February 2012
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FEATURED EVENTS

02.08.12 Community of Elders Wednesdays at the Temple Full Day On the second Wednesday of the month - LBT’s Community of Elders offers classes and interactive presentations in the morning, followed by a bag lunch, and choice of Yoga with Norm Gee or Fun & Games.  

FEBRUARY IS BLACK HISTORY MONTH . . . Arrive at 9:30am for coffee, tea, fruit - followed by:
10:00 - 11:15   CLASS with Bob Farrell, Freedom Rider and former Los Angeles City Council member for 17 years, speaking on: LA City Council . . . Then and Now. 

11:30 - 12:30   CONVERSATION with Sandy Banks, Los Angeles Times journalist, activist/writer. 

Then stay the afternoon for a 12:30 Bring Your Own Bag Lunch (Dessert & Coffee provided)   

1:30 - 3:00   Yoga with Norm Gee (for ALL ages)  OR 
1:30 - 3:00   Fun and Games:  Stay the day and play bridge, Scrabble or enjoy our lending library of books. 

02.09.12 Research Training Action Community Organizing at LBT is taking off! "Research Training Action" takes place Thursday, February 9, 7:00-9:00pm at Leo Baeck Temple. Join us as we launch the research phase of our work. For the next two months we will be researching opportunities for strategic action on the economy, education and health care system, at the local and state level, with a goal of finding the most strategic focus for our campaign. Then, mark your calendar for Thursday, March 1, 7:00-9:00pm for our upcoming "Action Strategy Session."

Contact us by email at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or call the temple office at 310.476.2861 to let us know to expect you.

02.09.12 People of the Book Club Join us for our monthly meetings on the second Thursday at 7:30pm in the LBT Community Lounge.  
Book title for February 9 - The Last Jump: A Novel of World War II by John E. Nevola.  All are welcome.

For March 8 begin reading The Last Resort by Douglas Rogers. 

02.10.12 Shabbat Evening Service / Scholar-in-Residence with Professor Daniel C. Matt - "Shekhinah: the Feminine Half of God" (see details below and on 2/11 and 2/12)

Each year, since 1980, an outstanding scholar visits Leo Baeck Temple for a weekend of study and discussion.  Join us this year, as we welcome our 2012 Scholar-in-Residence: Professor Daniel C. Matt
Topic:  From Kabbalah to the Big Bang:  Ancient Wisdom and Contemporary Spirituality

Professor Matt will introduce us to some of the central themes of Kabbalah. On Friday night he will focus on the concept of Shekhinah (the feminine aspect of God) in the context of Shabbat. In his subsequent presentations, he will show how the Zohar interprets and reimagines the Torah, and how the mystical tradition enables us to discover God in the material world. Finally, he will address the question of “God and the Big Bang,” exploring parallels between Kabbalah and contemporary cosmology, and seeking to find harmony between science and spirituality.  Please see the February/March Bulletin (page 5) for additional information and to register.

02.11.12 Scholar-in-Residence Program with Professor Daniel C. Matt

Kabbalah to the Big Bang:  Ancient Wisdom and Contemporary Spirituality

Shabbat Morning Minyan / Session One  9:30-12:00
   Join our Shabbat morning minyan for song, prayer, and learning, as Professor Matt teaches a passage from the Zohar on the Shabbat Torah portion. Minyan is followed by a vegetarian potluch Kiddush lunch.

Session Two   1:30-3:00    The Mystical Meaning of Torah

Session Three  3:15-4:45   Raising the Sparks: Finding God in the Material World
Havdalah  5:00
          
See 2/10 and 2/12 for additional topic information.  Go to page 5 of the February/March Bulletin to attend Saturday's program.

02.12.12 Scholar-in-Residence Program with Professor Daniel C. Matt

From Kabbalah to the Big Bang:  Ancient Wisdom and Contemporary Spirituality

On Sunday morning - Session Four   9:30-11:30
, Professor Matt will address the question of “God and the Big Bang: Discovering Harmony Between Science and Spirituality.”     Please see 2/10 and 2/11 for additional topic details; to register go to page 5 of the February/March Bulletin.

High Holy Days

Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and the season surrounding these "days of awe" are times of remembrance, repentance and renewal – when we deeply examine our actions during the past year, seek and offer forgiveness, and commit ourselves to change in the coming year.  At Leo Baeck Temple the High Holy Days offer a time of community, celebration, and contemplation.  

The Month of Elul

The final month of the Jewish year – the month of Elul, which directly precedes Rosh Hashanah – is intended to usher in a period of deep self-examination … the kind of self-proving that is best achieved when we can strip away some of the obligations that blur our vision of the ”bigger picture” in our lives.  We are taught that the High Holy Days can be truly efficacious only when we have thoroughly prepared for them by peering intently and honestly into our souls.  The final days of Elul are our last chance to prepare.

