Shofar September 2018

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September 2018

Shofar

‫שופר‬

the magazine of finchley progressive synagogue

“Lighting the Way” NIF-UK Photo Exhibit at FPS 2 Sept – 1 Oct


Shofar is always interested in hearing your news and including photos of FPS members, and their families, near and far. We welcome your articles on any relevant topic. Please send these to shofar@fps.org 2

Cover: Interfaith Chanukah celebration, Jerusalem, 2015. Source: New Israel Fund. (The NIF-UK is producing the September Tag Meir photographic exhibition ‘Lighting the Way’ at FPS).

Copy deadline is the 10th of each month. Please email all content to shofar@fps.org


From the Rabbi

rabbi rebecca birk

w

e say at this time of year ’shana tova tikateyvu: May you all be written into the Book of Life for a good year.’ But what do we actually mean? Here are ten ways to approach the new year during this period of renewal and to get the most from it. 1. Gratitude. Deut. 10:12 says, ‘Now, Israel, what does God ask of you? ... To walk in God’s ways ... and to serve God.’ The Hebrew word mah (‘what’) is similar to the word me’ah, which means ‘one hundred.’ Rabbis interpreted this verse as ‘Now, Israel, a hundred does God ask of you.’ So, a hundred blessings a day. An excellent way to feel grateful. 2. Music. Jump start the process with music and study to wake the brain and heart at Selichot service.* This year we share with FRS. David Dolan will bring his beautiful piano pieces to open up conversations with me on prayer and enquiry. 3. Apples. Visit the Newmafruit Orchard* with the community on September 2, and come back laden with apples – a novel way of beginning the year. 4. Come to services. Experiment with prayer and readings. We joke about the increase of folk attending these services but there is something special about gathering together for this reboot of our intentions, our community and ourselves. 5. Reach Out. Call and connect with people you haven’t seen for a while or that you have wittingly or unwittingly let down. 6. Reflect. On what you could have done and may do better. Use this time for introspection and renewal. 7. Question. Visit the website (below) to answer 10 private questions about yourself this Rosh Hashanah (9–19 September 2018); they are then locked in a secret vault and you receive the

answers again on Rosh Hashanah 2019. I have heard it’s great. www.renewyear.com 8. Walk. Sometimes synagogue isn’t to everyone’s taste but walking and the outdoors might be. Go by yourself or join us as we Walk into the New Year* from Kenwood House with conversation and silence. 9. Eat. Have a Rosh Hashanah Seder. Stretch out the apples and honey and bring other significant fruits, such as pomegranates for blessings, green beans for a long life. Ask questions and share intentions. Bring home grown produce for Sukkot. 10. Chai (Life). Chai is a well-known example of gematria, with a numerical value of 18. Consider committing 18 (more) hours in the congregation this coming year, to learning, to supporting security, kiddushim, adding to the garden, to singing in our services and being part of making community. * See HHD leaflet for times and places.

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From the Chair T

cathy burnstone

he new Board is due to meet before the High Holy Days and I’m pleased to report that the Board continues to be strong and committed. The Board welcomes Tamara Joseph as Honorary Secretary, Anji Pavell as Vice Chair, Melvyn Newman as Treasurer, and Chris Nash on the Executive. Although Josie Kinchin has stepped down we are fortunate that Josie continues to work on a range of tasks including drawing up Security, ‘welcome’ rotas and B’Nei Mitzvot support. Paul Silver-Myer has stepped down as Vice Chair but he has been co-opted as Vice President liaison and will continue to act as cochair when I’m away. We are grateful to Martin Silk and to Louise Gellman for their years of work, wise advice and fair-minded approach. The Board decided to support our Rabbi in focussing more exclusively on her Rabbinic tasks rather than on the more day-to-day aspects of running the synagogue. As always, the Board is willing to consider new ideas from members

as well as to receive constructive feedback. The AGM gave us the opportunity to appreciate the benefits of being part of the dynamic Liberal Judaism movement. Rabbi Baginsky reminded us that FPS is part of a forwardthinking movement committed to inclusiveness and social action. We discovered that the Biennial was fully booked and a number of late enquirers were unable to attend. The Biennial in 2020 will take place in a larger venue. A number of FPS members attended; we all enjoyed the opportunity of getting to know each other better as well as learning about other communities. I personally enjoyed using the new draft Siddur and some of the new tunes to the prayers.

