High Attitudes at High Altitudes

Dear Friends:
 
Beverly and I continued our transition from New York to New Mexico this past quarter, swapping out New York-style pizza for green chile, as we embarked on the arduous task of unpacking hundreds of boxes, many of them books, which had been stowed in our Los Alamos garage during our nearly month-long drive across country.  I discovered yet again that I am not as capable of handling change as I once was; I’m still adjusting to life without a daily National Laboratory routine. My focus is now on rabbinic activities, primarily in Santa Fe at HaMakom where I serve as rabbi, and in Los Alamos where I’ve often led Friday night services. 
 
One of things I admire about our Jewish texts is that the characters, even the most heroic and laudable among them, are all human with flaws as well as notably positive traits. Think of Moses (on occasion quick-tempered), King David (uncontrolled lust), and Jacob (deceitful). King Saul is particularly flawed at times, and the case can even be made that he shows evidence of manic-depression. I find it helpful to realize that we all experience emotional ups and downs, and our move to New Mexico challenged my mental health more than I anticipated. Through this period, I’ve been blessed with the support of my brother, Ted, my son, Dov, my primary care physician, and most of all, my helpmeet, Beverly. 
 
Before we recite the central passage of the morning Jewish worship service, the sequence of blessings known as the standing prayer or Amidah, we invoke the Divine as Tsur Yisrael, the Rock of Israel.  Perhaps the rabbis recognized that the Amidah, our opportunity to converse with G_d, forces us each morning to examine our lives, lives which can often seem bewildering or filled with change, sometimes driving anxiety. The image of the Rock of Israel, steadfast and unchanging, provides us with a degree of constancy and consistency that offers us comfort. 
 
During our road trip back to New Mexico, we stopped to join congregations in Roanoke, VA, Memphis, TN, and San Antonio, TX, and each experience was wonderful in its own way.  We met lovely people, learned new Shabbat tunes, and look forward to visiting those synagogues again. 
 
Despite the chaos of the move, I’ve been immersing myself in rabbinic activities.  Within the first two months of our return to the Land of Enchantment, I was privileged to conduct several lifecycle events including a Bar Mitzvah ceremony (kvelling over the fact that Dov served as the Bar Mitzvah tutor), a wedding, and a funeral, each of which represented a transition for those present.  Our Jewish traditions can provide that same comfort as we recite words from generations of teachers who draw on our rich text library. I drew on that library to teach a mini-class on How to Lead a Seder and then led or co-led seders for the HaMakom community in Santa Fe and the Los Alamos community. 
 
There are many ideas for classes I’d like to teach to the Jewish communities of Northern New Mexico and beyond, and I welcome suggestions for topics from potential participants.  In the meantime, it’s back to unpacking boxes and discovering books I never knew I owned! 
 
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
www.physicsrabbi.com

My reading list for the past quarter is artificially inflated by several short works, but now that books are reappearing on my shelves, I promise to return to lengthier works – honest! 
 
The Sages (Volume 1) – Binyamin Lau; tr. Michael Prawer 

Moneyball – Michael Lewis (no Jewish content but all I could find at one point on our journey) 

Alfred Stieglitz (Jewish Lives series) – Phyllis Rose 

Lillian Hellman (Jewish Lives) –  Dorothy Gallagher 

The Pity of It All* – Amos Elon 

Yiddish Tales – tr. Helena Frank 

Kaddish and other Poems – Allen Ginsberg 

Rashi’s Daughters, Book 1: Joheved – Maggie Anton 

The Book of J – Harold Bloom and David Rosenberg 

Our Country Friends – Gary Shteyngart 

Codex Maimuni: The Illuminated Pages of the Kaufman Mishnah Torah 

New Mexico’s Crypto-Jews: Photographs by Cary Herz 

World of Our Fathers* – Irving Howe 

Falik and His House – Jacob Dinezon; tr. Mindy Liberman 

Solos and Ensembles – Philip LeCuyer 

You Are Not Alone: Solace and Inspiration for Domestic Violence Survivors Based on Jewish Wisdom – Toby
Landesman 

Blue Has No South – Alex Epstein; tr. Becka Mara McKay 

Frayed Light – Yonatan Berg; tr. Joanna Chen 

Arabic Folk Tales – Asher Barash 

Through an Endless Stretch of Land – Kadya Molodowsky; tr. Yaira Singer  

 

Posted in Rabbi Jack's Quarterly