*High Holy Days services are included in New Shul Membership. If interested in becoming a member click here and if you would like to renew your membership click here.

Our theme for these High Holy Days is the Year of Improvisation. As we journey from the storytelling of 18th century Ukraine, to the mystical courts of 12th century Cairo, and into the music scene of 21st century New York City, we will search for ways to live life with a sense of lightness and play.

Improvisation is the art of listening, of taking what comes your way, and adding to what’s given. The improvisor’s response comes from the soulful center of one’s being. We improvise when we relinquish our expectation of control and result, and instead enter into the scary yet liberating space of the present moment. Come improvise with us!
— Rabbi Misha Shulman

CLICK ON THE IMAGES ABOVE TO VIEW OUR LAST YEAR’S HIGH HOLY DAYS PHOTO GALLERY.

By Itamar Dotan Katz

The Events

Erev Rosh Hashanah • Friday, September 15 @ 7:00 pm - Village Community School

A 19th century Ukrainian story will open our year and introduce us to our theme of improvisation, with the help of a Sephardic musical piece for the new year by Daphna Mor and the Beineinu musicians, and special guests Rabbi Abby Stein and actor Martin Reckhaus.

Rosh Hashanah • Saturday, September 16 @ 11:00 am - Brooklyn Bridge Park, Pier 6

Our signature Rosh Hashanah in the park, with a quasi-shofar performance by trumpeter Frank London, a women-led Torah reading, and a transformation of the seminal story of the biblical Abraham. Can we reimagine our forefather Abraham as driven by an inner world that is light, loving, and free? Master Shofar Blower Frank London will give a Shofar blowing lesson at the start of this service. Please bring your own Shofar, if you have one, or use one of Frank's.

*The event will take place on the grass - feel free to bring a blanket. (In case of inclement weather, the service will be held at the Village Community School.

TEEN TASHLICH • Saturday, September 16 @ 1:00 Pm - Brooklyn Bridge Park, Pier 6

A teens only, teen-led gathering with Rabbi Misha which will include some intention setting for the new year, throwing a bunch of stuff into the river, a shofar blowing showdown and ice cream.

Tashlich • Sunday, September 17 @ 4:00 pm - Hudson River Park, Pier 45

Looking back and looking forward, our Jewish-Brazilian Tashlich builds on the ancient ritual of casting away our sins in the form of breadcrumbs, adding prayers for renewal and new directions in the coming year in the form of flowers. Music, intention setting, and hanging out with friends on the pier.

*Meet at the West Side Highway, we will walk together towards the pier.

Kol Nidre • Sunday, September 24 @ 6:30 pm - Village Community School

A duet of the ancient melody of Kol Nidrei between Bassist Saskia Lane and singer Dana Herz will bring in the Day of Repentance. Combining musical traditions from around the world, and melodies from Beineinu and The New Shul, we will stare into the void within the soul where the key to peace, faith and art resides.

Yom Kippur • Monday, September 25 - Village Community School

10:00 am - Morning Service
Verses from the Prophets challenge the value of our fast and our prayers in a world filled with people who need our help. The biblical women who improvised our way out of danger and opened the door for redemption. Yonatan Gutfeld's haunting rendition of Unetane Tokef, the seminal High Holidays prayer delivered in a dream by a dead man to his disciple. Special guests: Restorative Justice practitioner Erika Sasson and Minister Terry Solomon.

12:30 pm - Yizkor

2:00 pm - Study/Meditation

5:45 pm - Neilah
We will begin as Rabbi Abby Stein shares her story of how she went from being raised as a boy by an ultra-orthodox rabbi to coming out as a girl of transgender experience, and being an author and rabbi, and how improvisation played into the development of her new-old spiritual world.

We will conclude the Days of Awe with a heart-opening, reflective, musically exuberant Neilah service followed by Havdallah and a community.

7:30 pm - Community Break-Fast.

*Please dress in white for this event.

children’s services

We are so delighted that you have included your children in your holiday observance. As we practice and re-invent ritual, seeing children at the services makes the whole experience that much more meaningful to all.

We know it’s a long sit, so when it comes time to let them move around, we encourage you to take advantage of the children’s programming we will be providing in partnership with the creative educators from the School for Creative Judaism throughout our observance of Yom Kippur:

Children’s activities for all kids ages 4-12

Kol Nidre 

7pm to 9pm

Yom Kippur Morning

10:00am to 1pm

Children’s services

10:30am -11:00am children under 5

11:30am - 12:00noon children ages 5-12

Please note: you can register for children’s programming separately. Adults who want to drop off their children and attend our main service must also register here.