friday night hosts & guests

FAQs: Can I host if I’m a terrible cook? Yes – you can host a potluck dinner so you don’t have to be responsible for feeding everyone. Can I host if my house is too small for everyone? Yes – you can host a meal in the small hall at the synagogue. Can I host if I don’t have any Shabbat things? Yes – FPS will provide a resource box including Shabbat candles, kiddush wine, challah, a sheet with blessings, and more... If you would like to sign up as a host or a guest, contact Alex at FPSfridaynight@icloud.com

There is something special about Friday night dinner. A chance to relax after a busy week, to enjoy Jewish traditions, delicious food and interesting conversation. And why not enhance the experience by sharing it with members of the community? At FPS we already experience an amazing sense of community and the feeling of sharing and belonging, and we are always interested in finding ways of maintaining and deepening community connections. Hosts to guests can be matched by their locality, as well as their interests, whether they have children of a similar age, similar hobbies and so on.

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WILL YOU HELP US CARE FOR MORE PEOPLE LIKE PAUL, THIS ROSH HASHANAH?

Charity Reg No. 802559

Paul is living with dementia. He’s been alone since he lost his beloved wife five years ago. He started coming to the dementia day centre a year ago. He’s made new friends and loves to play games. “The singing’s Paul’s favourite,” explains his niece Susan, “it always makes him smile.”

It takes £3,000 every day to keep our dementia day centres open for people like Paul. Please continue your support this Rosh Hashanah. To donate please call 020 8922 2600 or visit jewishcare.org/donate

#PeopleOfJewishCare

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The Kadoorie Synagogue in Porto O

ur holiday in northern Portugal would not have been complete without a visit to Porto, the capital of the north. And our visit to Porto would not have been complete without a visit to the Kadoorie Mekor Haim Synagogue. But what’s the connection between the Hong Kongbased fabulously wealthy Kadoorie family and the largest synagogue on the Iberian Peninsula? While my internet search left me without a direct answer to my question, it did teach me that a certain Elly Kadoorie was a Jewish Iraqi immigrant to Hong Kong who arrived in 1880 with the proverbial shilling in his pocket. He found work with the Sassoon family, and by 1901 he had cofounded China Light & Power, currently suppling electricity to 80% of Hong Kong’s population. The rise of the Kadoories to being one of the wealthiest families in Asia (net worth US$11B as of November 2017, according to Forbes Magazine) was not straightforward. When the Japanese occupied Hong Kong in 1942 many family members were imprisoned. Their Peninsula Hotel was taken over by the Japanese as their occupation headquarters. Sir Elly, knighted in 1942 for his achievements, died in Hong Kong’s Stanley Prison Camp in 1944 before seeing his sons reclaim and rebuild the family businesses. With gusto and grit, Elly’s sons Lawrence and Horace repossessed the family’s hotel after liberation in 1945 and turned it into the flagship of their international chain of luxury hotels. When four years later China seized most of the family assets, Lawrence deliberately instituted floodlit night-shifts for construction crews, 6

sarah rosen-webb

defying China’s threats and demonstrating his reportedly ‘almost childlike faith in the future of Hong Kong’. With genuine regard for the welfare of their workers, the Kadoories refused cheap labour and paid fair wages. They supported practical local charities and established wider philanthropic projects. ‘Wider philanthropic projects’, that’s the link! For when Portugal came under the rule of Antonio de Oliveira Salazar in 1929, Salazar made it clear that ‘Portuguese Nationalism’ and his dictatorship did not include ‘pagan antihuman ideals that glorified a race’. In 1937 Salazar wrote that he had no intention of following the Nuremberg laws. A telegram to the Portuguese Embassy in Berlin in 1938, made it clear to the German Reich that Portuguese law did not allow distinction based on race and, therefore, Portuguese Jewish citizens should not be discriminated against. This grand synagogue, funded in part by the Kadoorie family, was built in 1938 to support the Jewish community that Salazar welcomed and to serve as the headquarters of the Jewish Community of Oporto. Thus, a new chapter of the story of Jews in Portugal opened. A visit to the Kadoorie is worth it. The synagogue website, however, is difficult to use, responses to emails are slow, the congregation is quite orthodox, and security is tight. Once admitted, you will be welcomed and shown around. You might also learn this community’s role in helping Jews come to Portugal and escape Nazi persecution. Be sure to make an appointment before attempting to visit.


