Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Wednesday, April 30
The UH Israel Tour had an amazing day. About half of us left the hotel very early to hike the Snake path at Masada. For many the long, trail up to Masada was a bucket list item. There was a wonderful camaraderie along the way. At the top we were joined by the others. We toured Masada with our guide who showed us all the splendors of King Herod. After a quick lunch we headed to a spa along the Dead Sea. What a relaxing afternoon. We experienced the total spa treatment complete with a sulphur spa dip, mud bath and float in the Dead Sea. On the way home to the hotel our day was topped off by seeing where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found. Such an incredible experience. More to come from others on the tour. Ron Gieseke
Friday, April 25, 2014
Preparing for Israel and Holiness - by Rabbi Brigitte Rosenberg
Kedoshim t’hiyu. . . You shall be holy
These are the opening words from this week’s parashah,
Kedoshim. It is always a familiar
parashah, yet each year we come to it, I wonder, “what does it mean to be holy?” Is holiness about how I live my life daily?
Is it about being a “moral/ethical” person? Is it about how many mitzvoth I do,
both ritual and ethical? Is it how often I attend services, pray on my own. .
.? The list of questions goes on and on
depending on my frame of mind that year.
This year as we read Kedoshim, I am packing for a congregational
trip to Israel. As the new week begins,
I will lead fifty adults to Israel, 80% of whom have never been before. With Israel on the horizon, one can imagine
that my questions about holiness, surround Israel and this visit.
What does it mean to be holy? Does this mean a visit to Israel?
Is holiness praying at the kotel? Is holiness ensuring that one’s children
visit Israel? Is holiness walking in the
footsteps, standing on the ground where our forefathers and mothers stood?
Yes, yes, yes, and yes.
While I have been to Israel a number of times and even lived there for
an extended period, I am excited and feel blessed and honored to be a part of
this journey with our group. I feel
blessed to see Israel through their eyes, eyes that have not yet seen the
beauty of this country, nor felt the power of being in a Jewish state. As always, I look forward to walking the path
of those who came before me. I love that
I can stand in Jaffa where the prophet Jonah once stood. I always feel the power at Masada and think
of those who gave their lives on that mountain.
I look forward to observing the power of Yom HaZikaron, to experiencing
that moment of silence and the wail of the siren; and of course I am excited
for the craziness of Yom Ha’atzma’ut and celebrating 66 years of the Modern
State of Israel.
Just a week ago we said, “next year in Jerusalem,” and how
wonderful that instead of waiting for next year, we can shout out, “This year
in Jerusalem,” and begin to experience holy moments and create incredible, lifelong holy
memories of a land we hold so dear. Holiness is in the sites that we will visit –
religious, historic, and modern.
Holiness is in the people that we will meet – Israelis on the street, those
in our sister region Yokneam/Megiddo, those in the hospital we will visit in
the North, the soldiers we will sit with and share a meal. Holiness will be in our experiences, as we “see,
hear, feel, taste, and touch” this Promised Land, our Promised Land.
Kedoshim t’hiyu. . . You shall be holy.
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