Category: Every1Counts

Every1Counts, a reimagining of Counting the Omer will feature 49 days of individual responses from our congregation to “What Does Being Jewish Mean to Me?”

Posted in Announcements Every1Counts

Every1Counts: Day 3

April 2, 2018  17 Nisan, 5778

TODAY IS THREE DAYS OF THE OMER


It means I’m special. Despite millennia of hatred and venom directed against [Jews], I belong to a people who were bent but not broken. It is more than a religion. It is more than an identity. It is a state of being.

Steve G.

 

 

Posted in Announcements Every1Counts

Every1Counts: Day 2

April 1, 2018  16 Nisan, 5778

TODAY IS TWO DAYS OF THE OMER


Gathering! Community! Family! One of my favorite things about being Jewish is that we are called go join together. Our commemorations and celebrations are meant to be marked with others. Joining together, either at TBA, or around someone’s dining table to grieve a loss, to celebrate a new life or marriage or to celebrate a holyday helps us lean on each other and to raise each other up.

As a kid I looked forward to joining my extended family for Rosh Hashanah or Passover and now as an adult, with a family of my own, I love that our house tends to be a central place for our family to gather to celebrate these same events.

As we celebrate Passover we begin to count the Omer. Traditionally this was a counting of the harvest which would hopefully reap a good crop that would sustain the farmer and his family for the year. As we, who are not farmers, count our blessings we come together as an extended family and live the phrase “it takes a village” because that is what it takes to be a community.

Cantor Margot E.B. Goldberg

 

 

Posted in Announcements Every1Counts

Every1Counts: Day 1

March 31, 2018  15 Nisan, 5778

TODAY IS ONE DAY OF THE OMER


We begin Counting the Omer

We begin counting after sundown tonight, at the second seder.

(Since this is the Passover holiday, we are posting this prior to the first seder, so you do not have to use your computer on the holiday.)

Since 2012 we here at TBA have turned the Omer period between Passover and Shavuot into an amazing program called Every1Counts (E1C). This year, we’d are sharing the voices of our congregation.  This year we wish to enhance our community by listening to each other, so we asked you to tell us, in 150 words or less, “What Does Being Jewish Mean to You?”

Now, for each day of the 49 days of the omer, we will share one response to this question.


Lox, Bagels, and Kasha Varnishkes. L’dor va’dor, Tikkun Olam, Mitzvahs. Dancing the Hora, Hiding the Matzah, Blessing the Challah. And, of course, Israel.

I feel blessed to be a part of a community that shares so many beautiful customs and beliefs, and cares so deeply about repairing our world. My synagogue is my “happy place,” and my clergy and congregation make me smile. I love “belonging,” and welcoming others.

Like the embrace of my Tallit, Judaism warms and comforts me. Like grandma’s chicken soup, Judaism nourishes and sustains me. With rich tradition and history, Judaism anchors and supports me.

My Judaism calms, centers and soothes me. For me, Judaism is that warm cozy knowledge that you are home.

Debra Drattell

 

 

Posted in Announcements Every1Counts

Every1Counts – Introduction

March 29, 2018  13 Nisan, 5778

We will soon begin Counting the Omer

 

The Omer is the period between Passover and Shavuot.  Although we count in days, like all Jewish events, our day starts at sundown the evening before.  This year, we count the Omer beginning after the second seder on March 31, and we will count each day through Saturday, May 19.  The festival of Shavuot begins at sundown on Sunday, May 20.  This year we will “count” by sharing a submission from a congregant each day of the Omer.

Because we know you will be busy with your Seders, and we do not want you to feel obligated to use your computer on Passover or Shabbat, we will post two submissions on Friday, just as God sent us a double portion of manna on Fridays to get us through Shabbat.  Since the Omer starts on Saturday, March 31, we will post the first submission tomorrow, Friday, March 30.

There will be a counter on the sidebar of this webpage, so you can keep track of the days.  If you would like blessings you may say to count the Omer, as well as the English, transliteration and Hebrew for each day we count, please email everyonecounts@tba-ny.org and we will send them to you.

Posted in Announcements Every1Counts

Every1Counts

Dear Friends,

It’s almost Passover. And that means that Shavuot is not far behind: 50 days from 2ndseder to be precise. And in between, we have the period known as the Counting of the Omer. Since 2012 we here at TBA have turned it into an amazing program called Every1Counts (E1C).

This year, we’d like to share your voice with the congregation! Read on for more info!

The biblical word for measure is omer.   In biblical times, the Jews used to take a measure of barley, called an omer, to the Temple in Jerusalem as a sacrifice to God to say “thank you” for giving them a good harvest. From the second day of Passover until the festival of Shavuot, we count each day for seven weeks, and each day in ancient times an omer of barley was brought to the Temple. This period between Passover and Shavuot is called the “counting of the omer”. At Passover we escape from Egypt and spend 49 days traveling across the Red Sea, through the dessert to the base of Mount Sinai where we receive the Torah. The journey from slavery to Sinai moves us as a people from slavery to chosen-ness and with chosen-ness comes responsibility.

As Jews, we are taught that we all stood at Sinai and said, ”Naaseh v’nishma: we will do and we will listen.” This year we wish to enhance our community by listening to each other, so we are asking you to tell us, in 150 words or less, “What Does Being Jewish Mean to You?” Then, each day of the 49 days of the omer, we will share one response to the question.

Peace and Blessings,

Rabbi David K. Holtz

Cantor Margot E.B. Goldberg