Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 1, 1982 Page: 10 of 32
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TEXAS JEWISH POST PASSOVER IbSUE THURSDAY, APRIL 1,1982 DALLAS PAGE 1Q
synagogue
services
Emanu-EI Social Action
Special Passover Service
ANSHAI EMET
A special tribute to Cantor Harry Butensky and his
wife, Rose, will highlight 8:15 p.m. Sabbath Services
this Friday evening. Rabbi Michael Goldberg will lead
both the Friday evening and 9 a.m. Saturday morning
Service. An Oneg Shabbat and Congregational Kiddush
will follow their respective services.
BETH TORAH
Robert Schachter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herb
Schachter, will become a Bar Mitzvah this Friday
evening and Saturday morning, 9:30 a.m. Sabbath
Services. Rabbi Gabriel Ben-Or will officiate and deliver
the charge of responsibility to the celebrant. Mr. and
Mrs. Schachter will honor their son at the Friday
evening Oneg Shabbat and Saturday morning Kiddush.
EMANUEL
Members of Emanu-EI Sisterhood and their children,
will participate in the annual Sisterhood Family
Sabbath this Friday evening at 8:15 p.m. Evalyn
Osofsky and her daughter, Marni, will give the
Sermonette. Other participants will include Ann Kahn
and son, Josh; Susan Freeman and daughter, Brooke
and Myra Fischel and son, Jason. A Brotherhood/Sister-
hood sponsored Oneg Shabbat will follow.
At 11 a.m. Saturday morning Sabbath Services,
Rabbi Gerald Klein will preach on “What Do You Have
To Offer”? The Bar Mitzvah of Marc Andrew
Birenbaum, son of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Birenbaum, will
be observed at this Service.
GOLDEN ACRES
Sabbath Services will be held at 7 p.m. this Friday
evening at Golden Acres, the Dallas Home for Jewish
Aged. Members of Emanu-EI Brotherhood will assist.
Nathan Kaplan will conduct Saturday morning Sabbath
Services. Conservative Services will be held at 8:30
a.m. and Reform Services at 11 a.m.
SHALOM
Ninth and Tenth grade students of the Religious
School will participate in the Youth Service this Friday
evening at 8:15 p.m. Rabbi Mark Goodman will speak on
“Springtime and Freedom”.
A DALLAS TRADITION...
Ti
£
SPARKM AN/HILLCREST
Funeral Homes/Cemetery/Mausoleums/Flower Shon/Monuments
Northwest Highway at Boedeker • Garland Road at Easton.
Telephone 363-5401
At 10:15 a.m. Saturday morning Sabbath Services,
Eric Rubenstein, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Rubenstein, will become a Bar Mitzvah.
SHEARITH ISRAEL
First and second grade students from the Solomon
Schechter School will participate in 8:15 p.m. Sabbath
Services this Friday evening. Rabbi Jordan Ofseyer,
Rabbi Edward Friedman and Cantor Sol Sanders will
conduct the Service. An Oneg Shabbat will follow.
Daniella Greenberg, daughter of Chaia and Howard
Greenberg and granddaughter of Betty Grenberg, Far
Rockaway, N.Y. and Mr. and Mrs. Noach Wishnia of
Brooklyn, N.Y. will be Bat Mitzvah at this Service. Mr.
and Mrs. Greenberg will honor their daughter at the
Oneg Shabbat following.
Saturday morning Sabbath Services will begin at 9
a.m. A Congregational Kiddush will follow.
Anthony Charles Horovitz, son of Lois and Joel
Horovitz, grandson of Helen Horovitz, Cornwall,
Ontario, Canada and Anne Elias, Montreal, Quebec,
Canada, and great grandson of Ray Chazan, Montreal,
will become a Bar Mitzvah at this Service. Anthony will
be honored by his parents at the Congregational
Kiddush following.
TIFERET ISRAEL
Rabbi Max Zucker will conduct 8:30 p.m. Sabbath
Services this Friday evening. A Discussion on Passover
will follow at an Oneg in the Round. Guest Cantor,
Charles J. Segelbaum, will conduct a Passover
Sing-a-long.
At 9 a.m. Saturday morning Sabbath Services,
conducted by Rabbi Zucker and Cantor Segelbaum, the
Rabbi will speak on “The Haggadah — a Masterpiece of
Reality”. A Kiddush will follow. Junior Congregation
will be held in the small chapel at 10 a.m.
YOUNG ISRAEL
Services will be held at 1450 Preston Forest Square,
Suite No. 218 on Friday evening, Minha - Maariv will be
held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday morning Shachrit Services
will be held at 9 a.m. Mincha - Shalosh Seudot - Maariv
will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday evening.
Weekdays morning prayers will be held at 6:45 a.m.
Sunday morning Services will be held at 8 a.m.
Light Sabbath Candles
Friday, April 2
6:30 P.M.
