Cantor Bat-Ami Moses
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March 09th, 2026

3/9/2026

 

February 4th, 2026 


This past Monday we celebrated Tu B’shevat, the 15th day of the Hebrew month of Shevat celebrating the birthday of the trees, which is one of the four new years listed in the Babylonian Talmud. Even though it certainly doesn’t feel or look like it outside, this holiday reminds us of our connection to the earth and gives us hope in renewal, and the knowledge that spring will eventually arrive! Tu B’shevat has also become a holiday that reminds us of the human responsibility to care for trees and all of nature, knowing that the time is now to plant those seeds, tending them to help grow and secure our future. 

It is my pleasure to announce that Temple Israel will be participating in this mitzvah of caring for our earth, “shomrei adamah” spearheaded by our Religious School Administrator Kenny Acker who will be leading the initiative of composting our food remains at our Religious school with the hope that this practice will continue to occur at all our programs. Our children and teens will learn by doing, and set the example for us! 

And until we see that first bud on the tree, I hope these words from Katherine May from her book WINTERING will help us get through this challenging time, when our country, world and planet needs so much healing and renewal. 
“Plants and animals don’t fight the winter. They don’t pretend it’s not happening and attempt to carry on living the same lives they lived in the summer. They prepare. They adapt. They perform extraordinary acts of metamorphosis to get them through. Wintering is a time of withdrawing from the world, maximizing scant resources , carrying out acts of brutal efficiency and vanishing from sight, but that is where the transformation occurs. Winter is not the death of the life cycle but its crucible.” 

​Rabbi Abigail Treu teaches that even though right now everything seems to be dormant, frozen and not flourishing or growing with us--this is only our perspective and not the truth, because there is an invisible energy and growth that is happening deep down in those roots which will flourish and blossom in the spring. 

We will act now by composting, and soon enough the winter’s transformation into spring will lead us outdoors thanking the Divine for our tree of life!  
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February 11th, 2026

​This past Shabbat I was honored to take six of our Temple Israel teenagers to Washington D.C. to participate in The Bernard and Audre Rapoport
L'Taken Social Justice Seminar, designed to both expose teens to a variety of public policy issues and explore the Jewish values that inform the Reform Movement's advocacy around these issues. 
Here is some of the feedback I received from my students. “This was the most meaningful experience I have ever had. The opportunity to be a part of something and make a real change and difference in the world inspired me greatly.”  “This trip has been life changing, being able to meet kids my age who are all interested in saving the world like me has been amazing.” “L’taken is genuinely the best Jewish experience I have ever participated in. Every moment was packed with so much knowledge and so much fun. I have learned about our world, faith, the people I shared the experience with, and even myself.” 

​L'Taken means "to repair" and in partnership with the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism (RAC), these students were able to make an impact to help repair our country by meeting with members of Congress lobbying on bills related to Immigration and Antisemitism. After spending Shabbat learning Torah and singing joyfully our Shabbat prayers in community with over 350 teenagers from all over the country, we spent our free time visiting the African American History Museum and the Holocaust museum. One of the highlights was celebrating the end of Shabbat with the havdallah service at the Jefferson Memorial, lighting up the night not only with candles but with the light of doing mitzvot and pursuing justice as Jewish teens all over the country bonded together in the name of Tikkun Olam.    

​This coming Shabbat is known as “Shabbat Zachor” the shabbat of remembrance which is observed the Shabbat immediately preceding Purim. By reading a special part of the Torah, we are commanded to remember the attack by Amelak on the Israelites after the Exodus from Egypt and to “blot out the memory of Amelek” just as we will boo and blot out the name of Haman on Purim, linking the historical Amalekites to Haman who we know as the villain in our Purim story.  Another way that we can ensure that good will always triumph over evil is fulfilling the commandment  of Tzedek, tzedek tirdof, justice, justice you shall pursue (Deuteronomy 16:20) just as our teenagers did last Shabbat.  Please join us for this Shabbat Zachor as we remember and then immediately rejoice in our Purim celebration on Monday night March 2nd 5:30pm for our Purimshpiel, megillah reading, and a festive oneg. Prizes for best costume and Hamantaschen for all! 

