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September 30, 2025

A Moment in Time: “Preparing for Yom Kippur”

Dear all,

Last weekend, our Temple Akiba community gathered at the beach for Tashlich—a ritual of casting our burdens into the waves, releasing the heaviness in our hearts that keeps us from being whole.

We do this before Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, as a wake-up call—a spiritual jolt reminding us to pause, to realign, to ask:

Who are the people who matter most to me?

Have I truly connected with them?

And if not—what am I waiting for?

Today, as the gates of Yom Kippur draw near, this is our moment in time.

A moment to pick up the phone.

A moment to bridge the distance.

A moment to enter 5786 not distracted, but deliberate— with hearts open, lives aligned, and love renewed.

With love and shalom,

Rabbi Zachary R. Shapiro

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Craving What Never Changes

Human beings crave the new. That’s especially true with current events. The news changes seemingly by the hour. Even if we know it’s bad news, we’re riveted. The never-ending news feed injects a constant flow of electricity into our lives. It keeps us in the know.

We’re aware of the intoxicating effect of news, but what about the opposite of news— those things that never change, that are always old?

Look, for example, at the Jewish holidays. They never change. They always show up exactly as they were last year.

Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Sukkot, Simchat Torah, Hanukkah, Passover, Purim, all of them— they never fail us. They don’t care how we feel or what mood we’re in. Like clockwork, they show up to serve us, year after year.  

It’s easy to take such obvious things for granted. Indeed, we take for granted anything that never changes, anything we can always count on. By the time Rosh Hashanah rolls around, we’re not in awe of its arrival because we’ve known all year it would show up. We’re more concerned about getting tickets for the service. 

For some reason, though, this year I have a new sense of appreciation, even a sense of awe, for Jewish holidays that always show up. Maybe I’ve been so dizzy with the speed of change around us that I’m craving anything that stays in place, anything that doesn’t change.

I attended a service on Rosh Hashanah that hasn’t changed in a thousand years. There I was in Pico-Robertson in a shul where I sang the same Rosh Hashanah melodies my ancestors sang in Morocco centuries ago, melodies that only come out this time of year.

Nothing had moved. Nothing had changed.

The only things that moved perhaps were my heart and soul, and the nostalgic part of my brain that longs for the days when I would stand next to my father in Casablanca while singing those very same melodies.

We all have these moments when intense familiarity moves us by its unblemished presence, its very absence of change.

That also holds true for words. The fact that Jews still read from the same Torah scroll may be the ultimate expression of the power of things that don’t change. The world may be spinning out of control, but century after century, our Torah stays exactly as is.

I’ve developed an affinity over the years for things that don’t change — things that don’t try to win me over.

That Casablanca minyan I attended on Rosh Hashanah did nothing to win me over. It was just there, humble, authentic, earnest.

When the rabbi got up to speak, there was no effort to connect to current events or what we’re all feeling these days. No, he spoke about God and Rosh Hashanah. He was trying to be relevant not to our time but to the specific time that had brought us together — the first day of the Jewish year, the day of Creation, judgment and introspection and what that day demanded of us.

The rabbi was sharing what was on his mind, not what he thought was on our mind.

Of course, Jews have always modified aspects of the Jewish tradition to make it more relevant to its time. That’s why we have different denominations. It’s part of our great kaleidoscope. What turns me on about a service that hasn’t changed in 1,000 years won’t necessarily turn on other Jews. 

But beyond the issue of individual taste and customs, what matters most about the Jewish holidays is simply that they exist —that they always show up as our rock of stability.  

Think of the weekly holiday of Shabbat. We spend the week immersed in the fast-paced frenzy of the world and the stress of our lives, and then what shows up at sundown on Friday? Yes, our very own weekly Rosh Hashanah — that blessed day of renewal that comes to rescue us, week after week.