9 Nisan 5742
Have A Good Shabbos!
obituaries
TYCHER
Services for Lucille Ty-
cher were held Thursday
March 25 from Sparkman-
Hillcrest Chapel with Rabbi
Jordan Ofseyer and Cantor
Sol Sanders officiating.
She was survived by two
sons, Frederick Z. Tucher
and Martin Tycher, eight
grandchildren and five great
grandchildren. She also
leaves one brother, Irving
Raskin and a sister, Edith
Horowitz.
Interment was in the
Shearith Israel Cemetery.
ROVIN
Bess Rovin, age 84, died
March 27 at Golden Acres
Nursing Home in Dallas. She
is survived by her sister,
Belle Rovin of Dallas, and
several nieces and nephews.
Services were at Hillcrest
Chapel East on Monday,
March 29, with Rabbi Gerald
Klein officiating.
The Social Action Com-
mittee of Temple Emanu-EI
will sponsor a special Sab-
bath Service for Passover on
Friday, April 9, at 8:15 p.m.
Neil H. Cogan, Associate
Professor of Law at South-
ern Methodist University,
will discuss the numerous
bills, currently under con-
gregational debate, which
seek to limit the jurisdiction
of the lower federal courts
and the Supreme Court.
“The subject of the rights
of individuals is a timely one
during the Passover sea-
son”, said Bernard Gold-
stein, Chairman of the Social
Action Committee. As Jews
celebrate the historic exodus
from Egyptian oppression it
is important to be aware of ^
the continuing need to ^
reaffirm justice and protect
the freedom of all people. —
Goldstein continued, the I
government of the United
States guarantees freedom _
to individuals through a m
system of checks and bal-J
ances, the concept of separa-
tion of powers, and the right
to equal protection under
the laws. Professor Cogan
will explore the pros and
cons of bills which, if passed,
might alter the balance of —
our government by limiting*
federal court jurisdiction.*
He will be introduced by
Rabbi Jack Bemporad.
The public is invited.
Hashachar-Young Judaea
Meet At JCC On April 4
H
Hashachar-Young Ju-
daea’s will meet this Sun-
day, April 4 from 1 - 2:30
p.m. in the Art Studio at the
Dallas Jewish Community
Center on 7900 Northaven
Rd.
All 3-7 graders are invit-
ed. Membership in Young
Judaea is only $7.00 a year.
R.S.V.P.s to attend thi
meeting should be made b;2
calling 691-8141. HashachaF
Young Judaea is sponsored
by Hadassah.
quiz box
BY RABBI SAMUEL J. FOX
[Copyright 1982, Jewish Telegraphic
Agency, Inc.]
QUESTION: What is “Kaddish”?
ANSWER: What we refer to as “Kaddish” is a ,
combination of verses which consist of prayers and
declarations sanctifying the name of the Almighty in
public. One of the basic requirements of the Jewish
faith is to sanctify and spread the holiness of the
Almighty’s name in public. This (which we refer to as
“Kaddush Hashem”) can be accomplished in a variety of
ways. One way is to do good deeds in public. Another is
to submit to martyrdom when it becomes necessary in
order to maintain one’s faith. A third is to proclaim this
sancification in public prayer. The latter exercise is
what we mean by “Kaddish”. In public prayer it is used
as an expression of faith after each section of the liturgy
and after concluding an experience of learning and
study of the words of the rabbis. The angels are said to
praise the name of the Almighty and man emulates the
practice of the angels which elevates mankind to the
status of angelic beings.
QUESTION: Why is it that certain recitations of the
Kaddish are assigned to the mourners?
ANSWER: One reason given for this practice is that
the mourners express the fact that they are accepting
the judgment of the Almighty whose decision brought
about the death of their beloved. Their belief still
persists and their faith has not withered. A second
reason is that their recitation of the Kaddish brings
reward in heaven to their deceased parent who is
rewarded for having brought up a child who displays his
faith in the Almighty in public. The famous Rabbi Akiba
is said to have rescued a dead man from Gehenna (hell)
by directing his child to recite the Kaddish. Generally
speaking, in a practical sense, the Kaddish is really a
substitute for the mourner’s obligation to publicly lead
the entire prayer service. Leading the service as a
whole was meant to express the fact that the deceased
has left behind a child dedicated and loyal to the Jewish
faith. Since many mourners are incapable of leading the
entire service, they recite the Kaddish to which the
congregation responds. While this recitation belongs to
the leader ot the entire service or to the lecturer of the
study of Rabbinic literature, in the prayer service a
number of these recitations were limited to the
mourner and in the lecture experience the recitation
was left to the mourner who lead the group in Kaddish
since he could not lecture to them.
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Wisch, J. A. & Wisch, Rene. Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 1, 1982, newspaper, April 1, 1982; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth754279/m1/10/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .