Yizkor Drasha

What is the purpose of remembering?

By Ittay Flescher

In a few minutes, the tone and the mood in this room will change quite dramatically. In a short moment, we will transition from joyful singing and prayer, to a serious amournful time of the service called Yizkor. 

This Yizkor service first appeared in the Machzor during the Middle Ages in Europe, where it was recited on Yom Kippur in order to remember the many martyrs slain during the Crusades. Such a memorial list was first recited in Nuremberg in 1295, and the custom soon spread. 

Later, the practice began of saying it on the festivals as well. There were those who opposed this, since grieving over the dead is not in the spirit of the festivals, which are days of joy and gladness. Over time, popular custom and desire overcame rabbinic reluctance, and the recitation of Yizkor became strongly rooted.

For me when I was young, I always associated Yizkor with playing down ball at St Kilda shule. Yizkor back then, was wondrous adult free time for kids to run and play outside the shule for hours until the end of musaf. As a young child, I had imagined that perhaps the reason all the adults asked the children to leave was because they were doing a special ceremony to honour the dead where everyone would one-by-one, public share stories of their loved ones. 

Since my father Reuven Getzel z”l passed away when I was just 21 years old in 1999, Yizkor time has been very different for me. Now that I say the prayer, I have learnt that:

1) It only takes about 5 minutes to say

2) At only two sentences, it doesn’t say much, and is more of a promise to givetzedaka in their memory, rather than a retelling of the person’s life story, which is what I had imagined as child. 

I think this is shame. Given the large amount of time we spend in shule on Yom Kippur, I think there should be a more unscripted part of the tfilla where each of us does get an opportunity to share and honour the past of our loved ones. However, with Yizkor being the way it is, I’d like to take a moment to consider what purpose the Yizkor should be for us today. Why do we need to remember our loved ones, or the holocaust, or the crusades on Yom Kippur? And does this act of remembering have any impact on our present and future?

As a first step to answering this question, I’d like to draw your attention to a book written in 1982 by Yosef Yerushalmi called Zakhor: Jewish History and Jewish Memory.”

“Zakhor” is an examination of the conflict between the collective stories that Jews share as a culture and the verifiable chronicle of history itself. 

In the book, Yerushalmi observes, ''Many Jews today are in search of a past, but they do not want the past that is offered by the historian. Such Jews often turn instead literature and ideology.'' 

In the modern age explains Yerushalmi, “learning history from classical Jewish Scripture has been replaced by history as the validating arbiter of Jewish ideologies and the replacement has yielded chaos… since it cannot credit God’s will as the active cause behind Jewish events, and it cannot regard Jewish history as being unique.”

Sociologist Uri Ram of Ben-Gurion University gives an example of how the replacement of Jewish history with Jewish memory happened in the years preceding the founding of the Jewish State.

“The Hebrew culture that was created in Palestine before the establishment of the state was a far cry from the Jewish culture elsewhere. Jews immigrating to Palestine were rapidly socialized into it, and their “Sabra” offspring contrived a narrative founded on settlement, community and soldiering. They spoke only Hebrew and were ignorant ofHalacha, they were oblivious to the culture of their parents, let alone their grandparents. Regarding the diaspora, theirs was a culture of pure amnesia. They forgot the diasporic Talmud but remembered the biblical stories, they forgot Jewish names and choose Hebrew names for their offspring, they forgot the rabbis of Yavneh and remembered the rebellion of bar Kochba, they forgot the Holocaust, but remembered the heroic ghetto rebellions (Yom Hashoah veHagvurah).”

Israeli writer Haim Hazaz who was the first recipient of the Israel Prize in 1953 depicts this desire of many of the early Zionists to replace history with memory in his 1942 book, "The Sermon."

The main character, Yudka, whose defining characteristic is a reluctance to speak in public, asks to deliver a statement before the committee of his kibbutz to discuss the school curriculum. At first Yudka has trouble articulating even the beginning of his idea, but then he gathers himself to declare,

"I want to state . . . that I am opposed to Jewish history . . . because we didn't make our own history, the goyim made it for us. . . . What is there in it? Oppression, defamation, persecution, martyrdom. And again oppression, defamation, persecution, and martyrdom. And again and again and again, without end. . . . Just a collection of wounded, hunted, groaning, and wailing wretches always begging for mercy. . . . I would simply forbid teaching our children Jewish history. Why the devil teach them about their ancestors' shame? I would just say to them: 'Boys, from the day we were exiled from our land we've been a people without a history. Class dismissed. Go out and play football.'"

The story concludes with Yudke explaining that what he does want to teach our children to remember is the “great deeds and stories, heroes, bold spirited fighters andconquerors. In a word, I want them to remember a world full of heroism.” Yudke conceived of Zionism as a revolt against Jewish history 

One could understand why adopting such a narrative of history, one that saw Jews as heroes rather than victims, as agents rather than actors in history, would have served a purpose in for the early Zionists like Haim Hazaz in 1942. As Rommel’s Nazi troops were in Egypt and heading towards Palestine, the yishuv in Palestine was not just facing an existential crisis, but also a physical one. Adopting a new memory of the past, and a new way of being Jewish was essential to both their survival and to the success of the Zionist enterprise.

In responding to this story, the historian Yosef Yerushalmi acknowledges that Yudkawho wants kibbutz history classes to jump from the tanach to the plamch, still does have a past “only with an intermission of almost two millennia.”

Why does this matter? Why are we still arguing about our history? Why has the act of memory we do on Yizkor become a religious imperative for an entire people?

Yerushalmi explains the question of whether the voice of Yudke’s memory or voice of the historian is the one heard is not without consequence. “There are myths that are life sustaining and deserve to be reinterpreted for our age. BUT, there are also some myths that lead astray and must be redefined. Others are dangerous and must be exposed.

Yerushalmi generalizes that that "many Jews today are in search of a past, but they patently do not want the past that is offered by the historian"

With that in mind, what should we remember this Yizkor?

For those of us who will stay in the room now to remember our loved ones during thisYizkor we all have to make a choice about what we remember.

Will we try to think less of the times when our parents or children challenged us, criticized us, or didn’t have time for our company? Or will instead remember thetimes they showed kindness and love towards us, the meals and holidays we shared together and the life cycle events we celebrated as families.

Will we remember the arguments and broigeses that divided our friends and family? Or the values of respect and humility that we learned through imitation that remain with us long after our loved ones are here no more.  

And what of other events in our lives in the past year. Should we remember them accurately as history, a more romantically as a memory?

Having being blessed with witnessing the birth of a beautiful son four month ago, when I look back on the past year, this event will undoubtedly be the defining one ofmy year. Over the past four months, I have been asked constantly asked, How’s the baby? In the corridor at work, at shule, by random passers by in the street. Everyone asks, How’s the baby?

There are many ways to answer this question. Should I talk about the sleepless nights, the vomit on every piece of clothing I wear, the smelly nappies or the absence of quiet time in my home?

Or should talk about the fun of dancing with Eitan on my chest during kabbalat Shabbat, the glow I get I see him laughing with his big sister Nava, the warmth I get from his cuddles and joy that radiates from his beautiful smile.

In other words, should I describe the last four months through the prism of history (what actually happened) or memory (how I’d like it be remembered).  

