Rosh Hashanah YONA BURSTYN Nothing’s as AMAZING as a MUSICAL! LEFT: Rabbi Yehuda Kaplan shows off two shofars from his collection. RIGHT: Kaplan has more than 50 shofars, plus some antlers and animal hooves. Horns And More “ SOMETHING Local rabbi shares his collection of shofars to educate others. ROTTEN! is The Producers PLUS Spamalot PLUS The Book of Mormon . SQ UARED !” —NEW YORK MAGAZINE (KUJGT6JGCVTGƾ5GRVƴ1EV $TQCFYC[+P&GVTQKVEQOVKEMGVOCUVGTEQODQZQǥEG )TQWRU )TQWRU"$TQCFYC[+P&GVTQKVEQOQT 2/5GRV “When we are no longer able to change a situation — we are challenged to change ourselves” - Viktor Frankl Specializing in Adult and Adolescent Psychotherapy To make an appointment call Monica K. Goodwin, L.L.M.S.W. Adult & Adolescent Psychotherapist 5777 West Maple Road, Suite 175 West Bloomfi eld, MI 48322 MKGoodwin24@gmail.com P: (248) 932-4325 F: (248) 932-4326 Glassman Genesis Valet Service Jeff Stewart Assistant New Car Sales Manager Serving the Community Since 1969 248-636-2736 Complimentary Maintenance Serving Our Community For Over 45 Years! 5FMFHSBQI3Et4PVUIýFMEt XXXHMBTTNBOHFOFTJTDPN 30 September 6 • 2018 jn 2168010 ROCHEL BURSTYN CONTRIBUTING WRITER M any folks are preparing for Rosh Hashanah by dusting their shofars and practic- ing their blowing, but Rabbi Yehuda Kaplan of Oak Park is not actually a baal tokaya (shofar blower). If he were going to practice blow- ing all his shofars, it would take quite a while: He has more than 50 … and counting! His fascination with shofars began more than 20 years ago, when Yeshiva Beth Yehudah orga- nized a shofar demonstration for its students and Rabbi Kaplan, who’s been teaching first grade there for 25 years now, found him- self as mesmerized as the students. “I thought ‘What’s this fellow doing that I can’t do?’ The only answer was: He had lots of shofars and I didn’t,” Kaplan said. “So, I asked him where he got them and called the same place to order some. Over the years, I grew quite a collection.” He has horns from goats, deer, impalas, antelopes, gazelles, cows and African water buffalos, most of which he buys from suppliers. Sometimes the source is more dramatic, such as the time his brother in Monsey, N.Y., heard a noise in his front yard and observed a deer shedding its horns before running off. “My brave brother put on gloves and went out to pick up those freshly shed horns and put them in a big bucket of Clorox just because he knew I’d want them!” Kaplan said. During the weeks leading up to Rosh Hashanah, Kaplan leads sho- far demonstrations similar to the one that first got him hooked. He transports his shofars, each care- fully encased in bubble wrap and kept inside a suitcase year-round, to nursing homes and schools. While showing his collection, he explains how an animal’s horn is made into a shofar, explores what makes a shofar kosher as well as the different sounds and sizes of the horns. “A kosher shofar needs to be large enough to stick out of both ends when it’s held in your fist. There should be no doubt you’re holding a shofar,” Kaplan explained as he showed off the smallest kosher shofar of his collection. The smaller ones make a high-pitched crying sound, a fact he points out as ironic because the smaller ones were those smuggled into concen- tration camps and labor camps during the Holocaust. The collection is more than just shofars. Kaplan has oddities that keep any curious onlooker gaping. Among them is a horn still attached to a deer’s skull, which a friend of a friend who enjoys hunting man- aged to procure for him. He also has a cow’s hoof and a horse’s hoof. He takes the opportunity to show his audiences a split hoof and a non-split hoof, one of the main dif- ferences between a kosher and non- kosher animal. “I like to say I cover everything from horn to hoof !” Kaplan said. As he clearly demonstrates with his unusual collection, there’s so much more to the mitzvah of shofar than what meets the ears. •