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From the Rabbi

Rabbi Chaitovsky

The Counting of the Omer is just one of the many mitzvot found in this week’s Torah portion, Emor. It is a great example of a law which adapts to changing context. Originally an agricultural marker of new versus old grain, relevant primarily to Israelite farmers, it assumed a much greater significance through time.
Click HERE to learn more about this important mitzvah.

I do hope to see everyone in shul this Shabbat. Our special guest will be
Herb Keinon, long time columnist for the Jerusalem Post and, and an uncle of
Rabbi Danny Wolfe. He will speaking to the congregation after its services and sharing “insider information” about Israel and the Middle East as only he can.

Shabbat shalom to everyone!

From the Cantor

Cantor Marty

In this weeks Pasha, “Emor-Say unto the Cohaneem,” we learn how special it was to be a spiritual leader amongst the Children of Israel. The interesting thing is, that today’s leaders, whether Rabbi’s and Cantor’s or Political leadership like Netanyahu are chosen by the people, or the person themselves. The Priests or Cohaneem were there by virtue of being born to a father who is a Cohen descended from only one person Aaron the older brother of Moses.

            In other words, it wasn’t how much you studied to become a Rabbi, or how astute you were to become a leader of people. It was strictly a matter of birth. Now this doesn’t mean that a Cohen in ancient times didn’t learn and study in order to perform their duties. Quite the contrary. A Cohen had to be a Shochet, a bit of a doctor to diagnose certain diseases, a chemist who could mix the Ketoret of holy incense and many more jobs. The Torah portion enumerates several other restrictions that are laid on the Cohen even mentioning who he could marry.

            In our Haftorah, Ezekiel, the incredible prophet who speaks to the Jewish people in Babylonian exile, speaks to the Cohaneem and Levites who survived the destruction of the first temple. Ezekiel was among a thousand of the Jerusalem Elite who were taken to Babylonia 10 years before the destruction. He had visions of the next Temple or Beit Hamikdash not knowing that it would be only 70 years before the Jewish people returned to Israel. The Book of Chronicles reports that only 4,000-5000 people first returned, most stayed in Babylonia soon to become the Persian Empire.

            Mostly, Ezekiel's message is that the Cohaneem should maintain their physical and spiritual piety and comport themselves properly. If the people could see and experience the purity and specialness of an entire group of Jews, it would give them the strength and motivation to re-build the Holy Land. We need more Ezekiels in our time, to give us strength of purpose and to withstand the barrage of Anti-Jewish hate and propaganda that surrounds us. We are a strong people who have seen pretty much everything over the years. Now, with mass media, tik-tok etc, that have spread falsehoods and outright lies, we all need to be Ezekiels with a vision of a brighter future.

From the Rabbi - May 9, 2024

Rabbi Chaitovsky

We are honored to be paying tribute to our community’s Holocaust survivors and their families this Shabbat. As I am sure we all know, the number of survivors is rapidly shrinking. Here in Colorado, there are currently just fifteen people with first-hand knowledge of the Holocaust. Eight of those are members of BMH-BJ. The Shabbat will cap a week of special programming designed to heighten awareness of this tragic period, about which there is still much to learn. I will be sharing a few words about how Yom Hashoa – Holocaust Memorial Day was noticeably different this year than those of other years. We will welcome local business man and BMH-BJ member, Avi Brown, who will speak on “From the Holocaust to Israel” at approximately 11:20 AM.

On Shabbat Day, after mincha at 7:30, we will be hearing from two Israeli soldiers, Hodaya and Elad Blitz, a young, married, religiously observant couple with a fascinating story to tell. They will speak during seudat shlishit. I encourage all to attend.

The Holocaust then – and the current anti-semitic/anti-Zionist wind blowing across the country, around the globe and even in Israel, now – demonstrates that we have not yet perfected our fulfillment of the words in this week’s Torah portion, Kedoshim, which exhort to Love Our Neighbor As Ourselves. Rabbi Akiva taught that this was the great principle of the Torah, its central pillar.The world still has a way to go, it seems. Come to shul this Shabbat to learn more.

From the Rabbi - May 2, 2024

Rabbi Chaitovsky

Why do the Jews NEED a Land, anyway? This question was posed to Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, zt”l by an Imam from the Middle East with whom Rabbi Sacks was in dialogue for a time. Click HERE to listen to his answer based on a verse from this week’s Torah portion, Acharei Mot.

