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1851 Noriega Street San Francisco, CA 94122 ● (415) 564-5665
The Rabbi's Blog: Living Jewish in San Francisco

In this week’s parasha, we read how Yaakov, on his deathbed, prepares his family for life after his passing. Fittingly, the National Association for Chevra Kadisha (NASCK) has dedicated this Shabbat, Parashat Vayechi, to generating awareness and educating the Jewish community about end-of-life decisions. Adath Israel is proudly participating in this effort along with over 600 shuls in North America. For more information on why and how you can prepare your family, I encourage you to read this week's blog, written by my colleague, Rabbi Efrem Goldberg, on end-of-life planning. 

Shabbat Vayechi
Friday, January 1 - Saturday, January 2

T.E.A.M. Shabbat
One of the more sensitive topics of discussion is that of the Torah perspective on end-of-life matters. The Traditional End-of-Life Awareness Movement (TEAM) is a national movement dedicated to generating positive awareness, educating, and guiding the Jewish community on the value of life and making appropriate end-of-life decisions. Applying the parasha’s themes of Yaakov’s illness and direction to his children, his request for Chesed-Shel-Emet and his arrangement for burial is meant to encourage people to consider and deal with issues that are often ignored, thus increasing awareness and respect for life – here and hereafter.

Z'manim:
Friday, January 1
8:00am    Shacharit 
4:44pm    Candlelighting
4:45pm    Mincha/Ma'ariv

Shabbat, January 2
Vayechi
Shema must be concluded by 9:49am
9:30am     Shacharit followed by
                 Mincha
5:47pm     Havdalah
6:15pm     Ma'ariv

Sunday, January 3
8:00am    Shacharit 
4:40pm    Mincha/Ma'ariv
Monday- Thursday, January 4-7 
7:45am    Shacharit
7:00pm    Ma'ariv


Davening Zoom Links
Shacharit
Meeting ID: 8285 7998 099
Passcode: 5240 99
Call-In Number: 1(699) 900-6833


Ma'ariv
Meeting ID: 8651 4928 893
Passcode: 3228 19
Call-In Number: 1(699) 900-6833



 
Adath Israel Zoom World
Thursday, December 31, 7:30pm
Friday, January 1, 3:00pm
Meeting ID: 8591 9877 123
Password: 3332 74
Call-In Number: 1(669) 900-6833
Meeting ID: 8711 0287 339
Password: 0465 97
Call-In Number: 1(669) 900-6833
Meeting ID: 8675 4375 483
Password: 9311 88
Call-In Number: 1(669) 900-6833
Meeting ID: 8707 3447 128
Password: 8312 34
Call-In Number: 1(669) 900-6833
Meeting ID: 8547 0196 516
Password: 7161 17
Call-In Number: 1(669) 900-6833
Meeting ID: 8591 9877 123
Password: 3332 74
Call-In Number: 1(669) 900-6833

Tauba Weiss in memory of her beloved son, Sam
Yakov Kogan for the Yahrzeit of his beloved father, Yitzchak
Pavel & Larissa Vinnitskiy for the Yahrzeit of beloved long standing A.I. member, Jeanette Korek
The Ralph & Marsha Guggenheim Family Foundation to support the Orthodox community in San Francisco
Marty & Goldie Sosnick for the Yahrzeit of Joseph Sosnick
Drs. Johnathan Esensten & Raquel Gardner for the Jewish Day School Transportation Fund  

Ester & Joe Kaplan for the Yahrzeit of Ester’s beloved mother, Gittel Strykowski-Cohen
Sally Weiss for the Jewish Day School Transportation Fund
Emil Knopf for the Jewish Day School Transportation Fund
Emil Knopf for the Yahrzeit of Menachem Mendel Leichter


Morning Minyan Sponsorship
Thank you to Bella Pasynkova, Polina Pasynkova and Anna Kelenson for sponsoring this week’s minyan in memory of Isaak Zelkin.

Enjoy Adath Israel's Kosher Kitchen Offerings:
Metropolitan Catering
Neshama Foods
Parasha in a Nutshell

Jacob lives the final 17 years of his life in Egypt. Before his passing, he asks Joseph to take an oath that he will bury him in the Holy Land. He blesses Joseph’s two sons, Manasseh and Ephraim, elevating them to the status of his own sons as progenitors of tribes within the nation of Israel.

The patriarch desires to reveal the end of days to his children but is prevented from doing so.

