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Prayers from the Heart: Created by the Children of Temple Or Olam

A few weeks ago, I taught the children of our Religious School about acrostic prayers.  In an acrostic, the first letter, syllable or word of each line can spell out a name, a word, or even a message.  Some of our prayers, like the Ashrei  (also known as Psalm 145!) give us a way to remember the Hebrew alphabet; the acrostic is functioning here as a neat mnemonic device.

The children had two words to work with: “Prayer” and “Tefilla,” the Hebrew word for prayer.  We will be reading aloud the beautiful work they produced tonight at services.  Spelling has been left as it was in the original 🙂 :

Please let me have your hands.
Raise my spirit.
And you love us.
Yes, and we love you.
Energy is what I need.
Reach my hopes.

Please god let this be a good day
Rise above us
And make it good.
Yes we know we make mistakes
Encourage us to do better
Relise that we try to be good

The day will start
Every time
For a kindness
In each others
Love and
Loyalty
Amen

Please help the people in need,
Raise us up
And make life peaceful
Yes, we love you god.
Empower us to be great people
Respect each other greatly

Plese help my famlily stay happy and helthy
Redeem the world and make less vilonce
And let ne reach my favrit dream in reality
Yes, help us make peace and happiniss
Enjoy all lives
Rejouce our famelys and frinds

Wondering which child wrote which acrostic?  Check out the next Shmoozeletter for the answers!

Shabbat Shalom,

Rabbi Barbara

Another Mother of All Hanukkah Parties: Mark the Date!

An early celebration of Hanukkah is a happening thing at Temple Or Olam. Bring your menorahs (we can practice lighting them…) and some amazing food to share. Also bring a talent for a family audience that you can demonstrate in 3-5 minutes. We encourage magic tricks, juggling, singing favorite songs, skits and jokes of all kinds.

There will be games, a craft table for the little ones, and a talent show. Our religious school kids will astound us with great performances. There will also be a surprisingly spiritual gift for everyone.

Please RSVP to info@or-olam.org to let us know what you and/or your children might want to offer us for the talent show – deadline for talent contributions is December 12th. (A little birdie told us that Lady Gaga might show up at our party…!)

Hanukkah Party!
December 16th @ 7pm
McGill Baptist Church
Bring food, menorahs, and talent!

Food and Fellowship and Friendly Feelings

Just a reminder that we are asking those attending services to bring something wonderful to share at oneg (we especially like healthy snacks if we can get them…) and to help  straighten up afterwards.  Many hands have been making for light and friendly work and we appreciate that very much!

Torah Study Poll: Vote by Nov. 17th!

For over a year, some of our members have gotten together on a conference call each week to explore the parshiot with Rabbi Barbara.  Sometimes we stay on a single verse and sometimes we cover several.  On occasion, we have even explored Chasidic readings or the rabbi has told us about a rabbinic midrash.  It has been an enlightening and personally enriching experience for our members, and we want to make sure that no one is left out who wants to join us.

To that end, we have created an online poll that proposes three possible times for our upcoming meetings.  If the idea of studying and engaging in stimulating conversation around Torah holds any interest for you, we ask that you please vote on the time that would work best with your schedule (even if you cannot attend every week).

Please use this link to vote by November 17th so that we can plan accordingly for next week’s Torah study.

From Rabbi Barbara: Passing on Paradise for Love on Earth

We’d sung happy songs and deeply moving prayers. We welcomed Shabbat in with Feelin’ Groovy and were moved (again), when our second oldest member, Ruth Kingberg, beckoned in the angels of peace by singing Shalom Aleychem. Mi Chamocha featured our new cowbell. Veshamru, the high and slender sound of the recorder.

Time for the drash, the story, the reflection.

The subject: Parsha Lech Lecha – particularly, Genesis 15. The content: Night visions, dreams, predictions, a covenant.

In the first of two nighttime encounters with the Divine, Abraham mourns his childlessness. God knows how that anguish haunts Abraham and makes him a promise of children. God commits to the Divine promise by invoking a ritual well-known to the Ancient Near East (though strange to us).

In that ritual, animals were sacrificed and the parties to the contract would walk between their divided parts. Should they violate their agreement, the punishment would be dire: They would end just as the animals beside them: cloven in two.

In this night vision, God Godself is the one who passes between the animal parts. It is God who must keep the promise. Abraham is merely to believe in it.

In the second night dream, God comes upon Abraham to foretell his descendants’ future. They will be enslaved for four hundred years before knowing freedom again. It is a dark vision, a vision of horror and pain.

Two visions, two dreams, two futures: Life with children to follow, to keep the memory of one’s short existence on the earth alive, to carry a good legacy. Then, the knowledge: We cannot make our children safe from the real world they belong to.

Whoever we love, whether attached to us biologically or not, these are the beloveds we long for, the souls we want to make safe. Those two night visions – the one of hope and the other of dread – they are both, in essence, about the power of human connections on this earth. They are about love.

