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MIDDLE SCHOOL NEWS

Candle Lighting - 5:02 pm

Havdalah - 5:56 pm

Parashat Beshalach

Mishloach Manot

The deadline has been extended one week.  Please join us to make this year's mishloach manot mitzvah campaign one of our biggest. You can participate in this joyous mitzvah at different giving levels. Please click on the link below to download the order forms and kindly submit to the main office by Friday, February 13, 2009. Sorry, order forms cannot be accepted beyond this date. Thank you for your generosity!

A PENNY FOR YOUR SEARCH!

Search the web with Yahoo-powered GoodSearch.com and they will donate a penny to Schechter each time you search!  Also, shop at more than 600 GoodShop.com merchants, including Amazon, Best Buy, Macy's, Toys R US, to name a few, and up to 37% of the purchase price will go to Schechter!  GoodSearch.com is a new Yahoo-powered search engine that donates half its advertising revenue to the charities its users designate.  Just select our school by selecting "Schechter" from the list as the organization you want to support.  Spread the word!

 COMING EVENTS

Monday, February 9, 2009

Tu B'Shvat

NEW: Girls' basketball Team A previously unscheduled practice. Team A practice will take place in the new gym from 5:30 pm - 6:30 pm.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Elections for Israel's 18th Knesset 

Monday, February 16 - Friday, February 20, 2009

February Break - school closed

Monday, February 23, 2009

School resumes - Gray Day

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Board of Directors Meeting

SAVE-THE-DATES

Schechter Fine Arts Festival - Sunday, March 8, 2009 - 6:30 pm Gallery Opening, 7:00 pm Performance. The Fine Arts Festival will take place at the Glen Cove Campus (please see link to informational flier below).

Middle School Boys' Baseball and Girls' Softball Tryouts - Monday, March 16 and Tuesday March 17th after-school at the Jericho Campus. Transportation to Jericho will be provided.

Salute to Israel Parade - Sunday, May 31, 2009

First Day of School for 2009 - 2010 - Wednesday, September 9, 2009

EXCITING NEWS!!

Thanks to the hard work and diligence of Josh Rubin and Ariella Kristal and the SAFE club, our agreement with Royal Waste Services to set up recycling bins in the entire upper school has come to fruition.  SSDS/SSHSLI GOES ECO.

REMINDER

Re-enrollment for 2009-2010 School Year - Keep in mind that re-enrollment for the 2009-2010/5770 school year was sent to you by mail on Friday, January 9th.  The mailing contains everything you need to re-enroll.  Please read the cover letter which explains everything, including some changes and some innovations.  Please don't put off completing the paperwork as the deadline for re-enrolling is Friday, February 13, 2009.  Like other non-profits, Schechter is equally vulnerable during the economic downturn.  Your timely re-enrollment helps us prepare effectively for the coming year.  Re-enrollments received after Friday, February 13, are subject to a $200 late fee.  Re-enrollment after February 13th does not guarantee placement (re-enrollment is subject to a wait list).  Thank you.

YASHER KOACH TO OUR STUDENTS

I received the following letter this week:

Dear Mr. Dalfen,

We would like to extend our appreciation to you for your school's generous donation to Big Brothers Big Sister of LI Donation Center.

It is because of the time, effort and generosity of people and schools like yours that we are able to provide mentors, programs and services to the children of Long Island.

Sincerely yours,

Paul Hutter

Operations Manager

DONATED CLOTHING CAMPAIGN

Thank you to all our families who donated hoodies to our Knesset's Hoodies for the Homeless campaign. Our Knesset will be bringing all the donated sweatshirts to the Nassau-Suffolk Coalition for the Homeless.

LOST AND FOUND

The clothes in our Lost and Found have exceeded the size of our largest boxes. If you have found that your child/ren is/are missing any clothing, please check our Lost and Found boxes in the old and new gyms. All clothing remaining in the Lost and Found by Friday, February 13th (the day before the February break) will be donated. Please note that we have been going through the boxes periodically to check for clothing with a name and we have returned those clothes accordingly.

TRANSPORTATION NEWS

The deadline for submission of the District Transportation Application is Wednesday, April 1st. Thus far, we have transportation applications for the following districts: East Meadow (3 pages), East Williston (2 pages), Farmingdale (1 page), Garden City (1 page), Glen Cove, (1 page), Half-Hollow Hills (1 page), Herricks (1 page), Jericho (1 page), Levittown (1 page), Massapequa (2 pages), North Shore (1 page), Oyster Bay-East Norwich (2 pages), Plainview-Old Bethpage (1 page), Port Washington (2 pages), Sewanhaka (1 page), Syosset (1 page), West Hempstead (3 pages). If your home district is not listed above, parents should reach out to their district transportation office to request an application. We will update you if we receive additional applications from other school districts (please see link to transportation forms below). 

