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[personal profile] cellio
Thursday night David gave me a tape of the Torah reading I'm going to do in a few months. It doesn't look/sound too hard, though I still want to learn rather than derive the trope interpretation. I had asked him to chant it twice, once using the names of the tropes and then once with the actual words, but he didn't do the former. (That seems to be a standard teaching method.) So I'll have to hit him up for that next time I see him.

At the end of the tape he recorded his phone number and email address (in case I had questions), and then ended with the word "b'has'lecha". I infer from both ccontext and the fact that I recognize "lecha" that this means something vaguely like "take care", but it's probably going to bug me until I find out for sure. Gotta remember to ask Dani. (Unless one of my Hebrew-enabled friends speaks up first.)


At Friday services, Temple Sinai now has name tags for board members to wear during the service and social afterwards. (I think I've alluded before to being "tagged and released", like they do with endangered species to track individual bald eagles or whatever.) Last night my manager (Werner) was there with his family, and as I walked up to say hi he said something like "woo hoo! board of trustees, eh?". So much for separation between work life and non-work life. Not a problem, but I didn't really know what to say. So I just shrugged, and introduced myself to his wife. :-) Even though a board member really has no impact on a regular congregant, it still felt a little odd to be perceived as being above him in some pecking order.

The name tags seem to be having a positive effect so far, though a couple board members are grumbling a bit. Every week, so far, at least one person who I did not know has approached me just to chat. I think this is good, because while I try to approach newcomers, I'm a little too shy and often end up bumping into a non-local relative of the bar mitzvah instead of a member or prospective member -- and they would rather be schmoozing with their relatives, not people from the congregation. I guess my radar just isn't very good.

The name tag also helps me be more confident in approaching people like that. It's funny, but a random person saying hi and welcome can sometimes come off wrong, but a random person with a name tag saying hi and welcome gives a different impression -- that this is someone who is "supposed" to do that sort of thing, so it's ok.


The Saturday-morning study group is in the first chapter of Leviticus, which is about animal sacrifices. (Ok, half of Leviticus is about animal sacrifices.) A couple weeks ago one of the rabbis made a good point, so after this paragraph I am no longer going to talk about "animal sacrifices". The phrase has the wrong connotation, and isn't what the Hebrew means, quite. The Hebrew word is "korban" (singular) or "korbanot" (plural), and those are the words I'm going to use in my journal from now on.

You see, it's not about "sacrifices" in the sense of "giving something up", the way we use the word in English today. In most cases, the person who brought the korban took the meat home with him, or most of it. There's a reason that some people refer to the temple service as the "priestly barbeque". God got part, the priests got part, and you got part. Some korbanot were for attoning for transgressions, yes, but the bulk of them were specified on a particular schedule. Everyone brought a lamb for Pesach, for instance, because you were supposed to eat roasted lamb at the seder. It has nothing to do with sin.

The Hebrew word "korban" comes from the same root as the verb "karov", which means "to draw near". A korban is how we -- or rather, Jews before the destruction of the temple -- draw closer to God. Prayer replaces korbanot now, because you can't have korbanot without the temple. (The Torah says so, that's why.) And the structure of the prayer service mirrors the structure of the temple service of 2000 years ago.

Ok, end of digression. We were reading passages from Leviticus about how to actually do the sacrifices, and someone brought up the issue of cruelty to animals. (I presume this was a "city kid"; most of us are.) This led to a discussion of whether the methods for killing the animal were humane. I seemed to be the only person in the room who was willing to attempt the point that if we presume that this text is of divine origin, and if we take note of the many examples throughout the Torah where compassion is important even for animals, then we must presume that the Creator of all life wouldn't specify an inhumane method of killing animals for His glory.

I think some of my fellow congregants think I'm nuts. I suppose that will get more pronounced if we ever drift toward the detailed discussion of how this is done, as given in the Talmud; I've actually studied that part a little. (No, it wasn't my idea, but that's where Rabbi Roth's online mishna-study group happened to be headed, and I was part of the group, and all Torah/Talmud study is good at some level, so....)

There was a side discussion about the folks who want to return to this system; we've had that discussion before and there was nothing really new here. I don't think I know any Reform Jews who want to rebuild the temple and return to korbanot, though this is part of Orthodoxy. (Actually, it's not just a Reform idea; 800+ years ago the Rambam -- Maimonides -- argued that this would be going backward and we should not expect to return to that system.) Today, there are some people who are actively breding red heifers and making tools and stuff because they plan to bring this about, which would be scary if there were more than a few hundred of them.

Toward the end Rabbi Freedman jokingly said that next week will feature a discussion between a member of PETA and a Chareidi Jew. :-) (A discussion with the latter could actually be fascinating, though it's not going to happen.)

Greeting...

Date: 2002-02-05 08:29 am (UTC)
goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Default)
From: [personal profile] goljerp
The name tag also helps me be more confident in approaching people like that. It's funny, but a random person saying hi and welcome can sometimes come off wrong, but a random person with a name tag saying hi and welcome gives a different impression -- that this is someone who is "supposed" to do that sort of thing, so it's ok.

This is interesting, because it's something that's come up in my minyan. (Quick digression: I go to a shul which can have up to five different services (not including children's services) going on at the same time on any given Saturday. It's fun, but not your normal shul.)
Basically, we try to be very friendly and welcoming to people who aren't regulars. At our recent minyan meeting we talked about how it was everyone's responsibility to say hi to people at services and kiddush. This is tough for me, because I'm a bit shy in general. And I don't have a nametag. I try to compensate by standing at the entrance to the room where we have kiddush and saying hi to people as I hand them grape juice or wine.

I was just invited to join a study group, which sounds fun... although the next meeting is this Sat afternoon, and I already invited friends over to my place. It sounds like your group is doing interesting stuff. And if it helps, I don't think you're nuts. (It might not help, because I am probably nuts myself.)

There was a side discussion about the folks who want to return to this system
Ok, I'm not that nuts. :-)

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