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‘The Mikveh Monologues’ to benefit community mikvah Jan. 30, 31

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

SAN DIEGO (Press Release)– Waters of Eden, San Diego Community Mikvah and Education Center, hosts its premier event, a multimedia stage production of “The Mikveh Monologues”.

Written by best-selling author Anita Diamant (The Red Tent) and director Janet Buchwald, the play is an introspective tour of the ritual bath, redefined for 21st century usage, and a theatrical celebration of personal discovery in all of its complexity and mystery. The performance will take place at the Lawrence Family Jewish Community Center, 4126 Executive Drive in La Jolla, at 7:30 pm on Saturday, January 30, 2010.  The evening will include a community havdalah and dessert reception.  Individual tickets are available for $25 through the JCC Box Office, (858) 362-1348 and lfjcc.org.  Please call for group rates.

The Mikveh Monologues serve as a moving testament to the power of the ancient ritual of immersion in water.  The production presents a compelling case for the reinvention of mikvah as a means to mark life passages of celebration, healing, and personal transformation for men and women, young and old.  Through music and dramatic interpretation, the viewer will understand how this experience can be a Jewish antidote to the homogenization of modern life.

A second performance will take place the afternoon of Sunday, January 31, 2010 as part of the Agency for Jewish Education’s Yom Limmud: San Diego’s Community Day Learning.

Waters of Eden, San Diego Community Mikvah & Education Center, is an independent California non-profit 501c3 organization.  The Center is projected to break ground at the base of Cowles Mountain, adjacent to Tifereth Israel Synagogue, in 2011 and to be dedicated during Chanukah, 2012.  Waters of Eden will provide a unique center for Jewish continuity, spirituality, renewal, and learning for the greater San Diego community as a separate and independent institution, open to all, regardless of affiliation who self-identify as Jewish and those on their paths to Judaism.

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Preceding provided by Waters of Eden, San Diego Jewish Community Mikvah and Education Center

Adventures in San Diego Jewish History~January 8, 1954

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

Compiled by Gail Umeham

Personals

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 3

Friends of Harry Goodwin will be leased to learn that he is again doing his expert repairs on fine china, glassware, silver and gold metals at his home, 1812 Tustin, B-2-1655.

Harry has done work for the San Diego Fine Arts Society and La Jolla Art Gallery and has established quite a reputation in this field.

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Mrs. Harry Goodwin will fulfill a long-held ambition when she sails from San Francisco Jan. 22, to visit her sister, Mrs. Charles Brodie, who lives in Auckland, New Zealand, and whom she hasn’t seen for 27 years.  She expects to return in two months.

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Mr. and Mrs. Nat Schiller recently spent a weekend in Pomona as guests of former San Diegans Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hyman.

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Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tennen have recently moved into their new home at 3350 Wisteria Dr.

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The long New Year weekend gave many an opportunity to visit near-by vacation spots.  All-time favorites, Las Vegas and Palm Springs, had the biggest “play.”

Esther and Lou Moorsteen and Diane and Frank Pomeranz started the weekend on Tuesday by flying to Las Vegas.  Among others spending the holiday there were the Harry Farbs, Leo Krasnes, and Sol Prices.  Reports say Marlene Dietrich’s gown is all the newspapers claim.

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Taking advantage of the desert sun at Palm Springs were the Murray Goodriches, Irvin Kahns, Abe Ratners, Harry Snyders, Joe Rittoffs, and Bob Kaplans.

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Among the first-nighters enjoying “The Silver Whistle” last Tuesday were Rabbi and Mrs. Monroe Levens, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Levins, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Harris, and Mrs. Harry Lipinsky.  Staff members Ray Bass and Edward Cherney were on hand for the opening, too.

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On leave from Fort Ord, Alan Breslauer made the holidays more pleasant for his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Breslauer.

Cradle

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 3

“Fore” shouted Allan Lame, and four it was.  Born Dec. 27 was Jesse Robert, weighing 7 lb. 6 oz.  Allan and Pearl presented the latest member of the quartet to Marcia, Jerry, and Michael at the Bris held Sunday.

Here to see the ceremonies and greet the new grandchild, were Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lame of Cleveland, Ohio and maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Krennen of Seattle, Wash.

Rabbi Morton J. Cohn and Dr. Joseph Kwint welcomed the newborn infant into the Jewish congregation

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Alex Majtlis of 1644 Fourth Ave., a daughter, Rose, on Dec. 21.  Brother Jackie, 5, willk welcome his native American sister.  The Majtlis’ came to America from Austria 2½ years ago.

Ushering in the New Year with a loud cry was Robert Bland Berman, 6 lb. 8 oz. son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Berman, born Jan 1.  This made it a celebration for the proud grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bland and Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Berman and great uncle, I. Heller, all of San Diego.

Junior Charity League

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 3

The last meeting of the Junior Charity League was held at the home of Sophie Stone, where the one annual fund raising affair of the club was planned.  A gala Valentine Card Party is to be held, at the Temple Center, on February 4th, when a delicious luncheon will be served, and a valentine motif carried out in the decorations.  All proceeds from this affair will go to the Polio Foundation, a most worthy cause.  Donation (for the luncheon) will be $1.50.

At the close of the meeting Esther Moorsteen showed a film made by UNICAEF, titled “The Children,” showing the plight of the children of Asia and India, who so badly need help from the rest o0f the world.