Jewish tradition holds that, on the High Holy Days, one atones for sins committed against God. However, for wrongs committed against one's neighbor, one's co-worker, one's parent, one's children, one's spouse ... one must seek forgiveness directly from the offended. Many Jews devote the month of Elul to taking this practice seriously, seeking, through introspection, conversation, and correspondence, to make amends. Elul provides us with the opportunity to think about the previous year and make plans for what we would like to do differently, to look at where we have lost track of ourselves over the past year, and to reset our course.

On the Saturday evening prior to Rosh Hashanah, our congregation gathers together for a special Selichot program and prayer service. It is an evening of learning, prayer, reflection, and return.  We prepare not only ourselves for the serious work of the High Holy Days, but also our Torah Scrolls, as they are taken from the ark and dressed in the white mantels specific to the Days of Awe. 

Rosh Hashanah

Rosh Hashanah is the Jewish new year. The shofar, the ram's horn, wakes us from our stupor and demands that we face ourselves and our wrongdoings. The liturgy of the holiday stresses that life is short, our days our numbered, and our chance to change, do good, repent, accomplish the things we dream of, and treat the people we love as they deserve to be treated, is now.

The High Holy Days, unlike most Jewish holidays, are heavily focused on the synagogue. Many Jews who rarely or never attend synagogue will do so on these days. Although the process of teshuvah, repentance, is highly personal and introspective, we do it in the presence and solace of one another. The liturgy focuses on the themes of judgement, repentance, God's majesty and memory.

At Leo Baeck Temple, Erev Rosh Hashanah services are offered at 6:00 and 8:45pm.  Rosh Hashanah morning services are offered in the main sanctuary at 9:30am, and a Family Rosh Hashanah Alternative service is offered at 1:30pm in our “Tent of Meeting” on the temple’s main lawn for adults and school-aged children.  A Children’s Service for pre-schoolers and toddlers is offered at 2:00pm.

As the sun goes down on Rosh Hashanah, we offer a Tashlich experience at Will Rogers State Beach in the Pacific Palisades.  This short service including the “casting-off” of our sins (in the form of breadcrumbs) into the ocean’s waters followed by a “bring your own” picnic dinner has grown into one of the most popular “new” traditions at Leo Baeck Temple.

To learn more about Rosh Hashanah click here.

Yom Kippur

Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, falls ten days after Rosh Hashanah. When the Temple stood in Jerusalem, the High Priest effected atonement for the entire people through an elaborate ritual. Today, in the absence of the Temple, each of us stands, alone, together, naked as it were, before God.

Yom Kippur is the dramatic culmination of the entire season of teshuvah, repentance.  It begins at sundown with the prayer of Kol Nidre, whose haunting melody marks the start of the fast and sets the tone for the next 24 hours. Referred to as the “Sabbath of Sabbaths,” Yom Kippur holds a crucial place in the Jewish calendar.

At Leo Baeck Temple, Yom Kipppur begins with Kol Nidre services at 6:00 and 8:45pm.  On Yom Kippur morning, traditional services are offered in our main sanctuary at 9:30am with a Family Yom Kippur Alternative service at 1:30pm on the temple’s main lawn for adults and school-aged children.  Following the morning service, a study session is conducted for adults in the main sanctuary.  The temple campus remains open throughout the day, and the park-like grounds provide moments for quiet reflection.  A Children’s Service for families with toddler and pre-school aged children begins at 2:00pm.  The afternoon services begin with a Musical Meditation at 3:30pm.

To learn more about Yom Kippur click here.

 

2011 / 5772 dates:

Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Erev Rosh Hashanah Evening Service - 6:00pm and 8:45pm

Rosh Hashanah - Thursday, September 29, 2011
Morning Sanctuary Service - 9:30am
Alternative Family Service - 1:30pm
Children’s service - 2:00pm
Tashlich - 5:00pm at Will Rogers State Beach (between Tower 5 and 6)

Friday, October 7, 2011
Kol Nidre / Evening Service - 6:00pm and 8:45pm

Yom Kippur - Saturday, October 8, 2011
Morning Sanctuary Service - 9:30am
Alternative Family Service - 1:30pm
Children’s service - 2:00pm
Musical Meditation - 3:30pm
Afternoon Service - 4:00pm
Yizkor Memorial Service - 4:30pm
Neilah (Closing) Service - immediately following Yizkor
 

Download Cantor Kates singing Kol Nidre (coming soon)

Click here for our clergy’s High Holy Day sermons from Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur 5771.