​ Shabbat Shalom and Hag Purim Sameah! 



February 18th, 2026 

I am so grateful for the wisdom of our Jewish tradition, especially for the many minhagim (the traditions) that tether me to my past as I cultivate a vibrant Jewish future. I am thankful for the continuing dialogue I have between the letter and the spirit of the law that guides me on almost every decision I make in my professional and personal life. As I open the treasure chest filled with Jewish laws and traditions, it almost feels like a gift, especially at moments when we find ourselves in despair and worry after reading the latest news headlines, or in pain when dealing with our collective and personal loss and grief—it is in these moments that I am most attached and most grateful for Jewish practice. 


After all, today marks the new Jewish month of Adar, a month that according to the Talmud teaches us that, “When Adar enters, joy increases!” This is a reflection on the month's connection to happiness and miracles for the Jewish people that sets the spiritual tone for the holiday of Purim which emphasizes joy, gratitude and the triumph of good over evil and light over darkness. In fact, the Hebrew word Adar has the same roots as the word Adir, meaning strength or power, symbolizing the inner strength required to embrace joy even in uncertain times. I would say, as much as the Jews of Shushan were faced with antisemitism and uncertainty, we too are certainly living in very unsettling and troubling times.
But here is where the beauty of our tradition comes into play. Even if we are steeped in sorrow, our tradition says– pause your pain, if only for a moment. This happens, for example in the pausing of sitting shiva when Shabbat or a festival falls during the seven days. Our pain doesn’t dissipate even though our practice of normalcy and finding joy continues. 
Rabbi Jill Hammer writes that “The message of Adar is not to cover up our true feelings with forced merriment but to recognize the double edge that lies under all reality. Our lives flow through both good and bad times. The key to Adar is to know that and still to believe happiness is possible. In Adar, joy is a mask we put on to conceal pain, yet we also know the joy is real.”
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Adar invites us to put on that mask as we find inner joy, engage in acts of loving kindness and show up for each other in community~ And we invite you to do just that! Please join us in your favorite mask or costume as we celebrate Purim together on Monday March 2nd at 5:30! RSVP here (add link) You will not want to miss our Purimshpiel, ESTIE! Starring talented Temple Israel adults and HAVA NASHIRA followed by a community Megillah reading where we will blot out and boo the name of HAMAN! Followed by a festive freilach oneg! 
​

This is our Adar practice, to show up in joy, in triumph, in hope.
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November 13th, 2025

11/13/2025

 
Rabbi Nachman of Bratzlav teaches that there is only one prayer one should know by heart. That prayer is “Todah Rabah,” meaning THANK YOU! After this past weekend’s celebration of my 13 years at Temple Israel and 18 years in the Cantorate, I’d like to thank our fierce and phenomenal staff, the devoted committee members who made our synagogue sparkle, and all of the sponsors and donors who make up our “kehilla kedusha,” this holy congregation. I thank you all from every chamber of my heart. 
This coming Shabbat, we will open the Torah to the portion called “Chayei Sarah,” meaning the life of Sarah. Rabbis and scholars of our time have grappled with the fact the story actually begins with her death, but the name of the parashat is “her life.” Of course, we have come to understand that one’s legacy is shaped from a life well lived and often shared in one’s death, but the lesson of the portion is to remind us that our time here on earth is so very precious. One of my favorite Mary Oliver poems, The Summer Day, reminds us of the question we must ask ourselves everyday, “What is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?
I have had the blessing and the holy privilege to act as a “k’lei kodesh,” a clergy person in my one wild and precious life. It has been an honor to be there for you in your sweetest simchas and your deepest sorrows, and in turn you have been there for me in my joyous moments and in times of great fear and loss. You are my congregants who have become my family and friends and my colleagues are people I laugh and cry with everyday. I never take for granted that I get the privilege to work with Rabbi Sharon Mars, my senior clergy partner who has become my best friend, spiritual soul sister and partner for life. I have been so blessed to build a life of art and culture, spirit and blessing and music and meaning at Temple Israel.
If you missed it,this is a must watch! See where my journey all began, singing Shabbat songs since I was a little girl! This wild and precious young girl grew up to become a very blessed Cantor, a sweet singer of Israel filled with a passion for Judaism, music, teaching and healing. L'chaim to 13 years and many many more!
Cantor In Training!
Shabbat Shalom, 
Cantor Bat-Ami Moses 

