Young children (0-5) and their parents celebrate Shabbat with singing, movement, blessings and storytelling. We touch on the main highlights of the Shabbat morning service: wonder, fun, song, listening to the world, dancing and Torah. Afterward we enjoy an informal oneg nosh and the chance to play and schmooze. Led by Deborah Eisenbach-Budner.
Parkinson’s Resources (PRO) will hold its annual Sole Support on September 17, 2016 at the Rose Quarter. Sole Support is a longstanding philanthropic series of 1k and 5k walks to support the essential programs serving residents facing Parkinson’s disease. Walkers will enjoy an afternoon of celebration, live music, dancing, picnicking, and family-friendly activities. Participants hitting a path of fundraising benchmarks will receive incentives, as well as drawings and grand prizes.
Founded in 1980, PRO is a nationally recognized nonprofit with the singular focus of improving the quality of life for those living with Parkinson’s in Oregon and SW Washington by bridging the gap between medical care and wellness through a balance of hope for the future with education and services for today.
Mothers Circle- an Empowering Program for Moms Without a Jewish Background
The Mothers Circle is a 13 week community-wide empowering program geared to women of other religious backgrounds raising kids in a Jewish family environment. Held at the MJCC, this supportive class is for anyone wanting to learn more about the “how-tos’ of tradition, holidays and ritual. There is no cost and childcare is provided. Come learn more at an information session, Mothers Circle style Rosh Hashanah “mini-lesson” and coffee on September 18, 9:30-10:30 am, at the MJCC.
Contact programs@nevehshalom.org or 503-293-7313 to RSVP or for more information. www.facebook.com/motherscirclepdx
The Mothers Circle is coordinated by Congregation Neveh Shalom and co-sponsored by the Mittleman Jewish Community Center, B’nai B’rith Camp, The Oregon Board of Rabbis and Congregations Beth Israel, Havurah Shalom, Shaarie Torah and Shir Tikvah. Thank you to our generous funders: The Holzman Foundation, The Oregon Jewish Community Foundation, The JEZ Foundation, the Jewish Federation of Greater Portland, and The Oregon Jewish Community Youth Foundation. Mothers Circle is an affiliate program of Big Tent Judaism.
Welcome Portland! Join us for Sunday Brunch!
Hadassah! Research in Service to Humanity
Put your imagination, your dreams, enthusiasm and organizational skills to work for Portland Hadassah. Make a difference; help continue to make Portland successful.
To help, contact Event Chairs, Diana Lindemann: diana2504@msn.com or 503-312-2530 or
Carolee Kawer: ceekay1014@gmail.com or 503-657-3928
Have you been wanting to make a tallit for yourself or for your child’s bar/bat mitzvah – or would your teen like to make their own? Would you like to embellish a tallit you already own?
Learn a bit about the religious requirements and history of tallit, how to decide what size of tallit you like, how to choose fabric, and how to get started with designing and planning your tallit. The class will emphasize making the tallit meaningful by incorporating fabrics with personal meaning such as your father’s ties, a grandmother’s crochet doilies, a favorite t-shirt. Learn about the difference between Rabbanite and Karaite tzitzit, and get ideas about how to make tzitzit tying meaningful.
Free to members of Shir Tikvah; non-member fee is $18.
Dive into a fun parent and child crafting class and make your very own Gi-Felted Fish. Learn the basics of needle felting. Specialized barbed needles are used to tangle and compact natural wool fibers into a solid constructed sculpture. Each participant will take home an adorable fishy friend of their own creation. All supplies will be provided. This activity if fun for families of all ages!
COST: $40 PER PAIR.
MEMBER COST: $36.
ADDITIONAL CHILD: $10.
Register at oregonjcc.org/felt
Join us for Congregation Beth Israel‘s fall fundraiser, featuring a Beatles tribute band!
Secrets of the Greatest Generation: stories our mothers never told us
September 20, 2016 talk at 7:15pm
Doors open at 6:30pm to view the exhibit
Ticket Info: Free for OJMCHE Members with RSVP, General Public $5, view of exhibit included
Talk by Suzanne Hertzberg, author of Katherine Joseph: Photographing an Era of Social Significance
When Katherine Joseph died in 1990, her daughter discovered a trove of memorabilia from her mother’s career as a Roosevelt-era photographer for the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU). Joseph photographed union leaders and progressive political luminaries as well as men and women at work in union shops and at play in union-sponsored cultural events. She traveled to Mexico in 1941 on an extended photojournalistic grand tour, returned to New York on the cusp of Pearl Harbor, and went on to document labor’s wartime Home Front efforts. Then, as did millions of American women after the war, she married and left her job to become a full-time homemaker. Closing the door firmly on her remarkable career and accomplishments, she rarely spoke of her past, sharing with her daughter only anecdotal snippets and the occasional photograph. Her path from traditional immigrant upbringing to independence, adventure, and professional success remained essentially a secret for the rest of her life.
Hertzberg embarked on archiving her mother’s work and researching her career, a project that bore fruit as Katherine Joseph: Photographing an Era of Social Significance, for her children to appreciate their grandmother’s accomplishments and for the preservation of an important historical legacy. She found the research process enlightening as she came to know her mother as a young woman—talented, accomplished, playful, adventurous, sexy—who kept her own trove of juicy secrets for nearly half a century. Readers often express that Hertzberg’s book made them think about their own mothers in a new light and sparked their own research journeys. “We have much to learn from the ‘Greatest Generation’ women,” Hertzberg notes, “who were raised not to draw attention to themselves or their accomplishments and who succeeded so well in doing so that we risk losing their legacy.” Yet, Hertzberg cautions, we have a responsibility as historians —even amateur/family historians. “As we learn about our mothers, we must resist the temptation to look at the past through the lens of the present, and when we uncover secrets, we need to contemplate and respect the question of who has rightful ownership of our life stories.”
Selichot Service: Join us for a casual selichot service with lots of discussion