After Yom Kippur comes Sukkot, another holiday that never fails us, another chance to reconnect with our ancestors and with the lessons of gratitude and humility. Sukkot speaks both to the frailty of the present and the sturdiness of a past that has nourished us for millennia. 

Ironically, the fact that our holidays never change enables us to change. We study their timeless lessons to make timely changes in our lives. While they stay the same, we grow. While they stay old, we can renew ourselves.

We know that things that always change  — like the news we drown in every day — can never renew us. They can only titillate us.

Jewish holidays, on the other hand, are like a reliable old friend. We love them because they bring out our best, and they’re always there when we need them.

In this month of holiness, the timeless beauty of the holidays will show up to help us uncover our own holiness. They show up and never change, so that we can show up and change.

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Chessed Etrog Project Doubles Sales, Bringing Hope to Israeli Farmers After Oct. 7

The Chessed Etrog Project began two years ago, following the attack on Israel on Oct. 7. Many farmers in Israel were struggling, both due to a shortage of workers and difficulties distributing and selling their produce. 

Rabbi Mickey Katzburg, who learned about this struggle, decided to help the farmers and launched the Chessed Etrog Project. It started with the belief that, with a little creativity, everyday actions could be fused with acts of kindness.

Katzburg, the founder of the World Center for Jewish Education, told The Journal in an interview after the launch that they had reached out to Jewish organizations in the U.S. and the U.K., inviting them to join in. “We wanted to offer added value,” he said.

Last year, 5,000 etrog were sold in the U.S., and this year the number has doubled to 10,000. “I know it’s an ambitious number, but we are hopeful we’ll be able to sell as many,” Tania Suares, the project manager, said. “We have seen a lot of support from Los Angeles, Florida, Texas and Minnesota this year, and we are excited to see that momentum growing.”

The response from the Jewish community has been incredibly heartening, she said. “We’ve seen engagement across the spectrum: Reform, Conservative and Orthodox communities alike are all eager to find meaningful ways to connect and give back.”

The etrog is a citron, a large, fragrant citrus fruit that is one of the Four Species used during the Jewish festival of Sukkot. It is considered a symbol of beauty and heart, representing a person’s inner devotion and integrity. During Sukkot, the etrog is held together with the lulav (palm branch), hadas (myrtle), and aravah (willow) in a ritual waving in all directions, symbolizing unity and gratitude for the harvest. Many people also display the etrog in their sukkah as part of holiday decorations and blessings.

This year, Milken Community School in Los Angeles partnered with the Chessed Etrog Project, purchasing etrog sets to use as a teaching tool and introduce students to the mitzvah of the lulav and etrog. “They wanted to take their involvement further and do something bigger with their community,” Suares said. “In addition to already supporting the Chessed Etrog mission of helping Gaza-border farmers, Milken has also adopted Nir Oz, a community deeply affected by Oct. 7, as part of their rebuilding efforts. They saw a beautiful opportunity to partner with us to sell etrog sets to their broader community, creating a meaningful way to combine both missions. It’s truly a win-win-win: families receive their beautiful etrog sets, Israeli farmers are supported, and the community of Nir Oz feels embraced in its path to recovery.”

Seeing the impact the project has made has given the team confidence to expand their mission. This year, they are also supporting Israel Employment Innovation (IEI), which helps reserve soldiers transition back into civilian life through meaningful employment. Many organizations care for reservists, but this focus is unique: finding steady work restores routine, confidence and dignity, creating a ripple effect that strengthens not only the soldier but also their family, community, and society. “We see employment as a cornerstone of resilience, and that’s why we are so committed to supporting IEI alongside our farmers.”

Thanks to the project and the participation of many synagogues, schools and organizations, farmers in Israel are now regaining their rhythm and feeling hopeful again. Sales are up, and spirits are stronger, but full recovery — both emotionally and economically — will still take time. “They are steadily returning to their pre-Oct. 7 routines, and many are finally able to welcome back their full workforce,” said Suares. “The growth in etrog sales has given them a powerful sense of support and optimism for the future, and they feel the embrace of the global Jewish community.”