That night, I also told a story about Adam and Eve. In that tale, they find life outside the Garden of Eden difficult, challenging, and painful. But when God offers them the chance to return to the Garden they flatly refuse – even though they are both old and exhausted from years of labor. They cannot bring themselves to leave their real lives behind. Not before they must, anyway. They refuse to leave their children, their memories, and their earthly experience for the happy forgetfulness of paradise. They reenter the real world, the world of earthly love.

I asked my congregants to imagine they stood before the gates of the Garden of Eden. Would they enter? Would they, too, refuse? If the latter, what was it that held them to the earth, to the real world?

Everyone had a card and a pen. They began writing.

After the service, one of our children showed me his card. He had written his name on the top: Caleb Malin. Next to it, he had drawn a Star of David, a tiny Torah scroll and, finally, our Temple Or Olam logo, the fiery letter shinn. Below he listed all the things he could not leave behind:

My dog my Parents my brother my gram my PaPa my Granmuther my ante my uncl my rabis my cusens my Grandfather my ont.

“Caleb,” I said, “this is absolutely beautiful!”

“Those are all the things I won’t leave behind,” he said. “Can I draw a picture, too?”

“Please!” I answered. “Let’s go find you another card.”

Later at the oneg, Caleb came by to show me his picture. I read the card again. “Caleb,” I asked, “I didn’t know you had two rabbis. Who is your other rabbi?”

“Mr. Ralf!” he said.

I laughed.

Mr. Ralf, of course, is my husband of almost thirty years. At every service, Ralf plays a range of instruments, from the darbuka, a Middle Eastern drum, to recorder, to (most recently) the cowbell.

Ralf has a calm and quiet soul. For seven years, he has done one task after another for our congregation, from creating earlier websites to designing our monthly Shmoozeletter to maintaining our data base to schlepping all the instruments and musical equipment and our Torah to every last service and to every last bar or bat mitzvah. He has comforted congregants and made them laugh. He is a beacon.

No rabbi could do more.

I cannot bear the idea of leaving Ralf behind. Were the Holy One of Blessing to offer me Paradise, I would refuse it – even if the cost was that I would never see it at all and would have given up, say, one little minute with Ralf.

God would not ask such a thing, I think. God would know that my longing is to be with Ralf, with my beloved family and friends as long as I can be, just as God knew that Abraham longed for those he needed to love to live – Ishmael and Isaac. The real world, with all its pain and sorrows, with all its frustrations and disappointments, contains our dreams.

Perhaps there will come a time when I am ready to go. Maybe I will feel that way someday, though it seems so impossible to me now.

But if and when God or Paradise beckon and welcome me, may they do so only after I have made it clear that my dreams, like Abraham’s, were about the love I bore for those I loved while I was on this earth.

Shabbat Shalom.

November Shmoozeletter – and a new member welcome

The November 2011 Shmoozeletter is on line (click here).  Special points of interest:

  • Nov. 4 and Nov. 18 Services
  • New Employment Section announced
  • Donations
  • MiLev HaPardes: Simchat Torah

Temple Or Olam welcomes new members!  They are Harriet Bogage, Karen and Joe Carter, Barbara Goldstein, Sarah Mann, the Spivock Family (William & Yvette with Bryston and Emory), and Ashley Tourangeau.  Greet them at services and festivals, and help them feel well at home!

 

Family Kabbalat Shabbat November 4: Dreams and Longings in Parsha Lech Lecha

Our dreams reveal our hopes and longing.  In this week’s parsha, God appears to Abraham in a dream.  How are we to understand the magic and the promise of that dream?  Please bring your Books of Life with you (and a pen or crayons…) and we’ll explore the story with the help of our children.  We’ll see if we can’t find the answers ourselves! 

Join us for an especially joyous Shabbat service as we continue to welcome in our many new members and experience the joy of being in community.  Please remember to bring a noshable (preferably healthy and nice)  for our Oneg Shabbat. 

Time: 7 p.m.
Location: McGill Baptist Church, 5300 Poplar Tent Road, Concord, North Carolina

Simchat Torah (and other news)

It’s Simchat Torah — an evening when we make real what it is to start all over again.

Every year we roll back our Torah to the very beginning for the next year’s reading.  This Friday we’ll celebrate with a procession, carrying things that make beautiful music and glitter — from tambourines to magic wands.  Then we’ll unroll the Torah completely so we can all see every word.  Rabbi Barbara will chant the final and the first verses of our scroll.

As we roll back to Genesis we’ll stop at five special locations to learn about special features in our Torah, accompanying our travels with song.  The names of seven congregants will be pulled out of a hat and they will stand by the Genesis column of their choice. Rabbi Barbara will find the blessing in that column meant for that congregant.

We’ll close our Torah, wrap her up for our new year, and pass her — arm to arm — so that we all can take turns carrying the very core of our tradition.

Finally, we nosh at a potluck oneg!

