Times Colonist

Jewish High Holy Days ruffled by hurricane

Storm disrupts temple services during Rosh Hashana

- RACHEL ZOLL and TERRY SPENCER

NAPLES, Florida — During hHurricane Irma, Temple Shalom served as a sanctuary of a different kind.

When the storm changed course at the last minute, the Naples synagogue suddenly became an emergency shelter. As power stayed off for days, the Reform temple, which had only minimal damage, was a place for neighbours to escape the heat and have a free meal.

Now, amid the upheaval caused by Irma, Rabbi Adam Miller has decided the sermons he had carefully planned for the Jewish High Holy Days, starting Wednesday night, are no longer relevant.

“Those are in the trash can,” said Miller, who rode out the storm in Memphis, Tennessee, carrying one of the synagogue’s Torah scrolls for safekeepin­g. “The new message now is bringing the community together. No matter how challengin­g it might seem, we can pick up the pieces and rebuild.”

In Florida’s large Jewish community, the solemn period starting with Rosh Hashana has taken on new meaning as congregant­s facing desperate uncertaint­y about the state of their homes, neighbours and livelihood­s seek as much comfort as inspiratio­n in the new year.

“The hurricane was so incredibly disruptive psychologi­cally,” said Rabbi Michael Resnick of Temple Emanu-el of Palm Beach, a Conservati­ve congregati­on, who used a solar charger to power his phone so he could send emails of support to his congregati­on throughout the storm and in the days after.

“For me, it was a reminder of how small and fragile we are and that we really have no control over a whole lot.”

Even before Irma, Jews in Florida and throughout the U.S. were unsettled approachin­g the holidays, after a year of everbolder expression­s of anti-Semitism, including a rally last month of neo-Nazis and white nationalis­ts in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, where cries of “Sieg Heil!” were heard. President Donald Trump’s blaming of “many sides” for the violence at the march drew rebukes from many Jewish leaders.

For Florida’s Jews, Irma presented a more immediate personal threat. About 600,000 Florida residents — or about three per cent of the population — are Jewish, and many are elderly.

Lillian Andron, 70, who spent days without power at her home, declined invitation­s from friends to go elsewhere for the holidays because her husband, Michael, wanted to keep his years-long tradition of blowing the shofar, or ceremonial ram’s horn, at his North Miami Beach Orthodox congregati­on. He started practicing a month ago, a sound his wife found comforting during a difficult two weeks of storm watching, long gas lines, the hurricane and the aftermath.

“I feel like this year Rosh Hashana became even more important because we just want to get in touch with the infinite, so I feel like I don’t need to do the big meal and have company. This year I just wanted to be more reflective,” she said.

Many Jews who evacuated ahead of Irma will not make it back to their communitie­s and their synagogues for the holidays. Miller said some parents have told him they won’t return until schools re-open. Resnick said many of his congregant­s who had spent the summer outside of Florida have dropped plans to return to Palm Beach for Rosh Hashana.

The Reform Jewish movement and other branches of Judaism are asking synagogues around the U.S. to admit those displaced by Irma and hurricane Harvey, which devastated Texas last month. Congregati­ons generally charge for attendance during the High Holy Days, which also include Yom Kippur, or the Day of Atonement.

In Key West, Rabbi Yaakov Zucker of the Chabad Jewish Center in the Florida Keys said his congregati­on of about 200 people is scattered across four states.

“They themselves are sort of wandering Jews right now, refugees,” Zucker said as he fielded calls from congregant­s seeking a place to attend services. A synagogue in Parkland has offered to host them, Zucker said, and he expects at least 50 of them to attend.

The disruption from the storm could reach far beyond the immediate period of recovery. The High Holy Days are a critical time for fundraisin­g, which can make or break a synagogue budget for the year.

Kol Ami of Boca Raton, a small Reconstruc­tionist congregati­on trying to attract new members, does not sell seats for New Year services and instead relies on contributi­ons to cover the costs of flying in a rabbi and cantor to lead worship.

Kol Ami’s rental space, at a Unitarian Universali­st church, had no building damage, but some electronic­s inside were damaged.

“We’re not sure how much we’ll have to improvise,” said Roberta Jainchill, the congregati­on’s president. “We survive from one holiday to the next and hope people come through with donations. I hope we make it.”

Miller said his Reform synagogue will host about 40 members of a nearby Conservati­ve congregati­on because their building was too damaged to hold services.

Miller was a student rabbi in New York City when the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks occurred. He said Florida after Irma feels “a little like that.”

“We’re a community where everybody’s life is turned upside down,” he said. “People here desperatel­y need to hear the shofar calling them to another year of life.”

 ?? TERRY SPENCER, ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rabbi Adam Miller of Temple Shalom in Naples, Florida, holds the Torah he took to Tennessee to protect it from hurricane Irma. Miller has rewritten his Rosh Hashanah sermon to reflect the damage done to southwest Florida by the storm.
TERRY SPENCER, ASSOCIATED PRESS Rabbi Adam Miller of Temple Shalom in Naples, Florida, holds the Torah he took to Tennessee to protect it from hurricane Irma. Miller has rewritten his Rosh Hashanah sermon to reflect the damage done to southwest Florida by the storm.

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