Members of the Junior Charity League decided to help by a small personal donation to Mrs. Moorsteen, who volunteered to be chairman of this project.

The whole community is invited and urged to attend the club’s party on February 4th.

Yo-Ma-Co News

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 3

Yo-Ma-Co Club officers to be installed on Sunday, Feb. 7, at El Cortez Hotel are Pres., Jack Brisker; V.P., Al Nadler; Rec. Sec., Mrs. Dave Brooks; Corr. Sec., Mrs. Milton Kassy; Treas., Dave Brooks; Sgt. At Arms, David Cohen; Aud., Ray Lowitz; and Membership Chrmn., Mrs. Jack Brisker.

Please Note

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 3

Due to the untimely passing of Mrs. Anna Shelley, mother of Mrs. Morton Thaler, the Hadassah Youath Aliya dinner, scheduled for Jan. 19, has been postponed to Feb. 21.

Mrs. Robert Strauss, president, announces the Youth Aliyah affair will take place in addition to the regular February meeting.

Unveiling

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 3

A monument in memory of Otto Rosenbaum will be unveiled Sunday, Jan. 10, at 2:00 p.m. at the Home of Peace Cemetery.  Rabbi Baruch Stern will conduct the services and read the memorial.  All friends of the family are asked to attend.

Double Talk

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 5

By Janet and Susan Solof
As New Year has arrived once more,
And resolutions are being made galore,
Go to school with a happy thought
Remembering everything that was taught.

New Year’s Eve brought the A.Z.A.’s and B.B.G’s on their toes as they gave a big dance.  The main event of the evening was the crowning of the Queen.  Susan Solof was the queen elected and her date Art Pogrell reigned as King.

As the football season comes to an end, we wish to congratulate Bernie Stolsoff and Dave Kenin from Kearney and Gary Naiman from hoover who received “ Letters.”  Good goin’ boys.

Make 1954 successful for the Youth groups.  Take an interest and an active part in them and support all of their affairs.  You will have fun too.

Phone your news—W-5-0679.

B.J. Sisterhood News

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 5

The Beth Jacob Sisterhood will hold its next luncheon-meeting Tuesday, at noon, on January 26, at the Beth Jacob Center.  All guests and members are invited to attend, as a most entertaining afternoon has been planned by program chairman, Mrs. Jack Brisker, and membership chairman Mrs. Sidney Rose. Mrs. Sam Bloom and her committee will sponsor and serve the luncheon.

In memory of Anna Shelley, Beth Jacob Fun Night has been postponed.  A date for this affair will be announced later.

Hadassah News

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 5

“ Bing, Bang!  Bingo!”  is the way president Mrs. Robert Strauss invites all women to be Hadassah’s luncheon guests on Jan. 20th at 12 noon, in the Temple Center.  Besides the complimentary luncheon, each guest will receive a ticket on the mink stole and the opportunity of winning many other attractive and worthwhile prizes.

No formal business meeting is planned and reservations should be made as soon as possible with Mrs. David Block T-9611 or Mrs. Murray Samuels, W-8-2051.

Jewish Center News

Southwestern Jewish Press January 8, 1954 Page 5

A dance exhibition by Alice Mason, noted dance teacher, and her students, will be given on Tuesday, January 12, — 8:30 p.m. at the Jewish Community Center, 3227 El Cajon Blvd.  All 20-30 year olds are invited to participate in an evening of enjoyable activities, in addition to the special program.

A Table Tennis Tournament starts on Tuesday, January 19th.

Juniors—Registration is now open for the junior (5-12 yrs.) ballet and creative dance classes to be held on Wednesday afternoons 3:00 p.m. at the Jewish Community Center and on Friday afternoons at trhe Portuguese Assembly Hall, 2818 Addison St., both under the direction of Mrs. Irene Timen.  Mrs. Timen has had many years of teaching both classical and modern ballet and has studied with Mikhail Mordkin, Doris Humphrey, Charles Weidman, Jose Jose Limón, Pavley, Oukrainsky.

The size of the classes are limited, so register early.

Discussion Group—Dr. Ernest Wolf, chairman and moderator of the Center Discussion Group announces that Dr. Virginia Voek, assistant professor of psychology of San Diego State College, will be the next speaker at the Jewish Community Center’s Discussion Group meeting on Wednesday, January 13th, 8 p.m., at the Center, 3227 El Cajon Blvd.  Her topic is the series on “Psychology of Prejudice” will be “ Why the Hate—the Personality of the Bigot.”

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“Adventures in Jewish History” is sponsored by Inland Industries Group LP in memory of long-time San Diego Jewish community leader Marie (Mrs. Gabriel) Berg. Our indexed “Adventures in San Diego Jewish History” series will be a daily feature until we run out of history.

Silent One Day Sale, Holy One Day Sale

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

By Steve Hofstetter

NEW YORK — I imagine it’s much more difficult to be a Jew on Christmas than it is to be a Christian on Hanukah. You don’t find many Hanukah specials about families  getting stranded in an airport learning the true meaning of the
menorah.

But if there were lots of Hanukah specials, I’d be just as annoyed as I am at those about Christmas. I finally realized that I do not dislike most Christmas specials because they are about a holiday I do not celebrate – I dislike them because they’re really, really cheesy.

I love the original Grinch cartoon. The Peanuts specials are always fun, and Seinfeld’s Festivus episode is a classic. A number of sit-coms have simply had funny events happen at Christmas parties, which is fine considering that the holiday is a part of our country’s pop culture. But the shows that have people changing their lives based on the true meaning of Christmas really exasperate me.

