Important notice:If you haven't done so already, please subscribe to this new website-generated newsletter. Enable HTML in your email in order to be able to click on our links.The final legacy e-mail and hard copy newsletters have been sent to our mailing list. Unless you subscribe, you will no longer receive newsletters. Please tell your friends.Note: For those without Internet access, the newsletter will be sent on request via US Mail (to members who have paid their dues). Your email subscription, however, saves the community considerable labor, postage, printing and paper.Events and Services We have posted our schedule on the community events calendar. Please have a look at it to see all of the details, then join us. New items added include the following:
- High Holiday services: See calendar for times.
- Sukkah on Shabbat pot luck dinner: Friday, October 2, 2009 5 pm. See calendar for details.
- Sukkot under the stars pot luck dinner: Friday, October 9, 2009 6 pm. See calendar for details.
- Shabbat service: Saturday, November 21, 2009 10am. See calendar for details.
- Chanukah party potluck: Friday, December 11, 2009 7pm. See calendar for details.
- JCK Board meeting: Tuesday, October 13, 2009 7pm. Call any Board member for more information.
Dues and FeesAs a reminder, annual dues are now due!
- Family Membership $250
- Individual Membership $150
Please send your membership dues to us by mail or bring your check to services.We welcome all Jews and guests to worship with us even if they cannot afford the full dues.Please contact any board member to make other arrangements.Sunday School Classes.
- Classes have resumed in Lihue and Princeville.
Mahalo to Rabbi Mark Shapiro for the inspirational High Holyday Services.Congratulations to Vicki Goldberg's granddaughter, who is a recipient of the 2009 World of Children award.

moment, take a breath, slow down, and re-connect to the values we hold dear in our lives.May this be a sweet year. We pray the prayer that has been uttered since the dawn of civilization - may this be a year of peace in the world. May there be peace in Israel, in our nation, in our communities, in our homes and our hearts. Ken yehi ratzon.Carole and I would like to take this opportunity to wish you and your loved ones L'Shanah Tovah.Shalom,Marty
cantors, and Jewish educators.
When people hear that Hanna and I are going to Hawaii for the High Holydays, they chuckle with a shade of envy. “Boy, Rabbi, you fell into a great gig again" (we had a gig on the Big Island for three years).But when we had a gig in Juneau for two years, we got a different reaction. “Juneau? Why Juneau? Are you a masochist?”Nope, neither a hedonist nor a masochist. Just a retired rabbi and spouse, looking to find Jews in the newer states of the union with whom to celebrate the 5,770th birthday of the world . And the experience, no matter the weather, has been remarkably the same.Rosh Hashana is considered by our people to be the birthday of the world. Our logical side certainly agrees that this planet and the cosmos are much older than that, So 5770 stands for whatever the unknown beginning was.A midrash asks “So, was the first day of creation Rosh Hashana?” It seems like the simplest of questions. And it answers “No, the 6th day was Rosh Hashana,” And that confusing answer comes to teach us that the world didn’t really start until the creation of human beings. And that was on day six”So God didn’t just want a world. He wanted it with us, to care for it, nurture it, learn from it, and perfect ourselves. It’s OUR birthday—a time, like most birthdays to figure out what we could be and should be.Let’s celebrate with that in mind. But don’t try to blow out the candles without all the rest of us helping you.Hanna and I are looking forward to meeting many of you in the coming days.Sincerely,Rabbi Mark Shapiro
We have posted our schedule of High Holiday services on the