Author Archives: guest

Lessons and Fond Memories

The Nierenbergs joined Beth El at about the same time that Rabbi and Sylvia came to the congregation and throughout the years, we had so many opportunities to learn from both their teaching and their modeling of how to live a life full of acts of lovingkindess.  In the early years, Rabbi Orenstein led the Young Couples Club in studying Pirkei Avot, and we learned that to grow in our practice of Judiasm, we should try performing just one mitzvah at a time. If it wasn’t working for us, he taught that, rather than give up, we could place that mitzvah on a lower rung of the ladder and move on to another. His sermons on Shabbat morning usually gave us a teaching that helped us become better people in the week ahead.  A memorable act of lovingkindness that Rabbi Orenstein performed for our family occurred when he appeared at the hospital with his newspaper on the morning of Arnie’s open heart surgery.  He was prepared to remain with Arnie until he went into the operating room, and indeed, he sat with him outside the operating room until the nurse came over to ask if they were finished praying so Arnie could be prepared for surgery!  What a comfort it was for us to have him there at that stressful time!

Claire and Arnie Nierenberg

By: Claire & Arnie Nierenberg

Always Our Rabbi

Beth El became our second home when we moved to New Jersey. Rabbi Jehiel (Jerry to our Ramah memory) and Sylvia immediately  became part of the fabric of our family. You were always an integral part of our Shabbatot, our Life Cycle events, our Jewish studies, and most certainly our “dugmaot” in  life. However, what we also loved were the “other” times – your home was always opened to our children when they played at the park, paying attention to our kids on our walks home from shul, attending Avi’s First Grade Siddur Play because he had invited you on one of those walks (and then writing him a thank you note!!), witnessing the joy you felt becoming a grandparent for the first time when you picked up a carriage, and not to mention your competitive tennis in our backyard even when the temperature  reached 100 degrees!! Jehiel, you are always our Rabbi, our teacher, our dear friend. The world changes around us but one constant is our love, our respect and our friendship for you and of course for Sylvia.   We are honored to help celebrate your 77th! With much love, Brenda and Jerry

By: Brenda & Jerry Deener

A Very Special Connection

Dear Rabbi Orenstein and Sylvia,

I came to work at Congregation Beth El in 2005 as the Rabbi Roston’s assistant. Of course, I had been connected to my Judaism my entire life, having grown up in a large Conservative congregation in Queens, NY. My husband and I were members of B’nai Keshet, the Reconstructionist synagogue in Montclair, from 1978 to 2007 when we became Beth El members.

How astounding it still it is for me to think about how early in my working at Beth El, I discovered that Rabbi Orenstein’s father-in-law, Sylvia Orenstein’s father, was Rabbi Israel Mowshowitz, my rabbi from that large Conservative congregation in Queens – Hillcrest Jewish Center. It was Rabbi Mowshowitz who performed my marriage to Marc in 1971. It was Rabbi Mowshowitz who always visited my Hebrew School classes regularly, especially to keep the kids on their toes! It was to hear Rabbi Mowshowitz’s sermons on Shabbat that my maternal grandfather rushed to services when he visited us.

Then, in the summer of 2006, Rabbi Orenstein was getting ready to officiate at High Holy Day services at a congregation in Montreal. My family and I were getting ready to celebrate my son and daughter-in-law’s wedding in Montreal in August. The rabbi who was marrying my children was the rabbi who Rabbi Orenstein would be working with at High Holy Days. In a conversation with Rabbi Bright of Montreal, Rabbi Orenstein told him that he would be marrying the children of congregants from Beth El. He then said to me, “Cheryl, I told Rabbi Bright about who you are –so the pressure is on!”

And one more connection….in February 2010 when Rabbi Orenstein turned 75 and the naming of our granddaughter Ashley coincided with his birthday celebration…we shared the simchas together at Beth El. It was so sweet. And to this day, we are connected to you. As are so, so many other people whose lives you have touched.

Happy Birthday, Rabbi!

With love,

Cheryl Slutzky

Virtuoso

One year ago we celebrated Jehiel’s 76th birthday at Beth El in South Orange.  The sanctuary was filled to capacity, and everyone had nice things to say about Jehiel.  We were all feeling quite warm and fuzzy by the time Jehiel himself went up for an aliyah.  And of course, being on the bimah, he had to speak.
    “I just want to express my deep –” he paused a moment “– disappointment in the committee that organized this celebration.”
    He paused while we all cackled.
    “This is supposed to be a warm, caring, inclusive congregation, open to everyone,” he continued, looking out over the thousands of people present.  “And yet I see the committee has invited only my best friends.”
    And that’s how, in the space of about thirty seconds, he had us laughing, crying and loving him.  Virtuouso!

