May the New Year bring to all our friends and family health, joy, prosperity and everything good in life. Rosh Hashanah 2015 5776 '24 —.., ■ •••••10 P' Judi Schneider Brett, Patty, Caidey, Zack & Caroline, Bryan, Arryn, Ethan & Avery Brad, Molly, D.J. & Anna Brandon, Alexandra The Rosh Hashanah crew at Adas Shalom Synagogue: Rabbi Jacob Segal, Morris Hadrick and Cantor Nicholas Fenakel in 1956. four speakers at last year's inaugural program where we were asked to reflect on a transformational moment in our lives. To say that it was emotional for me and the congregants would be an understatement. It was an experience that profoundly impacts me to this day. I will be forever grateful to Rabbi Yedwab for including me and for hav- ing the vision to create this amazing way to bring the New Year in. Mincha Moments is open to non-members and is free of charge. Call the temple office at (248) 661-5700 for details. Well, that does it for my pre-High Holiday walk down Memory Lane; which, by the way, I hear is being turned into a round-about. I wish you all a happy, healthy and sweet year and an especially good parking space at your synagogue of choice. Ushanah tovah tikateivu! ou !Or BISTRO ROYAL OAK ❑ Alan Muskovitz is a writer, voice-over/acting talent, speaker, emcee and a regular guest host on the Mitch Albom Show on WJR AM 760. Visit his website at laughwithbigaLcom. View the menu at www.bistro82.com For reservations, call 248.542.0082 A 401 S. Lafayette Ave. Royal Oak MI • 248 542 0082 • Bistro82 com , ground, images, humorous commentary and text played on a large television screen. The service was packed. "People were laughing and enjoying themselves — the mood was light, rather than the heaviness often associated with services:' she said. "It's not enough to work with clergy; the people sitting in the pews need to think changing prayer culture is possible:' Still, though others recognize the problem of growing disengagement, they believe the solution lies not in chang- ing the texts, but in re-examining them. Rabbi Elie Kaunfer, executive director of Mechon Hadar, stressed the importance of preserving the traditional liturgy "Instead of refor- mulating the words, we try to reinterpret the words in order to connect:' said Kaunfer, who holds a doctorate in liturgy from JTS. "How we perform Rabbi Kaunfer the words oftentimes has much more to do with our experience of prayer than the words themselves," he said. Melody and the "sound field of a synagogue," the noises present in between prayers, deep- ly impact the experience of prayer. "If we are thoughtful about sounds, prayer can be experienced very differently:' While many people choose to substi- tute English for the traditionally Hebrew prayers, Kaunfer stressed the "power of praying in Hebrew:' "Whether or not you understand the words, there is a rhythm and mystery to the traditional Hebrew liturgy:' he said. He gave the example of Kol Nidrei, the service recited at the start of Yom Kippur, and the Mourner's Kaddish. "It's not something everyone can fully understand, but the meter of the words in Hebrew has a powerful force:' Still, both Uhrbach and Kaunfer agree that the search for meaning in prayer, though far from a new issue, is a pressing one. Uhrbach, who served on the editorial committee of Mahzor Lev Shalem: Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, a prayer book for the High Holidays, and who is in the process of editing a full-length siddur, said that directing the Block/Kolker Center feels like a circle closing. "Heschel worked tirelessly to revive prayer and to remind us what prayer could be. His teachings reached me, and now I'm trying to do the same. I hope to bring that conversation back to JTS." Wishing our clients and friends a happy and healthy New Year! From the staff of Elite Networking & Consulting Elite Networking & Consulting 0 3 4 3 0 0 May the coming year be filled with health and happiness for all our family and friends. L'Shanah Tovah! Harvey & Marilyn Saperstein ❑ JN September 10 • 2015 69