Jacob blesses his sons, assigning to each his role as a tribe: Judah will produce leaders, legislators and kings; priests will come from Levi, scholars from Issachar, seafarers from Zebulun, schoolteachers from Simeon, soldiers from Gad, judges from Dan, olive-growers from Asher, and so on. Reuben is rebuked for “confusing his father’s marriage bed”; Simeon and Levi, for the massacre of Shechem and the plot against Joseph. Naphtali is granted the swiftness of a deer, Benjamin the ferociousness of a wolf, and Joseph is blessed with beauty and fertility.

A large funeral procession consisting of Jacob’s descendants, Pharaoh’s ministers, the leading citizens of Egypt and the Egyptian cavalry accompanies Jacob on his final journey to the Holy Land, where he is buried in the Machpelah Cave in Hebron.

Joseph, too, dies in Egypt, at the age of 110. He, too, instructs that his bones be taken out of Egypt and buried in the Holy Land, but this would come to pass only with the Israelites’ exodus from Egypt many years later. Before his passing, Joseph conveys to the Children of Israel the testament from which they will draw their hope and faith in the difficult years to come: “G-d will surely remember you and bring you up out of this land to the land of which He swore to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,” (Chabad.org). 


Parasha Thought
By Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky

Yaakov had passed from this world. His twelve sons were left alone in a foreign world, and it was time for reconciliation. The brothers were afraid that with Yaakov’s passing, Yoseph would avenge them for selling him to Egypt. So, they sent the sons of Yaakov’s concubine Bilhah, with a message. “Your father commanded before his death saying,Thus shall you tell Yoseph, please, kindly forgive your brothers terrible deed and their sin for they have done you evil.” Yoseph assures them that he has no intent for retribution. In fact, he promises to sustain the brothers and their families.

The Talmud in Yevamos tells us that Yaakov would not have suspected Yoseph to be vengeful and he never issued the stated command. The Talmud extrapolates from this incident that one may twist the truth for the sake of peace and harmony. Yet it seems that there was a bit more than twisting truth. It seems that there was an overt lie. And why would they use Yaakov’s name in this untruth? If he did not suspect Yoseph as Rashi explains, then weren’t they insulting him by saying, “your father commanded”?

The 1929 Boston Braves were owned by Judge Emil E. Fuchs. Judge Fuchs cared basically for the financial management and legal affairs of the team, but the depressed economy and his unwillingness to put up with the difficult and expensive Roger Hornsby, left the team without a manager.

Judge Fuchs, an experienced adjudicator, read the rulebook and surrounded himself with a few cronies who would help him guide the team. Then he literally brought his swivel chair into the dugout and began to manage the team.

It was late in the summer of that dismal season, and the team had just been on a losing streak. Miraculously, however, it seemed that the down streak was about to end. The game was tied in the bottom of the ninth and the bases were loaded. The Braves were batting, and Judge Fuchs gave the orders to swing away.

After one strike, the batter, Joe Dugan, called time and approached his well-respected manager. “Judge,” the player suggested, “the rookie at third base is playing well behind the bag. If I drop a bunt, we’ll squeeze in the winning run!”

The judge looked sternly at the ball player. He was stunned at the mere suggestion. “Mr. Dugan,” he exclaimed, “You will do no such thing. Either we will score our runs honorably or not at all!”

The Sha’ar Bas Rabim explains that though Yaakov never explicitly gave the command to lie, he did issue a game plan for the future. Before he blessed the brothers, he gathered them together with the words, “gather yourselves together,” (Genesis 49:1-2). The charge for the future was unity, and whatever it took to achieve unity amongst the brothers was the core of Yaakov’s wishes. The brothers understood how to play the game of life and how their father Yaakov would have wanted it. Peace and harmony were the only ultimate goal. That is what all parents want for their children and that is what the objective of the twelve brothers was. It took a squeeze play, but harmony was achieved. Had Yaakov been alive to manage the situation he may have also chosen the exact game plan. Yaakov, with the guidance of his mother and a skillful deception, had his father give him the blessings that were intended for Esav.

My grandfather, Reb Yaakov Kamenetzky, of blessed memory, once told me that attaining the highest level of any attribute requires knowing when to violate it! And to that end, Avraham the stalwart of kindness and compassion, was ready to sacrifice his own son at God’s command, surely an act of seeming brutality. Yaakov, whose virtue is truth, knew when it was proper to mislead. And Yaakov’s sons who understood the virtue of Yaakov’s truth, also understood his quest for peace. They learned, very well, that though sometimes it is time to swing away, this was the time to drop a gentle bunt.

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