Updates

*We're excited to announce three special guests that will be collaborating with us on our High Holy Days services this fall. Guest Prayer Leader and musician Daphna Mor, along with percussionist Yuval Lion and Bassist Saskia Lane come to us from Beineinu, a like-minded local organization dedicated to making Jewish life relevant and meaningful. Daphna is a seasoned prayer leader and internationally renowned musician, hailed by the NY Times for her virtuosity, who has performed with the NY Philharmonic, as a soloist in Carnegie Hall and many other prestigious venues. A passionate performer and teacher of Piyyutim, liturgical poems, Daphna also runs her own Arab music ensemble. Yuval and Saskia are also both musicians of the highest caliber, who have worked with top performers in their fields. The three of them collaborate regularly with our Shul musicians. Even more exciting is the prospect of welcoming the Beineinu community into our New Year gatherings this year.

 

Musicians

 


Sir Frank London is a Grammy-award winning trumpeter-composer and co-founder of The Klezmatics. His works include the Yiddish-Cuban opera Hatuey Memory of Fire; the klezmer trumpet concerto Freylekhs for Trumpet & Orchestra , folk-opera A Night In The Old Marketplace, Davenen for Pilobolus Dance Theater; and 1001 Voices: Symphony for a New America. He has made over 40 recordings of his own music, most recently Ghetto Songs, Frank London's Klezmer Brass Allstars' Rooftop Concert; the Klezmatics' Letters to Afar; and the score for Salomé: Woman of Valor. He has worked with everyone from Itzhak Perlman to Iggy Pop; is featured on over 500 CDs, and was on HBO's Sex And The City.

 
 


Dana Herz is an Israeli, New York City-based singer and composer. Currently working on her debut album creating unique layers of sounds from Jazz, Soul, and Folk. Dana has been dedicated years to explore the human voice and its power to heal and connect people. Dana is currently leading her own band and has performed her original music in some of the most prestigious venues and festivals in Europe, Israel, and the United States, including WOMAD festival, The Troubador London, The Sunset Sun-side Paris, Le Poisson Rouge NYC, Muri Switzerland and many others.

 
 


Yonatan Gutfeld grew up in Jerusalem, where he studied music composition. He was active in the Tel Aviv singer-songwriter scene and toured the country with his band after releasing his debut album. He lives in NYC where he records his songs, teaches and writes music for theatre productions. Yonatan is also The New Shul's Music Director.


Daphna Mor is an internationally renowned musician, hailed by the New York Times and the Chicago Tribune for her virtuosity, as well as a passionate educator. Daphna has performed on such prestigious stages as Summer Stage, NY, with the New York Philharmonic at Lincoln Center, and as a soloist at Carnegie Hall and Tanglewood. She also performed in festivals and concerts in the United States, Canada, Poland, Italy, Spain, Germany, Slovenia, Croatia, Austria, Greece, and Israel. Among her many recordings, Daphna appears on Sting’s CD "If On a Winter’s Night." Christopher Hunt of MSN writes: "Ms. Mor leaves all who witness her playing with a smiling jaw-dropped expression.” Since moving to Brooklyn in 2000, she has established herself as a leading musician and educator/prayer leader, serving as a Musician in Residence at B'nai Jeshurun Synagogue, and leading the Early Childhood program and services at Brotherhood Synagogue in Gramercy Park. Mor is a passionate performer and teacher of liturgical music of the Jewish diaspora (Piyutim), focusing on brining awareness to the global element of prayer and including those melodies in Beineinu rituals. She was invited to Mumbai India where she gave a master class of Piyutim, while learning new local Indian ones and incorporating them in Beineinu Shabbat ceremonies. In other educational initiatives, Daphna acts as the Musician to the Education Department of the Metropolitan Museum of Art connecting Art and Music Education. Daphna lives in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, with her husband Daniel and their two children.


Saskia Lane is a Brooklyn-based Juilliard-trained bassist, composer, performer, puppet maker and educator. Saskia continues to tour her show BIRDHEART, which has captivated audiences worldwide, including a performance in Belgium graced by the presence of the Dalai Lama. For nearly a decade, Saskia was an integral part of the renowned Salzburg Festival, lending her multifaceted skills as a musician, actor, and puppeteer to the cherished annual production of JEDERMANN. In addition to her life as a performer, Saskia composes and directs operas for the very young, OTOYOTOY (2017), NOOMA (2019), and CAMILLE’S RAINBOW (2022), all of which premiered at Carnegie Hall. She just received her fourth commission of its kind, slated for the fall of 2024. Her work has received residencies at The New Victory Theater, BRIC, Park Avenue Armory, Watermill and St. Ann’s Warehouse. A classically-trained musician with a strong grounding in jazz, Saskia has appeared with artists as diverse as Jay-Z and Beyonce, Marc Ribot and the Kronos Quartet.


Yuval Lion is a New York based drummer, born in Tel Aviv. Lion has worked with some of the world’s most distinguished rock, pop, r&b and jazz artists including Chrissie Hynde, Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings, Meshell Ndgeocello, Martha and Rufus Wainwright, Lionel Loueke and more recently with David Byrne, Suzanne Vega Duncan Sheik and David Broza. In addition to worldwide tours Lion maintains a high profile in New York City's live and studio scene. Yuval is a member of the New York iconic guitar noir trio Big Lazy.

