There are people who don’t want to come to a traditional structure because they don’t like tradition,” Rabbi Hoffman says. Hence his abbreviated, participatory service in a decidedly non-synagogue site. “We cater,” he says, “to both a traditional and non-traditional crowd.”
Rabbi Niles Goldstein, a de facto spokesman for the young-and-searching segment of the Jewish community, calls the phenomenon of off-site High Holy Days services “a symptom of a problem … a reaction to the fact that so many Jewish men and women find American Jewish worship lame. It really doesn’t touch their hearts and souls in a significant way.”
Rabbi Goldstein, author of “Gonzo Judaism” (St. Martin’s Press, 2006), conducts Rosh HaShanah services in a standard setting, his New Shul in Manhattan, but in a non-standard way. Instead of a rabbi’s sermons, there is taped Bob Dylan or Leonard Cohen music —“very moving, very challenging songs.” The congregants discuss the lyrics. Or there is a staged reading of part of a play that has an appropriate, reflective theme.
The playing of music, Rabbi Goldstein observes, “would only be acceptable in the non-halachic community” that allows music to be played on Shabbat or Jewish holidays.
The decision to veer from tradition on Rosh HaShanah or Yom Kippur, he says, assumes a built-in risk, that the medium, in this case the atypical location or changes in ritual practice, will take precedence over the holidays’ message. “It’s very important to separate substance from shtick.” He doesn’t name names, but says some of the programs that offer radically different options for High Holy Days services “are shtick, more geared to entertainment than real true inspiration. The real challenge is to figure out what the right balance is.”
He defends his music-themed services. “This is not shtick,” he says. “This is a way to open up the service to the people in away that speaks to them.”
Rabbi Baron faces a similar challenge at the Temple for the Arts in L.A. Housed in the Wilshire Theater, a 2,000-seat, one-time vaudeville house, the temple under the rabbi has become “a center of arts and culture for the entire community,” with several A-list showbiz members of the Jewish community on its membership list. On Rosh HaShanah they fill the auditorium for services that include interpretive dancing, jazz presentations, dramatized stories and staged lighting.
“We’re about the arts,” Rabbi Baron says. “People come to the synagogue from all over Southern California. They feel very at home in the theater.”
Closer To God Outdoors
For some Jews, Rosh HaShanah means backpacks.
Groups that offer al fresco services find a natural constituency in people who declare that they feel closer to God when they are in touch with nature.
“When celebrating Rosh HaShanah, I want to see the stars, feel the wind and hear the birds,” says Rabbi Efraim Eisen, who led services in the Gettell Amphitheater of South Hadley, Mass., while serving as chaplain of Mount Holyoke College.
Support the New York Jewish Week
Our nonprofit newsroom depends on readers like you. Make a donation now to support independent Jewish journalism in New York.
The Baltimore Hebrew Congregation is hosting its own alternative service this year. It will hold its annual erev yom tom family service, for the first time, at Oregon Ridge Park, a municipal facility, preceded by a picnic and concert.
The free event is open to the public.
A month before the holidays, 400 people had signed up. “I expect to have double that” by the time Rosh HaShanah arrives, says Rabbi Elissa Sachs-Kohen. “I’m not surprised. For some people, just coming to the synagogue building is somewhat daunting. To take it outside is going to allow some of those folks to reconnect with their tradition. We’re trying to capture some of the awe and majesty of Rosh HaShanah in a natural place.”
On the Ten Days of Penitence, which rank with Passover as the most observed part of the Jewish calendar for wide parts of the Jewish community, this trend — no one keeps records on how many services take place in untraditional places — provides an insight into the evolving, eclectic nature of American Jewry. It’s another sign that many Jews in this country are reshaping the style, and in many cases, the content, of the High Holy Days liturgy into one over which they hold more control.
“Thirty percent of Jews are content in synagogues,” says Rabbi Jamie Korngold, alluding to national affiliation figures — that means that 70 percent aren’t. So the Westchester native who lives in Colorado formed “Adventure Rabbi: Synagogue w/o walls,” which brings a Jewish experience to the skiing-hiking-outdoorsy crowd. “Synagogue is boring for a lot of us. You sit there and the rabbi lectures at you.”
