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ADL backs Wiccan’s right to sue California prisons

December 1, 2009 Leave a comment

NEW YORK (Press Release)–The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) urged a federal appeals court to allow a Wiccan religious leader to have his day in court to pursue a religious discrimination case.

A Wiccan clergy member challenged as unconstitutional a policy of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation that limits paid clergy positions to members of five religions, not including his faith. A court denied him the right to bring the lawsuit on the grounds that he was not the correct party to do so.

Deborah M. Lauter, ADL Civil Rights Director, issued the following statement:
At a minimum, the plaintiff in this case deserves his day in court to challenge a discriminatory practice. He applied for a job and was told that, because of an exclusionary California policy, he was ineligible. That makes him the appropriate party to challenge the policy and it is puzzling why the trial court refused to hear his case.

In addition, as a taxpayer he should have had the right to challenge the use of government funds that favor certain religions over others. The court’s decision to restrict that right is an affront to fundamental American principles of religious liberty.

The case, McCollum v California, is before the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.  ADL joined several organizations in filing an amicus brief.

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Preceding provided by Anti-Defamation League

Shoah Survivor Rita Ross speaks Dec. 14 at Adat Shalom

December 1, 2009 Leave a comment

POWAY, California (Press Release)—The Temple Adat Shalom Adult Education Committee presents Rita Ross, the writer of an exceptional memoir that delves into her childhood during the Holocaust, saving the lives of children and personally experiencing the horror of the era.

Her book, Running from Home, which will be available for purchase, is written in a compelling narrative that conveys childlike innocence in a world of cruelty.

The event will be held at Temple Adat Shalom, Poway, on December 14 at 7 PM.  The community is invited free of charge.

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Preceding provided by Temple Adat Shalom

In the Mix, for 20s to 40s, will focus on cultural events, and hold Dec. 9 mixer to preview Jewish film festival

December 1, 2009 Leave a comment

SAN DIEGO–Jews in their 20s, 30s, and early 40s who desire to participate in and influence the cultural offerings of the Center for Jewish Culture at the Lawrence Family JCC have formed a new group called “In the Mix.”

The group is kicking off its activities with a Wednesday, Dec. 9, Flix Mix cocktail party previewing the San Diego Jewish Film Festival. It will be held from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the PB Ale House, 721 Grand Avenue in San Diego

In the Mix Co-chairs Shelley Neiman and Stacy Ziman say tickets may be reserved online at $10 per person or may be purchased at the door for $12. The first 50 persons who reserve their tickets will be entered into a special drawing.

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Preceding provided by ‘In the Mix’

How about some Turkish beignets for Chanukah?

December 1, 2009 4 comments


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By Linda Capeloto Sendowski

BEVERLY HILLS, California—Hot from the sizzling oil, dripping with warm, lemon scented, honey syrup the bumuelo is a Sephardic tradition.  That first bite of sweet crispy goodness is worth the calorie conscious guilt I will feel after eating this traditional goodie.

Bumuelos also known as birmuelos, as burmuelos, depending on where Sephardic families are from, are the Jewish version of a doughnut or beignet.  Since bumuelos originated in Spain, they traveled with Ladino (Judeo Spanish) speaking Jews in the 15th century to the Ottoman Empire as part of their traditional cuisine.  Bumuelos have their counterparts in many other countries.  This honey puff is known in Greece as loukoumades, and in Syria, as zalabieh.

Where I grew up in Seattle, Washington, we called them bumuelos and my Turkish mother made great ones.  She had a special blue enamel pan that she reserved for deep frying French fries or Chanukah bumuelos, and we ate them golden brown, hot out of the oil, after pouring the special syrup on top.  My mom or Nona as the kids call her was always the most capable of all her sisters.  She is an ace at Sephardic baking including, borekas, baklava, and biscotios and is still going strong at 91.  She wears a homemade terrycloth apron with pockets and her tan hands, still nimble, work quickly with the soft sticky dough.  Today, I do that job with my mom at our family Chanukah dinner in sunny southern California.