Beit Tefillah

services at fps

services – september Friday 30 August

6.30pm Kabbalat Shabbat Service

Saturday 1 September

11.00am Shabbat Service 8.00pm Selichot Service with FRS 101 Fallow Ct Ave N12 0BE

Friday 7 September

6.30pm Shabbat Service

Saturday 8 September

11.00am Shabbat Service

Sunday 9 September

6.30pm Erev Rosh Hashanah Service*

Monday 10 September

9.15am Rosh Hashanah Family Service* Tot breakout activities 11.15am Rosh Hashanah Traditional Service* Teen discussion

Friday 14 September

6.30pm Kabbalat Shabbat Service

Saturday 15 September

11.00am Shabbat Shuva Service

Tuesday 18 September

7.30pm Kol Nidre Service (Fast begins 6.54pm)*

Wednesday 19 September

10.30am Yom Kippur Services* (& see p.8)

Friday 21 September

6.30pm Shabbat Service

Saturday 22 September

11.00am Shabbat Service

Sunday 23 September

5.30pm Sukkot Sanctuary Event* 6.30pm Erev Sukkot Service*

Monday 24 September

11.00am Sukkot Service*

Friday 28 September

6.30pm Zayin Friday night & Sukkot Sleepover

Saturday 29 September

11.00am Shabbat Service celebrating Maya Stubbings Bat Mitzvah

Sunday 30 September

6.30pm Erev Simchat Torah Service*

Monday 1 October

11.00am Simchat Torah Service*

*Full Service information in HHD Booklet

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Beit Knesset Some events might be cancelled due to High Holy Days. Please check beforehand.

community events, all welcome!

Mondays @ 7.30pm, £4. There are even small prizes for winners! Contact Paul Silver-Myer via synagogue office on 020 8446 4063

20, 27 September & 4 October, 12.00-1.00pm ‘Introduction to Talmud’ with Rabbi Adam Frankenberg 27 September, 7.00pm Delving into Judaism; 8.00pm ‘How to Lead Shivah’ with Rabbi Rebecca

rosh chodesh

cafe thursday

bridge group

Taking a break during High Holy Days. Contact Wika Dorosz on vdorosz@gmail.com book club

Wednesday 12 September @ 8.00pm The Book Club welcomes you to their meetings, held in people’s homes on the second Wednesday of each month. We choose a variety of books, many—but by no means all—of Jewish interest. The only condition is that the person recommending a book must have read (and loved) it! and that it is available in paperback. Contact Sheila King Lassman sheila@waitrose.com or Edgar Jacobsberg on e.jacobsberg@gmail.com learn

Thursdays, 6 September, 12.00-1.00pm Rosh Hashanah with Rabbi Rebecca 13 September, 7.00-8.00pm Delving into Judaism: ‘This is Real’ with Rabbi Rebecca

Thursdays 13 (closed 20 September) @ 1.00pm £6 for a freshly-prepared 3-course lunch. For menus or more information contact Nicola Marzell via the synagogue office: 020 8446 4063 pilates

Thursdays @ 6.30pm led by Tali Swart. Beginners to intermediate; individually tailored instruction. Payment in blocks of six, roughly £8 per lesson. We are now in the large hall so we can accommodate more people. Contact taliswort@btconnect.com cafe ivriah

Saturdays (Term time), 9.45-10.45am All welcome to an informal, wide-ranging and topical discussion, with topics varying from the weekly Torah portion to current affairs. Over coffee and biscuits, between Ivriah drop-off and morning service.

yom kippur service timings, wednesday 19 september

10.30am 1.15pm 3.00pm 4.00pm 4.45pm 5.30pm 6.00pm 7.00pm 7.15pm

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Traditional service Yom Kippur Shiur; Family Service and Tot breakout activities Musaf, and Teen breakout Youth Board Games going into Neilah/Havdalah Minchah Service Yizkor Memorial Service Neilah Service Havdalah Breaking the Fast, and Nail in the Sukkah


