Calendar

Nov
13
Tue
The Big 5 @ Portland Kollel
Nov 13 @ 7:45 pm – 9:45 pm

Five Book of Moses, Crash Course, Decoded and MITZVAfied

Led by Rabbi Amster

Did you always wish you knew the five books of Moses better? Well, here is your chance to educate and familiarize yourself in all the major events that take place in the Torah.

More info:

– Learn the 5 books of Moses in 5 weeks.

– Know all major events in the entire Torah

– Get in-depth knowledge of the Torah’s life (changing) messages and how to find the hidden gems

– The Mitzvot? Yes! we will visit and expand on the Mitzvot as they appear inside of the Torah

Nov
14
Wed
Chai Baby + PJ Library Indoor Playground @ Mittleman Jewish Community Center
Nov 14 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm

Chai Baby + PJ Library Indoor Playground

For parents/caregivers and their children up to 5 years old. Play. Meet friends. Run. Have a Kosher snack. Sing + listen to stories. Have a blast!

Second Wednesday of each month
September 12
October 10
November 14
December 12

Free and open to the community.

In partnership with PJ Library, Chai Baby, Portland Jewish Academy

UNIVERSAL HUMAN RIGHTS: YOU CAN BE A FORCE FOR JUSTICE @ Szechuan Chef Restaurant
Nov 14 @ 6:00 pm

Wholistic Peace Institute presents a fundraising dinner to support the Torah for Justice, Torat Tzedek.

Rabbi Arik Ascherman is internationally recognized as a leading advocate for human rights and social justice in the Middle East. He is the Founder & Director of Torat Tzedek and the former Director of Rabbis for Human Rights – the largest human rights NGO with over 300 rabbi members, in the Middle East.
He is a Harvard Graduate and received his Rabbinic Ordination at Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion. Having sustained beatings and stabbings, and bravely arguing land use cases in front of the Israeli Supreme Court, he has managed to survive extremely taxing and dangerous work, and continues to exhibit resilience for peaceful, non-violent resolution of these decades long conflicts.

Wholistic Peace Institute presents a fundraising dinner to support the Torah for Justice, Torat Tzedek, an NGO that defends the human rights of all Israelis and those under Israeli control, advocating for Palestinians, socioeconomic justice for Israelis, African asylum seekers, and Israel’s Negev Bedouin citizens.  Rabbi Ascherman is a well-known leading human rights advocate and symbol of hope to many Israelis and Palestinians.  The lecture and dinner is in conjunction with the 10th Annual Harold Schnitzer Spirit of Unity Awards brought to Oregon by Educating for Peace, the Wholistic Peace Institute.  This Student Peace Leadership Program awards and recognizes middle and high school peace clubs for their important work in our communities and brings international and national human rights experts into our Oregon School System.  Come hear Rabbi Ascherman explain how “in the human rights field we must have one foot in the grassroots and the other among the decision and opinion makers.”  Field work provides the necessary knowledge and moral voice for being able to successfully go to the courts, the Knesset, the public, the international community, and/or to the press.  He will explain the tactics he is effectively using to move toward equitable outcomes and social justice in the region and why it is important to teach about human rights in the schools today.

Israeli Dancing @ Mittleman Jewish Community Center
Nov 14 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Israeli Dancing

Join us for a fun Israeli folk dance class. All levels are welcome. Six people needed to run class.

Wednesdays
September 26 – December 12
NO CLASS on October 10 or November 21

Cost: $100 Members + Guests. Drop-in Fee: $15 per class.

Register: CG 100: oregonjcc.org/registration

The White Elephant Archive, Setting No. 3 @ Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education
Nov 14 @ 7:00 pm

The White Elephant Archive, Setting No. 3 explores the legacy of the Holocaust from the perspective of the third generation living in Austria today. In this intensely personal, one-man production Eduard Freudmann uses his family’s archive–which includes poems written by his grandfather while imprisoned in concentration camps–to explore his family’s silence about the Holocaust, and his own attempt to understand the burden of this legacy through art. Reflecting on the politics of Holocaust commemoration in Austria, and larger questions about how to speak of a horror once its witnesses are gone or silent, this production provides a rare and important glimpse into the experience of the third generation living in Europe, and the impact of trauma across generations.

Eduard Freudmann is an award-winning multimedia artist specializing in video, performance and public installations. His most recent work “The Monument May Be a Forest” (2016), was selected as the winning design of the controversial competition “From Those You Saved,” which will commemorate the Polish Righteous Gentiles in Warsaw. Freudmann’s work has been presented globally in international exhibitions, art biennials and festivals, including the OFF-Biennále Budapest, and is Senior Artist at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, where he researches and teaches Trans-disciplinary Art. Freudmann’s work explores the politics of commemoration and history, aesthetical perspectives on the archive, and the mediatization of the Holocaust. He is especially interested in historical-political commemorations in public spaces, both official and unofficial, and approaches to writing microhistories, including the transmission of family histories.