From the Rabbi- Apr 18, 2024

Rabbi Chaitovsky

We usher in Pesach with the first seder his coming Monday evening. On Sunday at nightfall, we have the tradition to “search” for chametz and then to “burn” it the next morning as a way of demonstrating that we want nothing to do with chametz for next eight days. Here is a video d’var which highlights an interesting custom of the Vishnitzer Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Hager (1830-1884), when it came to the burning of chametz. Watch HERE to learn more.

This Shabbat is Shabbat haGadol – the Shabbat preceeding Pesach. As I have done every year, I will be offering a special Shabbat HaGadol class after our davenings conclude (approximately 11:30 AM) entitled “Don’t Be a Bitter Herb - Pesach and Personal Growth”. A delicious kiddush will follow. I hope you will join for the class.

I wish everyone a shabbat shalom, a chag sameach vekasher and as always…see you in shul!

From the Rabbi- Apr 11, 2024

Rabbi Chaitovsky

This week's Torah portion, Tazria, and the coming Festival of Pesach, provide seemingly conflicting messages regarding what is proper behavior. Let's see if we can figure it out.

Rav Aaron Soloveitchik writes in his book, The Warmth and the Light, “Upon delivery from Egyptian bondage the Israelites regained their self-expression. As long as they were subjected to Egyptian bondage their self-expression was stifled and suppressed. But at the moment of Exodus the Israelites regained their speech. Slaves cannot express or assert themselves properly. They cannot realize their potential. Only the free man is capable of doing so. It can be added that slaves are not given the opportunity to raise questions or ponder ideas, that is reserved strictly to free people.”

The physical freedom we achieved at Pesach also allowed us the right to free speech, to say what we wanted to say. And in fact speech is very much a part of the Pesach observance – “And you shall tell it to your children,” and the one who increases telling the story of the exodus is to be praised.” So the lesson is obvious: raise your voice. It's a sign of being a free man.

But then we have this week's Torah portion of Tazria, which discusses, among other things the symptoms of a disease called tzaraat, often (mis)translated as leprosy. It was probably a bit closer to what we call psoriasis. Maimonides tells us that tzaraat was not a natural affliction, rather it was a miraculous affliction that infected only the Jewish People for the sin of lashon harah - of speaking slander and gossip. And so our speech is not free. We can't say everything we want to say. We have to be careful not to say lashon harah, not to speak slander or gossip. But what is considered lashon harah? The Torah, when it continues the discussion of lashon hara in next week’s parsha, Metzora, simply tells us: “You shall not go up and down as a slanderer among your people.”

Rabbi Israel Meir Kagan (1838-1933), known as the Chafetz Hayim, devoted his life to studying and teaching the ins and outs of permissible and impermissible speech. The examples he discussed were practical and exhaustive. While one may debate his conclusions here and there, overall he seemed to hit the nail on the head. Based on his work, it seems that the laws governing speech are complicated and simple at the same time. The issues surrounding sharing information in professional or social settings, in letters of reference, or a phone call about a potential shidduch/match are certainly complex. At the same time, his advice was quite simple – avoid talking about people. Period. This was surely an effective way to avoid saying “the wrong things” about someone.

So, there's Pesach which gifts us the freedom of speech. And then there’s Tazria, which teaches that you get tzaraat for certain kinds of speech. Pesach and Tazria combined teach us an important lesson: You're free to say what you want … but you're smart to keep your mouth shut if you have nothing good to say.

Shabbat shalom.

This Friday evening we will welcome Shabbat at 6:30 in our chapel. Due to circumstance beyond our control it will be difficult for us to make the minyan. I ask that if you are able, please make every effort to attend the Friday service to be sure we have the numbers. 

From the Rabbi - Apr 4, 2024

Rabbi Chaitovsky

What should have been a high point of spiritual achievement for the Israelites became a moment of trauma and tragedy. In this week’s Torah portion, Aaron’s two children, Nadav and Avihu, caught up in the desire to serve God as only priests could, fill their sacrificial censers with ketoret-incense and approach the altar. They light the incense, but the fire, referred to as a “strange” fire, incinerates the two priests, killing them instantly. It seems that their act was unauthorized by God. They acted on their own and things literally backfired as a result.

There is an even greater mystery in the parsha – and that is Aaron’s reaction. It says “vayidom Aharon – and Aaron was silent.” How are we to understand his silence? Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, a world-renowned trauma expert was discussing with colleagues a picture of a man’s brain that was taken using an fMRI, a machine which measures brain activity by detecting changes in blood flow in different brain regions. This particular image was taken while the man was having a flashback to a traumatic experience of being caught in the stairwell of the World Trade Center on 9/11.