So why do we eat bumuelos or other fried treats on Chanukah?  Chanukah commemorates the great, although not long lived, physical victory of the Maccabees over their enemies the Greeks in the year 164 BCE.  It is the philosophical victory of freedom of individuality and freedom of religion over the enforced uniformity of the Hellenistic majority.

The Maccabees were a father, his five sons, and all their followers.  The most famous was Judah Maccabee or Judah ‘the Hammer’.  They conducted a guerilla war from the hills around the town of Modi’in near Jerusalem.  The story has it that when the victorious Maccabees returned to reclaim their temple after 3 years of fighting, they found it defiled and used for Pagan rituals.  To reinstate the temple, oil was required to rekindle a menorah.  The amount of oil available was not sufficient, so a miracle occurred, and the oil lasted for 8 days until they could obtain more.

We recall the miracle of the oil in the victory story by eating fried food.  Food as symbolism is used often in the Jewish calendar.  Chanukah is not of major religious importance; it’s really just a celebration on the Jewish calendar.  However, with the twist of fate of having roughly the same timing as the Christmas holidays Chanukah became huge.  We light candles, give gifts or gold coins, and eat.

Most are familiar with latkes made with shredded potatoes, fried in oil, and served with applesauce and or sour cream.  I make them all year long, but other kinds of fried treats are consumed as well including, bumuelos, Israeli sufganiyot (filled doughnuts), sweet potato latkes, zucchini ejjeh (fried individual frittatas), and bread crumb crusted cauliflower florets.

This Chanukah, try including bumuelos in your Chanukah feast.  It enhances a dinner of latkes and brisket or a dairy meal as well.  While I was recipe testing last week I served them for desert after a meal of roast rack of veal with wild mushrooms, braised fennel, Brussels sprouts and baked yams.

Bumuelos

Makes 15-18 bumuelos, serves 6-8, parve

1 envelope rapid rise yeast (2 teaspoons)

1 cup plus 1 tablespoon warm water

1 teaspoon sugar

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

1/4 teaspoon sea salt

2 cups unbleached flour

Vegetable oil for deep frying, (I use about 2 quarts)

Syrup

1 cup water

1 cup sugar

¾ cup honey

1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice

Place the yeast and sugar in a medium bowl.  Pour in the warm water and stir.  In a few minutes, when the yeast begins to foam, add the oil.  Mix the salt into the flour and starting with ½ cup of the flour, whisk it into the yeast and water.  Add the flour in additions of ½ cup each and mix until smooth and well blended.  The dough will be a little loose and sticky.  Cover the bowl with plastic wrap.  Set the dough aside in a warm draft free corner to rise for one hour.

Prepare the syrup while you wait for the dough to rise.  Place all the ingredients in a saucepan on medium heat.  When the sugar has dissolved, let the liquid boil for 5 minutes.  Remove it from the heat.  (You could make the syrup well ahead and just rewarm it.)

When the dough is ready, preheat the oil in a deep 4-6 quart saucepan pan or deep fat fryer to 360º-365º.  The oil should be 3-4 inches deep.  Prepare a small bowl with water for wetting your hands.  Dough doesn’t stick to wet hands.

With your right hand scoop up about 2 tablespoons of dough into your left hand, make a ball, and open a hole in the center with your thumbs.  Then slide the dough off your fingers into the hot oil.  The dough will drop into the oil and then unfold into a freeform doughnut with a hole in the center.  Fry for about 1.5 minutes on the first side until golden, then flip with a tongs, and fry until the second side is a beautiful gold color.  Remove the bumuelo from the oil with a tongs and drain on paper towels. For best results, fry 3-4 at a time so as not to overcrowd the pan.

Dip the bumuelos into the hot syrup and serve.  Alternatively, you might pass the syrup and let the guests serve themselves.