The choices we all make in regards to how we talk about the past and present of our family members in public will not only impact on we relate to them now, but will also influence their reputations and character by the rest of the community.

The choice we make to questions like these matters. Because what is remembered, which means the pictures and stories we share of our life moments on Facebook or place and the walls of our homes, often become far more important that what actually happened.

Historian Deborah Lipstadt makes this point beautifully in the following teaching. “When we remember, irrespective of whom we are remembering—a parent, a grandparent, a sibling, an aunt or uncle, teacher or mentor—these memories become part of us. As we internalize these memories they change us and we evolve, we grow. So, too, those who will follow us and remember us may be changed by their memories of us.

Memory is not just a link from generation to another. It also has its lateral aspects. Every human action, as Yerushalmi notes, “elicits certain inevitable results.” If I remember something and am changed by it, that change may, in turn, elicit a reaction from those around me. In other words, the impact of remembering travels down from generation to generation but also cuts across all generations.

Memory is an act done in the past present and future.

With that in mind, may all your memories, from those you have at Yizkor, to those you consider during the rest of the year, create a future for you that leaves us all tzurara be tzror hachayim, Bound up in the bond of life.

And for all of us in this room who will one day be remembered by a future generation, I wish you one thing, again in the words of Deborah Lipstadt.

"May we live lives of such privilege and security, be blessed with the wisdom and humility to live in a way that is worthy of not just being remembered, but of being emulated by those who follow us.

Shana Tova and Gmar Chatima Tova

 

Sources and Further Reading

Yizkor: Yom Kippur and Remembrance - By Deborah Lipstadt

http://www.jofa.org/uploadedFiles/site/Education/RH-5773-3.pdf

Culture and Collective memory – By Leon Wieseltier

http://www.nytimes.com/1984/01/15/books/culture-and-collective-memory.html

The Sermon - By Haim Hazaz, 1942

http://zionismspring2010.wikispaces.com/file/detail/Haim+Hazaz+The+Sermon.pdf

Fiction and Memory: Zakhor Revisited By Sidra DeKoven. Ezrahi

http://muse.jhu.edu/login?auth=0&type=summary&url=/journals/jewish_quarterly_review/v097/97.4ezrahi.html

Yerushalmi on memory & history

http://velveteenrabbi.blogs.com/blog/2010/09/yerushalmi-on-memory-history.html

Yizkor: The Memorial Service – By Rabbi Dr. Reuven Hammer

http://myjewishlearning.com/texts/Liturgy_and_Prayers/Siddur_Prayer_Book/Shabbat_and_Holiday_Prayers/Yizkor.shtml

Posted on September 27, 2012 .

Ne'ilah Drasha

By Lionel Lubitz

So it has come to this. We have reached the destination. But isn’t life an exploration of the journey not the destination. What does it mean to have reached this point? We have all participated in this journey, different pathways, different timings, and different needs.

Some of us started this part of the journey at the beginning of Ellul with the daily sound of the shofar reminding us that the time of reflection, returning to our roots had begun. For some of us this is a year round journey, for others it is a brief but sweet reconnection with something that attaches us to our community or our inner spirit.

The Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur experience is a powerful start. The yamim noraim…the days of awe.

What is Rosh Hashana? What are the sign posts that it is here? Like the power of the Hagadah on Pesach.

There are no special foods like Matzah at Pesach and Cheesecake at Shavuot. No huts to build and sit in the rain for Sukkot, not even a Hannukiah for Hannukah. It may seem somewhat empty, an anti climax. Just a bit of apple dipped in honey for a sweet year. Not even the promise of fireworks and alcohol-induced euphoria that the secular New Year offers. An evening service that is over soon after it begins with little to distinguish it from a weekday maariv.

So what is it all about?

It is about the start of our introspection. The journey inwards to find our true self. What are we, what matters, where have we got it right and where have we got it wrong?

The niggunim that are so familiar, even going back to childhood memories of my father humming the Yigdal tune as he prepared for shul on erev Rosh Hashana. There, in the heart of Africa where we, with the Shoah in our consciousness struggled with the new generation of oppressed. Where the Jude star was not needed, for the African people wore it on their skin and suffered the humiliation as second-class citizens. Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur give us the opportunity to connect ourselves with the oppressed and dispossessed whether it is our own people or the greater community of humanity. We who were the ‘boat people’ 60 or 70 years ago know what happens when intolerance and suspicion drives people into a state of prejudice and hate.

  The Yom Kippur experience takes us from the particular to the universal.

The shofar with nothing but pure breath driving its pure simple sound stirring so much within us as it penetrates to our core, helping us on the inward journey.

 The Torah reading on Rosh Hashana starts with Sarah and Avraham and ends on Yom Kippur with Yonah. Two stories that take us from the particular to the universal.

 Let’s look at it in depth.

The Torah reading on the first day of Rosh Hashana takes us deep into that place with Sarah in a state of hope and ecstasy as she is told that despite her old age she would have a son Yitzhak. Soon that hope and joy was followed by jealousy and intolerance as she drives Hagar and Ishmael from Avraham’s home. Yes, kind, loving Sarah capable of such joy followed by jealousy and anger.

What do we learn about joy, jealousy and anger? As Bob Dylan wrote ‘the line is thinly drawn ‘tween joy and sorrow’

On the second day of Rosh Hashana we are taken on a journey of blind faith where Avraham takes his only precious son and without protest prepares to sacrifice him.

Avraham so connected to his faith and devotion to G-d that he doesn’t question the directive to sacrifice him.

What do we learn about faith?

What do we do with that adherence without questioning for  ourselves?

When do we accept and when do we question?

Yes he who was the epitome of chesed prepared to sacrifice his son without a whimper

What was he thinking!

In the Haftorah on RH We followed the story of Hannah who also childless promised her son to G-d if she ever had one and so it happened that she had a son Samuel and did give him to the priesthood.

What do we learn about attachment?

We give our children life and love but we do not own them nor control their destiny.

 After Rosh Hashana we are imbued with all those attributes from love to kindness to sacrifice of different sorts and ultimate redemption as Isaac survives, Ishmael is promised that he will also be the progenitor of a great nation.

The next 10 days takes us through the days of penitence where we look at ourselves to see where we can do better.

This culminates in the Kol Nidre opening Yom Kippur.

We stand in silence as the Torah comes out and our Baal tefilah utters those words initially in hushed tones building to a crescendo at the third reading. The day of words, songs, emotional reflections including the Yizkor for those we have lost and the confessions, vidui, as we search ourselves for how to become better, less burdened more accepting of ourselves and others, more loving.

On Yom Kippur afternoon along comes Yonah who is told to go and warn the people of Nineveh to change their ways and find redemption.

Who are these people?

Are they our people?

No they are not.

“Go to Nineveh,” says God, “and save that city from its wickedness.”  Historically, Nineveh was the capitol of the Assyrian Empire. In 722 BCE, the Assyrians destroyed the northern kingdom of Israel and exiled its population. They besieged Jerusalem, humiliated its king, and carried off its treasures. For an Israelite, Nineveh was the enemy, the world centre of evil, and the heart of darkness.

Save Nineveh?

Why would Jonah want to save Nineveh?

Nineveh is ‘other’ not ‘unsere’

Yonah exercises free will and decides not to go, as he is not up to the task. But circumstances change and he is driven back and given a second chance to do G-d’s will. The people of Nineveh do change, they change their ways and they find redemption.