I am a very spiritual person, and I have never changed my life based on the true meaning of a holiday. And let’s just say that learning the true meaning of a holiday, sans bastardization, was actually possible. Would we want that lesson to come from ABC Family?

Any holiday is okay in small doses, but TV networks go absolutely nuts on Christmas. I am pretty patriotic, and generally a big fan of the whole America thing. But I wouldn’t be able to accept a bunch of sitcoms telling me the true meaning of July 4th. Imagine the final two weeks of every June filled with TV characters ending episodes with an arm-in-arm chorus of “My Country Tis of Thee.” Which they couldn’t do because no one knows the second verse.

There were several ABC sitcoms that have two Christmas episodes. Sure, ABC sitcoms are always ridiculous, but how long are they trying to celebrate this holiday? I know about the supposed “Twelve days of Christmas” thing, but I don’t know anyone who actually celebrates the holiday for more than a day
and a half. I bet someone in religion marketing noticed that   Hanukah has eight days, anddecided that something had to be done to compete. “They have eight  days? Well,  we can have twelve!” But if you’re going go 150% on the Jews, you  have to keep  it up across the board. Every Yom Kippur, Jews don’t eat for 25
hours. If you  can go 37.5, I’ll give you 12 days of Christmas. Until then, forget
about your  golden rings and admit that Christmas is a one-day event.

I wonder if any Christian kid actually enjoys all of the Christmas sitcoms. I doubt that there are any 19-year-olds watching TV during winter break saying, “you know, I completely missed the point of this holiday. Come on, everybody – let’s go caroling!”

TV execs should realize that the way Christmas is portrayed on the majority of their shows is not how it’s celebrated in a majority of the country. First of all, more than half the marriages in America end in divorce, which destroys the notion of the large family meal with everyone accounted for. Right
there, you’ve already entered minority territory. Then there’s the realization
that not  everyone is Christian (gasp!), and some of the people who are
Christian don’t have a dozen relatives that want to come over for dinner. And most importantly, a lot of people out there don’t get along well enough with their extended family to do anything but hurl insults and mashed potatoes.

In a rush to beat each other to the holiday punch (ba-dum!), TV networks have been airing Christmas episodes earlier and earlier. It used to be the week before Christmas. Then it was two weeks before Christmas. Now, they air the first week of December. Pretty soon, Christmas specials will start so early that they’ll air during the Christmas prior. And the year in between will just be one continuous commercial.

Uncle Jesse can tell DJ all he wants about how Christmas is about love and selflessness and family, but not until after Macy’s tells you about  their one-day sale. There is a certain irony to running all those sale ads during the  heartwarming story of a family learning about the wise men. The only wise men here are the ones in the ad department.

Christmas TV teaches you that you should give. And to help, it also
directs you to the nearest store. Driving up profits in the retail sector is
the true meaning of Christmas sitcoms, and that’s something I discovered
without the help of a snowed-in airport.

Learning this true meaning has made me all warm and fuzzy inside. Come on everyone – let’s carol. How does that Macy’s jingle go?

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Steve Hofstetter is an internationally touring comedian who has
been VH1, ESPN, and Comedy Central, but you’re more likely to have seen him on the last Barbara Walters Special.

ZOA criticizes JNF for donating trees to P.A.

November 30, 2009 1 comment

NEW YORK (Press Release)–The Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) has criticized the Jewish National Fund (JNF) following reports that the organization, established by Jews and for Jews to rebuild Jewish national life in the biblical home of the Jewish people, has donated 3,000 trees to the Fatah-controlled Palestinian Authority (PA) of Mahmoud Abbas for a new city near Ramallah.

Benny Kashriel, the mayor of Maaleh Adumim who also is a member of the JNF board, said Monday that he will raise the JNF decision with the JNF board. The JNF, a time-honored symbol of Zionism, has for decades received literally billions of dollars from Jews in the Diaspora for planting trees and building the modern Jewish State. Kashriel said the contribution to the PA is a grave step that was taken without any request for approval and without advance notice and reflects a “system that has gone haywire … The country has gone crazy when it plants trees for the PA in Judea and Samaria at the same time that it forbids Jews to build. The system does not know who it is representing – us, the Palestinian Authority or the Americans?” (Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu, ‘JNF Donates 3,000 Trees to Palestinian Authority,’ Israel National News, November 30, 2009).

ZOA National President Morton A. Klein said, “We are deeply critical and indeed shocked by the decision of the JNF to donate thousands of trees, grown with money donated by Jews from around the world, to the PA. The PA is a terror-promoting entity controlled by Abbas’ Fatah, which demonstrated only in August at its Bethlehem conference that it does not accept Israel as a Jewish state, does not support a peace agreement that closes the conflict and engages in, indoctrinates for and glorifies terrorism against Jews. At this conference, Fatah honored terrorists, including Khaled Abu-Isbah and Dalal Mughrabi, responsible for the 1978 coastal road bus hijacking, in which 37 Israelis, including 12 children, were slaughtered.

“Has it really come to this, that a venerable Zionist organization with only one purpose – the up-building of a sovereign Jewish national existence, takes money from Jews and then uses these funds to make a gift of trees to Israel’s unreconstructed enemies?