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Linda Capeloto Sendowski is a food blogger and cooking teacher based in Beverly Hills, California.  For more recipes, stories, and food, visit her blog at www.theborekadiary.com.

Savoring Jewish life in Burma

December 1, 2009 4 comments

Interior of Musmeah Yeshua
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By Sammy Samuels

YANGON, Myanmar–Jewish life in Burma today is quite different from what it was during colonial times, which lasted until World War II.  Before the war, it still was the case that “the sun never set” on the British Empire, including in Southeast Asia. Jewish merchants, who migrated originally to Burma in the late 1800′s, served as a natural conduit between the British colonial rulers and the export–import community abroad. The Jewish community of approximately 2,500 people was a respected presence in business and a valued part of local society. During this “Golden Age” Jewish influence within the government and society as a whole grew rapidly.

Jews were incorporated into the life of the country and played a prominent part in various fields. In tropical Rangoon Jews owned ice factories and bottling plants. Some dealt in textiles and timber, while others were customs officials and traders. Jews held a designated seat on the Rangoon Municipal Committee. The Jewish community in Burma was so influential, in fact, that in the first years of the century, Rangoon and the smaller city of Bassein had Jewish mayors, and Judah Ezekiel Street in downtown Rangoon was named to honor a Jew. The Sofaer family donated the iron gates to the Rangoon Zoo, and another Jew, Mordechai Isaac Cohen, donated the beautiful cast-iron bandstand in Bandoola Square. Both are still standing tall today.

In the center of downtown Rangoon (now Yangon) stood Musmeah Yeshua, the grand synagogue with its soaring ceiling and graceful columns. Musmeah Yeshua, one of 188 sites on the list of Yangon Heritage Buildings, was constructed in the 1890s. The Jewish cemetery, with more than 600 gravestones, and the synagogue with its 126 silver sifrei Torah (Torah scrolls) and Jewish school for over 200 students, proclaimed Jewish affluence and comfort in this lush land.

As Jewish wealth grew in those early days, Jewish philanthropy grew as well. The community donated large sums for local schools, libraries, and hospitals and helped local Burmese in many different ways. The Burmese were very appreciative of this aid and the country was a welcome and tolerant home for Jews for many years.

The golden days of Jewish life in Burma came to a close when the Japanese invaded in 1941. Japanese occupation forced most of the Jewish community, along with most of the British colonial population, to flee to other countries. Some Jews returned after the war, but they soon realized that the beautiful life they remembered was no more and their homes and wealth were gone.

Even so, there were promising relations between postwar Burma and the new State of Israel. Burma and Israel both achieved their independence in 1948 and Burma recognized the State of Israel in 1949; it was the first Asian country to do so. Burmese Prime Minister U Nu was the first foreign head of state to visit the newly independent State of Israelin 1955. Six years later, Israeli Prime Minister David Ben Gurion spent two weeks in Burma. President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi, Golda Meir, Moshe Dayan, and Shimon Peres also visited Burma.

Despite these cordial relations, Jews found it difficult to regain their lives and re-establish their businesses in Burma after World War II. The Jews of Burma scattered to Israel, Australia, England, and the United States. Since then, the Burmese Jewish community has continued to decrease in population.

Today, only a handful of Jews live in Burma. For more than 35 years, my family has taken care of the synagogue, cemetery, and what remains of the community. Burma and the Jewish community has always been our home since the 1890s or perhaps even earlier when my great-grandparents left Baghdad to start a new life in the vibrant city of Rangoon. During World War II, my grandfather, Isaac Samuels, risked his life for the synagogue; today, we still revere the same building and its history, which encompasses Jewish life in Burma.

Every day, my father Moses Samuels sits in the quiet synagogue of which he is a trustee, waiting to greet Jewish visitors and to share with them the rich and unique history of the Jewish community of Burma. In particular, every Friday, he  and I  wait at the synagogue for Jewish visitors hoping we will be able to gather the minyan (requisite ten people) to begin services.

