From Boroughs To Burros


A last walk along the ocean before we headed west

Dear Friends:

I begin this bittersweet missive with a paraphrase of a passage from the first major Rabbinic text, the Mishnah, in which Rabbi Nechunya ben HaKanah composed a prayer (M. Ber. 4).  This prayer expresses my own experience with the Jewish Center of the Moriches. “Upon my entrance, I prayed that no mishaps should occur because of me; and upon my departure, I offer thanksgiving for my good fortune in having been among you.”

In July 2019 it was “Go East, Young Man.”  Now it’s “Return West, not-as-young Man.”  I thought the title of this missive was cute, but it’s not terribly accurate.  Technically, of course, Beverly and I were living for the past two-and-a-half years on eastern Long Island, not in the boroughs of New York City, and I can’t remember that I’ve ever seen a Southwestern burro (Spanish for “donkey”) except for the statue in Burro Alley in downtown Santa Fe. Nonetheless, the title captures the focus of this past quarter which was our move back to the high desert of Northern New Mexico.  
 
While still in New York, Beverly and I ventured further out on the island for a weekend getaway in East Hampton where we davened in a gorgeous shul (Jewish Center of the Hamptons) which we’d Zoomed into on occasion.  In New England, I got to revisit the lovely Boston Synagogue on a brief trip to visit my niece, Ruby.  Both occasions resulted in aliyah honors for which I am grateful.  Closer to home (now our former home), I had the privilege of delivering a d’var Torah at Temple Beth El in Patchogue, NY, and TBE also generously offered me the opportunity to chant Haftarah on multiple Shabbatot.  
 
At the Jewish Center of the Moriches where Beverly and I were indeed privileged to serve, we held a mixture of Zoom-only and hybrid (Zoom plus in-person) events including a long-awaited Bar Mitzvah ceremony.  I also represented JCM at a few outdoor civic/public “menorah” (technically “Hanukkiot”) lighting events over Hanukah.  At one of those, I quoted from George Washington’s letter to the Touro Synagogue: “The Government of the United States… gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.”  Our first president’s words remain remarkably relevant today.
 
Preparations for moving back to the southwest, including packing 85 boxes of books, put a crimp in my reading list (see below).  I guess electronic readers have a few advantages, but I’m still addicted to print copies on shelves.  Please send me your reading suggestions, and once we’re unpacked, I’ll resume my book-buying mania.  Until then, quoting from the aforementioned August 21, 1790 presidential brief, “May the father of all mercies scatter light, and not darkness, upon our paths, and make us all in our several vocations useful here, and in His own due time and way everlastingly happy.”
 
B’shalom,
Rabbi Jack
 
Last quarter’s reading list is below, with highlights denoted by an asterisk*


Rabbi Jack Shlachter
Judaism for Your Nuclear Family
physicsrabbi@gmail.com

The Rivals & Other Stories – Jonah Rosenfeld, tr. from Yiddish by Rachel Mines

Knowing God – Elliot Dorff

Structure and Form in the Babylonian Talmud – Louis Jacobs

The Story of Bible Translations – Max Margolis

Track Changes – Sayed Kashua (Thanks go to Phyllis for recommending this book to me)

Rav Kook’s Introduction to Shabbat Ha’Aretz – tr. Julian Sinclair

The Last Jew – Yoram Kaniuk, tr. Barbara Harshav

A Book of Psalms – selected and adapted from the Hebrew by Stephen Mitchell

The Doctrine of the Zaddik in the Thought of Elimelech of Lizensk – Louis Jacobs

People Love Dead Jews-Dara Horn

Rav Kook:Mystic in a Time of Revolution – Yehudah Mirsky

Zoom Torah – Mitchell Chefitz (Kindle)

A History of Jewish Literature Vol. 1 – The Arabic-Spanish Period – Israel Zinberg – tr. Bernard Martin

Israel: A Concise History of a Nation Reborn – Daniel Gordis

Irving Berlin: New York Genius* – James Kaplan

Maimonides: Life and Thought – Moshe Halbertal

God: A Biography* – Jack Miles
 
and uncharacteristically, binge-watching the Israeli television series Srugim while in the midst of packing
 

Posted in Rabbi Jack's Quarterly