The UJA Federation has partnered with several local synagogues in Brooklyn to launch an initiative called “Shofar Across Brooklyn.” This program aims to bring the sound of the shofar, a traditional Jewish instrument used during religious ceremonies, to the entire Brooklyn community. As part of this initiative, members of participating synagogues will travel to various locations across the borough, including parks and street corners, to blow the shofar and spread the spirit of the Jewish New Year. The program’s goal is to foster a sense of unity and bring joy to community members during these challenging times..
NEW YORK – The ancient sound is a little different every time you hear it, but the blast of the shofar is one that has resonated in the Jewish community for millennia.
“It’s our alarm clock. It’s to make sure that we’re not sleepwalking through life. To say if you only had one day left, if this was your last year, how would you want to be living? Wake up!” explains Rabbi Michelle Dardashti of the Kane Street Synagogue, a historic sanctuary which leaders say is the oldest continuously operating synagogue in Brooklyn.
Observing the customs of the holiday, from the foods to the sounds, is important to local families, including 8-year-old Pella and her dad, Josh.
“You eat apples and honey to show that the new year is going to be a sweet new year,” Pella says.
“It’s super important it to give kids something in terms of ritual that is fun for them, that they experience, and have joy with,” says Josh, a congregant of Romemu Brooklyn.
Hearing the sounds of the shofar is traditionally required of all who observe the holiday. That’s why leaders at UJA Federation of New York are gearing up for their fourth annual Shofar Across Brooklyn, a program which started in 2020 at the height of the pandemic.
“The Jewish community in Brooklyn is one of the largest in the world, and there are so many people that won’t find themselves in a synagogue for so many reasons. Either they’re homebound or they’re have too many kids to drag around or they’re just not comfortable in a synagogue,” says Rebecca Saidlower, UJA Brooklyn’s Executive Director of Community Mobilizers.
The program is an effort to bring this mystical sound to more than 20 local parks and public spaces.
“It’s happening the exact same time that our ancestors did it, or that somebody in Coney Island’s doing it. So it’s like really unifying in time, and the sound is unmistakable,” says Sarah Schmerler, congregant at Kane Street Synagogue who will be blowing the shofar in Cobble Hill Park.
Sunday at 4:30 p.m., the sound of the shofar will ring across more than 20 locations across the borough.
“As a Jewish person who has family members who’ve known oppression, religious freedom is being able to walk into the center of Brooklyn, like carrying a shofar on this pier and not to be afraid for a second. New Yorkers are amazing people,” says Rabbi Scott Perlo of Romemu Brooklyn.
For thousands, it’s a rallying cry for unity, self-reflection and a sweeter tomorrow.
Rosh Hashanah begins Friday at sundown.
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Leaders in the Jewish community in Brooklyn are gearing up for the fourth annual Shofar Across Brooklyn program, which aims to bring the traditional sound of the shofar to more than 20 local parks and public spaces. The shofar, a horn that is blown during the Jewish holiday of Rosh Hashanah, serves as an alarm clock to wake people up and remind them to live their lives to the fullest. The program provides an opportunity for those who may not be able to attend a synagogue for various reasons to still participate in the holiday traditions.
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