Cantor's Message

We have made it through more than a year of the pandemic. Our lives have been reinvented, our Shabbat Services are over the internet. We re-created our entire community onto a new virtual reality. If we have learned anything from this experience we have found new and wonderful strengths. The pandemic and Zoom has…

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Communications CMI
A Message from The President

The Hebrew words “gam zeh ya’avor”, which in English translate to “this too shall pass”, have been evoked frequently for more than a year. We trace the origin of the phrase to the legends of King Solomon, who is traditionally portrayed as “wealthy and wise’….

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Communications CMI
A Message from The President

The arrival of spring and the promise of Pesach inspire us with the potential for renewal and redemption. We have endured, and thankfully survived, what was possibly the most challenging winter of our lives—not caused by weather, but by conditions of historic proportion…

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Communications CMI
One Year During COVID

Marking one year of COVID fills us with a range of emotions as we grieve what we lost, express gratitude for what we have, and hope for better days ahead. COVID has transformed our lives, our sacred community, and our world. In Judaism we acknowledge that grief does not disappear immediately but that it evolves over time – we count the days, months and years since the loss of a loved one. Processing the pandemic may feel similar to mourning…

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Brian Immerman
Praying for Hope and Peace on January 6th

Like many of you, my eyes welled up as we watched a mob descend on our most sacred national spaces. I felt nauseous seeing guards run from people wielding guns, watching them break down windows and desecrate the spaces where our lawmakers from both parties, chosen by citizens, work to create and shape the future of our country. Senators and Representatives hid under desks and were escorted to safer spaces, while our president declared his love for those rioting.

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Brian Immerman
As we await the results

As our country concludes voting today, I know that many are feeling anxious, scared, and, I pray, hopeful. Hopeful because whether by absentee ballot or in person today, we who are eligible were able to participate in our incredible civic process to guide our nation. I am also hopeful because of our CMI community and Jewish tradition that guides and supports us through both joyous and challenging times.

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Brian Immerman