The Daily ItemMARBLEHEAD – The word “mitzvah” means good deed in Hebrew. “Got mitzvah?” is a series of events happening on the North Shore the weekend of March 27-30, with the theme, “Celebrating Bar or Bat mitzvahs with less stressing and more blessing.”The largest event is the Sunday community wide Expo of mitzvah projects featuring national speaker Danny Siegel, “the Pied Piper of Tzedakah.” The Expo, believed to be the first of its kind in the Greater Boston area, is commpletely non-commercial and wholly focused on adding meaning to the Bar and Bat Mitzvah celebration.”We felt that the Jewish community needed do something to energize and inspire families to rethink the modern Bar/Bat Mitzvah formula and help them to create their own formula for what makes a Bar/Bar Mitzvah celebration meaningful,” Organizer Maura Copeland said.The Got Mitzvah Community Wide Expo will be held Sunday, March 29, from 2 to 5 PM at the JCC or the North Shore, 4 Community Road, Marblehead. Open and free to the entire community, the Expo will features more than 50 organizations and ideas for great mitzvah projects with local, national and international service organizations, resources for planning a Bar or Bat Mitzvah trip to Israel and information about making invitations, tallit, kippot, centerpieces with purpose, a genealogical tree and more.”There was an explosion of enthusiasm from so many nonprofit organizations. We really want to inspire Jewish families to create their own formula for what makes the celebration meaningful. We especially wanted to help kids get hooked on tikkun olam (repairing the world). The result is this unique, completely non-commercial Expo where people can take advantage of a community wide exchange of ideas, experience, creativity, and opportunities to learn about all different kinds of mitzvah projects,” said Copeland.The Expo is not limited to those who are planning their mitzvah projects, but to any teen considering ways to continue the mitzvah of tzedakah. Those who attend the Expo will be inspired to think of tzedakah and tikkum olam beyond the day of the Bar or Bat Mitzvah. Becoming a Bar or Bat Mitzvah is about taking on the responsibility of the mitzvot (good deeds) as a Jewish adult and many of the projects featured can be continued in an ongoing way as teens begin to take on their Jewish responsibilities.Planning for this event began at Cohen Hillel Academy, but many volunteers throughout the community joined the effort to build a true community event, speaking to teens about their past mitzvah projects and religious schools and community organizations about their participation.”You might even call this expo “organic” because it draws on the wealth of ways people in our own North Shore community have added meaning to their Bar/Bat mitzvahs and their lives,” Copeland said.Got Mitzvah is grateful to Cohen Hillel and the Jewish Women’s Endowment Fund for supporting this event and to the following partners for their contributions: Chabad of Peabody, Chabad of the North Shore, Congregation Agudas Achim-Temple Ezreth Israel, Congregation Beth Israel-Andover, Congregation Shirat Hayam, Congregation Sons of Israel, the Jewish Community Center of the North Shore, Jewish Federation of the North Shore, the Jewish Journal, Jewish Rehabilitation Centers for Living, Lynn Swampscott Marblehead Hadassah, Melrose Jewish Community Center, North Shore Teen Initiative, North Suburban Jewish Community Center, Temple Ahavat Achim, Temple Beth Shalom of Peabody, Temple Beth Shalom of Melrose, Temple B’nai Abraham, Temple Emanuel of Andover, Temple Emanuel of Chelsea, Temple Emanu-el Marblehead, Temple Ner Tamid and Temple Sinai.Got Mitzvah?Schedule of EventsAll events are free and open to the public.Friday, March 27, 7 PM, Shabbat Services at Temple Sinai, 1 Community Road, Marblehead. Features an Oneg Shabbat with Danny Siegel who will speak on the topic, “How to Raise a Mensch in a Material World”Saturday, March 28, 10 AM, Yout