Showing posts with label Reconstructionism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reconstructionism. Show all posts

Friday, October 21, 2022

Dorshei Derekh Overview 2022

Deborah Schwartzman's
parochet
Minyan Dorshei Derekh (“Path Seekers”) launched in 1986 as one of the three davening (prayer) groups meeting on Shabbat morning at Germantown Jewish Centre (GJC).

We are based in the Maslow Auditorium on the second floor of the school building. Shabbat services begin at 10:00 am and conclude around 12:30 pm followed by a kiddush/schmooze.

Dorshei Derekh is an affiliate of Reconstructing Judaism - we count faculty, students, and alumni among our membership. (As part of GJC, we are also an affiliate of the United Synagogue for Conservative Judaism.)

Ñ Core Dorshei Derekh ValuesÐ

·         Lay leadership

·         Vibrant participatory services

·         Critical and creative engagement with Torah and liturgy

·         Theological diversity

·         Mutual aid/caring for one another

·         Feminist innovation

·         LGBTQ inclusion

·         Anti-racist learning and practice

·         Intergenerational community

·         Inclusion of those who have been historically marginalized in Jewish communities

Ñ Davening Ð

·  We use Kol Haneshamah, Reconstructing Judaism’s prayerbook; many members of our minyanhelped to create it.

·   The first half of our service is enhanced by lively singing and/or chanting, occasionally accompanied by rhythm instruments.

·     We read Torah on a Triennial Torah cycle, divided into 3 aliyot.

·   Members volunteer to prepare and give each week’s Dvar Torah. These are text-based, creative, and intellectually stimulating presentations, encouraging lively response. Zoom participants participate in their own breakout groups following the Davar Torah.

Ñ LeadershipÐ

We rely on our members’ educational, liturgical, and organizational contributions to keep our minyan running.

Our leadership consists of the Chair, the past Chair, and the Incoming Chair. Individuals organize the many functions that are required to keep our minyan going. They are listed at www.minyandorsheiderekh.org

Ñ Service Times Ð

We meet on Saturday mornings and on Rosh Hashanah, Kol Nidre, Yom Kippur, Sukkot (1st day), Erev Simchat Torah, Shemini Atzeret/Simchat Torah, Purim Eve, Pesach (1st and 7th day).

We have joint davening with the other GJC minyanim for:

·         Kabbalat Shabbat
(Friday evening services)

·         Erev Rosh Hashanah

·         Charry Scholar-in-Residence Weekend

·         Occasional celebrations of Bar and Bat Mitzvahs and special events

Ñ Membership Ð

For minyan membership information contact Heather Shafter at heathershafter@verizon.net

For GJC membership information, contact Nina Peskin, GJC Executive Director, at

215-844-1507 Ext. 12 or director@germantownjewishcentre.org.


Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Guide To Jewish Practice - Book Party

This is hard to read, but if you click on it, it will enlarge and be clear.
This is hard to read - click on it to enlarge.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Nathan Reports on the Recon Rider Team Results - #1!!

Dorshei Derekh/ Recon Riders 2.0
Leila, Hadassah, and Eliyashu

This year’s Recon Rider’s team at the Hazon NY Jewish Environmental Bikeride – which included several Dorshei Derekh regulars and other GJC folks – was a tremendous success. The Recon Riders were the top team both in terms of numbers of participants and in fundraising. In addition to its regular terrific programming, Hazon chose to focus of the Shabbaton on the theme of food justice and several Recon Riders also helped lead and teach the Hazon community during the weekend. For more information about the ride, check out http://www.hazon.org/programs/new-york-ride/. And once again thank you to all the members of the Dorshei community who supported this year’s riders. Your support made a difference for us and for the environment!
- Nathan Martin



