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The Magical, Mystical Calendar Ride

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With Rosh Hashanah fast approaching I thought it important to address the holiday in some way.  I began to consider how I can incorporate the concepts of Rosh Hashanah with my profession as a therapist and very quickly my vision grew from thinking about this one holiday to consideration of the entire Jewish calendar.  I’ve studied for many years about the Jewish holidays with my husband—he fills me in on all of the interesting Gemarot and halachot (commentaries and laws) about the holidays and even feeds me bites of wisdom from more mystical sources here and there.  Over the years I’ve pieced together my perception and understanding of the Jewish calendar from these various angles and I’d like to share it with you now as we get ready for a Jewish new year and participate in the process of doing teshuva (correcting our actions) and asking for selicha (forgiveness) from others and from HaShem.

Our beloved Jewish calendar is filled with an abundance of observances which include holy days that are observed some through celebration and some through restriction.  Most of our holidays incorporate elements of prayer as well as feast, and involve time spent with our immediate families as wells as our greater synagogue communities.  To quickly run through the majors in the line-up:  Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Sukkot/Hoshanah Raba/Simchat Torah, Channuka, Purim, Passover, Shavuot.  There are a handful of other less major but none-the-less meaningful holidays sprinkled throughout the year.  Then, of course, above and beyond all holidays is the holiest of days that we are privileged to observe and experience every single week:  Our Queen, Shabbat.  To my knowledge, no other religion in the world has a calendar with such an extensive network of holidays, and with such a highly demanding schedule of observance.  To be an observant Jew is not simply a flight of fancy, but rather it is a marathon of involvement meant to tap both our physical and spiritual endurances.  If we understand the ultimate goal of why HaShem created this system for us, then we can also understand that it takes years to train for this marathon—in fact, it takes a life time . . . and, if I may be so bold, what follows is my interpretation of why.

In my experience, there are basically three types of people in this world:  those who are sleep-walking, those who are waking up, and those who are awake.  Please allow me to explain.

Sleep-Walkers:  Those who are sleep-walking are people who live their daily lives with little conscious awareness of their actions.  Behaviors and routines are route, done from memory and habit, and are little more than robotic.  Every now and then something will “nudge” them to wake up—some bad news, some event of some kind—but in the end they are lulled back to sleep and continue in their original state.  In general, the sleep-walkers do not like to take responsibility for their actions and their lives, tend to blame others for their misfortunes, and walk through life in a victim-mentality trance that protects them from ever having to grab the reins of their own involvement.  Life is two-dimensional, like a flat piece of paper or a pencil tracing the same line over and over again.

Waking Up:  Those who are waking up are people who have been sleep-walking but that “nudge” that was sent to them actually worked and has begun the process of bringing the conscious mind to the forefront of activity.  Slowly the person begins to realize concepts of cause and effect, mindfulness, taking responsibility for one’s actions, learning how to apologize and ask forgiveness, learning how to forgive, and generally begins to put meaning and substance into daily activities.  A new perspective is developing and a new depth of understanding how people and places are connected starts to bloom.  Feelings emerge and dimensions shift as the soul stirs and demands more.  Life is no longer two-dimensional, but the view is still a bit unclear—and often riddled with a combination of joy and pain.

Awake:  People who are awake are not perfect nor do they claim to be, they are simply aware of their imperfections and are willing to take the necessary steps at improving.  They take full responsibility for their actions and the state of their lives.  When challenges arise they face them head-on and look for ways to grow under the circumstances.  Events—good or bad—are opportunities to reflect and refine.  Daily activities are three-dimensional; life becomes somewhat magical as HaShem hints at His presence in even minor daily interactions and happenings.  Interactions with others, even a simple hello with the grocery clerk, are moments of sacred contact with another being of G-d’s creation.  The impact of individual actions is conceptualized in the scope of humanity as a whole.  Our actions—our mitzvot (good deeds) and our aveyrot (wrong-doings, G-d forbid)—are placed in a greater context with an understanding that we do not exist in a vacuum but rather in an elaborate matrix that connects us all.  It is in this third state—the state of being awake and conscious—that we can begin to heal ourselves and others, make tikkunim (corrections), understand the cycle of our souls, and appreciate that we each have a curriculum and path to follow and fulfill in this lifetime that no one else can do for us.

Are you still with me?  I know, that is a lot to take in.  And depending upon where you are on this scale of sleep-walking to being fully awake, you may be feeling a range of emotions from utterly annoyed and bored to elated and intrigued.  But the real question is: how does all of this relate to the Jewish calendar? This is where things start getting very interesting.  For this next part I need visual aids . . .

Again, based solely on my own interpretation of what G-d intended for us, I have come to understand the Jewish calendar not as a place-marker for time, but rather as a highly crafted instrument for spiritual refinement and development.  If used properly with the proper level of consciousness and awareness, the calendar is a means for fulfilling our purpose and elevating ourselves to the highest levels possible over the course of the years we are given to make our corrections and complete our mission.  For those who are sleep-walking, the experience of the Jewish calendar looks like this:

A flat, repeating series of events that go around and around each year with little if any change or personal growth experienced.  The holiday prayers and activities are the same year after year.  If things do change it is more than likely a result of non-action and reactivity as opposed to proactive, intentional measures.  There is usually some meaning in the holidays and the focus is centered primarily around the checklist of prayers and “to-do” actions as well as time spent with family and friends enjoying meals together.  Of course these things are important and provide a sense of accomplishment, yet it is potentially missing one of the most crucial elements intended for us during this period of time:  cheshbone nefesh (literally translated as “calculations of the soul”)  and actual tikkune and teshuvah (correction and repentance).

For those who are in the process of waking, or who have already awoken, the Jewish calendar experience is more like this:

The Jewish calendar, when fully engaged, is a living, dynamic tool meant to elevate us towards our fullest potential with each passing year.  Each holiday brings with it its own focus and area of spiritual development so that by the end of one full calendar year we have been given the opportunity to examine every aspect of ourselves in an effort to correct and overcome our personal areas of necessary improvement.  For Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur specifically, we are focusing on the physical manifestation of our lives—our health, our wealth, our marriages, our children, and our very lives.  We are hopefully inscribed in the Book of Life for a prosperous and abundant year to come.  In addition to the check list of prayers to say and meals to share, we are meant to truly embody the words that we are saying and to allow for the food (and Rosh Hashana Seder for some) to enrich us physically.  Our prayers surround the concept of cheshbone nefesh  (“calculations of the soul”) where we, in detail, constructively review our thoughts, actions, and intentions over this past year and literally calculate where we have succeeded and where we have fallen short.  Without this process of cheshbone nefesh bringing meaning and depth to our prayers, the prayers are merely words like any other.  This is why a person who is actively partaking in this personal review, asking for forgiveness for past actions, and setting clear and honest intentions for the coming year can stand humbly before our King’s court and ask for assistance, mercy, and blessings in the coming year to be elevated through the cycle of the calendar.

We are about to enter into a very special time of year where, through our prayers and spiritual work, we have the power to literally change our lives.  The truth is, we can do this at any point in the year, however for the Jewish soul this is required course work at this time of year with a final grade given at the completion of the Yamim Noraim  (10 Days of Awe between Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur).  The month of Elul is given to us as a study period of 30 days to prepare, review, and move forward with confidence.  And we are given until the end of Sukkot to completely get our acts together before our next year is sealed.  In this matter, G-d is more than generous giving us ample time to wake up and do our necessary work.  It has been my pleasure and honor to write to and for you during this past year.  I apologize if anything I have written has offended or upset you as this is never my intention.  Wishing each and every one of you a sweet, blessed, and abundant New Year.  May you be inscribed in the Book of Life for a healthy, happy, and prosperous year.  May it be one that brings you to new heights in your personal experience, your family life, level of wellness, and your closeness to G-d.  Shanah Tovah u’metukah!

By: Mia Adler Ozair

Mia Adler Ozair, MA, LPCC, NCC is a licensed clinical psychotherapist and educator with a private practice in Beverly Hills, California.  Mia is licensed in both California and Illinois and she can be reached through her website at www.bhcounselingcenter.com or followed on Twitter @MiaAdlerOzair.

 

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Mazal Tov! Josh & Debbie Feigelstock  on the birth of a baby girl.

Popular Artist Now Painting Jewish Art

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Robert Tanenbaum, a prolific artist who has been painting famous pop icons for 40 years, has now begun to paint Chasidic – Jewish oil paintings.

As a young boy growing up in St. Louis, Robert Tanenbaum spent many hours after school at his grandfather’s kosher butcher shop.David Rumlevitz was a kind, patient “zaydeh” and while he worked as a schochet and butcher, Tanenbaum drew pictures in a small back room.

Anything he saw there, whether it be a broom, a meat slicer or a stack of Jewish newspapers, he drew exactly as he saw them, much to his grandfather’s surprise. At the age of ten, he did a large drawing of Moses and the ten commandments without any lessons or formal training.

His first art classes were given in college at Washington university, school of fine arts, where he won numerous awards for portraiture.

Portraits are his specialty, some of which include a posthumous full length life-size portrait of Howard hughes for Hughes aircraft , three CEOs for UPS and two for Texaco Oil.

