A Minyan In Mormon Land

skiiing rabbiMazel tov to the Jews of Park City, Utah on the groundbreaking of their new synagogue, Temple Har Shalom.

The synagogue will be built with views of Summit County’s snowy peaks, a coincidence Rabbi Joshua Aronson calls beshert as Har Shalom means “mountain of peace.” According to BYUnews, it’s only the the second syngagogue to be built in the entire state. Architect Alfred Jacoby, known for his work re-building synagogues in Germany, did the blueprints, and whatever gorgeous design he’s come up with, I’m pretty sure it’ll look nothing like this.

The congregation has 260 families, which I find amazing as I paid a visit to Park City a few years ago and met who I thought was the only Jew in Utah. What must it be like to be Jewish in a place so overwhelmingly goyish? More importantly, is it kosher to ski on Shabbos?

*Painting of “Rabbi On Skis” by Tel Aviv artist Alexander Klevan. His work is absolutely wondrous — check it out!

Chozzerai For Kidlets: Start The Indoctrination Early

doctorpuppetBeware, it only looks like a puppet, albeit a finely-crafted plush one from OyToys. It’s really a subliminal tool for Jewish parents who feel that occupational pressure can’t wait until after the bar mitzvah.

Look, Benji, doesn’t he wear nice clothes to work? They’re called scrubs and they’re kind of like pajamas without the feet! Now put down the Barbie and play doctor with your cousin.

Book Proposal Not Forthcoming

mjmHere at temporary Yenta HQ there is always much discussion about how life could get much more complicated and annoying by attempting to write a book. Sh*t, when you’re a blogger and a full-time mother, what’s a little more unpaid work?

There’s certainly a market for Jewish mother writers out there. Meredith L. Jacobs of ModernJewishMom has promised me a review copy of her soon-to-be published Modern Jewish Mom’s Guide to Shabbat and I have no doubt that it will be as terrific as her site, which is earnest without being preachy and humorous without having to resort to the dirty or corny.

The book promises to pull errant Jewish mothers back into the Shabbos fold with table-setting suggestions, recipes and Talmudic wisdom, and I look forward to MJM’s conservadox perspective. Being a somewhat retarded Jew (I light candles religiously, but have been known to ecstatically shoe shop on an occasional Saturday) who has a great weakness for the dirty and especially (!) the corny, I have much admiration for Jewish mothers who knows a good Old Country joke — in Yiddish — and don’t have to Google a decent kugel recipe.

That’s not saying every how-to book by a Jewish woman is worth the trees that died for it: SomethingJewishUK‘s Leslie Bunder has written a scathing review of “The Jewish Princess Cookbook,” a self-proclaimed combination of “cooking, culture and comedy.” I’d never review a book I haven’t read, but our old buddy Bunder writes that this one “fails terribly on its humour” and “just is very cringing reading.” The book’s accompanying site is as glossy and pink and a trustfunder’s bedroom and painfully uses the ol’ “What does a Jewish princess make for dinner? Reservations!” joke like it’s an original creation. As a writer who has hard drive of idiotic ideas for book proposals (“Pedicures for Dummies,” “101 Casseroles Made With Mustard and Cheese,” “The Stoner’s Guide to Natural Childbirth”) I find it peturbing that people actually receive publishing deals based on overplayed, stereotype-driven claptrap.

So maybe once I finish folding this pile of laundry, figure out what’s for dinner and post a couple more dirty/corny/Jewish things, I’ll dust off a book proposal outline. Although “The Jewish Mother’s Guide to Dealing With Southern Baptist Gynecologists” and “Your Mother-In-Law, Dementia And You” don’t exactly smell like bestsellers, one never knows.

The Economics of a Reform Yom Kippur

After such a light Rosh Hashanah service, I figured Yom Kippur services at Mickve Israel had to be fairly innocuous. Honestly, it wouldn’tve surprised me to see hors d’oeurves in the foyer. (Okay, that’s not fair. But at least a couple of congregants — one related to me, ahem! — felt morning coffee was perfectly justified.)

pimp daddyAnd just like every Reform Jew knows there will be some joker sucking on a peppermint in the next row, all Reform Jews expect to be hit up for money on the High Holidays. The congregation president’s self-conscious, I-hate-to-ask-but-since-I-have-y’all-here-for-once plea to fill the synagogue’s coffers is as familiar as the Aleinu in the Jewish world I grew up in. So when the parnassus (that’s what they call him here; why, I have no idea) got up on the bima to do his job, I did what I usually do, which is read the parts of the Gates of Prayer that that don’t make the cut into the service. Other people stared into space, some slept (maybe they were repenting, but c’mon, who drools when they daven?), some surreptitiously tried to move the gum they’d been chewing into a piece of paper without making revealing crinkly sounds. The parnassus droned on about the truly fabulous renovation that’s still carrying a half million debt; the congregation accepted it, just like they would accept the rabbi’s rambling sermon afterwards, because it is as much a part of the holy day as the truncated liturgy.

