Posts Tagged: Biennial 2011

“The Jew I Want To Be”



by Susan Klau I believe every person has a passion in life. Whether it’s collecting baseball cards or singing on stage, everyone has something they love to do. It happens that my love was – and still is – Jewish youth programming. Judaism was incorporated into my life from a very young age, and going to temple was a regular activity for my family. I used to spend Fridays in the back row of the synagogue playing cards or board games, and though I had the mission of board game victory in mind, it was there in the back of [...]

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The Myth of Denominational Demise



by Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, Ph.D. The world is filled with certainties that aren’t – like the myth that religious denominations are dead. We will eventually have three inchoate pools of people, it is said: Orthodox, “Other,” and Unaffiliated. Already Orthodoxy is less a denomination than a way of life rooted in halakhic observance, community consciousness, and synagogue centrality. “Other,” presumably, will feature the very opposite, synagogues as “limited liability communities” that collect dues in exchange for rabbis on call, life-cycle ceremonies, and occasional events like High Holidays. The growth market will be “a pox on both your houses” — [...]

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Having the Back of Kids Outside Our Walls: The Charge from our President at URJ Biennial 2011



by Rabbi Robert Nosanchuk Near the end of Genesis, Jacob encounters his grandsons- whom he never thought he’d have the blessing to see. He asks the boys “who are you?” in a familiar peek-a-boo trick of aging grandpas on the young people in their families.  But all kidding aside, Jacob draws them close to offer a blessing to them. He reaches to the boys with his frail hands and crosses them in an uncomfortable pose, placing the right hand over the head of the younger one and the left over the elder child.

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Ready for Change



by Dusty Klass I am so full of emotions that I am finding it hard to begin this post. My brain is full, my heart is full, and good gracious have the rooms been full – even overflowing, with grown men and women settling down on the floor, sitting cross-legged in their business-casual attire. The excitement, the readiness for change is in the air. It is palpable, it is vibrant, it is damn near explosive. We are ready for this, we have BEEN ready for this. And by this, of course, I mean the Campaign for Youth Engagement.

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A Reform — And Personal — Paradigm Shift



by Rabbi Elyse Goldstein I last went to the Biennial Convention of the Union for Reform Judaism twenty years ago. A very large and professional conference, sometimes having as many as four or five thousand people, it is meant for congregational leaders and congregational clergy from the 900 North American Reform synagogues to come together to learn, share best practices, pray together, hear top-notch speakers, and recharge. I haven’t gone because first of all, I wasn’t serving a congregation except for once a year on the High Holy days, and second, I felt a personal distance and even alienation from [...]

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Chairman’s Address to the URJ Biennial



by Stephen Sacks Thank you Eric and thank you all for the great honor you have bestowed on me. I stand here today as a member of three different Reform congregations in North America.  Temple Shalom of Chevy Chase, Maryland, Temple Sinai of Washington, D.C., and our third congregation — the one i want to tell you about because it says so much about ab0ut our Reform Jewish future.

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Since Last Biennial



by Rabbi Daniel Freelander Since we last gathered for a Biennial convention two years ago in Toronto, the Union for Reform Judaism has been hard at work strengthening Reform Judaism in North America. We have had two interesting years of growth, of challenges and excitement with an eye to the future.

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Hineni Biennial: The Enduring Legacy of Seth Erlebacher



Just ten days ago, thousands of us left Washington, DC, inspired and uplifted by the largest, and by acclamation the best, Biennial in URJ history.  Nearly 6000 Reform Jewish leaders of all ages gathered from 48 states and Canada representing over 540 congregations.   The music and the insights keep echoing within each of us, a long weekend of concluding and beginning all at once.

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Launching the Campaign for Youth Engagement at the 2011 URJ Biennial



Boker Tov! Zeh hayom asa Adonai, nagila ve-nismcha bo! This is a day that GOD has given us; Let us rejoice and be glad in it! I am so deeply honored to stand before you as the next Senior Vice President of the Union for Reform Judaism. I grew up in this Movement. My father was the president of a small congregation; my mother became a bat mitzvah as an adult during Sisterhood Shabbat; my brother was the founder of our temple youth group; and I met my wife at Eisner.

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Galilee Diary: Exile?



Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, to the exiles whom I exiled from Jerusalem to Babylonia:  Build houses and dwell in them and plant gardens and eat their fruit.  Take wives and beget sons and daughters, and take for your sons wives and for your daughters husbands, that they will have sons and daughters and multiply and not diminish.  Seek the peace of the city to which I have exiled you, and pray for it to the Lord, because in its peace will you have peace. -Jeremiah 29:4-7 I recently had the privilege of attending the [...]

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Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath presents President John F. Kennedy with a Torah scroll that had belonged to Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise.

Introduction of President Obama



You may be wondering why I called you here today. I will not pretend to introduce President Barack Obama as if you do not know who he is. You do. The world does. And we know that across the panorama of American history, the sea-changes of our national journey are often marked by extraordinary people. This President, facing some of the most daunting economic and foreign policy challenges of our lifetimes, is just such a person.

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Rabbi Rick Jacobs

At the End of Two Years



Prepared Remarks Washington, DC Biennial 2011 December 18, 2011–22 Kislev 5772 This Biennial is almost over but we’re just getting started.  What a humbling responsibility you have placed on my shoulders; what a tremendous opportunity we have to shape the Jewish future with imagination, courage and commitment.

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Rabbi Eric Yoffie

2011 URJ Biennial – Presidential Shabbat Sermon



National Harbor, MD December 17, 2011 We gather again on this Shabbat as a Reform family – experiencing together these precious hours of sacred time, praying as only we know how. Shabbat, above all, is a time for celebration and praising God – and that is what we have done. As usual at these services, we do it mostly through music. We sing because we are commanded to sing; because music reaches deep down into the crevices of our souls and connects us to God; because music is God’s gift that summons our emotions and ties us to our tradition [...]

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Davening in the 21st Century with iT’filah



by Rabbi Dan Medwin Prayer can be challenging.  But fortunately, we have some great tools as Jews to help us reach those moments of prayerfulness and connection to God.  We have our liturgy, passed down and refined over generations, with themes that speak to our human experiences.  In more recent history, thanks to a man named Gutenberg, we’re able to capture these inspirational words and put them in the hands of each member of the community in the form of a book.

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