Special Guests


On Erev Rosh Hashanah, Rabbi Abby Stein will join in discussion with Rabbi Misha about the message of one of Rabbi Nachman's stories, and what it teaches about improvisation as a spiritual posture. Then, on Yom Kippur Rabbi Abby will share her story of how she went from being raised as a boy by an ultra-orthodox rabbi to coming out as a girl of transgender experience, and being an author and rabbi, and how improvisation played into the development of her new-old spiritual world.

We're thrilled to welcome Rabbi Abby Stein this year as a member of our Rabbinic Chavurah and our 5784 Scholar in Residence. Rabbi Abby was born and raised in a Hasidic community, is a direct descendent of its founder the Baal Shem Tov and attended an “all boys” Yeshiva, as a student in the Chassidic community in Williamsburg. She is steeped in the world of her ancestor, Rabbi Nachman and the other Chassidic voices that we will be mining these High Holidays. Ordained in 2011, Rabbi Abby is an educator, author and activist. After leaving the Hasidic community, and coming out as a woman of trans experience, she has given 500+ speeches, around the world on all 7 continents, raising awareness on LGBTQ issues in Judaism, antisemitism, media, and more. Her Book, Becoming Eve, was published in 2019. In 2020 she was named by Prospect Magazine 1 of The World's Top 50 Thinkers.


On Erev Rosh Hashanah, actor and director Martin Reckhaus will put on his storytelling hat and perform Rabbi Nachman of Bretslov’s story A Tale of Trust.

Martin Reckhaus is Co-founder and Director of Loretta Auditorium, a collective of theatre/film artists. Emerging from the experimental theatre scene of NYC’s Lower East Side in the 1980s, this company has consistently produced provocative new works for theatre and, more recently, film. He studied theatre at the Studiobuehne, Koeln. “Rhythm, history and the belief that the stage—the world—as we construct and perceive it—can be and is changed by sensual means: this is what drew me to the theatre. Born into German post-war society, active participation in the social, aesthetic, and civil renewal was a necessity, more than a question of choice. Originally, I engaged in politics, attracted by the potential of the public assembly. However, I quickly became disillusioned with this realm. At that point, I was offered a role in a play. The world opened. I was possessed by the conviction that change comes about through a poetic and philosophical quickening.”


On Yom Kippur morning, Erika Sasson will lead an unforgettable conversation with Minister Terry Solomon, who went through a restorative justice process with her after his husband was killed on the streets of New York.

Erika Sasson is one of a handful of people in the country running restorative justice processes in cases of homicide, sexual harm, and domestic violence. A 2023 recipient of the prestigious David Prize for extraordinary New Yorkers, Erika has worked for the last decade on developing her approach. She spends months in conversation and in preparation with each of the parties involved-- and their loved ones--and she has learned deep lessons about forgiveness, repentance, and the question of whether people can change.

 

Venues

Erev Rosh Hashanah, Kol Nidre and Yom Kippur will take place at the Village Community School (272 W 10th St, New York, map). A Paid parking on 738 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10014 and on 128 Perry St, New York, NY 10014.

Public transportation: The 1 and 2 trains at Christopher St. station OR A, B, C, D, E, F, M at West 4 St. station.

Rosh Hashanah Morning and Teen Tashlich will take place at Brooklyn Bridge Park, Pier 6 (Atlantic Ave & Bridge Park Dr, map). Pier 6 is on the opposite side of the park from the bridge and the carrousel. It is the far end of Atlantic Ave, next to the ferry to Governors Island and Fornino’s restaurant. A paid parking garage is located near Pier 6, accessible on the south side of 360 Furman Street. 

Public transportation: The N, R and W trains to Court Street station are 7 minutes walk to the Pier. The South Brooklyn Ferry from Wall Street or Corlears Hook in Manhattan stops right at Pier 6.

The event will take place on the grass - feel free to bring a blanket. (In case of inclement weather, the service will be held at the Village Community School-  text and email notification will be sent as soon as possible).

Tashlich will take place at Hudson River Park, Pier 45 (West 10th St & West St, map). A paid parking garage is located near Pier 45, on 353 West St. (Pier 40 Garage).

Public transportation: The 1 and 2 trains to Christopher Street station are 7 minutes walk to the Pier. 

 

Pricing

High Holy Days services are included in New Shul Membership. If interested in becoming a member click here and if you would like to renew your membership click here.

Guest tickets pricing as follow:

In-person Tickets: $180 per person (13 and up) per service

All Service Pass: $540 per person

Live Stream Access Pass: $180

At The New Shul no one is excluded for financial reasons. Students, people on fixed income, unemployed or in need of financial aid. For arrangements, please email Executive Director Susan Meyers at susan@newshul.org.

Please indicate in your registration how many children under the age of 12 will be attending each event with you. If you would like to sign them up for any of the children programming (Erev Rosh Hashanah (9.15) Kol Nidre (9.24) and Yom Kippur Morning (9.25)) services, please fill out this form