My father has posted a sign on the front door of the synagogue: “A tree may be alone in the field; a man alone in the world, but a Jew is never alone on his Holy Days.” It is my father’s belief that no Jew should be alone during the holidays—and yet most of the time, only the two of us can be found in the synagogue. Even if only we two are present, I always feel the echoes of the many Shabbat services that took place in this beautiful synagogue and I hear the melodies of the songs our ancestors sang when the community was at its peak.

We may not be able to return to the glorious days of Jewish life in Burma, but the community believes that, through tourism, we will be able to make a difference in keeping the Jewish spirit alive here. In 2005, we started the travel agency Myanmar Shalom, with the goal of linking Jews around the world to our small community and enabling visitors to explore and experience this beautiful country about which Rudyard Kipling wrote: “This is Burma and it will be quite unlike any land you know.”

Through years of isolation, the country has managed to retain many of its cultural traditions and to preserve much of its historical heritage—making it one of the few remaining places on earth that truly can bring a visitor back in time to experience the Asia of old. Whatever the politics of visiting Burma, tourists will find a nation of gentle folk and smiling people, rich archaeological sites, glittering pagodas, colorful bazaars, and joyous festivals.

Among many other programs, Myanmar Shalom hosted its unique “Southeast Asia through Jewish Eyes.” Cooperating with Lotus Travels we attracted more than 30 participants led by Rabbi Marvin Tokayer, creator of “Journeys through Jewish Eyes,” and one of the world’s foremost authorities on the Asian Jewish experience.

For many years, the synagogue has not had a local minyan, so the group visit made a difference to this small community—once again filling the Rangoon synagogue with joy and song.

I often think about the “golden days” before World War II, when the synagogue was filled with more than 300 people for all congregational activities — the Jewish holy days, the weddings and bar mitzvah ceremonies. No matter where the descendants of Jews from Burma now live, the synagogue Musmeah Yeshua always will remain an important landmark of Jewish history in Southeast Asia for all of us and a reminder of the very vibrant and lively community that once lived in Burma.

Today, only a few of us are left in Burma, but our Jewish spirit is still alive and our prayer services still continue. I hope that through tourism the Jewish community may begin to revive and that our beautiful synagogue once again will be filled with joy and song as we continue our historic role in the life and welfare of the country.

For more information about the Jewish Community of Burma consult Almost Englishmen: Baghdadi Jews in British Burma by Dr. Ruth Fredman Cernea or contact us at  www.myanmarshalom.com.

Chabad of La Costa seeks yard-sale items

December 1, 2009 Leave a comment

CARLSBAD, California (Press Release)–Rabbi Yeruchem Eilfort, spiritual leader of Chabad of La Costa, has issued the following appeal:

Our Annual Community Yard Sale is THIS coming Sunday (December 6) from 8am – 2pm at the shul (1980 La Costa Avenue, Carlsbad). We need your saleable items now. Please bring items in good condition to the shul at this time. The items will be stored in the Noah’s Ark Classroom until Sunday morning. We also need additional volunteers for Sunday’s event.”

More information may be obtained from Chabad at La Costa at (760) 943-8891.

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Preceding provided by Chabad at La Costa

Lecture on Kafka’s last love Dec. 12 at Beverly Hills art gallery

December 1, 2009 1 comment

BEVERLY HILLS, California  (Press Release)–Explore the intriguing mysteries surrounding three of Lee Waisler’s portraits on the closing day of his About Faces exhibition at Sundaram Tagore Gallery in Beverly Hills on Sunday, December 12 from 3 to 5 pm: Literary genius Franz Kafka, his last love Dora Diamant, and Kafka’s friend and literary executor Max Brod, whose archive in Tel Aviv is making international headlines.

