Please join us to experience a Shabbat Service led by our own Sabina. Kiddush to follow the service.
Details will be announced in the newsletter and email reminders prior to the service.
Standard Shabbat Service Zoom link will be used.
Please join us to experience a Shabbat Service led by our own Sabina. Kiddush to follow the service.
Details will be announced in the newsletter and email reminders prior to the service.
Standard Shabbat Service Zoom link will be used.
Please join us for Shabbat Services with Rabbi Printz.
Join us to pray, discuss and kibbitz. Service starts at 10:00 a.m..
Torah Study and Kiddush (for those in person) follows the service.
Use the regular Shabbat service zoom Link or the one you receive by email. Contact a board member if you have not received your link before the service.
Masks are optional for in-person services.
Share in the fast and time of introspection on-line and in-person. This may be your year to feel Yom Kippur in a way you haven’t before. We all hear the same words year after year, but we all interpret them through our own lens. Every once in a while, the service connects in a special way.
Morning services start at 10:00 am and Afternoon at 5:00 pm.
There will be child minding in the morning.
‘On this day shall atonement be made for you, to cleanse you’ (Leviticus 16:30).” “May you be sealed in the Book of Life.”
Services start at 9:00 pm at the beach (TBD) for Tashlich. There is no on-line component for Tashlich.
Shul Services start in person and on-line at 10:00.
There is no child minding services or lunch today, but there is always a warm and interesting discussion that occurs on Day 2.
Email with Zoom link will be sent out by September25.
It is a mitzvah to hear the blowing of the Shofar and a pleasure to do it on the waterfront. Cast away sins and concerns with the congregation at a new location this year.
The location will be sent by email by Wednesday, September 25. There is no on-line component for Tashlich.
“The blessing over the blowing of the shofar on Rosh Hashanah refers to the mitzvah as ‘hearing the voice of the Shofar,’ but since that voice speaks without words, the message that is heard depends a great deal on who is doing the listening.”
— Douglas Aronin
The shofar inspires us to rise above despair and embrace the promise of a better world.”
—Robert Bank