At that moment, there was absolutely no brain activity in the part of the brain dedicated to language, known as Broca’s area. The memory of the trauma rendered him speechless. Only after therapy, where Dr. van der Kolk helped the man give words to the pain, did later images show brain activity in the language centers. Perhaps Aaron’s silence in our parsha was not a choice he consciously made but was a natural reaction to the overwhelming trauma of witnessing his two sons dying. Broca’s area in his brain was lifeless. He literally could not speak. There were no words.

Other commentators insist that Aaron consciously chose silence as a way to demonstrate that he accepted God’s decision and would not protest in any way. The Talmud praises Aaron for his “faithful” silence. Rabbi Shmuel Goldin agrees that Aaron chose silence, but adds a provocative twist. Moshe attempted to console Aaron by telling him that God is sanctified by those who are close to him, meaning that Nadav and Avihu were precious to God. It is then that the Torah tells us that Aaron was silent. Rabbi Goldin suggest that Aaron’s silence challenges Moshe’s words of comfort. “Moshe, there are times when words do not suffice, when they are, in fact, hurtful. I reject your attempt to explain the inexplicable. No words or comfort will assuage my heart’s deep pain. I am willing to accept God’s justice, but I know that I will never fully understand. For me, in the face of overwhelming loss there is only one meaningful response: silence.”

Different people will react differently to trauma. There is no one right way to cope. We cannot be sure what Aaron’s inner thoughts and emotions were. The possibilities suggested by our commentators model and validate various ways one can respond to tragedy. Rabbi Goldin cautions those reaching out to others to offer help to carefully weigh their words and actions. There are times when “silence is truly golden.”

Shabbat shalom…and as always, see you in shul!

Rabbi Chaitovky

ps – we hope you will make the extra effort to join us this shabbat to wish a very happy birthday to a very special lady, Eudice Lewkowitz.

From the Rabbi - Mar 28, 2024

Rabbi Chaitovsky

This week we have a double header Torah portion – our regular reading, Tzav, and a special selection from the beginning of Chukat, referred to as Parashat Parah, the portion of the (Red) Cow. You will hear me speak of the Red Cow this Shabbat, but I wanted to share an insight growing out of the way Tzav describes a particular sacrifice, called the todah – thanksgiving offering.

The todah is one of a group of sacrifices called shelamim. As a general rule, these sacrifices could be eaten by the one who offered them on the day they were brought through the next day . The todah offering, which was brought in thanks to God after being saved from a dangerous situation, could be eaten ONLY on the day it was brought through that night. The leftovers were not allowed to be eaten the subsequent day. Also, unlike the other peace offerings, the thanksgiving offering was also different in that it was required to be accompanied by 40 loaves of bread.

Why the differences?

Torah commenatator Seforno suggests that the increased amount of food and decreased amount of time to eat it incentivized the inviting of guests. Unlike other sacrifices which may be more private in nature, the ideal thanksgiving offering is a public endeavor. The social setting allowed the benefactor of God’s graces to recall the details of God’s wonderous deeds to a larger audience, hence making “God’s name great” amongst the other invitees at the meal.

Studies have shown that people who demonstrate gratefulness and thanks when circumstances call for that will be more likely to “pay it forward” and make the effort to extend themselves to others in need. You can read about this more fully in Emotional Success: The Power of Gratitude, Compassion, and Pride, by Dr David DeSteno.

It is noteworthy that that the original Passover Offering – Korban Pesach, also needed to be consumed in an even more restricted time frame, at the seder meal that evening. Once again, sharing the meal with many guests was the only way to accomplish that. Even today, with no sacrifices being offered and no real time limits on the seder meal, their seems to be a natural desire to have family and friends gather together around the seder table to enjoy each other’s company, to retell the story of the Exodus and to enjoy delicious foods, all as a way to express our thanks to God for what was done then…and to express our confidence and faith that God continues to do things for our benefit.

On that note, if there is room at your seder table for a guest or two – or if you are looking for a seder to attend – please contact our office and make your wishes known. We will make every effort to match guests with hosts to spread the Pesach spirit and to encourage all to offer thanks – todah to God Above.

Shabbat shalom…and see you in shul!

From the Rabbi - Mar 21, 2024

Rabbi Chaitovsky

This Shabbat is Shabbat Zachor, the Shabbat on which we read about Amalek and his attack on the Israelites right after they crossed the Reed Sea. We always read about Amalek on the Shabbat preceding Purim because Haman, the guy we love to hate in the Book of Esther, traces his lineage to Amalek. Our victory over Haman is a victory over Amalek. Sadly, the spirit of Amalek, if not the DNA, lives on today. May we emerge victorious and whole from our never-ending battles with Amalekites all around us.