Purchase Etrogs online at https://jewisheducation.net/4-minim/, or at The Los Angeles Lulav and Etrog Market, 9031 W. Pico Blvd., S. Wetherly Drive, one block east of Doheny

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How Yom Kippur Helps Us Stop Playing the Blame Game

This year, once again I will be standing in synagogue along with my community for Yom Kippur, the most sacred day of the Jewish calendar. On more than ten separate occasions, I’ll strike my chest, confessing to a litany of sins, like bad business dealings, disrespecting the elderly — and committing violence. 

Most of my friends don’t do many of the things to which we find ourselves confessing, so why do we recite this list?

The Day of Atonement’s central prayer contains a “Worst-of-Sins” list, with every single one confessed in the plural. It’s always we sinned, not I sinned. We committed slander. We engaged in futile conversation. Even the most pious will admit to things they did not, and would not, do.

“We not me” is a spiritual affirmation that dates back to the earliest days of religious tradition. Yom Kippur’s observance is commanded to the Israelites in Leviticus (16:29) not as an individual obligation, but in plural second-person terms: “For on this day atonement shall be made for you [in the plural] to purify you [plural] of all your [plural] sins; you [plural] shall be purified before God.” While we also take responsibility as individuals, here the repentance is for “us,” a reminder that our fate is shared and intertwined.

On Yom Kippur, Jews don’t just pray as individuals. We pray as one. We are a community shouldering the weight of our wrongs. We don’t pass judgment or pass the buck. We seek commonality with empathy.

We live in an age that thrives on finger-pointing. Politicians win points not by solving problems but by assigning blame. Social media is built to amplify outrage, rewarding whoever shouts “it’s their fault” the loudest. Even in our homes, we instinctively blame others—our coworkers for the missed deadline, our spouse for the messy kitchen, our kids for the chaos. The blame game is easier than accountability. Yet this usually leaves relationships frayed and problems unsolved.

Yom Kippur represents another approach—that of the second-century mystic Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai. He relayed a parable of a group of passengers on a ship. One person began to drill a hole under his seat. Other passengers protested, “What are you doing?” The individual replied, “Why does it bother you? I am only drilling under my seat, not yours.” They replied: “When the water enters and the boat sinks, we too drown.” The passengers, of course, were responsible for the individual, and the person for them. Blame would do nothing to keep the ship afloat.

The collective acknowledgment of guilt on Yom Kippur interrupts our natural inclination to blame, helps us unravel knots, and forces us to reflect on the ways we need each other. We stop pointing fingers. We focus on what matters and how we can fix things.

Once a year, we stand shoulder to shoulder and chant our sins out loud. Wrapped in solidarity with those who may have lived very differently from us, we affirm: “Your failings are my failings. My repentance is yours.”

Jewish mystics see this as a sacred act of repair with metaphysical ripple effects. With each confession, we concede that a spiritual rupture has occurred. In taking ownership as a group, we commit to mending the tear—to restoring goodness and light toward its perfect, primordial form. This is what the Kabbalists referred to as Tikkun Olam—the work of healing a fragmented world.

Life gives us an endless supply of excuses to shift responsibility. At work, at home, in society—there’s always someone else to blame. But Yom Kippur teaches that repair begins only when we stop outsourcing guilt and start owning our share. Striking our chest as we confess is a visceral reminder that none of us is perfect. We’re all human, flawed, and bound together—and we must literally take that to heart.

We cannot fix everything alone, nor can we keep blaming others for the world’s brokenness. We return together. That’s one lesson Yom Kippur offers—not just to Jews, but to anyone exhausted by the culture of blame: when we take responsibility as a collective, we create the possibility of real change.


Rabbi Dr. Benji Levy is a global educator and the CEO of Share.Fund.

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