Beit Midrash 2 September – 1 October ‘Lighting the Way’ Photographic Exhibition For the month of September, FPS will be hosting an exhibition of photographs called ‘Lighting the Way’ showcasing the work of Israeli antiracism group Tag Meir, who support victims of hate crime and educate against racism. The exhibition has been produced by the New Israel Fund UK and will be shown in the Small Hall. 6 September – Learn for Rosh Hashanah with Rabbi Rebecca Thursdays 20, 27 September & 4 October, 12.00-1.00pm – Introduction to Talmud with Rabbi Adam Frankenberg In these three sessions we will look at three sections from the Babylonian Talmud (the Bavli), all texts will be available in English (although we will dip into the original languages of the Talmud). Key ideas and personalities will be introduced as they arise, as well as a general and gentle

learning at fps

introduction to the Daf (Talmudic page) and terminology. In true talmudic tradition vigorous debate is encouraged. The three sessions will work together but anyone is welcome to come to any or all of them because they also work as stand-alone sessions. And a bit about me (in the third person): Adam Frankenberg was ordained out of LBC in 2015 after completing five years there. Before that he studied at Manchester taking an MA in Jewish Studies and before that at Keele (Biochemistry and Chemistry). As a child he and his family were members at Menorah Synagogue in Manchester. After coming to London Adam wasn’t a member anywhere until joining FPS where he now feels very much at home.

join the 50/50 club!

It’s a win-win situation! It’s also a way of supporting the synagogue while enjoying the chance to win a small cash prize. Why bother? Because FPS needs all the financial help it can get and this is a way of adding to its coffers at little or no cost to oneself depending on one’s luck. The way it works is that a £20 fee is paid to join the club for a year. Half of it is a donation to the synagogue and the other half goes into a prize pool, hence ‘50/50’. A draw takes place at the FPS Council meeting each month between October and the following July. Three participants win a share of the pot, so each Club member has ten chances to win up to £30 depending on how many participate.

The more who are signed up the more FPS gains and the more each individual stands to win. Take out membership in the name of your children and grandchildren – it’s a great way to provide them with a serendipitous gift! An application form will be enclosed with next month’s Shofar. 50/50 club draws, july winners:

1st Andrew Hochhauser £25 2nd Emilia Lassman-Watts £20 3rd Maeve Silver £15

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Notice Board together in barnet ‘walk in their shoes’

This fundraising walk will begin at 10.00am on Sunday 16 September and probably go on until about 3.00pm. There will be seven or eight stops at different host Night Shelter venues along the way (for refreshments!). Anyone can join for the whole walk or for a part of it. Registration is £25. For more information contact Elliott Karstadt treasurer@togetherinbarnet.org or register at https://goo.gl/forms/D7wrKGdMeSzEy0tz1

volunteer position at the jewish council for racial equality

The Jewish Council for Racial Equality (JCORE) runs a mentoring project matching UK-trained doctors with refugee doctors seeking to requalify so that they can practice in the UK. They are looking for a volunteer to take over the running of this project. Commitment: 1 day per week. Training will be given. For more information and to apply, go to www.jcore.org.uk/volunteer

walking into the new year, 5779

newmafruit trip

Meet at Kenwood House @ 10.00am Wed. 12 September Led by Emma Prinsley

The pre-Rosh Hashanah family outing to Newmafruit Orchards on 2 September leaves at 9.30am, returning at 5.30pm. Pictures and report in October’s Shofar.

Thu. 13 September Led by Josie Kinchin

a thank you from the library

Fri. 14 September Led by Helene Dane

We would like to thank Patricia Tausz for the many books she has donated to our library. These came from her parents’ home, following the recent death of Patricia’s mother, Martha Tausz. They are all books of Jewish interest acquired mainly by her father who was formerly involved with education in the ULPS. Gabby Essinger and Wika Dorosz

Tue. 11 September Led by Rabbi Rebecca Birk

Sun. 16 September Led by Paul Silver-Myer Mon. 17 September Led by Rabbi Rebecca Birk upcoming high holy days services at fps

Full information and tickets will be mailed to members. Non-member tickets will also be available. Submit applications for guest tickets to FPS office by Tuesday 4 September. Sun. 9 September Erev Rosh Hashanah service Mon. 10 September Rosh Hashanah service Tue. 18 September Kol Nidre service Wed. 19 September Yom Kippur services Sun. 23 September Erev Sukkot service Mon. 24 September Sukkot service high holy day appeal

Join us in supporting our HHD Appeal with your choice of this year’s charities (nominated by FPS members), return your form and cheque made payable to the Finchley Progressive Synagogue.