This story has been repeated in every generation since then.

And here we are playing out the same story. We need to find peace with our so called enemies because of what enmity and hatred does to us not just to them….yes we are not immune to the effects of hatred and suspicion on our own inner beings. We need peace with our enemies for their sake and for ours.

To know our story is part of the Yom Kippur journey, to understand who we are the frailties that our forefathers and mothers carried helps us to understand who we are and become better, more fulfilled more generous, giving and loving……Teshuvah,Tzedaka and Tefillah that’s all there is.

Some of us have taken the long route starting at the beginning of Ellul, some started with Rosh Hashana and some of us came today. Some for just a few moments, some for many hours. All with an authentic desire to connect with our story, to belong to our people. For some shul is a place of worship, for some a place to reflect and for some a place to connect with our parents, to make dad happy that we came, a place to remember fathers and mothers who have passed on. But we all belong here and we all form part of that rich tapestry of devotion that stretches from the hallowed, organ filled halls of the Temple (up the road) to the Adass shteible around the corner to all sorts of colours and patterns in between all weaving the rich fabric of which we all are a part.

Neilah is now upon us. The day is ending and we have just a short time left to find some meaning in the day. You may choose to utter more words, so many already said, or stand or sit quietly looking within to find meaning, or looking at your mum or neighbour in gratitude, or sing one last niggun to bring the joyful spirit of Shira into this place and into your heart.

So as the ‘gates’ prepare to close Let’s spend the next hour trying to find that part of us that is free from cynicism, free from judgement and find the purity within ourselves that will inscribe and indeed seal us in the book of life.

Posted on September 26, 2012 .

Yom Kippur

We are looking forward to an awe-inspiring Yom Kippur this Tuesday night and Wednesday at the Caulfield Park Bowls Club. The Divrei Torah will be given by: Mark Baker following Kol Nidrei, Ittay Flescher preceding the Yizkor service and Lionel Lubitz in the lead up to Ne’ilah. 

Yom Kippur times:

Candle lighting: 6:01pm

Kol Nidrei 6:15pm (doors open 6:00)

Shacharit: 9:15am

Yizkor and Drasha: 12:00pm

Mussaf: 12:30–2:30 pm

Mincha: 4:15 pm

Ne'ilah: 5:30 pm

Maariv: 7:00 pm

Yom Kippur for Kids: There will be child minders present during the Kol Nidrei Service and from midday onwards on Yom Kippur day. In addition to this, we will be running programs for tots (ages 1–5) and kids (ages 6–12) during Yom Kippur. The schedule for these programs can be found below. 

Tots

10–11:15 am free play

11:15–11:45 am mat session

11:45 am fruit and snack time

Kids

10–11:15 am free play

12:00pm Kids' club program 

Membership: If you have not yet taken out membership, please do so by visiting Shira’s website. If you have any queries, you can contact Ari via email or Lindy. We appreciate your commitment to Shira.

Yom Kippur Appeal: This year, Shira is raising money for two causes: the children's ward of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Malawi and Shoulder-to-Shoulder in Israel. You can learn more about the causes and donate by visiting the Shira website.

Gmar Chatima Tova!

Posted on September 24, 2012 .

Parshat Vayelech-Shabbat Shuva

Shabbat: This week’s services will take place at the Caulfield Park Bowls Club, where we will build on the uplifting and song filled atmosphere that we created over Rosh Hashana. Join us at 6pm for Kabbalat Shabbat and at 9:15am for Yaron Gottlieb’s weekly shiur. Shacharit will follow the shiur at 9:45am. The Dvar Torah will be given by our chazzan, Adam Ross. A light Kiddush will follow the service.

Yom Kippur: Yom Kippur services will be held on Tuesday night and Wednesday. A separate newsletter will be sent on Monday containing a full rundown of the schedule and programs offered.

Membership: By now you will have already enjoyed harmonious Tefillah, enthralling Divrei Torah and inpirsational and educational children’s programs. Please support these services and the many other programs that we offer by taking out membership. You can do so by visiting Shira’s website. If you have any queries, you can contact Ari via email or Lindy. We appreciate your commitment to Shira.

Shabbat Shalom & Gmar Chatima Tova

Posted on September 21, 2012 .

Rosh Hashana Drasha

By Yvonne Fein

On Simchat Torah, when we come to the very end of the scroll, it is traditional then to lay it on the Bimah and roll it swiftly right back to its beginning, before binding it shut and covering it. Rolling it back through Deuteronomy, Numbers, Leviticus, Exodus — all the way to Genesis. And each year as I watch it being rolled, I feel as though I’m watching time flying in reverse, till we reach the very beginnings of Creation. From an orderly, controlled, chapter by chapter progression throughout the year, on this day, there’s something wildly exuberant about the reverse refurling.

But on the second day of Rosh Hashanna, there seems to be no method, no nicety or design — and no exuberance, either. Just a kind of madness in the story we’re forced to read time and again — out of sequence, out of order — about Avraham Avinu, Abraham our Father, and that highly problematic incident with his son and the knife. We’ve been reading about it all the while knowing that a few chapters previously Avraham had argued at some length with God about saving those upright citizens of Sodom and Gomorrah, but in today’s chapter he did not utter a single word that might possibly have changed the good Lord’s mind about sacrificing his awesome, awestruck son — this child of Yir’ah — from the knife’s blade on Mount Moriah.

Now, when we were at school, we were told the story of Terah, Avraham’s father, who was the town’s leading idol manufacturer. Who remembers this tale? Anyway, for those of you who were away that day, I’ll tell it briefly. It was a busy afternoon in the idol shop, but Terah had to go to the quarry and buy some more marble supplies for the next batch of idols. “Avremeleh,” he said to his favourite son, “I need you to look after the gescheft for me this afternoon. I’ll be back before sundown.”

But as the sun began to set and his father still had not returned, Abraham looked at the sky and noticed the clouds spiked strangely with deep purple waves and surges of pale green that seemed to promise a strange storm. Almost without knowing what or why he was about to do this mad, inexplicable thing, he took the stone baseball bat that his father kept behind the counter in case of robbers and smashed the store’s entire stock of idols.

“I didn’t do it,” Abraham claimed when his father came home. “It was that big idol. The only one left standing. The one holding the baseball bat.

Terah was furious. “A creature of stone I’ve made with my own hands can’t destroy anything, let alone my entire Autumn range of idols for the harvest season.”

As soon as the words had left his lips, Terah realised he had fallen into the trap so cleverly set by his son

What he did not realise was that the stage had been set. Monotheism, in its earliest power, stood shivering in the doorway of what had once been Terah’s Emporium of Stone for all Occasions.

But I know this story, one way or another, is familiar to many of you. And I know too that the eternal dilemma of how a father — Abraham, son of Terah, destroyer of idols, bringer of God to humanity —  could not plead for the life of his son when he had no problem at all pleading for the lives of desperados, rapists and murderers is also a tale that has been told almost too many times to be  listened to yet again.

But if I will not try to fathom this story again, what is it that today’s text can offer up? I suspect the Haftorah may well provide if not new answers, then at least new questions.