FRIDAY LETTER

Parashat Beshalach

Exodus 13:17-17:16
February 7, 2009 / 13 Shevat 5769

This week's commentary was written by Rabbi David Ackerman, Rabbi for National Outreach, JTS


As an undergraduate, I studied American History, with a special focus on the African American experience in the nineteenth century. Black Americans of the time divided their lives into two distinct phases-before emancipation and after emancipation. The Civil War, of course, served as the hinge; by war's end in 1865 millions of former slaves had become, in the parlance of the day, freedmen. Not that post-emancipation Black life in America was easy, simple, or beautiful. As we all know, it took another century for some of the basic promises of emancipation-the right to vote, some measure of equal opportunity, fair and equal access to public accommodations, among others-to become reality. But still, that moment came to represent the possibility of transformation, of reversal of fortune, of redemption, for many.

Last month I stood in the cold with a million or so fellow citizens to witness President Obama's inauguration. I was fortunate to receive two tickets and was determined to give our two teenage sons the opportunity to be part of history. As they reminded me, somewhere in a crush of people getting on or off the Washington Metro, "Abba, this is something that we'll get to tell our grandchildren about." The boys took the two tickets and found their way to a reserved section near the podium. I headed to the National Mall, settling in near the Washington Monument, among the people. My "neighborhood" for the day was overwhelmingly African American, and for my neighbors on January 20 the day's events symbolized that same possibility of redemptive transformation embedded in emancipation a century and a half prior. My neighbors hung on every word spoken, especially those offered by the new president, who expressed the same sensibility in describing himself as "a man whose father less than sixty years ago might not have been served in a local restaurant" but who "can now stand before you to take a most sacred oath."

In our culture, the paradigm for moments of redemptive transformation is the Bible's story of the Exodus from Egypt, and Parashat B'shallah serves as the dramatic high point of that tale. B'shallah begins with a verse much commented upon: "Now when Pharaoh let the people go, God did not lead them by way of the land of the Philistines, although it was nearer . . . (Exod. 13:17)." The path from slavery to freedom will not be the direct route, but rather a roundabout one. The trip is not a straight shot; rather, as Rashi puts it, it is derekh m'ukam-curved and twisty.

The Midrash picks up on the Torah's unusual wording in order to make the point with even greater force. In Hebrew, "the way of the land of the Philistines" is derekh eretz p'lishtim.

Dividing that phrase adds a powerful nuance. Derekh eretz means the way of the earth, the ordinary course of events, the norm. God leads the Israelites neither in the ordinary way nor along a route that crosses through the coastal territory of the Philistines. The Israelites don't get to hug the shoreline; they have to journey inland toward redemption.

Pesikta d'Rav Kahana 11:8 offers a list of divergences from the usual course of things in the Exodus story. Usually, water comes from above and bread from below. Not so during the Exodus, wherein water emerges from rocks and manna rains down from the heavens. Usually, disciples walk ahead of teachers, carrying a lantern to light the path, even carrying the master over difficult terrain. Not so during the Exodus, wherein God does the advance work and the heavy lifting. Usually, disciples wash, clothe, and stand guard over their teachers. Not so during the Exodus, wherein God purifies and enrobes the Israelites, all the while never succumbing to slumber or sleep. It's a powerful reflection on redemption as reversal. Sometimes, to make things right, the world has to be turned upside down.

That crooked, upside-down path leads eventually to the Red/Reed Sea, the Torah's most dramatic metaphor for transition and transformation. Wisely, the Rabbinic framers of our parashah place the crossing of the sea at the very center of this Shabbat's narrative. Certainly, it focuses our attention on the theme of redemption. But this strategic placement of the crossing teaches another essential message: it's not all sweetness and light on the other side. Crossing complete, celebration concluded, the Israelites immediately encounter a series of existential crises, facing (and complaining about) a lack of food and water and a mortal enemy known as Amalek. The journey of our freedmen ancestors was hardly easy. President Obama's address captured this aspect of the spirit of the Exodus as well in his claim that "God calls on us to shape an uncertain destiny."

As the Torah's tale unfolds, the roundabout path will lead to an encounter with God at Sinai and, many years down the road, to the Promised Land. It takes time and effort and struggle. Redemption, like revelation, doesn't happen all at once. It evolves slowly, and sometimes painfully. As Congressman John Lewis, a veteran of Selma and one of the great heroes of the civil rights movement put it to a visitor the day before inauguration: "Barack Obama is what comes at the end of that bridge in Selma." A full generation's march through the wilderness is what it takes to get there.

The publication and distribution of the JTS Commentary are made possible by a generous grant from Rita Dee and Harold (z"l) Hassenfeld.

Have a Shabbat shalom,

Allan Dalfen

Upper School Principal

PDF files

Mishloach Manot Order Forms
Schechter Fine Arts Festival
Transportation Forms
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