By: Nikki Pusin

On Lotteries

Here’s a snippet that has stuck with me: a little riff between Jehiel and Debra on the subject of lotteries.
    Jehiel said that he has spoken with a number of people who have won the lottery.  (I imagine one of them was probably the court officer in the Hudson County courthouse where Sylvia clerked, who won $20 million.)  “People who win the lottery rarely ask, ‘Why me?'” said Jehiel.
    And Debra said that when she hears of people in this country playing the lottery, she tells them: “Don’t you realize that if you’re living here, you’ve already won the lottery?”

By: Nikki Pusin

Wisdom from Rabbi Jehiel (that I will always remember)

Among one of Rabbi Orenstein’s prodigious gifts is the ability to deliver words of Torah in such a way that you hear them and they stick.  I remember a High Holiday sermon where he taught that every one of us has a special mitzvah– a special skill or talent that God has given us–and it is our job to own that mitzvah and do it.  As an example, he mentioned that Rich and I have taken on the mitzvah of teaching Torah to children and their families.  Not only did he affirm to me the value of our work with young children, but he helped me to recognize that every individual– no matter how simple or how elevated– has an obligation to give what they can–in their own way– to make the world better.  And I continue to hear his “voice” and wisdom every time I try to grow by taking on a new mitzvah.

By: Treasure Cohen

A lesson from a wallet

Most of my learning from Jehiel has been informal, around the dinner table rather than in the classroom.  Only once did I have an actual course with Jehiel, as far as I recall.  I believe it must have been while I was in Central Hebrew High School, which would have been in the late 1960’s, and it was a course in Mishnah.  I remember coming into the classroom for the first class with some of the other students.  Jehiel was a little late coming in.  As the students were settling in around the table, one of them picked up a wallet from the floor.  The wallet had a $50 bill in it, as well as a black-and-white photo of a baby, but no other identification.  I remember spending some time scrutinizing the photo for any resemblance to anyone I knew, but I could not make a positive ID.  Then Jehiel came in.  We spent the next hour discussing what rights and responsibilities we might have with respect to the wallet, what the Rabbis said about hashavat aveda (return of lost property) and how we might go about making an ethical decision about what to do with it. 

I have never forgotten that lesson.  A few years ago, my daughter Molly found a wad of cash in a lake on Cape Cod where she was swimming.  I told her that return of lost property was an important law in the Torah, and I was very proud when she then went around to everyone on the beach to ask if they had lost some cash.  When no one claimed it, she gave a substantial portion of it to tzedaka.  I consider that that tzedaka was to Jehiel’s credit.

By: Nikki Pusin

The wisdom of a child

A few years ago, the Beth El bulletin published a photograph of Jehiel lighting Hanukkah candles with a class from the Beth El Preschool.  A child with whom I am acquainted was in the class, so I asked the child to identify various people in the photo.  The child correctly identified classmates and teachers.  Then I pointed to Jehiel.  “And who’s this?” I asked.  Without hesitation, the child replied, “That’s God.”
    Yes, it’s cute, but when you think about it, it was an easy mistake to make.  Children are very quick to pick up on moral authority, and Jehiel has it.  That’s why I have an engraved sign on my desk that says WWJD:  What would Jehiel do?  He’s never needed to hold mountains over people’s heads or fling fire and brimstone.  His style is more along the lines of Isaiah: Come, let us reason together.  As a teacher and a preacher he has always proceeded out of compassion and urged others to do the same–to live up to the best in themselves.

Nikki Pusin

By: Nikki Pusin

Outstanding Midot [Character Traits]

Dear Jehiel,

It’s always enjoyable to see you on visits and family s’machot. You always have interesting stories and experiences to relate, and it’s a pleasure to talk to you.

I (Shlomo) remember particularly a Shabbat I spent with you and Sylvia and the family in the 1960’s in Jerusalem, where I was able to appreciate your outstanding Midot, as expressed in your interpersonal relationships.

Mazal Tov on your birthday.

Wishing you all the best.

B’vracha,

Shlomo and Zipora Polachek and family

By: Shlomo and Zipora Polachek

A Friend

Dear Rabbi,
When Ivan and I moved to South Orange, our son Eric needed a “friend” at shul and you became his. You told him it was your shul, and if he needed anything he should come to you. What a gift that was for him, because he always looked forward to Shabbos and spending time in your shul. Thank you for that and for all the other times, during simchas and sadness, when you were there for us and our family.
Wishing you a very happy birthday.

Frema & Ivan Sobel and family