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   Personalizing 
	the Service: Instruction BookletsReform Perspective
	
	by Rivka C. Berman
 
Aside from the usual prayers, songs and Torah 
reading at a Shabbat service, there are ways to make the bat mitzvah service 
special.
 Personalizing the Service
 Adding prayers and readings can be a deeply meaningful way to shape the 
service. Get a sense of how much individualization is permitted at your 
synagogue by attending other bnei mitzvah services. Talk with your rabbi to find 
out the guidelines and limitations. Then go for it. Poetry readings  keep it 
short and practice first. Selections from other written works  same advice 
applies. Snippets from songs. These can act as a running commentary on the 
regular prayers. Remember the rest of the congregation and keep the references 
understandable and meaningful to those who may not know you or your family very 
well.
 
 Many synagogues corral all personalized input into the parents presentation of 
the tallit. Its not because rabbis besmirch sentiment; its just that services 
are for glorifying God, not each other. If you cant cram it all into this brief 
moment, save your words of wisdom for the party. Better yet: tell the bat 
mitzvah what youve been thinking at a special dinner with just mom, dad and 
her.
 
 Booklets
 There is a way to add your personal take on the service without doing actual 
readings from the bima. With your computer and a little creativity, you can 
publish a booklet as a guide to the service, a forum for personal statements and 
a memento of the day.
 
 What to Include:
  Depending on your crowd, there may be a need to give more or less of an 
introduction to the whole synagogue experience. Explain the phases of the 
service. Write a tour of the synagogue, such as the ner tamid, eternal light, 
the ark.
  Some pages can be dedicated to a brief history of the bat/bar mitzvah 
celebration.
  Write a biography of the bar mitzvah boy. Use a timeline format if essays are 
not your style.
  Memories written grandparents, aunts, uncles, parents, siblings and friends
  Color photocopies of baby pictures set alongside more contemporary shots
  Welcome and thank everyone for attending the service (especially the out of 
towners) with a handwritten letter.
  Add a map with directions to the place where the party will be held.
  Ease the challenge of finding the right page for the Torah reading by copying 
the portion into the booklet. Be careful. Its not a mitzvah to violate 
copyright laws, and once Gods name is on paper the booklets should be treated 
with special respect.
  Drawings or poems by the bar mitzvah: his best work, his interpretation of 
what Judaism means
  Prayers written by the bat mitzvah: for peace, for understanding, for 
patience.
  
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