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Notice Board june bagel fundraiser update

Philip Raphael and his team have done it again! Following on from last year’s successful Bagel stall at East Finchley Festival, FPS showed up again with its smoked salmon and cream cheese bagels on Sunday 24 June. As the photo testifies, willing hands and great self-control around the produce contributed to a good time and a profit of £544!

people welcome to new members: Lionel Derriey, Jonathan Jacobs and David Smee, Angela Stern, Colin Summers mazal tov to Beverly and David Aarons on the birth of a granddaughter Mika Ofra Rosenwasser and David Burns on the birth of a grandson Isaac Reuben Neil and Sarah Rosen-Webb on the birth of a grandson Dov Harry Helfman Laura and Jonty O’Connor on the birth of Elijah Jacob on 18 August (pictured) Laura Lassman and family on the marriage of Daniel to Arta in Riga in August Michael Tamman and Stephanie Werrell-Smyth on their marriage on 2 September

Maya Stubbings who celebrates her bat mitzvah at FPS on 29 September The following members who have special birthdays in September: Lilian Kramer, Sylvia Mendoza, Anthony Kay, Leon Gevertz, Richard Selby well done & good luck

To all our GCSE and A-level students and good luck to all youngsters starting new schools or going off to university in September condolences To the families and friends of Devorah Barnett and Avril Stein who died in July stone setting The stone setting of the late Sheila Isenberg will take place at Edgwarebury Cemetery at 1.45 pm on Sunday 7 October and will be officiated by Rabbi Rebecca Birk

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FPS Players and ‘The Disputation’ It’s

a truism that timing is everything in theatre. Take the timing of the Stanley Volk staged reading of ‘The Disputation’. Performed on July 21, it was 755 years to the day since the historic confrontation known as the Disputation of Barcelona (1263) – the strategy being that a victory for the Christian side would lead to a mass conversion of the Jews. Playing to a packed house, an affable King James I of Aragon (Paul Silver-Meyer) strolled down the aisle with his well-dressed but wily lady, Queen Yolanda (Phillipa Carr). Exposition unfolds over drinks, as the royals discuss the upcoming debate between Pablo Christiani (Edgar Jacobsberg) and Rabbi Moses Ben Nachman (Richard Greene). With the Dominican, Raymond De Penaforte (Mark Laikin), displaying his heavy bias, Pablo Christiani—a Spanish convert from Judaism to Christianity—emerged wearing a wig with a bald pate. This placed the Jewish side one up in the Costume department (the kippah is by far the better look). Rabbi Moses ben Nachman (aka

ca. cranston

Nachmanides) pulled his tallit gadol over his head, and stepped up to the lectern. The debate was on. Only to be upstaged temporarily as Rabbi Danny Rich’s barking dog stood his ground at the sight of the medieval gathering on the bimah. Prior to the theatre business (BTW Rabbi Nachman won the dispute but lost his domicile) Rabbi Rebecca and Student Rabbi Anna Posner from FRS jointly held a Tisha B’Av service. The siddur also dealt with opposing points of view, this time concerning the relevance or otherwise of Tisha B’Av and mourning the destruction of the Temples. Nachmanides provides a thematic link between Tisha B’Av and the staged reading: alone and exiled, he is credited with reestablishing the Jewish community in Jerusalem following its destruction by Crusaders in 1099. ‘The Disputation’ playwright, Hyam Maccoby (1924-2004), was a dramatist and British Jew who specialised in distinguishing between Judeo-Christian traditions and who worked as a librarian at Leo Baeck College. His grandfather, Rabbi Hyam Maccoby (1858–1916), aka the ‘Kamenitzer Maggid’, would have been a welcome addition to the FPS Green Team, being a passionate advocate of vegetarianism and animal welfare.

FPS Players, left to right: Edgar Jacobsberg, Mark Laikin, Philippa Carr, Paul Silver-Myer, Richard Greene. The Volk production was assisted by Adrian Lister and Alan Milner Costumes by Stanley Volk. Catering by Maureen Lobatto.

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maya stubbing’s bat mitzvah, 29 september

Hello, my name is Maya Stubbings and my Bat Mitzvah is on the September 29. I will be chanting a portion from Parasha Ki Tissa which is about Moses going up Mount Sinai for the second time to receive the ten commandments (he smashed the first ones after the Israelites built the golden calf!). I think the portion has a message about keeping faith in what you believe in and giving second chances as God did to the Jews.

