A Prayerful Invocation for Calabasas: Celebrating Leadership and Community
- Rabbi Paul Kipnes

- Feb 9
- 3 min read
For the Calabasas City Council Reorganization Meeting

And the Installation of
Peter Kraut as Mayor
Eternal One,
Makor HaBrachot, Source of all blessing,
We gather tonight in this sacred space of service,
this chamber of courage,
to celebrate the leaders of Calabasas—
a city of vision, vitality, and values;
a community of compassion, creativity, and care.
We lift up our prayers for this City Council,
leaders who daily lift up the burden
of paving our city’s path forward.
And we offer special prayers too
for Peter Kraut, our new mayor—
a dreamer, a doer, an engineer,
who regularly builds stellar structures out there,
and once helped build out right here,
in our beloved city of Calabasas,
a sanctuary for our synagogue,
for Calabasas’ Congregation Or Ami.

Now our new mayor Peter knows
that we need safe spaces,
where our bodies and souls might find places,
to connect and to rest.
Like in the midst of the covid pandemic,
when isolation swept through our streets,
Peter built for Congregation Or Ami,
and for this community,
a drive-through Sukkah.
For the Jewish holiday of Sukkot,
he built a shelter of connection and hope.
That temporary hut,
open to the heavens,
made us supremely aware
during the pandemic beyond compare,
that even the simplest structures can shield us from the winds of fear,
and offer shelter filled with
compassion and care.
Oh Calabasas…
In this week’s Torah portion,
the selection of the Bible that Jews around the world read,
called Vayishlach,
the Biblical ancestor Jacob wrestled with the Divine.
Similarly, every one,
and every city,
must wrestle with the question
of who it is
and who it dares to become.
So dear leaders –
Peter our new Mayor,
and outgoing Mayor Alicia,
and City Councilors Ed, David, and James,
and our City Manager Kindon,
and all our blessed City staff –
wrestle daily with
what this city is
and what it can yet be.
Wrestle with choices that demand courage
and hold courageous conversations
that require compassion.
Listen with attentiveness
and guide Calabasas with self-awareness,
so that Calabasas may become
its best self –
a city where justice flows like the waters,
and kindness grows like the stunning trees on our sunlit hills.
Holy One of Blessing,
we beseech you,
grant this City Council insight and resolve,
grant this mayor the boldness to involve
the people within and outside
of this City Hall
in a governance process
that builds unity, safety, and peace.
And speaking of safety,
in this time of destructive fires,
watch over our people, our pets, and our homes,
protect the protectors,
first responders who protect us,
and grant solace and support
to those who lost that which they hold dear.
And as for the people of Calabasas,
of this complex community Calabasas –
may we have patience with one another
and gentleness in the words we choose,
and may we always, always refuse,
to use words that lead to abuse,
but instead never, never fail,
in the way we speak, text, listen, and email,
to have generosity with one another.
Calabasas,
you are a city of miracles,
a mosaic of people who care—
In a world of indifference,
you craft beauty from challenge
and community from difference.
For a city’s greatness is measured
not only by what it builds or accomplishes,
but by how its people care for each other
in good times and bad—
with chesed, anavah, v’ahavah,
with kindness, humility, and love.
May we all – all of us –
be vessels of kindness, humility, and love.
And let us say, Amen.







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