“If JNF is to retain the confidence of American and world Jewry as to its dedicated purpose of building up the Jewish state of Israel, it is vital that the JNF publicly acknowledge its error and apologize for this clear misuse of funds it has raised. For the JNF to do otherwise would be to raise money from world Jewry under false pretenses. It is vital that JNF never repeat this decision.”

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Preceding provided by Zionist Organization of America

 

The Canary in Israel’s Coal Mine

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

By Shoshana Bryen

WASHINGTON, D.C. — For those who have asked why JINSA has kept Honduras in the spotlight since June, this is why: small democratic countries trying mightily to exercise legitimate governance and self-determination deserve our vocal support even – or especially – when they do things the U.S. would prefer they didn’t.

Honduras is one of these countries, as is Israel.  We have been surprised by the lack of Israeli interest in the democratic exercise of sovereign rights by Honduras, and especially in the lack of interest in the pressure exerted by the U.S. government to force compliance with America’s wishes.

The presidential and legislative election held in Honduras on Sunday provides an opportunity for American administration to walk back its decision to punish the small, poor Central American country for ousting its then-president Manuel Zelaya last June as he tried to pave the way for multiple terms, in violation of the Honduran constitution.  The election included only candidates nominated long before Zelaya’s ouster – and the interim president, who was never a candidate, removed himself from public view in the last week of the campaign.

The first decision of Team Obama back then was knee-jerk support for the radical line – joining Chavez, Ortega and Castro calling the ouster, authorized by the Honduran Supreme Court and legislature, a coup.  Then, in swift succession a) agreeing to the suspension of Honduras from the OAS; b) withdrawing accreditation from Honduran Ambassador Roberto Flores; c) withholding foreign aid; d) threatening Honduran access to previously awarded Millennium Challenge grants; e) refusing a diplomatic visa to the interim president for his visit to the UN General Assembly (a violation of UN rules); and e) using the American Ambassador in Honduras as point man to threaten Honduras’s future relations with Washington.

It was distinctly more American pressure than was applied to the Iranian government as it stole an election and punished demonstrators with arrest, torture and death.

The interim Honduran government, plus most of the arms of authority in the country – the legislature, the Supreme Court, the Catholic Church and the Human Rights Commission – held fast to the belief that their constitution mattered.  And after Senate Republicans held up the nominations of two Obama appointees for State Department Latin America posts, the Administration was pressured into turning to Costa Rica’s Oscar Arias to try to hammer out an agreement between Zelaya and the interim government.

A four-point plan emerged, giving the Honduran legislature and Supreme Court the lead in determining their own country’s future and obliging the U.S. and the OAS to sanction yesterday’s election.  The legislature will meet on 2 December to determine the fate of Zelaya and his failed attempt to hijack the country.  The interim president has said he will respect the legislature’s decision – even if it brings Zelaya back to complete his term until the January handover of power to the newly elected president.

Oscar Arias told the AP that he believes other Central and South American nations will respect the Honduran vote – Costa Rica will, he promised.  Brazil, Argentina and others have said they may not – claiming the election would only ratify the “coup.”  This is blatant interference in the internal affairs of a neighboring country, and the U.S., still the most important player in the hemisphere, should be quick to declare where it stands.

If it stands on the side of Honduras, all could be well that ends well.

We often call Israel the canary in the coal mine of Western, liberal democracy.  Honduras may prove to be the canary in Israel’s coal mine.

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Bryen is special projects director for the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. (JINSA). Her column is sponsored by Waxie Sanitary Supply in memory of Morris Wax, longtime JINSA supporter and national board member.

Rock’n Shabbat at Congregation Beth Am Dec.11

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

SAN DIEGO (Press Release) — Come join us on Friday, December 11,  at Congregation Beth Am for our unique Rock’n Shabbat dinner & service. Rock’n Shabbat is a community service held on the Second Friday of every month at 7:00pm.

This service, featuring Yochanan Sebastian Winston and his band and the Beth Am Youth Choir, combines the invigorating Shabbat service set to music with exciting new elements.  The service is led by Rabbi David Kornberg whose goal is to bring the whole community together for this unique experience of worship, singing and dancing.

Prior to services each month there will be a Shabbat dinner and Latke Party at 6:00pm. featuring delicious food catered by Charles Rubin of Shmoozers. The cost will be $18 per adult and $6 per child 2-12 years old.  Children 2 and under are free.  Reservations are required for dinner and space is limited.  Please call 858-481-8454 or debra@betham.com. Or visit our website www.betham.com for more information.

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Preceding provided by Congregation Beth Am

The Jews Down Under

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

Compiled by Garry Fabian

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Catholic School Students write and perform moving play

MELBOURNE – Year 8 and 9 at a  Victorian country Catholic College recently wrote  and performed a play “Our Shoah” which they presented to packed audience.

The background of this that a  teacher at the school was awarded a scholarship for a three week Holocaust Study course at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, a project that has been running for some seven years on an annual basis sponsored by
a Melbourne based B’nai B’rith Unit, the Raoul Wallenberg Unit. A number of  history teachers are awarded this scholarship every year, providing a fully funded scholarship.

On her return she shared her knowledge with her students who were inspired to write a play about a Jewish family in Germany and their fate during the period lof the Holocaust.  Both the script, backed by an audio-visual presentation  was extremely moving and  descriptive. It is an amazing achievement from
students , from a country town, who most likely  had never met a Jewish person before, and had not heard of the Holocaust.

