June Birthdays
6/12 Dot Frank
6/12 Paul Freedman
6/13 Marla Steinberg
6/14 Sophia Russell
6/16 Elliott Leader
6/16 Courtney LeBauer
6/22 Rachel Brough
6/25 Stuart Filler
6/26 Matthew Poliakoff
6/28 Stanley Hyman
6/29 Robert Britanisky
6/12 Dot Frank
6/12 Paul Freedman
6/13 Marla Steinberg
6/14 Sophia Russell
6/16 Elliott Leader
6/16 Courtney LeBauer
6/22 Rachel Brough
6/25 Stuart Filler
6/26 Matthew Poliakoff
6/28 Stanley Hyman
6/29 Robert Britanisky
6/9 Marla & Hank Steinberg
6/11 Jennifer & Robert Britanisky
6/14 Karen & Robert Lyon
6/15 Shirley & Gary Koshak
6/20 Susan & Larry Abelkop
6/20 Beth & David Blumenfeld
6/23 Mary & Andrew Poliakoff
6/25 Lisa & Ray Frye
6/29 Elaine & Stanley Hyman
6/30 Karen & Roger Fuller
6/3 William G. Smith
6/4 Samuel Robinson
6/6 Marsha Poliakoff
6/6 Minnye Weinberger
6/7 Barney Gelburd
6/7 Rhoda Koshak
6/8 Marvin Frank
6/14 Herbert Shapiro
6/14 Beth Weinberger
6/16 Jacob Barash
6/16 Sidney Captain
6/19 Shalom Baruch
6/25 Myron Parsons
6/26 Harry Tanenbaum
6/27 Ernest Acanfora
6/27 Fay Friedberg
6/27 Bella Cohen Karsh
6/27 Richard Packer
6/28 Sidney Anderson
“God made man because He loves stories.” Elie Weisel (The preface to The Gates of the Forest)
Dear friends,
Fans of the television show Boston Legal will recall William Shatner’s character Denny Crane. A colorful character whose egotism was gradually impeded by his loss of mental faculties and his incessant need to pursue women. In one scene he glibly comments that the reason for his interest in fostering new romances was “I want to tell my stories again to someone!” As the quote from
Elie Weisel so succinctly conveys, people love to share their favored narratives. The Jewish people have held fast to their narratives for millennia and this devotion has helped us in our survival and more than that our need to find life’s meaning.
Narratives and stories are powerful instruments that can persuade and foster change and at the same time sustain time honored values and traditions. Such is the favored exercise of companies, political parties, and religious institutions.
There is of course a downside to clinging to our narratives. How often our personal attachment to them can become stale and in fact deleterious to growth and change!
As a onetime prison chaplain, I encountered a most charming loan shark in the correctional facility. Once, with his guard down, he engaged in a personal revelry about his father who owned a candy store, what we now would call a convenience store. With his fists clenched and sharking, this inmate recalled how his father would generously let everyone and anyone buy products promising to pay for them eventually. Like Popeye the sailor’s Wimpy “I’ll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today!” This 75-year-old loan shark told me how he would complain to his father, “Dad, they take advantage of you. Don’t let them steal from you!” Respond- ing to this tale he had told over and over again, I finally said; “I guess you became a loan shark so people would not do to you what they did to your dad whom you loved!” Hearing this, he fell back in his chair for he had never put those two pieces of his life together.
Sometimes, we cling to our narratives, framing out what we think must be applied to our current situations, old ways of relating to the teachers we admired, the organizations that served us well and to the rabbis we knew. But to paste one’s antique narrative to a current situation is to get stuck in a maddening repetitive loop. That is to say, repeating the same behavior over and over again and expecting a new result. One teacher commented on how mice are smarter than people. When mice amble toward one part of the maze that does not lead to the cheese they turn around. But when people knock on a door repeatedly that won’t open, they continue to pound on it proving that was the way to go. All of us do that, you, me and everyone. It is difficult to let go of what you once knew.
While I love narratives and stories, I am suspicious of anyone who claims to have all the answers to problems based on what they think they had known before. Such persons are danger- ous. It fails to build teamsmanship and a sense of shared involvement.