This performance of The White Elephant Archive, Setting No. 3 is made possible by the Future Fund of the Republic of Austria and Federal Chancellery of Austria.

Nov
15
Thu
Yad b’Yad @ Rose Schnitzer Manor, CSP
Nov 15 @ 11:00 am – 11:45 am

Seniors and young families enjoy an inter-generational celebration of stories and songs each Thursday.

Join Kim Schneiderman for this weekly inter-generational story hour for young families with music, PJ Library books, and the residents of Cedar Sinai Park.

Poetry Night at the J @ Mittleman Jewish Community Center
Nov 15 @ 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm
Poetry Night at the J @ Mittleman Jewish Community Center | Portland | Oregon | United States

Poetry Night at the J

Join local poets, Justin Carroll, Bill Durham and others, as they share their poems and stories with the community.

Inspired by the Oregon landscape, Justin Jude Carroll’s first collection of poetry (Morning in the world) chronicles a personal and topographical journey through love and loss. His verse explores how bodies of all types — land, water, human — are witness to turbulence, stillness and transformation.

Free.

Interfaith Gratitude Service: Celebrating God’s Inclusive Love @ Beit Haverim
Nov 15 @ 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

We invite you to join us in our 6th annual interfaith celebration of gratitude hosted by the Lake Oswego United Church of Christ, Congregation Beit Haverim, the Muslim Educational Trust, The Bahá’í Faith of Portland, and the Islamic Community of North American Bosniaks. We will gather together to celebrate  our diversity, and the many things we share in common as people of God.

Featuring special guest speaker Willie Poinsette of Respond to Racism, our lively and musical service will be led by Rabbi Alan Berg of Beit Haverim, and the Rev. Jennie Ott of Lake Oswego United Church of Christ. Members of each faith community will help guide the service with readings, prayers, poetry and music.

Join us in this celebration of gratitude for the love of God, humankind, our shared values, and the diverse ways we express our faith. By coming together as beloved children of God, we hope to make the world a better place for all.

Following the service, we will gather around a delightful spread of pies, baklava and refreshments to get better acquainted in conversation. Invite your family, neighbors and friends to join us.

Rev. Ott says, “In a world that seems increasingly divided, it is important for us to bear witness to the profound inclusiveness of God’s love. As a Christian congregation, we rejoice in worshiping with Jewish and Muslim friends, as we are all the beloved children of God.”

Rabbi Berg adds, “The sense of shared mission was so clear in our planning. Gratitude is the foundation of a caring community. Beit Haverim joins hands with LOUCC and the Muslim Educational Trust to build a foundation for tomorrow that will endure.”

Executive Director Wajdi Said concurs, “MET’s focus on education through positive interaction with Muslims and non-Muslims, and honest communication with the media and public officials, has positively impacted not only the people of Portland, but well beyond our local area. We are grateful to join our friends as we come together for this service.”

Date: Thursday, November 15, 2018

Time: 7:00pm-8:00pm with reception to follow

Location: Shared Home of Lake Oswego United Church of Christ and Beit Haverim

1111 Country Club Road, Lake Oswego, OR 97034

Optional Donations: We will be raising money for Respond to Racism. All donations are graciously accepted.

Introduction to Judaism Course @ various local synagogues
Nov 15 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

This 18-week course is taught by members of The Oregon Board of Rabbis, representing a variety of Jewish affiliations. A carefully constructed curriculum includes Jewish history, life cycle events, holidays, ritual and daily practice, theology, study of Torah and contemporary Jewish America. While not a conversion class, most OBR members consider it a prerequisite for students beginning study for conversion. Classes 7-9 pm, Thursdays, at rotating Portland area synagogues.

Israel360: Asking the Tough Questions @ Congregation Neveh Shalom
Nov 15 @ 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Asking the Tough Questions: A Conversation Between Rabbi David Kosak and a Senior Israeli General

Join us to hear IDF Brigadier General (Res.) Nitzan Nuriel in conversation with Rabbi David Kosak. General Nuriel is a research fellow at the Counter-Terrorism Institute at IDC Herzliya. He previously served in the West Bank, Gaza and in the Northern Command during the withdrawal from Lebanon. General Nuriel is the former Director of Israel’s Counter-Terrorism Bureau and is responsible for having built the counter-terrorism partnership between Israel and the U.S. His recent work focuses on the Golan Heights border security challenge from both a humanitarian and practical perspective.

This program is co-sponsored by AIPAC together with Congregation Neveh Shalom and Israel360, Congregation Beth Israel, and Congregation Shaarie Torah.