Today Jeremiah tells us of the grief of Rachel, our youngest matriarch: “A cry is heard in Ramah” — the prophet declares — “Wailing, bitter weeping — Rachel weeping for her children. She refuses to be comforted for her children who are gone.” Reading on, we see how God promises her everything: restoration, reward, an end to exile. And there is godly compassion. God begs Rachel: “Restrain your voice from weeping, your eyes from shedding tears... for there is hope for your future. Your children shall return to their country.”

But Rachel makes no response. She is not Job, ready to forgive and forget. She has lost those most beloved to her and nothing will make her believe or trust that she can have restored to her that which should never have been taken in the first place. Nowhere  is it written that Rachel has been comforted for the loss of her children, even by  the extravagant blandishments of God. She weeps and we hear and taste her tears millennia after she first wept them.

We know Job forgave God even if we never quite understand why; we don’t know how Abraham would have reacted if God had not stayed his hand or even if, heaven forbid, Abraham’s hand had slipped in the horror of the moment and his son had paid the ultimate price of his father’s angst.  All we have is Abraham’s silence; his refusal to stand for his son. But we do learn on this day that Rachel refuses to be comforted. She will not retreat. That is where she stands. Some things, even godly things, her actions tell us, are unforgivable. Perhaps it is her very stubbornness that ultimately makes God take her life in childbirth, for has not God described himself as one filled with vengefulness.

Now I could make this an issue of gender politics. Rachel, the woman cries and ultimately dies in the act of giving birth, while Abraham, the man, doesn’t even say a word in his son’s defence; but how simplistic — though maybe just a little tempting —  that would be. Because I honestly believe the truth is, that we need something of both attributes contained in Rachel and in Abraham .

Perhaps, paradoxically, the very strength of Abraham lies in his precise ability to support and uphold the unjustifiable, that which is beyond the Pale, and then — this is even more remarkable — he stops trying when he realises he has gone as far as God will allow in that extraordinary dialogue between man and the Divine.

And perhaps it is just possible that Rachel’s weakness, not her strength, lies in her intransigence, her refusal to be moved, to be comforted.

I do not know. These are questions that have literally been keeping me awake at night.

I do know that to achieve any sort of equilibrium we need both parts to this frustrating equation, but both parts inevitably confront us with scenarios that are filled with profound pain. Because certainly the only viable way of living is about balance. But what if that balance is ultimately about suffering — evaluating its lesser or greater nature?

Take Hesed, for example, loving kindness. If that is all you have in the universe without Din, without judgement which contains harshness, we may end up creating a world where we reward the sinner because we are too full of love to chastise him or we punish the righteous, because we cannot exercise justice. Without balance — without those prepared to stand and die, or conversely, retreat in silence, we will have a universe that must crack on the very axis supposed to keep it stable.

But Rachel and Avraham are archetypes. They are not the stuff of day to day human beings. Rather they are the original pattern or model from which all things of the same kind are copied or on which they are based; they are prototypes. Cinderella is the archetypical victim turned accidental heroine. Fairytale characters, biblical characters — we don’t expect to meet them at Glicks or Chadstone. They exist to show us how life might be lived — right or wrong..

That said, what are we to make of Rachel and Avraham? How do we position them in our everyday lives so that they can have real meaning and be more than mythical characters? How do two such opposites provide us with the balance we need?

Perhaps a story will help and I begin it by asking you to consider the language of German. As Jews, we have pretty strong views on it, one way or another. Now, ironically, when many of our parents met during or just after the war, German was often the only language they had in common. If a Polish Jew fell in love with a Czechoslovakian or Hungarian Jew — I think they called them mixed marriages — before they could learn one another’s languages, German was all they could speak. It became their language of love. I was witness to many second generation children growing up, hearing, learning and becoming fluent in German because of this. Many still are. They can’t hate it because it was always so redolent of tenderness in households too often filled with torment.

It became a question of balance. To whom did the language belong? Hitler? Goebbels, Eichmann or Heine, Mahler, Mendelssohn?

So hold that thought.

Someone close to me lives in Sydney, but in Sydney there is no Shira; so this friend found she had nowhere and no way to sing the Jewish part of her the way we women here are so fortunate to be able to do. A fluent reader of music with a lovely voice, she found a community choir and all went well until one day the choir master handed around sheets with the music of Wagner.

Now we know that the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra periodically argues the morality of performing Wagner, but my friend was not in Jerusalem and after one session in suburban Sydney she realised she profoundly did not wish to sing Wagner. So what did she do, this child who had grown up with German as a second language? Did she stand and walk away, refusing the blandishments of the choir master who did not want to lose her? Or her voice? Or did she sing and hate herself for doing so? Was she Rachel or was she Abraham? Was she Hesed or was she Din?

I actually believe she achieved Tiferet, that sublime meeting of the extremes of the world of loving kindness and judgement, where balance and beauty take each other’s hands and dance the dance of ages.

She explained to the choir master her feelings about Wagner, informed by her Jewishness, Holocaust background, and yes, her true appreciation of German culture. Then she said she hoped he’d understand  that when the choir performed Wagner, she’d leave the room, returning when the next piece of music was about to be  staged. And as I thought about her actions I realised that in my friend I had actually found both Abraham’s silence and Rachel’s stubbornness.

We are none of us those brave Australian soldiers fighting in Afghanistan; nor are most of us Israelis putting our lives on the line, not just in the armed forces, but often merely by going to a discotheque or a pizza house. We are not matriarchs and patriarchs communing with God, but circumstances will nevertheless arise that, even though they are not issues of life or death, they still cut to the very  heart of what we believe in on a day-to-day basis and therefore how we live our lives.

So let me conclude by saying that there is not one easy answer to the questions of where do you stand? When is it right to be silent? When is it right to cry out in protest? When do you lay down your life? These questions are eternal. It is their answers that are elusive and it is our job on this earth to continue to grapple with them.

Posted on September 19, 2012 .

Rosh Hashana and Parshat Nitzavim

Shabbat: This week’s Shabbat services will be held at our regular location (222, Balaclava Rd, Caulfield). We will bring in Shabbat with a rousing Kabbalat Shabbat at 6pm. Shabbat morning will commence at 9:15am with our weekly Shiur given by Yaron Gottlieb and will be followed by Shacharit at 9:45am. Make sure you come to shule on Shabbat to meet our chazanim, Adam Ross and Yonina Fleischmann. This week, Yonina will be giving the Dvar Torah and there will be plenty of time at the Kiddush to chat with both Yonina and Adam.

Rosh Hashana: Rosh Hashana commences on Sunday night (16th September). We will once again be celebrating Rosh Hashanah at the Caulfield Park Bowls Club. We will be holding Ma’ariv services on both nights, as well as daytime services on Monday and Tuesday (17–18th September). We are privileged to be hearing a Dvar Torah given by the Hon. Michael Sifris on the first day of Rosh Hashana and from Yvonne Fein on the second day of Rosh Hashana.

Times for Rosh Hashana:

Rosh Hashana nights: 6pm

Rosh Hashana Days:

Shacharit: 8:15am

Drasha: 11am

Shofar: 11:30am

Mussaf Repetition: 11:50am

Finish: 1:30pm

Rosh Hashana for Kids: We will be running programs for tots (ages 1-5), kids (ages 6-12) and teens on both days of Rosh Hashana. 