Just saying!
Rabbi Yossi Liebowitz D.D.
These annual awards for excellence of character and service to humanity are given each year to two students from the graduating class (undergraduate or graduate) and to one non-student member of the University community.
Rabbi Liebowitz will be awarded the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award on May 21, 2023 at the Wofford College’s commencement at 9:30.
Algernon Sydney Sullivan was born
in Madison, Indiana on April 5, 1826, son of Jeremiah Sullivan (1794–1870) and Charlotte Rudesel (Cutler) Sullivan. He was named in honor of the
British politician, Algernon Sidney. His father was a lawyer, held the rank of Major in the War of 1812, and became a member of the Indiana legislature in 1821. Jeremiah Sullivan was also a judge of the criminal court of Jefferson County, Indiana, and of the Indiana Supreme Court (1837 – 1846). His grandfather, Thomas Littleton Sullivan, the son of an Irish barrister, emigrated from Charleville, County Cork, Ireland, in 1791, to Augusta County, Virginia. He also had a younger brother named Jeremiah C. Sullivan who, in addition to his legal career, also had a successful military career in both the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Army. Algernon Sullivan was educated
at Hanover College and Miami University, graduating in 1845. While a law student, about the age of twenty, he made a tour of Indiana, in advocacy of taxation for the maintenance of public schools. After studying law in his father’s office, he was admitted to the bar in 1848, and for eight years practiced in Cincinnati, Ohio.
For more information about Algernon Sydney Sullivan, Click Here
Dear Congregants,
Please join me in congratulating our Rabbi, Yossi Liebowitz. Rabbi Liebowitz is receiving the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award, a prestigious award given by Wofford College each year during commencement. This annual award for excellence of character and service to
humanity are given each year to two students from the Wofford College graduating class (undergraduate or graduate) and to one non-student member of the college community.
Rabbi Liebowitz will be awarded the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award on May 21, 2023 at the Wofford College commencement to be held at 9:30 am. Congratulations, Rabbi!
As the retirement of our esteemed Rabbi approaches, our search committee continues to work diligently to hire to a spiritual leader for our Temple. Please continue to check your email and mailbox for any updates and possible visits of spiritual leader candidates. I appreciate your patience and positive outlook during this time.
May is a wonderful month! For me, it has always been the summer pre-view and makes me eagerly anticipate our southern summer, which I love! I wish you an incredible May with loads of sunshine, happiness, and daydreams of summertime.
Warmly, Tina Lyon
5/1 Brian Hendrickson
5/1 Rick Tanenbaum
5/2 Marilyn Litoff
5/3 Benjamin Brough
5/3 Susan Goldman
5/3 Sylvia Rex
5/7 David Blumenfeld
5/9 Andrew Poliakoff
5/9 Alane Russell
5/13 Steve Garrell
5/18 Rebeca Greenfield
5/19 Norma Mortge
5/23 Lianne Wood
5/25 Rex Russell
5/31 Robert Lyon
5/13 Roxanne & Bogdan Gheorghiu
5/17 Deede & Jeff Cohen
5/13 Irene & Junie White
5/30 Cathy & Jon Lewson
5/1 Phyllis W. Stauber
5/3 Jonathan A. Fishbein
5/3 Sue Freedman
5/7 Jack Tobin
5/8 Jack Steinbrock
5/10 Elizabeth Reemes
5/11 Sara Hecklin
5/11 Marthe Heymann
5/11 Fishel Steinbrock
5/15 Dorothy Brett
5/16 Harry Price
5/18 David Packer
5/18 Morris Unger
5/20 Ernest Emory
5/20 Pauline L. Smith
5/21 Hyman Greenfield
5/21 Jerry N. Hyder
5/21 Susan R. Wise
5/21 Rabbi Max S. Stauber
5/24 Barry Goldman
5/24 Elizabeth Nabow
5/26 Mildred P. Gelburd
5/26 Pauline Unger
5/27 Herman Klausner
5/27 Ethel Silnutze
5/28 Samuel Shapiro
5/28 Rose H. Smiley
5/31 Ayala Paula A. Marks