The Pauline Glass Momorial Yad Vashem Scholarship has produced some very positive  results in assisting to pass on the facts about the Holocaust to a new generation of Australian  school students, and in a small, but significant
way combat the poison the Holocaust denyers are trying spread.

This year twelve teachers will be travelling to Israel in January under the scheme.

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New Polish Jewish group strengthens ties

MELBOURNE- A new organisation of  Polish Jews in Australia aims to strengthen ties  between Jewish and mainstream communities in  Poland, as well as among Jews and non-Jewish of Polish descent locally.

President Bernard Korbman told said the reason for the creation of the Australian Society of Polish Jews and Their Descendants (ASPJ), which  has a membership of around 50 primarily  “second-generation” people ­ the children of  Shoah survivors ­ was because “the time was right”.

The group also has survivors among its ranks, including David Prince and Moish Fiszman, who are on its board.

According to Korbman, the organisation, which  held its first annual general meeting on November  17, is a successor to the former Australian
chapter of the postwar Federation of Polish Jews, pioneered by communal figures such as Aron Sokolowicz.

ASPJ is also a descendant of the landsmanshaften, which underpinned Australia’s Polish-Jewish  community from the 1940s onwards, but which are now in decline because of the aging of survivors. It was the generation that established
the Jewish Holocaust Centre, of which Korbman is executive director.

“The children did not get involved and take over  from their parents,” he said. “We all felt Australian and [we] did not want to be known as Polish Jews, it meant very little to us. But as we’ve aged, some of the second generation have started to want to know more and learn about our roots.”

Interest has been re-ignited by developments such as the March of the Living, the fall of communism and renewed interest from Poles generally in their country’s Jewish history.

ASPJ has forged ties with the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, which will open in Warsaw  in 2011, and Andrew Rachjer, an ASPJ member, is  also a member of the museum’s board.

When Korbman visited Poland in 2006, he was “inundated by young Poles who wanted to learn  more about Judaism and Jews and [he] gave lectures at universities.”

Korbman said strengthening ties between Australian Jewish and non-Jewish communities of Polish ancestry needs to be achieved “without in any way whitewashing the history of the Holocaust and the relationship between Poles and Jews and anti-Semitism but we want to focus on the 1000-year history of Jews in Poland,” which he hailed as an age of culture, learning and long periods of peaceful development.

Meanwhile, he added, Jews and non-Jews of Polish descent in Australia need to hold “frank and honest dialogue” to break down stereotypes of each other’s communities.

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Gold Coast community shocked  by rabbi’s sudden death

GOLD COAST,  Queensland – The Gold Coast Jewish community and Jews around Australia are in mourning following the death of Temple Shalom’s Rabbi Jackie Wexler on November 21.

The 56-year-old, who suffered from food  allergies, had apparently been admitted to  hospital with an allergic reaction and diverticulitis some days earlier. She succumbed to a severe infection and cardiac arrest.

The Conservative rabbi arrived in Australia from the US in 2008 on a two-year contract to lead Temple Shalom.

The synagogue’s distraught president, Kate Lesser, said the congregation had been in close contact with Rabbi Wexler’s family in the US since her death.

“As a community, we have just lost our core,” she said.

Union for Progressive Judaism (UPJ) executive director Steve Denenberg said: “We learnt of the news of her passing with great shock and our whole movement is grieving. We said special prayers for her over the weekend.”

Rabbi Wexler once said of her calling as a rabbi,  that at the age of 17, “I knew without a doubt this is what I was meant to be,” although Conservative Judaism at that time did not allow women to be rabbis.

Gaining her s’micha from the Conservative movement’s Jewish Theological Seminary in the 1990s, she worked with congregations in Florida and on Long Island, New York. In August last  year, she took up her Australian appointment as a rabbi.

Discussions on extending Rabbi Wexler’s contract were about to take place, Denenberg said.

He said Rabbi Wexler had missed a rabbinical meeting preceding the UPJ’s six-monthly gathering in Sydney last week because she had been unwell.

Arrangements are being made to ensure a rabbi will be present for b’nei mitzvah taking place at Temple Shalom in the coming weeks.

“As soon as is appropriate, we will convene a search committee to look for a long-term replacement,” Denenberg said.

Rabbi Wexler is survived by her children, her mother and a sister, who all live in the United States.

Mumbai Survivor marks anniversary of massacre

CANBERRA – Australian students were among thousands worldwide who commemorated the first anniversary of the Mumbai terrorist attacks
with a communal Shabbat dinner.

A global directive by Chabad on Campus in New York, “Bring a Friend Shabbat” aimed to be the largest campus-based Shabbat celebration and was
held in memory of Rabbi Gavriel and Rivkah Holtzberg, who were Chabad shluchim (emissaries).

The couple, together with four others, were murdered in Nariman House, the headquarters of Chabad in Mumbai, on November 26, 2008.

In all, more than 170 people were killed over three days of terrorism in the tourist districts of the city.

Moshe Holtzberg, the infant son of Rabbi Gavriel and Rivkah Holtzberg, meanwhile, was spirited to safety by the Holtzbergs’ Indian nanny, Sandra Samuel.

Hailed as “a child of all Israel”, the toddler marked his third birthday at a gathering in Kfar Chabad on November 18.

Two thousand people attended the event, held to remember the victims and to see Moshe have his first haircut in accordance with religious tradition.