Cantor Moses' Musings--Take a Risk!

10/29/2025

 

וַיֹּ֤אמֶר יְהֹוָה֙ אֶל־אַבְרָ֔ם לֶךְ־לְךָ֛ מֵאַרְצְךָ֥ וּמִמּֽוֹלַדְתְּךָ֖ וּמִבֵּ֣ית אָבִ֑יךָ אֶל־הָאָ֖רֶץ אֲשֶׁ֥ר אַרְאֶֽךָּ׃


“God said to Abram, “Go forth from your native land and from your father’s house to the land that I will show you.”   Genesis: 12:1

This week we open the Torah to parashat Lech Lecha, meaning to “Go into yourself.” The Rabbis have interpreted this phrase in many ways, though I have developed my own interpretation that contains a deeper message conveyed in these short two words. Lech lecha has always meant to me, “Take a risk and have faith believing in the promise of tomorrow without knowing exactly where you are going but knowing you will be found.”

This is where we encounter the story of Abram, eventually becoming Abraham after he follows the counterintuitive instructions from Gd to leave his father’s home, holding onto the promise of a future through the whisperings of his heart. He eventually becomes our founding father who began the covenantal relationship between the Jewish people and God. 

Abraham is often seen as the embodiment of the Jewish attribute of “chesed,” known as loving kindness. His actions over his lifetime included welcoming wayfarers into his home, providing hospitality with food and drink, unlimited kindness and compassion exemplifying the importance of chesed in Jewish life. 

One cannot say enough about the importance of “chesed” or sometimes called “gemilut hasadim” acts of loving kindness in Jewish life at this moment in our world. Our sacred texts share a variety of actions that fall into this category, such as hospitality, visiting the sick, attending a wedding, giving interest free loans, redeeming captives, burying the dead and comforting mourners. While we sometimes emphasize tzedakah (righteous giving) in our modern lives, the Rabbis clearly favored chesed, since it refers to the way that we help others in times of need. 

There is no better time than now for all of us to embody the compassion of Abraham by recognizing the crucial needs right here in our own community. As many of you know, the federal government has notified the state of Ohio that due to the ongoing government shutdown, SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) may not receive their November benefits as normally scheduled. This is heartbreaking, especially at this time of year as the weather gets colder and the darkness descends (this weekend!) It is particularly upsetting that our friends and neighbors may not know where their next meal will come from.
Please join me as we live out Abraham’s chesed by providing food to the needy in one of these 3 ways: 
  1. Bring non-perishable items to our Harding entrance and put in the bins to be taken to the Mid Ohio Food Collective.https://mofc.org/
  2. Bring canned goods with flip top lids, granola and protein bars, accessible snacks and drinks and put them directly into our Little Free Pantry located in front of the gate on Harding.
  3. Visit  freshtak.com or mofc.org/  to donate to other food emergency food sources.
In The Observant Life, Elliot Dorff writes: “There are many reasons to care for others: to create a quid pro quo reason for others to care for us when we need help, to express our own humanitarian feelings...to contribute to establishing a society in which people care for each other, to live by the commandments.” 
Whatever our reason may be, these practices of “loving kindness” are essential in creating a caring and giving community. They are both individual as well as communal responsibilities, carefully defined in Jewish law. So, I charge you “Lech lecha,” and go help others in need. By doing so you will also hear Gd’s voice and carry out the whisperings of your heart to make the world a better place.