That said, Purim, which will start on Saturday night right after Shabbat, is undoubtedly the “happiest” celebration on our calendar. After all, the story is a celebration of our improbable, last minute, salvation from a relentless enemy. According to Rabbi Eitiel Goldwicht, there is more to the holiday. Done right, Purim helps us cultivate important “happiness habits” that reveal the true meaning of being happy. The secret, he says, is in the four special mitzvot of Purim.

1. Mishloach Manot – giving food to the friends. The recipient is not necessarily poor or needy, but more probably a friend or even a loved one. The first happiness habit is seeking to build relationships with others, connecting with and looking out for others, and having others care for us in return.

2. Matanot Le’evyonim – charity to those in need. Neuroscience research indicates that when we do things for others in need, the areas in the brain associated with pleasure and satisfaction light up. We all start out in life as receivers. Receiving makes every baby, toddler, child, and adult, happy. We must also develop in ourselves – and in our children – the habit of giving. It will provide a basis for a deeper happiness.

3. Reading Megillat Esther. The megillah can be seen as a long “gratitude journal” in which the miracles leading to our people’s survival are acknowledged. People who keep a “gratitude journal” often feel more optimistic and experience greater satisfaction in their lives. Making an attitude of gratitude a daily habit can have amazing impact.

4. The Festive Purim Meal – Seudah. The meal provides a moment in which we are truly mindful of who we are and what we have. People who practice mindfulness, the moment by moment awareness of thoughts, feelings and the circumstances around us, have stronger immune systems and are likely to feel greater happiness in life.
Four mitzvot + four special habits = one happy Purim and one, potentially happier life! Shabbat Shalom and Chag Purim Sameach…and, as always. I’ll see you in shul!

From the Rabbi -  Mar 14, 2024

Rabbi Chaitovsky

Studies have shown that people with a sense of humor have more positive moods, fewer negative moods, and an increased satisfaction with life in general. Laughter is beneficial for mental health and has physical health benefits as well - it can relax muscles, improve blood circulation, reduce blood pressure, and enhance respiration.

Dr. Rod Martin, who meticulously studied the psychology of humor for over three decades, distinguished between different categories of humor, some of which can be beneficial to the self or others, while others can be damaging. Affiliative humor, used to lighten the mood, to make the self or others feel better, is psychologically beneficial. But when it is used to put down the self or others, through sarcasm, teasing, derision, or ridicule, it can be psychologically damaging.

The Talmud (Ta’anit 22a) relates a story about Rabbi Berokah Hoza’ah who was walking through the marketplace when he met Elijah the Prophet. Rabbi Berokah asked Elijah if there was anyone in the marketplace who merited a share in the World to Come. Elijah identified two average looking individuals.

Wondering what it was that earned them their share in the World to Come, Rabbi Berokah asked them their occupation. They replied that they were jesters and when they see people who are sad they cheer them up with a good joke. The Sages appreciated the healing power of humor and the potential reward one receives for using this power to heal others.

In stark contrast, a paradigm of aggressive humor is the scoffer (leitz). Our tradition offers many statements which caution against becoming a scoffer. The impulse of the scoffer is to be cynical and sarcastic, denigrating and dismissing anything of significance.

Parshat Pekudei provides a detailed—and what at first glance seems unnecessary—accounting of all of the material used to construct the Tabernacle in the desert. The Midrash offers a backstory, which suggests the context for this detailed account. Moshe overheard a conversation between two scoffers. One pointed to the robust size of Moshe’s neck and thighs, accusing Moshe of eating and drinking in excess, as he had more means and wealth than the rest of the nation. “Of course he is rich. He is responsible for all of the money collected for the Tabernacle and there is no oversight,” his friend responded. “What do you expect?”

It is remarkable that someone would accuse Moshe of stealing from the funds raised for the mishkan, the House of God, especially after having successful bargained Yet, this is the negative and debilitating power of cynicism and scoffing. This aggressive type of humor against others, may get a short-lived good laugh, but it damages relationships, and is corrosive to living a meaningful life.

Humor is clearly a double edged sword. It can be positive and it can be negative. Let us always seek to harness the power of affiliative humor to enhance our psychological and spiritual well-being.

Shabbat shalom…and see you in shul

Sat, May 18 2024 10 Iyyar 5784