According to Samuel, it took some time for Moshe to recover from the attack, and he can now look at pictures of his parents without crying.

In Melbourne, Chabad Campus’ Rabbi Daniel and Sara Rabin organised a special dedication to the Holtzbergs. Rabbi Rabin honoured Rivkah’s love of
Shabbat with an intimate Shabbat dinner for 20 students.

At the meal, participants were encouraged to spend a few quiet moments reflecting on a personal resolution in memory of the slain rabbi and his wife.

“If 10 people could cause so much chaos and  tragedy,” he said, referring to the gunmen and hostage takers, “then 20 positive resolutions could change the world for good.”

Rabbi Rabin also honoured Rabbi Holtzberg’s love of scholarship and learning, by dedicating his weekly shiur to self-sacrifice and Jewish pride.

Meanwhile in Canberra, a ceremony to commemorate the victims of the Mumbai terrorist attack one year ago was held at the National Jewish Memorial Centre last week.

In particular, the slain Chabad emissaries were remembered at the event, which was organised jointly by Chabad of the ACT, the Israeli embassy and the ACT Jewish Community.

ACT Jewish Community president Dr Anita Shroot, Israeli embassy deputy chef de mission Eli Yerushalmi and Rabbi Dan Avital spoke at the memorial, and local resident Donald Chambers lit a candle.

New president for Rabbinical Council of Victoria

MELBOURNE – Rabbi Yaakov Glasman has been elected to replace Rabbi Meir Shlomo Kluwgant as president of the Rabbinical Council of Victoria (RCV).

After five years in the top job, Rabbi Kluwgant was required to step down, handing the baton to one of Melbourne’s youngest senior rabbis, Rabbi Glasman.

The North Eastern Jewish Centre rabbi edged out one of Melbourne’s most experienced senior  rabbis, Rabbi Philip Heilbrunn, to win the presidency, held at the RCV’s annual general meeting on November 25.

Caulfield Hebrew Congregation’s Rabbi Ralph Genende was elected vice president.

Rabbi Glasmann said: “It’s gratifying to know that my colleagues have expressed their confidence in me to assume the position of RCV president.”

He said his ambitions for the organisation are twofold: to continue the work already underway and to engage Jewish youth.

Rabbis and community leaders farewelled Rabbi Kluwgant at the AGM, giving him a standing ovation.

He has overseen a revamp of the RCV that delivered the rabbinic body extra clout and extra funding, in the form of substantial government grants.

In one of his last duties as president, Rabbi Kluwgant met last week with Victorian Premier John Brumby to thank him for his support for the state’s Orthodox rabbis.

Unfortunately though, Rabbi Kluwgant was unable to leave his post in a blaze of glory, with one of his pet projects, compulsory pre-nuptial agreements for Jewish wedding, voted down at the AGM. Instead, rabbis will recommend couples consider a pre-nuptial agreement.

Grandson recalls protest against Nazism

MELBOURNE – Aboriginal elder William Cooper’s grandson, Alfred “Uncle Boydie” Turner, was the guest speaker at the UIA’s AGM in Melbourne on November 26.

Cooper, of Yorta Yorta descent, spent most of his life in the Cummeragunja community where he was a spokesman for the Yorta Yorta in their ongoing
battles for land justice against the New South Wales government. Late in life, he resettled in Melbourne.

In 1938, following Kristallnacht, Cooper petitioned the German Consulate over the Nazis’ treatment of the Jews, the only such recorded protest in Australia at that time.

In May 2009, the State of Israel commemorated the brave actions of Cooper.

The Embassy of Israel and United Israel Appeal flew Turner to Israel for this commemoration and he spoke to the AGM about his experience.

More delays in Zentai extradition

PERTH  – Alleged war crimes suspect Charles Zentai has launched legal action that
will delay plans to extradite him to Hungary to face charges over a World War II murder.

Lawyers for the 88-year-old have been granted a judicial review of this month’s ministerial decision that gave the green light for the Perth resident to be sent to Budapest.

A Hungarian court wants Zentai to face charges in connection with the beating and murder of Budapest teenager Peter Balazs, whose body was dumped in the Danube in 1944.

A spokesperson for Home Affairs Minister Brendan O’Connor told The AJN the department will delay giving effect to its extradition ruling until after the Federal Court reviews the decision. That process must begin no later than December 4.

But there is no timeframe for the review, which could overturn O’Connor’s November 12 determination.

Zentai, who remains in prison in Perth, has maintained he is not guilty, and his lawyers have fought to keep him in Australia ever since the charges were laid in 2005.

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Fabian is Australia bureau chief for San Diego Jewish World.  He may be contacted at fabiang@sandiegojewishworld.com

Music and history abound throughout Israel

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

By Dorothea Shefer-Vanson

MEVASSERET ZION, Israel –As readers of this column will have surmised by now, my husband and I are keen concert-goers. Israel abounds in opportunities to attend inspiring orchestral concerts, uplifting chamber performances, and impressive solo recitals. We try to attend as many of these as our energy and pocket allow, and these almost invariably leave us agape at the wealth of musical riches with which this small country is blessed.

Thus, in the summer we attended a gala concert given in the open air in Tel Aviv, at which Daniel Barenboim conducted the orchestra, choir and soloists of Milan’s La Scala in a stunning performance of Verdi’s Requiem. It was attended by thousands, and was well worth enduring the heat and discomfort of Tel Aviv.

