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President's Message Shemini 3.25.22

Dear friends, This week's Parsha, Shemini, gives us the lists of kosher and non-kosher animals, fish, birds and bugs. Countless sages over the centuries have hypothesized about why this or that animal made it on either list.  Some of the most popular topics are the pig and the crawling insects. The pig appears kosher on the outside, with his split hooves, but is non-kosher on the inside, as it does not chew his cud –– a sharp reproof to those who act holy outside but are rotten inside. Crawling insects move secretly along the ground; a lesson to us to avoid sneaking around, but rather to rise up from our earth-bound impurity to holier pursuits.  In preparing this message, I ran across another metaphor that I had never heard. Rabbi Mirwis talks about the kite, a non-kosher bird of prey, and references a tractate in Chulin describing "the kite flies around the skies of Babylon and from there it can see a Neveila (a non-kosher animal) lying on the ground in the Land of Israel.”  The simple reason for this statement is to record the excellent vision of the kite.  But there’s a deeper meaning: Rabbi Mirwis compares the kite to those who sit in the diaspora and find the faults, the impure things, in the Land of Israel and complain and criticize. We are told the kite is not kosher because of its character. According to Rabbi Mirwis, this character is not just that the kite is a bird of prey, but also that the kite only sees the bad around it, in Israel and everywhere. We have to reject this behavior. It is incumbent upon us as Jews to find the good around us, to appreciate what we have been blessed with. •  •  • We are blessed that things are slowly coming back to normal. We are blessed that we have Shul to come to. The Purim celebrations were a great success and we are starting to plan for Pesach; information will be going out over the next few weeks. We have also set June 15th as the tentative date for the Annual dinner. More information will be coming about that…we are still in the early stages, but there may be an in-person component to the dinner.  Many topics were discussed at the Board meeting this week and the minutes of the previous meeting will be sent out soon after our Secretary returns from Israel. Some of the immediate changes you will see are a new air filtration unit for the Kiddush room and changes to the entry into the sanctuary for men and women on Shabbat and Yom Tov to prevent tripping and falls.  I'm pleased to announce that Rabbi David Shushan has been made the permanent Baal Koreh for both the early and main minyan on Shabbat and will  be with us for the High Holidays as well. A ritual committee will be formed in the near future. Its makeup and scope are being discussed in consultation with the Rabbi.  Membership dues invoices will be going out shortly. In addition to the standard membership levels, a new reduced-fee student pass has been approved. Please pay your dues as early as you can, it makes it far easier for us to keep the bills paid and the programs running, which we all appreciate very much.  Wishing you all a peaceful and meaningful Shabbat Shalom, Steven Inker

Tue, May 13 2025 15 Iyyar 5785