Please bring a dish of your own to share at the oneg following the celebration.  It all starts at 7 pm this Friday night at McGill Baptist church.  We look forward to seeing you there!

Simchat Torah
October 21st @ 7pm
McGill Baptist Church
Bring a potluck dish to share!

CROP Walk for Hunger

This past Sunday, several members of Temple Or Olam (and at least one guest!) participated in the Cabarrus county CROP Walk at Forest Hill UMC in Concord.  It was an interfaith event, and our congregation was well represented both in terms of enthusiasm and donations.  At last count, our seven walkers had gathered donations totaling more than $350.  Great job, Team TOO, and thanks to Linda VanArsdale for organizing this fun opportunity for tikkun olam!

Sukkot and CROP Walk

Sukkot at the Malin’s

This year’s festivities will take place on the 16th at the Malin residence.  Children from the religious school will be on hand to decorate the sukkah and get a bit of education on the holiday, and all members are welcome to attend. Food will be provided, so a donation to help defray food costs would be appreciated (any excess collected funds will go to the religious school).  Those who attend should also BRING CHAIRS to sit in.

Sukkot @ the Malin’s
October 16th, 9:30 a.m.
Bring chairs & a donation!

CROP Hunger Walk

After we finish celebrating the harvest at the Malin’s, some of us are making the trek to Forest Hill United Methodist in Concord for the CROP Hunger Walk to help those who are in need of a harvest of their own.  If you would like to sponsor those who are walking or participate in the walk yourself, it’s not too late!  Click here, find “Temple Or Olam” in the list, and choose either “Donate Now” or “Join Team.”  (Don’t forget to invite your friends, family, and coworkers to sponsor our team as well!)  Our vivacious and enthusiastic participants (wearing their TOO t-shirts!) will meet at Forest Hill UMC at 1pm to register for the 1 mile walk and turn in our donations. The walk starts shortly thereafter.

CROP Hunger Walk
October 16th
Forest Hill UMC in Concord
Meet @ 1pm for the 1 mile walk

Poetry for High Holy Days

Dear TOO members and guests,

Over our next year, I will be sending out meditations and journaling ideas for our Books of Life, 5772.  Consider these books one of many ways to deepen and explore your Jewish lives, and choose whatever suggestions appeal to heart and soul.

I’ve been asked to post copies of the poetry that we read during High Holy Days this year. I include texts below for pasting (and journaling) in your books.  If anyone wants a copy of the Rumi poem that became our Yom Kippur haftorah, please let me know via Rabbi.Thiede@or-olam.org.

I thank you all for the incredible sweetness you brought to our services this year.  Many people have told me that these were the most peaceful, joyous, thoughtful services we ever had. 

When an entire congregation is open, trusting, and caring, we receive such gifts in great abundance.  I thank you for so generously giving such gifts to me and to each other.

With great gratitude,

Rabbi Barbara

P.S. Many thanks  to the huge crowd of folk who so wonderfully and cheerfully helped us set up the sanctuary for our friends at McGill!

Temple Or Olam’s Unetanah Tokef for 5772:
When the signs of age begin to mark my body
(and still more when they touch my mind);
when the ill that is to diminish me or carry me
off strikes from without
or is born within me;
when the painful moment comes in which I
suddenly waken
to the fact that I am ill or growing old;
and above all at the last moment when I feel I am losing hold of myself
and am absolutely passive in the hands
of the great unknown forces that have formed me;
in all those dark moments, O God,
grant that I may understand that it is you
(provided only my faith is strong enough)
who are painfully parting the fibers of my being
in order to penetrate to the very marrow of my
substance
and bear me away within yourself.
– Pierre Teilhard de Chardin

Each person has a Torah
unique to that person
his or her innermost teaching
Some seem to know their Torahs very early in life
and speak and sing them in a myriad of ways
Others spend their whole lives stammering, shaping,
and rehearsing them
Some are long
Some are short
Some are intricate and poetic
Others are only a few words
and still others can be spoken
through gesture and example
But every soul has a Torah
To hear another say Torah is a precious gift
        Rabbi Lawrence Kushner
Yom Kippur
By Philip Schultz
 
You are asked to stand and bow your head,
consider the harm you’ve caused,
the respect you’ve withheld,
the anger misspent, the fear spread,
the earnestness displayed
in the service of prestige and sensibility,
all the callous, cruel, stubborn, joyless sins
in your alphabet of woe
so that you might be forgiven.
You are asked to believe in the spark
of your divinity, in the purity
of the words of your mouth
and the memories of your heart.
You are asked for this one day and one night
to starve your body so your soul can feast
on faith and adoration.
You are asked to forgive the past
and remember the dead, to gaze
across the desert in your heart
toward Jerusalem. To separate
the sacred from the profane
and be as numerous as the sands
and the stars of heaven.
To believe that no matter what
you have done to yourself and others
morning will come and the mountain
of night will fade. To believe,
for these few precious moments,
in the utter sweetness of your life.
You are asked to bow your head
and remain standing,
and say Amen.