Jewish families celebrate Rosh Hashana
Amy R. Spurgeon
NEWPORT MESA -- Hundreds of Jewish families gathered at sundown
Friday to observe the beginning of Rosh Hashana -- the Jewish holiday
that marks the beginning of the Jewish New Year.
The 10 days that follow are called the Days of Awe and Jews around the
world will spend time focusing on repentance, judgment and atonement. The
High Holy Days are considered the second major cycle of festivals in the
Jewish year and will end Sept. 20 with Yom Kippur.
“This is a time of introspection,” said Dr. Lee Berman, president of
Temple Bat Yahm of Newport Beach. “It is a time to be thankful for the
freedom to worship.
“This is a time for the Jewish community.”
Berman’s 14-year-old son, Joey, said High Holy Days are a special time
of year because he is reminded of the importance of being good and kind
toward others.
Hundreds of well-dressed people streamed into Temple Bat Yahm on
Friday while cars outside filled the streets. People young and old hugged
one another as they entered the large house of worship.
Holocaust survivor Erzsebeth Freifeld stood among the crowd while her
family found their seats.
“This holiday brings everything back,” said Freifeld, 83, who lost her
entire family in the Holocaust. “It reminds me of my parents.”
Wide-eyed 10-year-old Peter de Penne said this was his first time
worshiping at Temple Bat Yahm, which is a reform congregation. De Penne
comes from an Orthodox Jewish background where the rules are more strict.
“I kind of have to be here and I kind of want to be here,” de Penne
said while holding his prayer book and wearing the traditional yarmulke,
a skullcap Jewish men wear signifying the respect that man has for God.
One biblical ritual during Rosh Hashana is the blowing of the shofar,
or ram’s horn, which symbolizes the awakening of slumbering souls. Apples
and honey are also eaten to welcome a sweet new year.
Temple Isaiah of Newport Beach and Temple Bat Yahm both held services
at 8 p.m. Friday. Temple Isaiah will hold worship services at 10 a.m.
today and Sunday. Bat Yahm will hold a 9 and 10:45 a.m. service today.
“This is the beginning of a new spirit and a new hope,” said Flory Van
Beek of Temple Isaiah.
Bat Yahm members will join Rabbi Mark Miller and the cantor at North
Star Beach in Newport at 1:30 p.m. today for the “Tashlich,” or the
religious act of going to a body of water to cast away sins.
The Pacific Community of Secular Humanistic Jews is planning a Rosh
Hashana program for from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday at the Marriott Suites
Hotel in Costa Mesa.
Yom Kippur services are slated for 1 p.m. Sept. 20 at Orange Coast
Unitarian Universalist Church in Costa Mesa. Group members said the
services will strive to demonstrate the response of Secular Humanistic
Judaism to the changes of the contemporary world.
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