Rosh haShana 5775

Shana Tova

We are thrilled to wish you all a Shana Tova U'metukah. You, our chavrei tnua (members), families, alumni, and supporters, are the honey to our apples, the action to our values; you are our sustenance and our spirit. We are grateful to you for another great year in Habonim Dror full of strength, passion, and action.  At this time, reflecting on this past year and setting goals for the new year, we'd like to share with you a few Movement updates: This month, we are saying goodbye to Kali Silverman, our Mazkira Klalit (National Director), and Zoey Green, our Merakezet Chinuch (Education Director). Kali and Zoey have done important work in their tafkidim (jobs) and on the Mazkirut Artzit (Administrative Team). Their commitment and influence will resound for years to come. We welcome Sara Zebovitz as Mazkira Klalit and Zach Pekarsky as Merakez Chinuch to the Mazkirut Artzit, joining David Meyer (Gizbar, Financial Director), Jeremy Oziel (Merakez Tochniot, Programs Director), and Eitan Tako (Central Shaliach, Israeli Emissary). We are all excited for all they will bring to the Movement. In addition, Sara, Zach, David, and Jeremy are living collectively with two other members of their national kvutza in Brooklyn! This past summer, we had 1,400 campers and over 300 staff members at our seven camps throughout North America, as well as 116 participants on MBI (Machaneh Bonim b'Israel - our summer program in Israel for post-10th graders). Throughout this past year, we had 69 participants at our May movement member seminar187 participants of our Winter Seminar/Veida, and 37 'Workshoppers' (on our 9-month gap-year program in Israel). We just sent off 29 movement members to Israel for the 64th Workshop program! A lot has also been happening in our kenim (year-round activities) throughout North America, including many new initiatives that enhance Habonim Dror education and bring our values to local communities, including the Philadelphia March for Minimum Wage in April and the Vancouver Education Program during the teachers’ strike happening now. We're already gearing up for Winter Seminar in December, where active movement members (11th grade and up) will gather to learn and discuss the state of the movement and the vision for the future. Our office has recently moved to Brooklyn and unveiled our new (and still improving) website -- take a look around! Habonim Dror became allies of the Jewish Social Justice Roundtable this past year, joining an amazing network of 47 organizations pursuing social justice from a Jewish perspective. We are incredibly proud of three Habonim Dror North America members who are going to Israel to join Kvutzot Am (קבוצות ע''מ) this fall. Kvutzot Am, the Network of Educators’ Urban Kibbutzim, is a passionate group of olim (immigrants) from Habonim Dror Worldwide who have moved to Israel in order to take responsibility for the State of Israel and the Jewish People. We look forward to hearing from them as they explore their new lives in Israel and continuing our partnership with them. Check out Kvutzot Am’s new website to learn more about who they are and what they do. This year we know we will be facing more questions of our values and ideologies, but we are confident that with the support and dedication of our members, alumni, families, and supporters, 5775 will be another year filled with increased sustainability and many more accomplishments. If you aren't doing so already, please like our Facebook page and follow us on Twitter. Email mazkir@habonimdror.org if you have any questions or would like more information about Habonim Dror and Join the HDNA Mailing List! We hope 5775 is a happy and healthy year for you, your family, and your friends, and that this year brings us all closer to actualizing our collective values and seeing real and lasting peace and equality in Israel and Palestine and throughout the world.­ Shana Tova v'Aleh v'Hagshem, Kali Silverman Outgoing Mazkira Klalit, Habonim Dror North America

Mazkirut Artzit 2013-2014 in our new office!

Mazkirut Artzit 2013-2014 in our new office!

 

Zach and Sara, the newest members of the Mazkirut Artzit.

Below are pieces about Rosh haShana and Yom Kippur written by members of the Mazkirut Arzit. Enjoy!

Gedaliah Who?

by Eitan Tako

During the Ten Days of Repentance, right after Rosh HaShana and before Yom Kippur, hides a fast that marks an occasion from 2,500 years ago.

This is the fast of Gedaliah.

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Symbolism

by Jeremy Oziel

Symbols are a huge part of any Jewish holiday. Symbols are what remind us why a holiday is important and why we choose to celebrate it. Symbols help us to find meaning in our practice and belief. They can also inform how we celebrate different holidays. In many cases, symbols from the holidays remind us of the time we spend with our families. On a simple level, symbols are also a very practical way to pass down traditions. Children learn easily through symbols, especially through those that are food related. These are the ones I like the most. For instance, most of us can remember when we learned that Rosh haShana was about turning the page on the old year and looking forward to a sweet new one — through eating apples and honey. You may not have even been old enough to understand why there was another new year that came on January 1st, but you associated the beginning of school and the high holidays with the taste of apples and honey.

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Atone for What?

by David Meyer

Why will I fast on Yom Kippur this year? To fast or not to fast is an annual game time decision. When I choose to fast or attend services, it is on the grounds that those are, simply put, the activities Jews should be doing on Yom Kippur. Some years I even break the fast early on the grounds that I’ve sufficiently satisfied my desire to engage with Jewish traditions and customs —the lived experience of being Jewish. Other years, I am inspired by my friends and family to persist until the end of Ne’ilah. I’ve always made fasting a decision into which I put serious thought and consideration, but my thoughts have always been about peoplehood rather than spirituality. I would not be surprised if other Habonim Dror members and alumni have felt similarly.

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A New Year — Shofar, So Good

by Zoey Green

The sounding of the shofar is a powerful symbol that has taken on new meanings each year I’ve heard it. When I was young, it was a challenge: when will your lungs grow strong enough to turn the nebulous gas you breathe into crisp, concentrated noise? When I was bat-mitzvah aged, it was a test: do you know the name and pattern of each blast and what each meant to the generations before you? Then somewhere along the way, I questioned tradition, wondering whether I liked my New Year to be celebrated with silence or with sound and why was everyone so willing to put their mouth on the same old ram’s horn anyway? As I surrounded myself with the quirky energy that emanates from a room full of Habos, I discovered meaning in Judaism through its continuous demand that I seek to change the world for the better. With that realization, the dynamic sounds of the shofar came to signify solidarity and the importance of the community standing with every individual who is defiant enough to embrace tradition and make it relevant again today.

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A Communal Confession

by Sara Zebovitz

One of the most repeated prayers in the Rosh haShana and Yom Kippur services – and the ten days in between – is one of repentance. It’s called the Ashamnu (literally, “we have been guilty”), the prayer of confession. It is written as an acrostic, a type of poem common in Jewish prayer. The Ashamnu is said silently during the Amidah prayer, and aloud afterwards. The unique thing about this prayer is that it is not a personal repentance; all of the words are in the first person, plural, and past tense. We say, “אשמנו, בגדנו, גזלנו…” – “we have incurred guilt, we have betrayed, we have stolen…” Why is this prayer recited in this tense, and why are we required to atone for things we have not done? We may have not stolen, lied, committed adultery, or acted violently, but there are others in our communities who have. By reciting this prayer of collective confession, we are taking responsibility over our wider community and taking it upon ourselves to repent for those who have not.

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