Washington – MO Orthodox Rabbi Venue To Spend Yom Kippur In A Beer Garden Raises Eyebrows

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    GatherDC is hosting a Yom Kippur event at the Sauf Haus Bier Hall & Garten in Washington. (Courtesy of Sauf Haus Bier Hall & Garten)Washington – On Saturday, when Jews around the world will fast and gather in synagogues to pray on Yom Kippur, some young Jews will be coming together in the U.S. capital at a more unconventional venue: a beer garden.

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    Aaron Potek, the 31-year-old rabbi for GatherDC, a nondenominational group that does outreach to young Jewish professionals, is hoping to reach young Jews who otherwise would not attend synagogue on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar.

    “They are people who would not be going to a service otherwise,” said Potek, who was ordained by the liberal Orthodox Yeshivat Chovevei Torah in New York City. “Some will be fasting, some won’t be fasting. Some are coming from absolutely no [Jewish] background, some are coming from more of a background but have been alienated by more traditional approaches.”

    The event is not a prayer service and thus will not feature many of the traditional Yom Kippur routines. Instead, from 11 a.m. to 1:15 p.m., an expected 120 participants will come to the Sauf Haus Bier Hall & Garden on Dupont Circle to hear lectures, study Jewish texts, meditate and participate in discussions. Leading the event alongside Potek is Sarah Hurwitz, who worked as a speechwriter for President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama.

    And though it takes place at a beer garden, the bar will be closed and no food or drinks will be served. Those who do bring food will be asked to eat it inconspicuously.

    “I don’t care if you’re fasting or not, I still would like you to try to connect to the day of Yom Kippur,” Potek told JTA on Wednesday. “That’s not a statement about Jewish law, that’s not a statement about what the Torah says about fasting, that’s just living in the reality, and saying there are people who don’t fast and who don’t connect to fasting.”

    Potek says he hopes to attend religious services on Saturday, but likely will end up praying on his own in between the beer garden event and preparing food for homeless people at another GatherDC event.
    Rabbi Aaron Potek hopes to attract young Jews who otherwise would not be attending Yom Kippur programming at an event hosted at a beer garden. (Bruce Powell)
    The setting led to some minor controversy.

    “Having an event in a beer garden — the implication is that food and beverages will be served — on Yom Kippur is highly inappropriate and crosses the line of acceptability. To me, this is a mockery of our traditions,” Harris Cohen, the vice president of the D.C. Orthodox synagogue Ohev Sholom, told Religion News Service.

    Cohen later reiterated his view, writing on Facebook that though he had been made aware that no food or drinks would be served, he still thought the choice of venue “highly inappropriate.”

    Rabbi Ari Hart, who like Potek is a graduate of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, initially criticized the event on Facebook, saying the beer garden venue “runs against both the spirit and the law of Yom Kippur.”

    However, after being informed by JTA that there would be no food or drinks served at the gathering, he apologized for his initial criticism and gave Potek his blessing.

    “It’s just a space,” Hart wrote in an updated status. “A controversial, unconventional space? Sure. Would I feel comfortable? Probably not. Does that matter? Definitely not. Would hundreds of Jews who would feel uncomfortable in my shul, or any shul, feel comfortable there? Definitely yes.”

    Potek considered a few venues prior to settling on the beer garden. Price and capacity ended up being the determining factors, he said.

    “We wanted it to not be in a synagogue. We wanted it to be in a popular, centrally located area, something that people associated with their regular life,” he said.

    Despite the kerfuffle, Potek is looking forward to the event.

    “I’m really excited,” he said. “It’s unfortunate that questions of denominational lines have distracted from what I’m ultimately trying to do, which is help people talk about the meaning of Yom Kippur and the meaning of their lives.”


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    14 Comments
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    avigreen
    avigreen
    6 years ago

    I sure want to think his intentions are Leshem Shumayim, however there is a time and place for everything.
    Days leading up to yom kipper seem to be more appropriate for lectures and discussions. Perhaps the biggest teaching can be admiring such a holy day in a traditional way. Would be beautiful to do a minyen or say Shema yisroel provide a open house for all Jews to join in for prayer services even just to connect for hour.
    But the day is a day of atonement not lectures…

    6 years ago

    This Open Orthodox “Rabbi” will at lease serve cold beer after Kol Nidrei?
    In 2 years from now they will be at the same level as Reform.

    6 years ago

    And though it takes place at a beer garden, the bar will be closed and no food or drinks will be served.

    The headline trying to make us believe that beer will be served on Yom Kippur which clearly it is not.

    Fanatics think that these people would otherwise come to their stuffy shtebels which would never happen and which they don’t want these people there in any case. So, this well meaning Ruv is just trying a new tactic. May he be MATZLIACH in his efforts.

    Shimon
    Shimon
    6 years ago

    “speechwriter for Barack Obama.” Do we have to hear more?

    Sholi-Katz
    Sholi-Katz
    6 years ago

    What is the difference of Uman and this venture???

    Reb Yid
    Reb Yid
    6 years ago

    Well, what’s he going to teach them when they’re there? Yiddishkeit? Or some ersatz Jewish-oriented philosophy? That’s the real question.

    bsnow
    bsnow
    6 years ago

    Nebach.
    Another lost leftist liberal soul.

    RobertS
    RobertS
    6 years ago

    I’m surprised he didn’t have those female maharat rabbis in German beer wench costumes at the beer garden. Why give more press to these Open (non-Orthodox) rabbis?