Tu BiShvat Light Dinner & Seder

Temple Beth Zion Delaware 805 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY, United States

Join our Temple Beth Zion family to celebrate the Birthday of the Trees! Tu BiShvat is the Jewish “Earth Day”! It is a day on which we read Jewish teachings celebrating nature and our responsibility to take care of our environment. In Israel, trees are planted. All over the globe, Jews attend Tu BiShvat seders — communal meals to celebrate the trees and enjoy tasting several varieties of fruits and nuts. Light Dinner & Seder celebrating “The Birthday of the Trees” Speaker: Stephan Kline, CEO of NECHAMA, Jewish Response to Disaster Adults $10, Children (3-12) $5 (N/C 2 and under) Not a nut-free event. Please RSVP by February 4 CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

Nora Gold

Temple Beth Zion Delaware 805 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY, United States

Dr. Nora Gold is the prize-win­ning author of five books and the founder and edi­tor of the pres­ti­gious lit­er­ary jour­nal Jew­ish Fic​tion​.net. Her books have won both The Cana­di­an Jew­ish Lit­er­ary Award and The Vine Cana­di­an Jew­ish Book Award, and her writ­ing has been praised by Alice Munro, Cyn­thia Ozick, and Dara Horn. Title: In Sick­ness and in Health / Yom Kip­pur in a Gym This new book by award-win­ning writer Nora Gold is com­posed of two novel­las: In Sick­ness and in Health and Yom Kip­pur in a Gym. In Sick­ness and in Health is an intro­spec­tive nar­ra­tive writ­ten in the sec­ond per­son. It fol­lows five days in the life of a woman named Lily, who suf­fers from an undi­ag­nosed ail­ment that leaves her bedrid­den for near­ly a week every month. When­ev­er Lily has a series of awful sick days and can’t get out of bed, her mind goes down a rab­bit hole: she assumes that her hus­band is hav­ing an affair. To express this anger, Lily learns how to say ridicu­lous curs­es and angry phras­es in oth­er lan­guages. She regur­gi­tates them in a list, momen­tar­i­ly light­en­ing the seri­ous­ness of her con­di­tion.. Because Lily’s ill­ness comes and goes reg­u­lar­ly, she describes feel­ing like two dif­fer­ent peo­ple who can­not coex­ist. Gold writes clear­ly about […]