Tots

Unstructured play: 10-11:15am

Rosh Hashana party and story time: 11:15-11:45am

Snack time: 11:45am

Kids

Free play: 10–11:15am

Kids' club program: 11:45am

Teens

CSI (Critical Shira Issues): 11am

Membership: We look forward to spending a meaningful and uplifting Rosh Hashana together! If you have not yet taken out membership, please do so by visiting Shira’s website. If you have any queries, you can contact Ari via email or Lindy. We appreciate your commitment to Shira and anticipate a wonderful New Year.

Shabbat Shalom and Shana Tova

Posted on September 14, 2012 .

Open letter to the Shira community

An Open Letter to the Shira Community from Dr. Naor Bar-Zeev and Sarah Lodge Bar-Zeev:

We arrived in Malawi in January 2011.  

Naor works as a paediatrician in infectious diseases at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, and as an epidemiologist coordinating large research projects relating to the introduction of 2 new vaccines, one against the bacteria that causes pneumonia and blood and brain infection, and the other against the virus that causes severe diarrhoea. These two organisms are responsible for more deaths in children under 5 than malaria, HIV and all other causes combined. 

Sarah works as a midwife at the hospital, and is coordinating the implementation of sustainable evidence based interventions that are known to reduce maternal death and disease at health centres throughout the country for the Ministry of Health. Malawi has among the highest maternal mortality rates in the world. 

The Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital serves a population of about 1 million people in the southern region of Malawi. Malawi is among the poorest countries in Africa. 

The Department of paediatrics sees about 90,000 children a year, of whom about a third are admitted to hospital (last year over 31,500 admissions). On an average day there are 350 children (squeezed into 280 physical beds), and in the rainy season when malaria and diarrhoea are high, there are 450 children a day. (For comparison the new Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne has a maximum capacity of 357 beds.)  

There is a team of 8 consultant paediatricians (3 foreign including Naor, and 5 Malawian), 5 paediatric junior trainees. There are very few government funded nurses. It is only through charitable donations that the paediatric department employs 15 nurses, 2 clinical officers (who work like junior doctors do in Australia), 5 homecraft workers and 8 cleaners. All of them are pensioned and remunerated fairly. 

This equates to a nurse to patient ratio of 30. (In Australia the nursing industry standard is 1 to 4.) Due to extensive efforts at improving hospital care for children, the in-hospital mortality for children has declined from over 20% some 10 years ago to now 2.5%. Very high mortality rates are still seen among premature or sick newborns, and among children with severe malnutrition and those with HIV infection.

A long queue of mothers and children waiting to be triaged in the paediatric emergency department. In the background are the doors to the resuscitation rooms where urgent cases are seen immediately. 

A child with diarrhoea is assessed in emergency by a paediatric trainee. On the wall are clinical guidelines and other job aids.

A child with cardiac disease is reviewed. Most cardiac disease in developing countries is not congenital but rather acquired from rheumatic fever – an infectious disease, a condition also seen very commonly among Indigenous children in Australia. It is associated with poverty. With good preventive interventions the cardiac consequences can be avoided.

This infant has severe pneumonia. He is being supported by special nasal prongs that deliver oxygen under pressure. This Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) machine was built locally using a fishtank-type air pump to bubble gas through a column of water under pressure, nicknamed “Bubble CPAP” – a sustainable and easy to fix technology which is life-saving. Similar but more expensive systems to provide CPAP are in use globally. Mortality from severe pneumonia has declined since the introduction of the CPAP machines. We have 3 available. The baby in the photo did well and was discharged.  

Children in the oncology ward play in a small courtyard. They have Burkitt’s lymphoma, a blood disorder common in Africa which leads to tumours that can lead to facial deformity. Our paediatric oncology service has survival rates that are high compared to many developing countries. We cannot give very aggressive chemotherapy, because we do not have the capacity to support children through the difficult and often life-threatening side effects that strong chemotherapy requires. 

Families enjoy the weather outside the Moyo (“Life” in Chichewa language) nutritional rehabilitation centre. Children with malnutrition often have prolonged admissions, and their care continues at home through nutritional programmes at primary health centres located in the community.

A nurse attends to a newborn in the nursery. In the photo there are 2 babies in this cot designed for 1 baby. Up to 6 premature babies are sometimes nursed on this cot alone which has a functioning overhead heater. Babies are given oxygen through a tube, and those too young to suckle are fed via tube. At the top right corner of the photo is a “lunchbox” that is the nursery’s bubble CPAP machine. In the top left corner of a photo is nestled a “splitter” – a device that can split the oxygen supply to provide low flow oxygen to up to 8 babies from 1 oxygen source. In this nursery there is very serious understaffing. I have seen a nurse not leave this room for more than 72 hours as there was no other nurse to come and replace her.

The nursery for infants born outside hospital or those readmitted. On the right of the bench an oxygen splitter can be seen, and above it a monitoring unit for vital observations that is shared by the entire ward. (In Australia each baby would have their own monitor.) On the left on the floor is an oxygen concentrator. this machine sucks in air, extracts nitrogen gas leaving almost pure oxygen. It never runs out, but is dependent on electricity. When black-outs occur (and they occur often) any child needing oxygen is left unsupported. In a crowded nursery environment like this with cots separated by a panel of wood it is difficult to prevent cross-infections. I have seen a baby come in with severe chest infection and recover only to develop severe diarrhoea from a baby on the next cot, and go on to die from dehydration due to the illness he obtained in hospital.Under these cots are bright lamps which help keep the babies warm. The room is kept hot too, and feels like a sauna to work in.

The high dependency unit. Two CPAP machines are on the left, and a wall mounted monitor. The bed on the far right is being shared by two unrelated children, as is the second bed on the left. The entire hall is always full. There are two nurses for this hall. 

The two children in this bed have become friends. Both are recovering well. Water is not fluoridated in Malawi, and although safe to drink, does not protect against tooth decay. The clothes are bought at the market. They are sourced almost entirely from donated hand-me-downs from the West. It is not unusual to see a man on the street wearing a “Welcome to Ballarat” T-shirt. Or a T-shirt celebrating Australia’s bicentenary, or Sydney swans vest… This boy got nice Bob the Builder overalls. 

The newly built adult emergency department. A very limited ambulance service has to prioritise obstetric emergencies. Most other emergencies have to make their own way to hospital. For many this means paying a bicycle taxi to take them. In the middle of the night this can be unaffordable for many families, which means children often present for care very late, often too late, for a meaningful recovery.  

Got to throw in a photo of a cute baby! This child is shown recovering from severe pneumonia with CPAP and intravenous antibiotics, and in the next photo is now ready to go home.

Improving child health and reducing mortality is complex, since the fundamental underlying causes of poor health are economic and political, as well as more directly biological. 

They relate to literacy and female empowerment as much as they do to food security and availability of preventive interventions such as vaccination. 

Malawi has engineered improvements in food security and seen improvements in literacy in recent years. It has been very proactive in introducing vaccines that have been in use in wealthy countries for many years but were unaffordable in most other countries. Hospital care for children is improving also. 

But a major gap remains in availability of health staff. 

With my own eyes and almost on a daily basis I see children die who would have survived if they had closer nursing care. Supporting a nurse not only provides better care for children, but also gives that nurse employment and helps her to support and educate her own family. 