For twenty years, he was one of the top illustrators of movie posters when they were all done by hand, which included many movie stars. The Franklin Mint and John Wayne trust hired him to do a collectable plate series of 24 portraits of Wayne which sold over a million copies.

As his reputation grew, so did the breadth of his work. He covered advertising assignments with 32 paintings for Levi’s corporation ads, 35 paintings for AT&T, 33 national ad campaigns for the NFL and the collectible market, 150 portraits for the NBA, MLB, NFL, Nascar and horse racing, ranging from Michael Jordan to Mickey Mantle, Tiger Woods, and many others.

Tanenbaum always had a dream, from a young age, to create Jewish art, and now his dream has become a reality. Working with his partner, Yaakov Shallman, Tanenbaum has started to create beautiful oil paintings of the Rebbes, chassidim, tzaddikim, and Jewish scenes unmatched in their richness, true to life likenesses and warmth.

“This project has been a wonderful way to connect to my Jewish heritage and utilize my g-d given talent to paint Jewish subjects,” said Tanenbaum.

While the original oil paintings are not for sale just yet, their new enterprise called Canvas 26 is selling canvas giclee prints of his Jewish paintings to the public. They are available exclusively online right now at canvas26.com or athttps://www.Facebook.Com/canvas26
Special Offer for Chai Elul – 10% discount for – Good through Chai Elul.

A message from Beverly Hills Kosher (formerly Doheny Kosher Meat)

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We are pleased to announce that after weeks of waiting Beverly Hills Kosher Meat  is NOW OPEN for business  just in time for the high holidays.
You can begin placing your orders as of TODAY! via email: BHkosherMeat@gmail.com, phone: 310-276-7232, 310-8442 or fax: 310-271-7236
We are here to serve you with the finest quality of meat along with superb customer service and the highest standards of Kosher under the RCC. Our butchers who have served you in the past are eagerly waiting to serve you once again!
We thank you once again for your patience during this transition.
I look forward to greeting you personally!
Rabbi Berel Cohen
Rabbi Berel Cohen

Berel Cohen

Manager
Beverly Hills Kosher
310-276-8442

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Mazel Tov!! Engagement of Moshe Zev Kulek – Chicago, IL to Mimi Shifren – Los Angeles, CA

BBQ competition takes a kosher twist

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By Carey Wickersham, Fox4KC

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. — A BBQ competition with no pork?!?! There are only a handful of kosher BBQ’s around the country, but of course Kansas City has the first sanctioned kosher BBQ contest. Jewish and non-Jewish BBQ teams faced off in overland park on Sunday for first place and some bragging rights. Jimmy Nickel’s ‘Full House BBQ’ team took those bragging rights, but all competitors got to sample a different flavor of BBQ competition.

On the surface, it’s a sight familiar to summertime competitions in Kansas City. But this one is so much different.

“They provide meat smokers and utensils.  The only thing we provide is wood and charcoal,” Scott Fraley with ‘Smoked to Perfection’ said.

Everything at the competition had to be provided to insure that it met Old Testament standards.

“The differences are they all the meat, chicken, and every ingredient used in any of the food process is certified kosher from beginning to end,” Rabbi Mendel Segal said.

So if it isn’t certified as kosher, it’s nowhere in sight.

“It’s based on the Bible, the way the kosher rules are stated,” Rabbi Segal said.

Even the smokers themselves, the utensils and meat thermometers have to be kosher.

“Sometimes when you go to competitions people have their huge smokers and their own expensive equipment.  Now it’s a level playing field and it’s gonna come down to how skillful they are as BBQers.  I really like that idea,” judge Simon Majumdal said.

It’s a challenge that makes Jewish and non-Jewish competitors alike say, ‘Game on!’

Two brothers- in-law are both Jewish, both BBQ lovers, but Jay Goodbinder keeps the kosher food laws, Jason Kerschner, not so much.

“I really like pork and bacon and pork butt,” Kerschner said.

There is obviously no pork here and rabbinical law limits secret concoctions that are standard everywhere else.

“I can’t inject butter into my brisket, but we get creative and do other things,” Kerschner said.

But in the spirit of competition, it’s all good, because Goodbinder has his own completely kosher strategy.

“Pray hard,” Goodbinder said.

Because kosher BBQ competitions are so rare…there are many orthodox Kansas City Jews who have never even tried it.

“It was strange having someone 50 or 60 years old saying this is the first time I’ve ever had BBQ,” Fraley said.

“It’s heaven to them. In the non- Jewish world it would be like Christmas Day. You come here and eat BBQ to your heart’s content,” Kerschner said.

Many discovered that infusing ancient Jewish culture with a little Kansas City tradition is like a well-blended BBQ sauce, certified kosher for everyone.

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Mazel Tov! Baby girl to Aaron and Chaya Revere

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