This article also brings to mind a passage from Leon Wieseltier's Kaddish, about the prayer podium at the front of Kesher Israel in Washington, DC.
The shul feels so worn. A red velvet cloth is thrown over the rostrum at the front of the room, directly before the ark in which the Torah scrolls are housed. Here stands the precentor, that is, the leader of the service, that is, the mourner; and as I place my hands on this cloth, which is the color of wine, I see the traces of the hands that preceded mine. There are stains in the velvet. In places it is threadbare. This is an exquisite erosion. It is not neglect that thins these instruments. Quite the contrary. The more threadbare, the better. The thinner, the thicker.This is the thickness of memory that is in the ever old siddur - now to be a buried treasure.
-----------------------------------------
Debate over old prayer books goes underground
US synagogues face grave decisions about whether to bury
holy texts
By CHAVIE LIEBER February
17, 2013, 1:27 am
NEW YORK (JTA) — After years of watching synagogue members
die or move away, the Sephardic Jewish Center of Canarsie made the difficult
decision to downsize.
The 50-year-old Brooklyn synagogue had been a thriving
center for the area’s Sephardim. But after accepting that it could no longer
pull together enough money to cover expenses, let alone muster the 10 men
necessary for daily prayer, the synagogue disposed of most of its belongings
and began holding Shabbat services in a nearby Ashkenazi shul.
But what was the center to do with its prayer books? It
owned several hundred volumes in the Spanish-Portuguese liturgical style — some
tattered, some like new and some belonging to older members that may have had
significant worth.
“We donated some to a local shul, but we had to get rid of a
lot of them and bury them,” said Rabbi Myron Rakowitz. “It was difficult
because we didn't just want to throw them out or claim them unusable. We want
other people to use them, to give them purpose when we no longer can.”
What to do with the old books — it’s a growing problem for
synagogues across the United States.
In the past six years, the three major American Jewish
denominations have released new prayer books. More than 1,500 synagogues have
purchased the books, in some cases making older versions obsolete.
More than 700 congregations have bought copies of the Reform
movement’s new Mishkan T’Filah, and hundreds more are expected to buy. The
Conservative movement’s new High Holy Days prayer book, the Lev Shalem Mahzor,
has sold nearly 260,000 copies to some 500 congregations since its 2010
release. And more than 200,000 copies of the Koren siddur released in 2009 have
been purchased by more than 300 Orthodox synagogues.
Some congregations buy pricey lots in a Jewish cemetery;
sometimes a gravedigger is hired to do the work.
The problem isn't going away. The Reform movement is working
on a new High Holy Days prayer book, or machzor, that it expects to release in
2015.
According to Jewish tradition, prayer books are holy and
cannot just be thrown out. Traditionally, they must be placed in a geniza, a
repository for holy books awaiting burial. It’s the only religiously acceptable
way to dispose of them.
“This problem is just rampant because now is the greatest
time for creativity in writing new prayers and liturgy, and it’s going to get
worse when the new machzor comes out,” said Rabbi Elaine Zecher of Boston, who
is leading a committee working on the new Reform movement prayer book. “But our
solution to bury them shouldn't be looked at negatively. This is an intentional
disposal, not a mindless disposal.”
Some synagogues have sought alternatives to the burial
option. Congregation Beth Israel in San Diego takes its old books and those of
several nearby congregations, and mails them to Jewish Prisoner Services
International in Seattle. Congregation Netivot Shalom in Berkeley, Calif., sent
its old prayer books to Hillel chapters throughout the state two years ago when
it bought new machzors.
But finding a new home for all the leftover books, some of
them decades old, can be difficult.
“Our machzorim we’re looking to get rid of now are usable,
but they are from the 1940s version,” said Rabbi Philip Scheim of Beth David
B’nai Israel Beth Am in Toronto, which is planning to upgrade to the new Lev
Shalem machzor this year. “The English translation is incredibly hard for
people to get through.” For most synagogues, if the books don’t eventually find a
home, to the ground they go. Some buy pricey lots in a Jewish cemetery; others
bury them near their synagogue. Sometimes a gravedigger is hired to do the
work.
“It’s really a shame if we have to end up burying our books.
They’d be of good use, but we just can’t find anyone to take them in,” said
Marjie Cogan of Congregation Beth Shalom in Seattle, which has been trying
unsuccessfully for years to unload 700 old machzors. “It’s a huge problem for
us because we don’t have the means to store them.”
That’s not true of Beth Am, a Conservative synagogue in
Baltimore. The synagogue’s rabbi, Daniel Burg, says there is space to
temporarily store 1,200 books that are no longer used by the congregation. Burg
hesitates to bury the books because he feels it would be wasteful.
A congregation in San Diego mails its unused books to Jewish
Prisoner Services International
“On the one hand, we don’t want to destroy God’s name or
have it fade by the books just sitting there,” Burg said. “But on the other
hand, there’s a concept of ba’al tashchit, of not wanting to just waste things.
And it’s difficult to just get rid of things that could still have use.”
Daniel Freedlander, the vice president of the Union for
Reform Judaism, says his movement is confronting the problem of book disposal
for at least the third time: first in 1975, when Gates of Prayer replaced the
old Union Prayer Book; in 1990, when a new gender-neutral version was released;
and again with Mishkan T’Filah.
“No weeks pass by without us being contacted by people
looking to get rid of their old Jewish books,” Freelander said. “A good
majority of them get donated, but we’ve come to terms that many will get
buried, and the ceremony can actually be educational for kids. Those books
can’t just sit in your attic forever.” At Temple Emanu-El in Dallas, the congregation gathers each
year before Passover to collectively dispose of unused books. A communal prayer
is recited, as is the Mourner’s Kaddish, and there’s a moment of reflection.
“We gather together at the synagogue where members bring
tattered prayer books and other sacred books that can no longer be used,” Rabbi
Debra Robbins said in an email. “We developed a creative liturgical ceremony
for families and members of all ages to participate in together, and we have a
special grave site labeled sifre kodesh,” or holy books.
Zecher noted that Jews have been burying books for centuries
to make room for new ones, and the practice will continue to grow as the
religion continues to evolve.
“It might seem wasteful,” Zecher said, “but like everything
we do, it’s with intention.”
No comments:
Post a Comment