Shira Hadasha in Melbourne is collecting money for this purpose. All money collected is transferred into a foreign currency account of the Queen Elizabeth Paediatric Department held in Malawi. It will be used to provide employment for a nurse for the children’s wards. There are no overheads or other losses apart from bank fees for the funds transfer. All monies will pay salary, superannuation and other on-costs (eg medical insurance) for the nurse. The money in this account is regularly externally audited.

To donate to this important project please visit shira.org.au/malawi-hospital-drive

(All photos taken with permission of the parents/guardian for the purpose of disseminating information about the department for fund raising. Photos taken by Dr Sarita Depani and Dr Andrew Selman.)

Posted on September 10, 2012 .

Jewish Museum Course

Shiranik Yvonne Fein will be running a course at the Jewish Museum. You can find out the details below.

The Bad, the Bold and the Beautiful: Heroes and Harlots in the Bible

Yvonne Fein – Author, editor and playright

A cast of thousands, a complex plot line, the greatest story ever written! Over eight weeks, we will explore the stories behind the stories in the Torah, including those about Lot and his daughters, Esther and Mordechai, David and Jonathan, to name just a few. These fabulously flawed biblical characters will come to life upon the pages of source-materials they never handed out to you in school. As a class, we will ponder some of the great human dilemmas — good and evil, right and wrong and that fragile membrane which separates the sacred from the profane. When these biblical narratives are placed alongside ancient, mediaeval and contemporary commentaries, they extend an irresistible invitation: ‘Come inside,’ they say  ‘Come inside, like the scholars of old,  and examine the timeless and the universal , the humanity of our ancestors.’

Monday afternoon 12.45pm - 3. 00pm

(8 week course commencing October 15) at the Jewish Museum 26 Alma Road St.Kilda

Code: MA4/YF 

For more details see www.jewishmuseum.com.au short courses OR contact Leah (see below)

Enrolments  for all courses need to be received by September 24th

Leah Justin/ Short courses coordinator l.justin@jewishmuseum.com.au Jewish Museum of Australia 26 Alma Road / PO Box 117 St Kilda Victoria 3182 Direct +61 3 8534 3625 / Telephone +61 3 8534 3600 Facsimile +61 3 9534 0844 Availability Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday

Posted on September 7, 2012 .

Parshat Ki Tavo

Membership:

Rosh Hashanah is just over a week away! If you have not already done so, please take out membership so that you can be a part of the exciting and meaningful events and Services we have planned for the coming year. By renewing your membership, you are supporting the only inclusive Orthodox minyan in Melbourne where both women and men are active participants and song permeates the service. Please click here to renew your membership. If you have any queries, feel free to contact Ari.

Shabbat: We invite you to join us for a joyous Kaballat Shabbat at 6pm on Friday and for our weekly shiur, given by Yaron Gottlieb, at 9:15am Shabbat morning. Shacharit will commence at 9:45am.

Kiddush Lunch:

This week, Shira is hosting a discussion  on the topic Airing Our Dirty Laundry: Child Sexual Abuse in the Media. Manny Waks and Jewel Topsfield will speak and answer questions and Ashley Browne will moderate the discussion.

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Lunch will commence following the service at approximately 12pm, the presentation will begin at 12:30pm. Bookings for the lunch are now closed, but everyone is welcome to attend the talk.

Shira Tzedaka: So far Shira congregants have generously donated $6,523.00 towards employing a nurse for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. We are hoping to raise at least enough money to cover two years’ salary, which is $7,200. To contribute to the cause and see more info, click here.

Posted on September 7, 2012 .

Membership 2012

It's that time of year again, when we come together to celebrate and contemplate. 

Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur are around the corner, and this year we will once again be filling the Caulfield Park Bowls Club with our songs and prayers. 

It's essential that everyone who attends pays membership before the sounding of the Shofar in two weeks time. 

Please take out your membership this week and consider giving more so that our community can continue to flourish.

We look forward to seeing you in the park with our two chazzanim who we are bringing out from Jerusalem.

Shana Tova on behalf of the Shira Melbourne community,

Mark Baker

Posted on September 3, 2012 .

Parshat Ki Tetze

Membership: Our Elul membership campaign is well underway. We have begun looking forward to the New Year at Shira. If you have not already done so, please take out membership so that you can be a part of the exciting and meaningful events and Services we have planned for the coming year. By renewing your membership, you are supporting the only inclusive Orthodox minyan in Melbourne where both women and men are active participants and song permeates the service. Please click here to renew your membership. If you have any queries, feel free to contact Ari.

Shabbat: We invite you to join us for an exhilarating Kaballat Shabbat at 6pm on Friday and for our weekly shiur, given by Yaron Gottlieb, at 9:15am Shabbat morning. Shacharit will commence at 9:45am. The Dvar Torah will be given by Seraphya Berrin.

Mazal Tov: We wish a Mazal Tov to Ryan Brick and the Brick family on the occasion of Ryan’s Bar Mitzvah. Ryan, we are excited to watch you leyn in front of your family and friends and we are sure that you will make them proud.

ADC Dinner: Tonight, Shira is hosting a dinner with the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation Commission's Multifaith Future Leaders Program. Bookings for the event have now closed. Dinner will commence after the conclusion of the Friday night Service.

Kiddush Lunch: Shira will be hosting a discussion on the topic Airing Our Dirty Laundry: Child Sexual Abuse in the Media. Manny Waks and Jewel Topsfield will speak and answer questions and Ashley Browne will moderate the discussion.

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Lunch will commence following the service on Saturday September 8th at approximately 12pm, the presentation will begin at 12:30pm.

Cost: $20 for adults and $10 for students. Bookings for the lunch close on Tuesday, so please pay ASAP. You can pay via the Shira website or by depositing the amount into Shira's bank account.

Shiur with Gabbi Sar-Shalom: Gabbi will run a shiur exploring the significance of some significant prayers in the High Holiday liturgy.

When: Thursday September 6th 10-11:15am.

Where: 7/124 Balaclava Rd, North Caulfield (entrance on Leaburn St).

Bring: Machzorim.

RSVP: Please email Gabbi at gsshalom@yahoo.com or call her on 0423583665.

Shira Tzedaka: So far, Shira congregants have generously donated $6,123.00 towards employing a nurse for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. We are hoping to raise at least enough money to cover two years’ salary, which is $7,200. To contribute to the cause and see more info, click here.

Shabbat Shalom

Posted on August 31, 2012 .

Parshat Shoftim

Membership: The countdown to Rosh Hashanah is underway. We are all looking forward to bringing in the New Year with our chazanim Yonina Fleischman and Adam Ross at the Caulfield Park Bowls Club.We ask that you renew your membership at Shira for the coming year. By renewing your membership, you are supporting the only inclusive Orthodox minyan in Melbourne where both women and men are active participants and song permeates the service. We anticipate that the upcoming year will be one of joy and growth. Please click here to renew your membership. If you have any queries, feel free to contact Ari.

Shabbat: We invite you to join us for a melodic Kaballat Shabbat at 6pm on Friday and for our weekly shiur, given by Yaron Gottlieb, at 9:15am Shabbat morning. Shacharit will commence at 9:45am. The Dvar Torah will be given by Adam Hyman.

Mazal tov: We wish a Mazal Tov to Morry Dvash on the occasion of his 60th Birthday and 47th Bar Mitzvah anniversary. This week’s Kiddush is sponsored by the Klinger and Dvash families in honour of this occasion.

