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October 15, 2024
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Kudos for the Congregation Kiddush

This month I celebrated a milestone birthday (I am now enrolled in Medicare … yup, it’s that milestone birthday!), and my wife asked me what I wanted to celebrate the occasion.

Without hesitation, I told her that I’d like to have my extended family and local friends join me in a kiddush after Shabbat services on my birthday weekend.

And that’s exactly what was done … and it was lovely. My wife, my mom, our two children,  our daughter in law and our three grandchildren were all in attendance, along with many Stamford friends we have had for as long as 40 years.

I’m generally not big on birthday or anniversary parties. I never know what to request when someone asks me what I want for a gift. (I told everyone who wanted to give me a gift to make a donation to a favorite Jewish charity.)

But I’ve always enjoyed the kiddush after Shabbat morning services. It’s a chance to catch up and socialize with friends, many of whom I may not have seen for several weeks or months. Some good food and drinks make it even more enjoyable.

When I was a youngster, a shul kiddush was very rare. Maybe a family would make a kiddush for a bar mitzvah or an aufruf, but there was certainly not a kiddush every week as most shuls have now. And the word “hot kiddush” was not in our vocabulary back then. Herring, kichel and gefilte fish was the typical kiddush fare.

At one of the shuls I attend regularly in Stamford, there are three services on Shabbat … a 7 a.m., 8 a.m., and 9 a.m. service. There is a Torah class after the 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. services. And a kiddush after all three minyanim. We joke that if you attend the 7 a.m. minyan, and hang around shul for the morning, you can actually attend two Torah classes and partake in three different kiddushes! Speaking for myself, one kiddush is more than enough, but there are some folks who indeed attend all three.

I was thinking more about the congregation kiddush recently. Once COVID-19 closed our shuls down in March 2020 and many of us began davening at home, the shul kiddush was placed on hiatus. And even after we returned back to the synagogue for Shabbat davening, the kiddush was suspended for several more months. I certainly missed davening at shul b’tzibbur (I lead the services regularly), but truth be told there was actually some pleasure I got davening alone at home in the quiet solitude of our living room. However, what I missed much more was conversing with friends after shul at the weekly kiddush.

Many Orthodox synagogues across the country are struggling with the challenge of getting people back to shul on Shabbat. Some of us have become quite comfortable davening at home, and a lot of folks no longer see the value of attending Shabbat services. Several of the outdoor backyard minyanim that served an important purpose during the COVID outbreak have continued, even though the virus is mostly behind us.

May I humbly suggest that the synagogue kiddush might be a way to attract more people to return back to shul for Shabbat minyanim? And while it may sound crude to use gastrological methods to entice folks back to the synagogue, I will quote you the Talmudic thought: “Mitoch shelo lishma, ba lishma”—loosely translated to mean that an action that is done for the wrong reasons can eventually become one that is done for the right reasons.

Here are just a few kiddush ideas that shuls can use to entice more people to attend minyanim on Shabbat:

o For more than a year, because of COVID, bar and bat mitzvah celebrations were limited to very small celebrations outside the shul. Perhaps shuls can approach these families to make a large kiddush on the anniversary of their child’s bar or bat mitzvah, which would allow more of their friends and relatives to participate in the simcha they could not make, albeit a year or two later.

o Allow youngsters to deliver a dvar Torah after shul in front of the congregation, and encourage families to invite their friends and sponsor a kiddush in honor of the occasion.

o Honor groups of individuals, and encourage friends to sponsor a kiddush in their honor. For example, in Stamford we recently had a kiddush to honor those who check the eruv each week, a kiddush saluting the volunteers who are part of the security patrol every Shabbat, and a kiddush to show appreciation to the members of the chevra kadisha. A dozen or more people sponsored a very lavish kiddush for each of these occasions, and because so many people were being honored, there was a larger-than-average attendance in shul those weeks.

o Make a huge shul kiddush for graduates each June, with families of the graduates sponsoring the kiddush.

o Use Simchat Torah, the Shabbat of Tu B’Shevat, and the second day of Shavuot as times for a large kiddush for the entire community to attend. The kiddush thus becomes a social event, in addition to just being a kiddush.

No doubt there are many other ways to encourage individuals and groups to sponsor a shul kiddush. And I’m certain that this will be an incentive for many people who otherwise would be davening at home on Shabbat morning to attend services.

See you all at shul … and at the kiddush that follows!


Michael Feldstein is a contributing editor for The Jewish Link. He owns his own marketing consulting firm, MGF Marketing, and can be reached at [email protected].

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