Wednesday, August 10, 2011

David Teutsch on the Huff Post, on Contemporary Zionism & Reconstructionists


Rabbi David A. Teutsch








(Mis)understanding Reconstructionist Judaism

Posted: 8/10/11 12:36 PM ET

When I first became a leader of the Reconstructionist movement in 1980, several of the lay leaders lamented that it was the best-kept secret in the Jewish community. While the movement has grown fivefold in the intervening decades, it is still largely misunderstood by most American Jews. A recent article that appeared in Jewish Ideas Daily serves to perpetuate untruths about Reconstructionist Judaism.
Written by Joseph Siev, the article makes two points that are totally incorrect. The first is his assertion that while Reconstructionism has long been allied with Zionism, that is no longer true. In truth, the Reconstructionist movement has been strongly Zionist from its inception through the present moment. Following its founder Mordecai Kaplan, Reconstructionists have understood that a key to Zionism is ethical nationhood -- a commitment to justice for every person regardless of ethnicity or religion. In his book "A New Zionism," Kaplan argued that open and dynamic democracy, adequate resources devoted to ensuring that society's have-nots live in dignity and the ardent pursuit of peace are elements of ethical nationhood. At a time when the settlements on the West Bank being expanded by the government of Israel are one of the impediments to peace, Reconstructionists envision a Zionism built upon standards of ethical nationhood.
Siev's evidence for the alleged loss of Zionist fervor within my movement is the fact that some Reconstructionist rabbis are affiliated with Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP), which calls for, among other things, a boycott on goods from the West Bank. The reality that these rabbis represent a small faction within the Reconstructionist rabbinate is a detail Siev did not bother to include; perhaps he did not investigate enough to be aware of it.
Like most Reconstructionist Jews, I do not approve of any boycotts imposed on Israel and am therefore not a supporter of JVP. But in his article, Siev misrepresents JVP's position, falsely implying that JVP supports a wholesale boycott of Israel.
Immediately after the 1967 Six Day War, Rabbi Jack Cohen -- a leading Reconstructionist leader who served for decades as the director of the Hillel of Hebrew University and who has lived in Israel for the last 50 years -- wrote an essay calling for Israel to immediately withdraw from the West Bank. His reasoning was based on the belief that by not doing so, Israel's ideals would be compromised because such an occupation could only lead to a painfully problematic relationship to the inhabitants of the occupied area. As someone deeply committed to Israel as an ethical nation, I lament that no one listened to Rabbi Cohen in 1967. In expanding settlements, the Netanyahu government is making things worse. This is a painful reality that all of us concerned with peace must face up to, but this point of view hardly belongs exclusively to the Reconstructionist movement. Indeed, it is being expounded by many religious leaders across the denominational spectrum. Again, while I do not identify with JVP, those within our movement who do are generally motivated by their deep love and concern for Israel and her future. At a time when so many American Jews have walked away from the issue, the Reconstructionist movement has consistently remained passionately engaged with Israel and Zionism.
It seems that Siev would like to see the Jewish community treat as traitors anyone who shares the view that Zionism involves a profound commitment to the values embodied in Israel's Declaration of Independence and its Basic Laws, values that Reconstructionism affirms. These include human freedom, democracy, dignity for all and equal treatment of every citizen. Those committed to such values ought to be able to argue about goals, strategy and tactics without name-calling or misrepresentation.
Siev's second misstatement is so far off the mark that it is almost laughable. He writes that "neither Kaplan nor his thought features prominently in Reconstructionist self-understanding." Nothing could be further from the truth. Every Reconstructionist rabbinical student extensively studies Kaplan's work while at RRC. The current basic introduction to Reconstructionism, "Exploring Judaism: A Reconstructionist Approach" by Rabbis Rebecca Alpert and Jacob Staub, returns over and again to Kaplan's thought.
As a past executive director of the Reconstructionist movement's congregational body, a past president of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College and a current faculty member, I am a dedicated exponent of democratic communitarianism. To be effective, that approach has to shape the day-to-day life of Jewish communities. In September the RRC Press will publish "A Guide to Jewish Practice: Everyday Living," which provides guidance in exactly how to do that. The book details how to apply Jewish values-based decision making to every aspect of daily Jewish life, from business ethics to daily prayer, from tzedaka to bioethics, from community-building to sex ethics. Its connection to Kaplan's understanding of Judaism as an evolving religious civilization will be obvious to every reader. The book's main author, I am joined by more than 70 other rabbis and Jewish leaders who contribute their insights and commentary to the work. I believe that the publication of this work constitutes a major contribution to contemporary Jewish life.
It is often said that Judaism is a way of life. That will be no more than an empty slogan for liberal Jews unless Jewish leaders show the way by the manner in which they live and by the resources they place in people's hands. "A Guide to Jewish Practice: Everyday Living" provides a tool for thoughtful Jews to make decisions that can shape passionate and engaged Jewish living. I sincerely hope that Siev will read the book, particularly its section on the ethics of speech and the written word. There he will find an excerpt from the Talmud, Arakhin 15a: "God says of one who speaksl'shon hara (bad speech) 'we cannot dwell together in the world.'" Let us aspire to dwell together in mutual respect and strive to understand each other's perspectives.
Rabbi David A. Teutsch is the Director of the Levin-Lieber Program in Jewish Ethics and the Louis and Myra Wiener Professor of Contemporary Jewish Civilization at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. The writer of numerous books and articles, his newest work, 'A Guide to Jewish Practice: Everyday Living,' is forthcoming from RRC Press in September.