ADC Dinner: Shira is thrilled to be hosting a dinner with the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation Commission's Multifaith Future Leaders Program.

What: Kaballat Shabbat (Friday Evening Prayer Service) followed by a delicious dinner and a short talk given by Ittay Flescher.

Who: Graduates of the ADC Multifaith Future Leaders Program andShira congregants.

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Friday August 31st at 6pm

Cost: The cost of dinner is $15 per person. Please pay ASAP for catering purposes. You can pay via the Shira website or by depositing the amount into Shira's bank account:

Account Name: Shira Hadasha

BSB: 013 445

Account number: 4978 30199

Kiddush Lunch:

What: Shira will be hosting a discussion  on the topic Airing Our Dirty Laundry: Child Sexual Abuse in the Media. Manny Waks and Jewel Topsfield will speak and answer questions and Ashley Browne will moderate the discussion.

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Lunch will commence following the service on Saturday September 6th at approximately 12pm, the presentation will begin at 12:30pm.

Cost: $20 for adults and $10 for students. You can pay via the Shira website by depositing the amount into Shira's bank account.

Shira Tzedaka: so far Shira congregants have generously donated $5,859

towards employing a nurse for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. To contribute to the cause and see more info, click here.

Shabbat shalom.

Posted on August 24, 2012 .

Parshat Re'eh

Membership: The beginning of the month of Elul signals the march towards the Yamim Nora’im. This year we are excited to host Yonina Fleischman and Adam Ross as our chazanim. We will once again transform the picturesque Bowls Club into a holy place filled with song and prayer.

We ask that you renew your membership at Shira for the coming year. By renewing your membership, you are supporting the only inclusive Orthodox minyan in Melbourne where both women and men are active participants and song permeates the service. We anticipate that the upcoming year will be one of joy and growth. Please click here to renew your membership. If you have any queries, feel free to contact Ari.

Shabbat: We invite you to join us for an exhilarating Kaballat Shabbat at 6pm on Friday and for our weekly shiur, given by Yaron Gottlieb, at 9:15am Shabbat morning. Shacharit will commence at 9:45am.

We welcome the Bar-Zeev family back to Shira and look forward to hearing about their adventures during the Dvar Torah which will be given by Naor.

Mazal tov: This week at Shira we are excited to celebrate the engagement of Daniel Harris and Aliza Pinkus. As a shule we appreciate Daniel and Aliza’s effervescence, talent and commitment. We are sure that this Shabbat will be a blast! We wish a Mazal Tov to the Pinkus and Harris families. Daniel and Aliza have generously sponsored this week’s Kiddush.

Rosh Chodesh Elul Davening: 

What: Shira will be hosting a festive Tefillah, followed by a light breakfast and a shiur by Daniel Harris. 

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Sunday August 19th at 9am

Bring: Your singing voices and musical instruments.

ADC Dinner: Shira is thrilled to be hosting a dinner with the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation Commission's Multifaith Future Leaders Program.

What: Kaballat Shabbat (Friday Evening Prayer Service) followed by a delicious dinner and a short talk given by Ittay Flescher.

Who: Graduates of the ADC Multifaith Future Leaders Program and Shira congregants.

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield)."

When: Friday August 31st at 6pm

Cost: The cost of dinner is $15 per person. Please pay ASAP for catering purposes. You can pay via the Shira website or by depositing the amount into Shira's bank account:

Account Name: Shira Hadasha

BSB: 013 445

Account number: 4978 30199

Kiddush Lunch:

What: Shira will be hosting a discussion  on the topic Airing Our Dirty Laundry: Child Sexual Abuse in the Media. Manny Waks and Jewel Topsfield will speak and answer questions and Ashley Browne will moderate the discussion.

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Lunch will commence following the service on Saturday September 6th at approximately 12pm, the presentation will begin at 12:30pm.

Cost: $20 for adults and $10 for students. You can pay via the Shira website or by depositing the amount into Shira's bank account.

Shira Tzedaka: so far Shira congregants have generously donated $ $5,539.00 towards employing a nurse for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. We are hoping to raise at least enough money to cover two years’ salary, which is $7,200. To contribute to the cause and see more info, click here.

Shabbat Shalom!

Posted on August 16, 2012 .

Parshat Ekev

Join us this week as we bring in Shabbat with a vibrant Kabballat Shabbat at 6pm. At 9:15am on Shabbat we will enjoy a shiur on the parasha which will be run by Yaron Gottlieb, before commencing Shacharit at 9:45am. This week’s Dvar Torah will be given by Brad Bernstein.

We wish Daniel Harris and Aliza Pinkus Mazal Tov on their engagement!  We are thrilled to be celebrating this special time with you and we hope to celebrate many more smachot with you.

This week, we bid farewell to Brad Bernstein, Vivi Cohen and Yonah.  We are grateful for all that you have contributed to Shira. We wish you all the best and hope that you visit Shira frequently. We also wish a Mazal Tov to Lexi Kowal and her family on the occasion of Lexi’s third Bat Mitvah anniversary. We will be privileged to enjoy Lexi’s leyning in shule. Brad, Vivi and the Kowal family are sponsoring this week’s Kiddush.

Rosh Chodesh Elul Davening: 

What: Shira will be hosting a festive Tefillah, followed by a light breakfast and a shiur by Daniel Harris. 

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Sunday August 19th at 9am

Bring: Your singing voices and musical instruments.

Shira Tzedaka: so far Shira congregants have generously donated $3,454.00 towards employing a nurse for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. One year's salary for a nurse is $3600.00 and we are aiming to raise at least enough money to cover two years’ salary. To contribute to the cause and see more info, click here.

Shabbat Shalom

Posted on August 10, 2012 .

Parshat Va'etchanan

Join us this week as we bring in Shabbat with a joyous Kabballat Shabbat at 6pm. At 9:15am on Shabbat we will enjoy a shiur on the parasha which will be run by Seraphya Berrin, before commencing Shacharit at 9:45am.

This week, we are thrilled to be celebrating Tali Prawer’s Bat Mitzvah. We wish a mazal tov to Tali and her family on this occasion. It is fitting that this week’s parashah includes the Ten Commandmants as well as the Shema. Just as both these passages of text are fundamental to Judaism, the Prawer family is fundamental to Shira. We are excited to discover what personal touch Tali brings to the Shira community.

The Dvar Torah will be given by Tali and her father, Steven Prawer. The Prawer family invites the congregation to a kiddush at their home following the Service. 

Shira Tzedaka: so far Shira congregants have generously donated $2,904 towards employing a nurse for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. One year's salary for a nurse is $3600.00 and we are aiming to raise at least enough money to cover two years’ salary. To contribute to the cause and see more info, click here.

Rosh Chodesh Elul Davening: 

What: Shira will be hosting a festive Tefillah, followed by a light breakfast and a shiur by Daniel Harris. 

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Sunday August 19th at 9am

Bring: Your singing voices and musical instruments.

Shabbat Shalom

Posted on August 2, 2012 .

Parshat Devarim

Join us this week as we bring in Shabbat with a vibrant Kabbalat Shabbat at 6pm. At 9:15am on Shabbat we will enjoy a shiur on the parasha which will be run by Yaron Gottlieb, before commencing Shacharit at 9:45am. This week’s Dvar Torah will be given by the stellar Sibella Stern.

Tisha b’Av: This Saturday night (July 28th) is Tisha b'Av: The fast starts at sunset which is at 5:29pm (Shabbat goes out later at nightfall, which is at 6:12pm). Shira will host a reading of Megillat Eicha, followed by a film and discussion, at our regular premises 222 Balaclava Rd.

New Ner Tamid: We would like to acknowledge and thank Goldie Malin, who has graciously donated the Ner Tamid in honour of her friend and teacher, Debbie Masel z'l.  It is hanging over the Aron and is a beautiful symbol of the light that Debbie brought in to our community. 

Yamim Nora’im: The chagim are fast approaching. Please contact Ari at arielle@shira.org.au if you would like to be part of Shira’s famous Kol Nidrei choir or if you would like to contribute leyning.

Rosh Chodesh Elul Davening: 

What: Shira will be hosting a festive Tefillah, followed by a light breakfast and a shiur by Daniel Harris. 

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield).

When: Sunday August 19th at 9am

Bring: Your singing voices and musical instruments.

Shira Tzedaka: So far Shira congregants have generously donated $1,024 towards employing a nurse for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. One year's salary for a nurse is $3,600.00, so we still have plenty of progress to make. To contribute to the cause and see more info, click here.

Young MDA Speed Dating:  Young MDA is hosting a speed dating night on Thursday August 2nd. You can find out more details here.

Shabbat Shalom

Posted on July 27, 2012 .

Parshat Matot-Masei

Join us this week as we bring in Shabbat with a melodic Kabballat Shabbat at 6pm. At 9:15am on Shabbat morning we will enjoy a shiur on the parasha which will be run by Yaron Gottlieb, before commencing Shacharit at 9:45am.

Kiddush Lunch and Guest Speaker: A Kiddush Lunch will follow the Service and Rebecca Forgasz will speak on the topic  ‘Women known for these acts’:  Lesbianism in Halacha. Bookings for the lunch have closed.

Consecration of Debbie Masel (Miller): The consecration of the tombstone erected in loving memory of Debbie will occur this Sunday at 10am, at the Chevra Kadisha Cemetery (Browns Road, Springvale) Section 13, Row N, No. 30.

Tisha b’Av: Next Saturday night we will host a Megillah reading followed by a program.

Where: Shira (222 Balaclava Rd, Caulfield)

When: 6:45pm on July 28th

What: The reading of Megillat Eicha, followed by a screening of episode 3 from the brilliant TV series “Ancient Rome: The Rise and fall of an Empire” which dramatically depicts the rival Jewish factions at the time and the sinat chinam (baseless hatred) between them that contributed to the end of Jewish sovereignty in Judea. We will conclude the evening with a discussion about the historical context and modern incarnation of baseless hatred in Judaism.

Shira Tzedaka: so far we have raised $294.00 towards employing a nurse for the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Blantyre, Malawi. One year's salary for a nurse is $3600.00. To contribute to the cause and see more info, click here.

Young MDA Speed Dating: Young MDA is hosting a speed dating night on Thursday August 2nd. You can find out more details here.

Jewish Aid Australia program: Jewish Aid Australia runs a 6 week social justice course for 11 and 12 year olds called Stand Up.  It is an excellent program which complements Shira’s own Bnei Mitzvah program. To find out more about Stand Up, click on this link. If you have any queries about Shira’s Bnei Mitvah program email song@shira.org.au

Shabbat Shalom

Posted on July 20, 2012 .

Kiddush Lunch & Guest Speaker on July 21

Shira is excited to be hosting another of its famous Kiddush Lunches on July 21st. Rebecca Forgasz will be talking on the topic: 'Women known for these acts': Lesbianism in Halacha. Lunch will begin following the Service at approximately 12 and the talk will commence at 12:30pm. 

The costs are: $20 for adults, $10 for students (school and uni) and nothing for little kids. Please pay either via paypal on the Shira website or by depositing the amount into Shira's bank account. The bank account details are:

Account Name: Shira Hadasha

BSB: 013 445

Account number: 4978 30199

Bookings for the Kiddush lunch will be closing this Wednesday (July 18th), so book ASAP so you don't miss out.

Looking forward to having an excellent discussion over some delicious food!

Posted on July 16, 2012 .

Parshat Pinchas

In this week’s parashah, we see 5 strong women argue their case before Moshe, who then advocates on their behalf before Hashem. Join us at Shira as we follow in these women’s tradition. We will bring in Shabbat in style with an emphatic Kabbalat Shabbat at 6pm. At 9:15am on Shabbat morning we will enjoy a shiur on the parasha which will be run by Yaron Gottlieb, before commencing Shacharit at 9:45am.  This week’s Dvar Torah will be given by Melanie Landau. This is the first time that Melanie has spoken in Melbourne in a year, so be sure to come and hear her.

Kiddush Lunch and Guest Speaker: On July 21st, next Shabbat, we are delighted to host a talk given by Rebecca Forgasz on the topic: 

‘Women known for these acts’: Lesbianism in Halacha.

Lunch costs $20 for adults and $10 for students, little kids can attend for free. You can pay by paypal on our website by clicking here or depositing the required amount in Shira’s account (details below). Bookings close on Wed July 18th.

Account Name: Shira Hadasha

BSB: 013 445

Account number: 4978 30199

Consecration of Debbie Masel (Miller) : The consecration of the tombstone erected in loving memory of Debbie will occur on July 22nd at 10am. It is at the Chevra Kadisha Cemetery (Browns Road, Springvale) Section 13, Row N, No. 30.

Tisha Be'Av: On Saturday night of July 28th, we will commence the reading of Megillat Eicha at 6:45pm. This will be followed by a screening of episode three from the brilliant TV series “Ancient Rome: The Rise and fall of an Empire” which dramatically depicts the rival Jewish factions at the time and the sinat chinam (baseless hatred) between them that contributed to the end of Jewish sovereignty in Judea. We will conclude the evening with a discussion about the historical context and modern incarnation of baseless hatred in Judaism.

Shira Tzedakah: Last week in shule, Michael Fagenblat spoke movingly about how he and his family visited a hospital in Malawi where Shira member Naor Bar-Zeev works. Michael described the dire state of the hospital and how the opportunity to employ one more nurse would assist the hospital and save lives. Shira has decided to adopt this cause. Please click on this link to find out more about the cause and to donate.

Shabbat Shalom

Posted on July 13, 2012 .

Kiddush Lunch & Guest Speaker on July 21

Shira is excited to be hosting another of its famous Kiddush Lunches on July 21st. Rebecca Forgasz will be talking on the topic: 'Women known for these acts': Lesbianism in Halacha. Lunch will begin following the Service at approximately 12 and the talk will commence at 12:30pm. 

The costs are: $20 for adults, $10 for the concession rate and nothing for little kids. Please pay either via paypal via the Shira website or by depositing the amount into Shira's bank account. The bank account details are:

Account Name: Shira Hadasha

BSB: 013 445

Account number: 4978 30199

We recognise this comes at short notice, but we'd really appreciate it if you could book and pay ASAP for catering purposes. Bookings for the Kiddush lunch will be closing on Wednesday July 18th.

Looking forward to having an excellent discussion over some delicious food!

Posted on July 9, 2012 .