Cantor Moses' Musings- HINNENI- Here I Am

9/18/2025

 


This year when we hear the shofar we will certainly hear it as a broken cry. We are crying for injustice, violence, pain, fear and unspeakable grief as we enter 5786. This opening prayer, Hinneni, meaning HERE I AM is also a cry, as we cry out in all of our heartbreak and in all of our hope. I can't think of a more urgent time in our collective experience than in this moment of absolute heartbreak as we desperately cling on to hope. 

This prayer is chanted by the Hazzan/Cantor, the prayer leader on behalf of the congregation, as we stand together as one during the high holy days trembling in fear, overwhelmed in worry and yet also filled with a deep desire for change and redemption.

This year, as you hear this ancient melody, close your eyes and let it pierce your soul. This prayer instructs us to love peace and to love truth. It also pleads to the Divine. “May there not be stumbling blocks in our prayers.” What are your personal stumbling blocks? What are our collective stumbling blocks? 

  It concludes with the following blessing. 
“Blessed are you, who hears our call for renewal, redemption, healing and harmony.”


Ken Y’hi Ratzon- May it be so.   

Cantor Moses' Musings--S'LICHOT-Forgiveness

9/9/2025

 
“I ASKED MYSELF
Who’s listening to these words of confession?
Magnificent Ear of the universe, are You my personal confidant?
Or am I just talking to myself?
Then I got it:

The question is a diversion-
To distract me 
From hearing who I really am.”
                                          Mishkan HaLev  

These words are taken from the prayer book that contains our S’lichot prayers, which focus on forgiveness and repentance. These words should stir our souls and ignite more questions such as, “Who am I, really in this moment? And “Who do I want to become?”

One of my favorite teachings is from Rabbi David Aaron, who taught me while I was on my first trip to Israel on a Birthright program (a very long time ago!) that we are not human beings, but rather “human becomings.” This is the essential work of the High Holy Day season as we engage in “heshbon hanefesh,” the accounting of our souls to recognize how we want to grow spiritually, act in a more compassionate manner, and be of service to others. 

There are actually three levels of forgiveness according to Jewish law. 
  1. Selichah- translated as forgiveness which is the first step which must be taken if someone has committed a sin, whether it be against God or humankind. One must ask forgiveness to the injured party, and to repent, to feel remorse and promise never to commit that sin again. A person must forgive another person. 
  2. Mechilah- translated as “wiping away” is the response to the request, “Can we put our relationship back on the level it was on before I sinned against you?” A person must forgive another person. 
  3. Kapparah- translated as atonement, as in the day of Yom Kippur. This is the response to the person who says, “My conscience will not let me live with myself, because of what I did to you and to our relationship. This is only forgiven by God. 

It is interesting to have a deeper understanding of these levels of forgiveness. However, we must recognize that we are all desperately trying to do the very best we can living in this complicated world. So before you rush out to apologize for the hurt you may have caused others, take a moment to instead of beating your chest, to pat your back and to forgive the most important person who will be there to travel with you on your journey for the rest of your life, you. It is okay and mandatory to forgive yourself. It’s already on God’s list. So scratch it off yours. 

​

Cantor Moses' Musings-- ELUL

9/4/2025

 
קַוֵּ֗ה אֶל־יְ֫הֹוָ֥ה חֲ֭זַק וְיַאֲמֵ֣ץ לִבֶּ֑ךָ וְ֝קַוֵּ֗ה אֶל־יְהֹוָֽה׃

Look towards God. 
be strong and let your heart take courage!
Look towards God. 
Psalm 27:14 