A few weeks earlier we attended a weekend devoted to Beethoven in a hotel in Nazareth. The hotel, which afforded a magnificent vista over the Jezreel Valley, was comfortable and could easily accommodate the four hundred or so Beethoven aficionados who had come to be regaled with lectures about the composer and recitals of his work. The organizer and star of the weekend was Gil Shohat, a strapping young man of thirty-five who, as well as playing four of the most difficult Beethoven piano sonatas by heart that weekend (Pathetique, Moonlight, Waldstein and Apassionata), spoke about and demonstrated various aspects of the composer’s genius. Gil also composes and conducts on a comprehensive scale, and was recently made a Companion of France’s Legion d’Honneur, a signal recognition for any Israeli, and especially one so young. Now we are eagerly awaiting the next such weekend.

Not long after returning from Nazareth we caught a Saturday lunchtime concert in the Scottish Church, a fine building of Jerusalem stone dating from 1927 and overlooking the Old City of Jerusalem and the Valley of Hinnom. At the entrance to the church is a plaque commemorating ‘the Liberation of Jerusalem on December 9 1917’ which was laid by ‘Field Marshal the Viscount Allenby G.C.B., G.C.M.G. on May 7 1927.’ Inside the cool interior of the church, which is built in modern Romanesque style, plaques commemorate fallen soldiers of Scottish brigades who fell in both world wars. The text on one of them reads: ‘Sacred to the memory of Alistair, Captain, the Black Watch, who fell in the defence of Crete on May 28th 1941, aged 27, only son of Brigadier-General J.G.H.Hamilton of Skene, and of Mungo, Captain, the Black Watch, M.C., who died on December 14th 1941 of wounds received at Tobruk, aged 26, only surviving son of Col. Sir George Stirling, Bt., of Glorat. They worshipped together in this church, November 1937 – June 1940.’ One can only imagine how much grief and heartache is embodied in this inscription.

But that is not all the history that this church embodies. As you leave the building and look out over the walls of the Old City, another small plaque catches your eye. This one, headed ‘A Fragment of History,’ mentions the two tiny silver scrolls from the 7th century BCE discovered by archaeologists a few years ago in the valley below and usually on display in the Israel Museum. The ancient scrolls contain the priestly blessing, the form of words which Moses instructed Aaron and his sons, the priests of Israel, to use when blessing the people. The plaque quotes the text, which anyone who attends the Shabbat service in synagogue hears pronounced by the Kohanim, and obligingly adds its English translation as it appears in the Authorized Version of the Bible.

It’s impossible to take a single step in Jerusalem without encountering one aspect or another of our history.

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Shefer-Vanson, a freelance writer and translator based in Mevasseret Zion, can be reached at dorothea@shefer.com This article initially appeared in the AJR Journal, published by the Association of Jewish Refugees in the United Kingdom.

Inertia, rather than conscious policy, often influences the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

By Ira Sharkansky

JERUSALEM—What has Israel contributed to the impasse in the peace process, and to the suffering of Palestinians?

That is a question several have asked me, often with a follow up charging that I have not responded.

I have responded, more than once. Those convinced of Israeli culpability either have not understood my English, or they are not satisfied with my explanations. When I do not list the severe errors that they hold dear, they accuse me of evading the question.

Israelis have made no shortage of accusations against their own government for “missing opportunities.” Usually this means not offering enough, or not taking advantage of the possibilities of Palestinian receptivity with a generous offer.

No doubt Israel has not made its offers attractive enough. The question is, could Israel have offered enough to satisfy Palestinians and other Arabs, and lessened restrictions on the West Bank and Gaza, without endangering its own security?

Could it have gone after the really bad people, and allowed other Palestinians freedom of movement, including opportunities to work in Israel?

To those questions there is no absolute yes or no.

Moreover, it is overly simple to discuss “Israel” as a policymaking entity, just as it is overly simple to discuss “The United States” or any other democracy.

Democracies have dominant policymakers, but those individuals cannot overlook the pressures received from domestic allies and antagonists, the constraints of economics and international politics. Israel’s political spectrum is wide and boisterous, with demands for spending more on social services or doing more to pursue peace with the neighbors. There are religious Jews more concerned with observing the Sabbath than anything else, intense religious nationalists who feel they have a deed from the Almighty for the whole of Eretz Israel, and young couples, with or without a religious motivation, who want the best housing they can acquire for the least money.

One result of all these pressures is about 500,000 Israeli Jews living on land that Palestinians claim as their own. For numerous Palestinians, all Israelis are living on Palestinian land.

There may have been missed opportunities since the crucial events of 1948 and than 1967, but they have not been obvious.

Israeli policymakers have generally not moved any more heroically or decisively than policymakers in other democracies. Israel has limped along following what its officials perceived as opportunities and constraints, rather than conducting a thorough analysis of the present and future, then an assiduous pursuit of a rational strategy. Over the years settlers have demanded construction, suburbanites have demanded homes on cheap land, Palestinians have not come forward with attractive offers, and inertia has done its work. Politicians typically do what is easiest, not what one or another group of deep thinkers with controversial ideas claim is wisest.

Occasionally there is an heroic moment in politics, but often they end badly. Remember John Kennedy ordering an escalation of American involvement in Vietnam, and George W. Bush invading Iraq and Afghanistan with aspirations to make them stable democracies?