She and her staff lead Shabbat programs and hikes in Colorado’s high mountain desert.
“We do Jewish stuff outdoors,” she says. This year Rabbi Korngold will lead a Rosh HaShanah retreat at Estes Park, a national park and forest in the Rockies north of Denver.
“These are not your parents’ High Holiday services!” the Adventure Rabbi Web site states. “Leave your fancy clothing at home and come pray 8,000 feet closer to God!”
Mostly singles and young couples will come, Rabbi Korngold says. “People who are spiritually connected to the outdoors.”
Not all approve of outdoor services.
“The rabbis [who made rulings on Jewish law] were not in favor of davening outside, because there are too many distractions,” Rabbi Rosenbaum says.
Does the movement toward alternative services and venues threaten established synagogues?
Support the New York Jewish Week
Our nonprofit newsroom depends on readers like you. Make a donation now to support independent Jewish journalism in New York.
“I don’t think it’s taking away from shuls,” Rabbi Rosenbaum says. Rather, he says, it brings into the Jewish fold people who had remained outside.
“Ninety percent of the people who come to our stuff,” says Adventure Rabbi’s Rabbi Korngold, “are not involved in the Jewish community in any other way. They just wouldn’t go.”
The Adventure Rabbi participants stay in lodges; the dress code on yom tov is “casual clothes with a tallis.” Worship services are held a half-mile away, in an outdoor chapel in a clearing; wooden benches are arranged around a wooden stage. The two-hour service begins with a shofar call. Behind the chapel, the rabbi says, “are the huge peaks. You see posada pines and some aspens. You hear the elks start to bugle.”
Rabbi Korngold says she has the participants unroll an entire Torah scroll in the field and read the creation story. There is singing and discussion. “The service is accessible. It’s very experiential.”
Following the service come such programs as hikes and biking, yoga and crafts, watercolor workshops and lectures on physics.
‘Off-The-Wall Idea’
“Rosh HaShanah is our pinnacle program,” Rabbi Korngold says. “It carries forward,” generating participants’ interest for other Adventure Rabbi activities. “They’re so jazzed about being Jewish. They can’t wait for the next event.”
In New Rochelle, Rabbi Hoffman of The Flame says about 300 people come to his annual beginner’s High Holy Days services.
With no synagogues available for this year, someone had suggested Eden Wok. “What an off-the-wall idea,” the rabbi thought. Intrigued, he contacted the restaurant’s owners. “They were extremely accommodating.”
The novelty of services in a kosher restaurant was not universally appealing, says Rabbi Hoffman, who works as a litigation lawyer in Manhattan and has done Jewish outreach for nearly 40 years. “I think it turned off more people than it turned on.” With no other choice, the restaurant was rented and people came.
“The funny thing,” Rabbi Hoffman says, is “I don’t like Chinese food.” This, despite the stereotype about Jews and Chinese food.
The location, he says, drew the predictable jokes, like “Do I get a free egg roll?”
The tables were cleared from the serving area, rows of chairs were set up, supporters loaned Torah scrolls, Young Israel provided an ark and a mechitza curtain ran down the middle of the impromptu sanctuary.
“It was SRO,” Rabbi Hoffman says.
This year, as an inducement for people to come on the second day of Rosh HaShanah, which normally experiences a drop-off in the number of worshippers, he will offer a meal at the restaurant, also at no charge.
“We have to make sure that the venue doesn’t become the star,” the rabbi cautions.
Support the New York Jewish Week
Our nonprofit newsroom depends on readers like you. Make a donation now to support independent Jewish journalism in New York.
Steve Solinga, a frequent participant in Jewish Flame activities, says he and his family will go to both days’ services, and stay for the meal. “No question about it.”
“We’re going to talk to Hashem,” he says. “The location isn’t important. It didn’t distract me” last year.
Solinga’s friends heard laudatory reports about the 2006 Jewish Flame services. “I told them how great it was.
“Now all the people know about it,” he says. Some of his friends may wish to join him in the kosher restaurant this year. “It’s going to be a question if there is enough room.”