This is one of my favorite passages in all of the 150 Psalms of David. Every day during the month of Elul that just arrived a few days ago, reminds us to start spiritually preparing for the High Holy Days. We are invited to immerse ourselves in rituals that help us prepare for the deep spiritual work of “teshuva,” a returning to our best selves through acts of prayer, tzedakah, and repentance. This passage we recite twice a day in psalm 27, should wake us up by encouraging us to practice patience and strength. We should do this by not only passively looking towards the Divine but relying on our own actions of courage and resilience as we actively trust in God at the same time. 
This task feels extremely daunting in this challenging moment we are living in as Jews. “Teshuvah,” meaning returning and repenting, is the central gesture of the High Holy Day season. Rabbi Joseph Solevetchik describes teshuva as a circular motion. He writes,“If you aren’t moving along the circumference of a circle, it might seem as if the starting point is getting farther and farther away, but actually it is also getting closer and closer. The calendar year is such a circle. On Rosh Hashana, a new year begins and every day is one day farther from the starting point, but every day is also a return, a drawing closer to the completion of that cycle.” Rabbi Solevechitch points out that every step we take away is a step closer to home.
This Shabbat, we invite you to come home as we begin to celebrate this cycle of life as we bring new babies into the covenant, bless new adventures,  as well as come full circle as we welcome the “Millie Baran Project” to Temple Israel. In collaboration with a local organization, A Tribe for Jazz, composer and pianist Albert Marquès will be presenting his Ampl!fy Voices project, the haunting and heartfelt “Mir Zaynen Do,” a musical collaboration with 99 year old Holocaust survivor Millie Baran. 

Released as three tracks/videos, this new jazz composition includes Millie and her daughters singing the Yiddish song “Mir Zaynen Do” (We Are Here מיר זיינען דא). Its lyrics were written in 1943 by Hirsh Glick, a young Jewish inhabitant of the Vilna Ghetto, who was inspired by news of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Mir Zaynen Do (also known as “Zog nit keyn mol," “Partisan Song” or "The Song of the Warsaw Ghetto") was adopted by Jewish partisan groups throughout Eastern Europe during World War II, and became a symbol of resistance against Nazi Germany.

With the help and partnership of Jewish Family Services, we will also be welcoming and hosting local Holocaust survivors to stand and be recognized for their courage, resilience and faith, the true essence of the psalmist words. 

​

Cantor Moses' Musings--Tisha B'Av

7/31/2025

 
Tisha B’Av, the ninth day of the Hebrew month of Av is a day of communal mourning in the Jewish calendar. On this day we commemorate and mourn the destruction of the First and Second Temples in Jerusalem in 586 B.C.E and 70 C.E. respectively, as well as many other disasters said to have befallen the Jews on this day. We observe this holiday by gathering together without greeting each other, sitting on the floor in mourning in the dark, chanting psalms, reading poetry and chanting from the book of Lamentations, known as Eicha in a haunting melody that evokes suffering, longing, and an eerily kind of comforting hope. 

Hauntingly, this day will not be difficult for us to observe this year. The continuous and overwhelming mourning and loss, the betrayal of our own humanity, the rise in antisemitism has plagued us over these years of war, and at times it is paralyzing. Tisha B’Av gives us the opportunity to feel all the brokenness in its fullness, and wake us up to the pain that must be transformed into purpose.

Join us this weekend as we begin Shabbat, holding onto and sharing the precious moments in our lives that we can celebrate turning these dark times, (which is imperative!) with our monthly Celebration Shabbat. Come back on Saturday evening as we end Shabbat together and release into communal mourning giving each other the space to cry, to mourn, to hurt and eventually to heal as we observe Tisha B’Av. 

In her book UNFOLDING, Rabbi Karyn Kedar writes, 

“Tisha B’Av is a solemn period grounded in historical circumstances that encourages deep personal reflection. The Temple was destroyed because of human frailty; we chose hate over love, and all was lost for the nation. So too, with us, when we give into negativity we lose so much. Destruction, we learn and know so well, is caused by senseless hatred. Redemption will come with love.” 

Join us in love, help us be redeemed. 

Shabbat Shalom, 
Cantor Bat-Ami Moses 

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