
Shavuot
Ex. 19:1–20:23 • Num. 28:26–31 • Ezekiel 1:1–28 & 3:12 • Megillat Ruth
[2nd day: Deut. 14:22–16:17 • Num. 28:26–31 • Habakkuk 2:20–3:19]
Nasso (נשא – “Lift up”)[1]
Num. 4:21–7:89 • Judges 13:2–25
The readings for Shavuot include the account of the Giving of the Torah, Ezekiel’s vision of the Heavenly Chariot, and the departure of Ruth from Moab, her arrival in Bethlehem, and her gradual integration into her new home.
The readings for Nasso present the organization of the Levites, the ritual of the Sotah (a woman suspected of adultery), the laws of Naziriteship, and the Priestly Blessing. The haftarah announces the birth of Shimshon, the Nazirite.
Ruth 1:19
וַתֵּלַכְנָה שְׁתֵּיהֶם עַד־בֹּאָנָה בֵּית לָחֶם
“The two of them walked on until they came to Bethlehem.”
Jews arrived in Hartford as early as the 19th century, and gradually moved during the 1950s–1960s to the neighboring city of West Hartford. From this migration emerged a Modern Orthodox[2] nucleus that eventually formed the Young Israel[3] community.
An ‘eruv[4] ḥatserot, inspected every Friday, encompasses the neighborhoods surrounding the Young Israel of West Hartford synagogue. The contemporary‑style building stands within a quiet, tree‑lined residential environment.
[1] In the diaspora, when Shavuot lasts two days and the holiday falls on a Friday (Yom Shishi), the reading of Nasso is shifted by one week compared to the calendar in Israel.
[2] Modern Orthodox: A stream of North American Orthodox Judaism combining halakhic observance with active engagement in broader society.
[3] Young Israel: A network of Orthodox synagogues founded in the United States in 1912, historically associated with Ashkenazi Modern Orthodox communities.
[4] The ‘eruvin:
• Eruv ḥatserot — Allows carrying objects on Shabbat within a defined shared domain (Mishnah Eruvin 6–7; Bavli Eruvin 71a–82b; Shulḥan Arukh, OḤ 366–370).
• Eruv techumin — Establishes the permitted walking boundary around a town up to 2,000 cubits (Mishnah Eruvin 4:3; Shulḥan Arukh, OḤ 397).
• Eruv tavshilin — Allows Shabbat preparations to be performed on a Yom Tov that falls on Friday (Bavli Beitza 15b; Shulḥan Arukh OḤ 527).
Simplified procedure: prepare two cooked foods, recite the berakhah of the eruv, then consume them on Shabbat, preferably at se‘udah shelishit (OḤ 527:2, 527:12, 527:14; Mishnah Berurah 527:48; Kaf Haḥayim 527:48).