The family I was supposed to stay with in Cincinnati for the Shabbat immediately before the sh'liach k'hilah program just had to back out (for perfectly sane reasons which are not their fault).
I don't have a phone number for the HUC folks here at work, so I sent email to the two program organizers who seem relevant, pursuing a two-pronged approach: (1) do you know of anyone else who might be able to host me? and (2) what are the implications of checking into the dorm on Friday? (The latter boils down to: will there be anyone else around and will I be able to attend services? They've already said that there is a kitchenette in the dorm, so cold meals would not seem to be a problem.)
I could drive there between the end of Shabbat and the beginning of the program on Sunday, but I'd rather not. That's the back-up plan.
Update: Apparently they already knew about the problem
(my would-be host talked to them too) and are working on it.
I don't have a phone number for the HUC folks here at work, so I sent email to the two program organizers who seem relevant, pursuing a two-pronged approach: (1) do you know of anyone else who might be able to host me? and (2) what are the implications of checking into the dorm on Friday? (The latter boils down to: will there be anyone else around and will I be able to attend services? They've already said that there is a kitchenette in the dorm, so cold meals would not seem to be a problem.)
I could drive there between the end of Shabbat and the beginning of the program on Sunday, but I'd rather not. That's the back-up plan.
Update: Apparently they already knew about the problem
(my would-be host talked to them too) and are working on it.
(no subject)
Date: 2004-06-30 01:38 pm (UTC)Checking into the dorms requires advance notice, so they should be able to tell me if other students are checking in early. I'm assuming Hillel isn't active during the summer, but could be pleasantly surprised. I'm sorry to hear it's not in a Jewish part of town.
Food: the info they sent mentioned that a grocery store and several restaurants are within walking distance. And, of course, I can bring food from home. Once the program starts all meals are provided, so the kitchen facilities they offer are an extra, not essential (except that they'd be handy for that first Shabbat).
There aren't a lot of Reform Jews who are shomer Shabbat, but the proportion in a para-rabbinic program may be higher than in the general population, so I might get lucky.
What sent you to HUC, by the way?
(no subject)
Date: 2004-07-01 05:46 am (UTC)The library, as you'd expect, was a cornucopia of Jewish research and reading materials. I couldn't help but play hooky there a lot of the time.
Anyway, such was my former life.