Some of my hobbies include playing clarinet and piano, singing, bullet journaling, art, writing and reading. I love reading which is why I chose the charity BookTrust for my tzedakah project. In July I also held a charity concert that raised over £250. I am really looking forward to my Bat Mitzvah and celebrating with my family and friends. I would like to say a huge thank you to my teacher John Rubenstein for always bringing biscuits to our Hebrew lesson at Ivriah and supporting me through my journey.

our ljy-netzer israel tour

Ruben Qassim writes: My Israel tour experience was probably the best month of my life! I learnt about my heritage and about the beautiful country flowing with ‘milk and honey’. Not everywhere was easy. Our tour let us hear experiences from all sides. I was particularly interested in the Bereaved Parents’ Forum. I found it truly spiritual and inspirational seeing how Jews interact in our homeland. My peers shared this treasured experience with me, learning that all Jews need each other in this dog-eat-dog world. I would like to thank

everyone at FPS for contributing to my beloved trip which I will never forget. It has truly been a life-changing time for me in Eretz Yisrael. Raphy Klinger-Fixler writes: Israel tour was a truly magical experience, with memories that will stick with me for a very long time! I strengthened bonds with so many people and I know that I have a group of life-long friends. Every day was packed with exciting activities, from snorkelling in the Red Sea to Camel riding in the desert. One moment that was truly special for me was waking up at 3.30am to climb Masada in darkness; hiking to the peak to watch the sun slowly rise with an incredible view that I won’t forget. Tour has a special effect where for three weeks you are encapsulated in a bubble with your best friends and you end up completely forgetting about the outside world. Photo: Raphy Klinger-Fixler, Ruben Qassim, Hannah Gellman & Ella Balint-Kurti with leader Rosa Slater, daughter of FPS member Miriam Dwek

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Fun Page Instructions: As you look for the hidden words, remember that they can be horizontal, vertical, or diagonal—frontward or backward. Contributed by Leanne Guenther

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Contacts

fps website: www.fps.org

finchley progressive synagogue

Maureen Lobatto, Louise Gellman

54 Hutton Grove N12 8DR 020 8446 4063 www.fps.org facebook.com/finchleyprog

President: Alan Banes

Rabbi Rebecca Birk – rabbi@fps.org Emeritus Rabbi: Dr Frank Hellner Community Development Manager: Zoe Jacobs – zoe@fps.org

Life President: Sheila King Lassman Vice Presidents: Renzo Fantoni, Josie Kinchin, Alex Kinchin-Smith, Laura Lassman, Lionel King Lassman, John Lewis, Paul Silver-Myer, Andrea Rappoport, Joan Shopper contacts

Musicians in residence: Franklyn Gellnick, Dean Staker

Board of Deputies Reps: Janet Tresman, Stanley Volk

Synagogue Manager: Pauline Gusack pauline@fps.org

Beit Midrash (Adult Education): Adrian Lister adulteducation@fps.org

Premises Manager: Howard Hamerton

Beit Tefillah (Rites & Practices): Valerie Joseph

executive 2018

Café Thursday: Nicky Marzell

Chair: Cathy Burnstone, chair@fps.org

Care in the Community: Jacquie Fawcett jacquie@fps.org

Vice-Chair: Anjanette Pavell, ViceChairAP@fps.org Honorary Secretary: Tamara Joseph, honsec@fps.org Sam King, sam@fps.org Phillip Raphael, security@fps.org Ann Pelham, annp@fps.org Simon Cooper, scooper@fps.org Chris Nash, chrisn@fps.org Treasurer: Melvyn Newman, treasurer@fps.org

Website Editor: Philip Karstadt fpswebsite@fps.org Shofar Editor: CA. Cranston – shofar@fps.org Shofar Team: Sarah Rosen-Webb, Wika Dorosz FPS Office: administrator@fps.org The Finchley Progressive Synagogue is a company limited by guarantee (Company No 9365956) and a registered charity (Charity No 1167285) whose registered office is 54 Hutton Grove, Finchley, London N12 8DR

board members

Phillip Raphael, Samantha King,

ashley page

janet tresman

insurance brokers

mediator & collaborative family law solicitor

Commerce House 2a Litchfield Grove London N3 2TN

Altermans Solicitors 239 Regents Park Road, London N3 3LF

Tel. 0208 349 5100 16

Office phone: 0208 346 1777 Email: janet@altermans.co.uk


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