on Dec. 10, 1948 and it may have been the U.N.'s proudest hour. During a week when we are profoundly concerned about maintaining democracy and human rights at home and abroad, we need to be reminded of what is most sacred. Download the poster below and take a few moments to reflect on it. It helps to put things into perspective. (Click here to see it more clearly, as a pdf)

Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Joshua Hammerman