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ON-SITE Rabbi Abe Friedman of Temple Beth
Zion-Beth Israel in Center City
Courtesy of Rabbi Abe Friedman
Rabbi Geri Newburge of Main Line
Reform Temple-Beth Elohim in
Wynnewood Yael Pachino Photography
11 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.

Register in advance for this Zoom webinar by visiting the LINK
below: https://tinyurl.com/2pa6927w
There are many types of Jews
who may fi t into this category:
someone who needs to eat and drink
due to a medical condition, someone
who needs to eat and/or drink
with a medication and a woman
who is pregnant. Among others.

Take a little bit. Not the whole meal.

Regain your strength while still observ-
ing the spirit of the holiday, he said.

“Of course, you should try to fast,”
Isaacson said.

Rabbi Geri Newburge of Main
Line Reform Temple-Beth Elohim in
Wynnewood compared that approach
to the way kids fast. In general, chil-
dren are not supposed to fast if they
are still growing. Th ey need the
sustenance. But as they grow older, they can start
to cut back a little. Th is helps them
understand the holiday. As Newburge
explained, maybe instead of eating
two Pop-Tarts and scrambled eggs for
breakfast, they just eat eggs. Or, in an
adult’s case, maybe it is apple slices
instead of a three-course meal.

“Th e whole idea is for us to think
about what we’re doing, how we’re
doing it, why we’re doing it,” she said.

“As long as we’re not putting our
Thursday, October 6, 2022
Questions can be directed to VirtualSeminars@arden-courts.org
FREE DEMENTIA VIRTUAL SEMINAR
Conversations with Dr. Tam Cummings
A Monthly Education Series for the Dementia Caregiver
Navigating the Caregiver
Journey - Part One
health at risk.”
Fasting, though, is not the only
way to observe the holiday. It’s a tool,
explained Friedman — a means to an
end. But not the end in itself.

Friedman said it’s still important for
someone who can’t fast to go to ser-
vices and participate in the life of the
community. Th e point of Yom Kippur,
he said, is to take an honest look at our
lives to make a more concerted eff ort to
live by our values.

You can break the fast and still
repent, he said. Th is can be diffi cult for
Jews used to fasting to understand and
accept, especially if the medical neces-
sity to eat on the holiest day is new.

“You don’t need to work within an
all-or-nothing mindset,” Lautman
said. “Th at once you broke your fast,
you’ve failed and should give up the
rest of the day.” JE
A major concern for family caregivers of persons living with
dementia is anticipating what will happen next and how to
plan for the disease’s progression.

This is a two-part session in which the journey so full of
unknown twists and turns will be discussed. During the
first session, we will discuss the diagnosis and preparation
for the progression of the disease. The second session in
November will discuss care and more unexpected twists
and turns as the person with dementia advances towards
the latter stages of the disease.

Tam Cummings, Ph.D., Gerontologist
Author, Untangling Alzheimer’s: The Guide
for Families and Professionals
© 2022 ProMedica Health System, Inc., or its affiliates
jsaff ren@midatlanticmedia.com
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