Spirituality lescopes Morning minyan gazes heavenward to witness Venus converging with the sun. KERI GUTEN COHEN Story Development Editor T hree local amateur astronomers turned the rare transit of Venus across the sun into a truly spiritual experience. At 4 a.m. June 8, the trio was busy setting up their various telescopes in the dark on the edge of the ball field at Avery Elementary School in Oak Park. They had much to get ready, including adding special filters to block most of the sun's harmful rays and video equipment to record Venus' historic passage across the sun, which occurs twice a century. Dr. Steven Tennenberg of Oak Park and Russ Siegel and Ohr Somayach Rabbi David Shapero, both of Southfield, were anticipating the tran- sit for a while..And, like many amateur astronomers, they were excited about sharing the experience with others. Dr. Tennenberg suggested adding another layer to the view- ing — davening at sunrise. "It is a heightened religious experience to daven right at sunrise," he said. "It was a beautiful day. We put on our tallis and tefillin in the parking lot and started davening 30 minutes before sunrise and said the Shemoneh Esrei right at sunrise. The orange-yellow sun- rise couldn't have been more spectacular." Siegel felt the service was especially mean- ingful and "more dramatic" because it was outside and you could see the sun rising, and because sunrise is the preferred time to daven the morning service. When the service ended at 6:10 a.m., the Orthodox amateur astronomers focused their attention on Venus. In North America, the transit was visible between 6-7:30 a.m. Minyan members stayed to look at the rare occurrence, then others began showing up. Many Avery Elementary students came early with their parents to catch a glimpse of Venus. The tiny planet, about 1/32th the diameter of the sun, appeared as a small dark dot travel- ing slowly across the lower one-third of the sun. The second transit for this century will occur in 2012. A transit happens when one of the inner planets' orbits places it in line between the sun and Earth. Siegel captured Venus' movement on video, with the image 6/18 2004 50 showing on a color monitor. "It was slow-moving, but it lent itself to video," he said. "It was a spectacular transit — more than any of us expected," he said. Dr. Tennenberg and Rabbi Shapero are amateur astronomers whose interest goes beyond the scientific. Both give lectures about the connection between astronomy and Jewish law, Halachah. A common exam- ple is about the significance of the new moon to Judaism. "I've always been interested in astronomy and the space program, but in the last three or four years, my interest has-heightened and that got me to buy a nice telescope and learn more about astronomy," Dr. Tennenberg said. "The most fascinating thing is how the vastness and the interesting things in the universe reflect on the greatness of God." Above: Amateur astronomers Russ Siegel Rabbi David Shapero and, with his telescope, Steve Tennenberg. Left: In Rabbi Shaperds photo, Venus appears as a tiny dot near the bottom of the sun. Below: The minyan completes morning prayers in the parking lot.