Then a voice yelled from the back pew “Excuse me, but this is the Day of Atonement! How dare you talk about money!” Everyone shook out of his or her stupor and turned to look at a short-haired woman shaking her fist at the back. “I am Jewish, but this is a disgrace! Shame on you all!”

The parnassus, who might’ve been putting himself to sleep with his own speech, stammered only slightly. “Well, thank you for your comments, ma’am. In any case, I know we all have college funds to fill, but —”

“No! Don’t you people know what this is? Moneychangers in the temple, hello?” The heckler grabbed up her purse and her companion and rushed toward the back door. But not before delivering this kicker: “I hope you all find Jesus!”

A small murmur went through the pews. The parnassus recovered admirably. “Well, I guess she probably didn’t leave tzedakah.”

He finished his speech and everyone went back to sleep. Except for the Yenta, who being a nosy little parker, followed the woman outside.

On the stairs, she was already explaining to another young yenta that she had grown up Jewish but had “found” Christ years ago. She had come to Mickve Israel with another Christian friend to “get back to their Jewish roots” but after this service, she didn’t feel that there was a place for her. “That’s just what I can’t stand about the Jewish people! They’re so clannish! So materialistic!”

When we pointed out that she had been welcome at Yom Kippur services precisely because this congregation is open to all — meaning, no spendy High Holidays tickets — the irony was lost on her. I told her I don’t know what they do at Conservative and Orthodox shuls, but I always understood that asking for donations is de rigeur for modern Judaism.

This did not console her. “These are the End Times, people!” (I swear, I could hear the capital letters.) “Israel is surrounded! You all need to come to Christ and be saved!” And then she and her friend, who was obviously mortified by this her friend’s very un-Christian behavior, walked off across Monterey Square.

By this time folks were trickling out of the sanctuary, using the end of the parnassus’ unexpectedly dramatic half hour to escape the rabbi’s upcoming sermon. I reported what had happened and in typical Reform fashion, the reaction was mild.

El Yenta Man laughed and said “I don’t need to find Jesus. I know exactly where he is, thanks.”

Dr. Doris Greenberg, a longtime family practioner and congregant, snorted and said “Let her go over to the Jews for Jesus place on Abercorn. See how she feels when they ask her for her ten percent tithe.”

Here someone disrupted the holiest of days, and people made jokes. No one called the police, no one got too upset, no one even suggested that the doors be closed to non-members next year. I suppose some might interpret this as apathy, but instead I saw something else in this congregation that I’ve been judging as too casual and unobservant: Everybody I spoke to wished the Jesus intruder well on this day of forgiveness. This congregation may only wear yarmulkes half the time and attend synagogue infrequently, but at that moment, it seemed to understand the gist of being Jewish. Let’s hope they thread that understanding to their checkbooks so the parnassus can keep it to under fifteen minutes next year.

Note: The graphic, borrowed from fancydresscostumeshop.com, is NOT what the parnassus was wearing. But maybe the congregation wants to add a little something to the tzedakah box to get him this for next year’s speech?

When Football Is the State Religion

dawgsyarmulkeYou know you live in Georgia when the hot topic at Kol Nidre services is not “So many sins, only one day to atone!” but “How ’bout them Dawgs?

Even high school football is huge at shul; El Yenta Man couldn’t keep himself out of the next pew when he found out it held the quarterback of his alma mater team. “A Jewish quarterback, how ‘ bout that?” he kept saying with with a grin, well after the first tones of the choir. Sure, it’s a pretty big deal at a school as WASPy as Savannah Country Day and probably had something to do with it being the first year the private school closed on Yom Kippur. But still, I had to give him the Yenta version of the “church pinch” (a swift flick to the back of the head) when the rabbi gave us the stinkeye. “Eh, he’s a Windsor Forest fan, anway,” whispered El Yenta Man, rubbing his keppe.

For whatever reason, Jews can’t get enough of football in the South. Check out these meshuggenehs — a whole team of high school Jews in Texas who can’t wait to suit up. (Hat tip to Jewlicious.) Oy, boys, watch the orthodontia.

Georgia Bulldogs yarmulke available at LidsforYids.com.