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Our Chartering Organization:
Temple Beth Hillel

Most of our Pack Meetings and some of our events are held at Temple Beth Hillel in Valley Village. The Temple is located at 12326 Riverside Drive, between Whitsett and Laurel Canyon, on the south side of Riverside Drive. The parking lot is actually behind the main building, which can be accessed by making a right at Laurelgrove (if you are heading east on Riverside), and then making a right into the first driveway. The activity center (Mercaz room) where most of our meetings are held, is at the opposite end of the parking lot.


Why the Temple, you ask? Every Cub Scout pack must have a sponsoring or chartering organization. It may be a church, synagogue, community center, etc. That organization provides the Pack with facilities and other services to help the pack run smoothly. The pack, in turn, helps out the chartering organization when necessary.   


The chartering organization for our Pack is Temple Beth Hillel. 


It is very important to note that although our chartering organization is a Jewish temple, Pack 311 is not a Jewish organization or even a Jewish Cub Scout pack for that matter. There are Cub Scout packs which “advertise” themselves as being observant of one religion or another exclusively, and conduct their business in such a manner. We are not one of those packs.   


Pack 311 is open to people of all faiths and backgrounds. Quite simply, religion (of any kind) plays no role in our everyday pack activities. The only exception is that Scouts BSA encourages reverence and adherence to the faith of your family’s choosing ("A Scout is… brave, clean and reverent"). Thus, you may have, as part of working towards certain awards, a requirement to observe your own faith, however you define that faith within your own household.


Having said all of the above, the reality is that being sponsored by a Jewish Temple creates certain expectations on our part. Out of respect for our chartering organization, we avoid having official pack events at the Temple on Friday evenings and Saturdays (the Jewish sabbath), as well as on Jewish holidays. If the pack is providing food at an event, we avoid serving things that obviously fly in the face of the Jewish laws of kosher (pork, shellfish). 


And some of the things that the pack may be called upon to assist the Temple with may have a decidedly “Jewish” flavor in the sense that they take place at, or are sponsored by, the Temple for members of the Jewish faith. This is all part of the symbiotic relationship between a pack and its chartering organization. 

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