Among the tough nuts currently facing those who would bring peace to the Holy Land are those half a million Jews living where others do not want them. No one should expect a Jewish government to move them, especially after the removal of a few thousand Jews from Gaza brought rockets instead of peace.

Those faulting the Israeli government for missing opportunities have their favorite moments when they are convinced peace was at hand. Camp David in 2000 was one of those. Analysts quarrel about offers made, Palestinian responses, the presence or lack of counter offers, or whether the whole thing was made hopeless by the Palestinian narrative of being the sole party that has suffered, and having the weight of Islam on their side.

Without trying the impossible of solving this or other disputes about moments in history, I have no trouble faulting the Palestinians for mistakes greater than those of the Israelis. It has not be wise for them to insist on what the side with greater power has viewed as unacceptable: the right of refugees and their families to return, and 1967 borders. They have spoiled their chances further by incitement of their own people, and violence against Israeli civilians. The result is a profound lack of trust, which threatens the viability of any negotiations.

The claimed “punishment” of all Palestinians because of a few bad applies is another issue without a simple answer. Armies do not operate like the local police. They do not have complete control over the population, and the people they would arrest have the means to resist them. Are the Israelis less considerate of the local population than other active armies? The question provokes loud claims rather than conclusive answers. The Goldstone Report on Gaza demonstrates predetermined conclusions and reliance on questionable testimony that renders it a hostile document rather than anything reliable.

Is Gaza the world’s largest prison, as claimed by those thinking they are on the moral high ground?

Blockade is a conventional way of warfare, not objectionable when waged against an enemy who targets one’s own civilians, and fails to provide a prisoner the elementary rights assured by the rules of warfare. The IDF monitors levels of food, fuel and medications allowed into Gaza. Reports are that the people eat better, and are healthier than those in much of the Third World. Part of the explanation is the United Nations, which had been providing food, housing and medical care for 60 years, as well as protection for fighters and stores of munitions in its facilities. The Palestinians suffer as a result of all that assistance, insofar as they have been kept from looking after themselves.

You have heard of welfare dependence. The Palestinians represent the world’s worst case.

Add Obama to the problems currently facing both sides. He has lessened whatever meager prospects there were by his overreaching demand of a total freeze of settlement building, including Jewish neighborhoods of Jerusalem, and then backing down and praising Israel’s partial compliance. The combination has turned both the Israelis and the Palestinians against him, lessened his credibility as a mediator and the prospects of peace in the near future.

There have been several years of relative quiet, considerable economic development, and fewer Israeli incursions into Palestinian areas of the West Bank. If Palestinians can see those signs as better than violence, it may help to keep the heroes out of action. The crucial element of trust among Palestinians as well as Israelis may then grow to the point where meaningful negotiations are feasible.

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Sharkansky is professor emeritus of political science at Hebrew University

University of Haifa students devise You Tube campaign for Gilad Shalit’s release

November 30, 2009 Leave a comment

HAIFA (Press Release)–University of Haifa students have joined the public fight for the release of Gilad Shalit and decided to make their final project for a course in the School of Political Sciences a campaign for Shalit’s release. A survey that the students carried out among 200 respondents as a preparatory step for the project reveals that 87.5% of the Israeli public are interested in taking an active role in the fight for the release of Gilad Shalit.

The final project for the “Political Campaign” course given by Dr. Israel Waismel-Manor is the production of a short video, which each student creates on the topic that the class selects at the beginning of the course. At the end of the course, all of the videos are uploaded to YouTube and are virally distributed on the Web. The students are guided in their productions by theoretical material that is studied in the lecture hall and by a preliminary survey that they carry out to assess the basic points to focus upon.

This year the students chose the release of Gilad Shalit as their final project topic, more specifically joining “Gilad’s Army of Friends”. They began by taking a random survey amongst 200 respondents from different areas of Israel. This revealed that while 87.5% of the Israeli public are interested in actively contributing to Gilad’s release, only 28% have actually taken any type of action. The survey also shows that the public is highly aware of the release campaign. This is well reflected in the average answer to the question “How many days has Gilad been held hostage?”: 1,219; which is very close to the actual number of 1,239 days at the time of the survey.

Additional results of the survey show that 62% support the release of terrorists with blood on their hands to achieve an exchange deal; 16% are against it and another 22% are undecided. Only 20% of the respondents believe that the government has done all it can in order to bring Gilad back home and that the main factor impeding the release on the Israeli side is the prime minister. The students say that they are most motivated by the fact that only 36.5% of the respondents strongly believe that it is possible to bring Gilad home before the end of 2009.

“A central issue that has arisen from this survey is that the word ‘army’ in ‘Gilad’s Army of Friends’ deters people, as it infers that they would have to dedicate a lot of time to being active. I also thought so before we began this campaign, but now I know that it is more of an expression of support and solidarity and is intended to achieve a petition of one million names. This is a point I mean to convey in my video,” says student Moran Nof. She explained that she joined this particular course knowing that it combines campaigns with social involvement, but she did not expect to find herself a member of “Gilad’s Army of Friends” just a few weeks later. “Everyone wants to help out, but they are mainly doing it in theory only. I hope that our campaign will make people do something for real,” she concludes.

“I am very glad that the students have chosen to take what they are learning in the course and implement it for a worthy cause. This will be the first time that I hope not to need the videos at all, and pray that we will be able to watch them for the first time with Gilad at our side,” says Dr. Waismel-Manor.

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Preceding provided by the University of Haifa

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