The informal talk by Kathi Diamant, Adjunct Professor and Director of the Kafka Project at San Diego State University, will offer a look at the magical intersection of art, love, loyalty, and literature.

Lee Waisler’s art is in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NY, the Smithsonian Institution and Jewish Museum in Washington DC, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and the National Gallery of Modern Art in India. In this new series of three-dimensional portraits of historical and contemporary figures, the artist presents a global group of iconic figures spanning different disciplines, from Albert Einstein to Leonard Cohen.

Kathi Diamant is author of Kafka’s Last Love: The Mystery of Dora Diamant, a literary detective story about the remarkable woman who captured Kafka’s heart and kept his literary flame alive for decades. As founder/director of the Kafka Project, for over a decade she has led the authorized search to recover the lost writings of Franz Kafka, confiscated from Dora by the Gestapo in Berlin 1933.

Sundaram Tagore Gallery is located at 9606 South Santa Monica Boulevard, Beverly Hills, CA 90210. Tel: http://www.facebook.com/l/978fa;310.278.4520

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Preceding provided by Kathi Diamant

ZOA to confer Theodor Herzl Medallion on Sheldon G. Adelson

December 1, 2009 1 comment

NEW YORK (Press Release)–The Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) announced that it will present to world-renowned businessman and pro-Israel philanthropist Sheldon G.  Adelson its most distinguished and historic award, the Theodor Herzl Gold Medallion for outstanding achievement in Zionism.

The ZOA Dinner will be held at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York City, 42nd & Park, on December 13, 2009, (5PM reception, 6PM dinner).  Some refer to this award as the “Nobel Prize in Zionism.”  This magnificent Gold Medal is rarely given by the ZOA.  Past recipients include Lord James Balfour, Sir Winston Churchill, President Harry Truman, Israeli Prime Ministers David Ben Gurion, Golda Meir, Menachem Begin, and Yitzhak Shamir.  Mr. Adelson is the Chairman and CEO of the Las Vegas Sands Corporation.  He and his wife Dr. Miriam Adelson are major supporters of Birthright Israel, Yad Vashem, the U.S. Holocaust Museum and numerous other Jewish/Israeli causes.  They are also active politically, promoting strong U.S./Israel relations.

At the ZOA Dinner, Dr. Miriam Adelson will be receiving the Louis D. Brandeis Award. Past recipients include Vice President Joe Biden, Ambassador Moshe Arens, Abba Eban, Max Fisher, Justice Arthur Goldberg, Larry King, Elizabeth Taylor, Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, Ronald Lauder, Mort Zuckerman, Natan Sharansky, Simon Wiesenthal and Senators Rudy Boschwitz, Elizabeth & Robert Dole, John Heinz, Daniel Inouye, Jacob Javits, Daniel Moynihan, Arlen Specter and many others.

Dr. Adelson is an esteemed expert in drug rehabilitation and runs clinics in both Israel and the U.S.  She is also a full partner in all of the Adelsons’ pro-Israel activities.

Morton Klein, President of the ZOA, will be presenting the awards to the Adelsons.

Speakers at the ZOA/Adelson Dinner include Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (video), Deputy Prime Minister Moshe Yaalon, and Minority Whip U.S. Congressman Eric Cantor of Virginia.

Robert Guzzardi, Esq., will be receiving the Moskowitz Award for Jewish Activism, presented to him by Mrs. Cherna Moskowitz, wife of Dr. Irving Moskowitz.

Jeff Jacoby of the Boston Globe will be receiving the Ben Hecht Award for Outstanding Journalism in the Middle East.  Previous recipients include A.M. Rosenthal, Cal Thomas, Daniel Pipes, Caroline Glick, Itamar Marcus, Sidney Zion, and Joseph Farah.

The Emcee for the evening will be Mr. Gary Erlbaum, a leader in the Jewish Federation of Philadelphia, and the Jewish Agency.  He was also former National Chairman of Young Leadership for Israel Bonds.

Introducing guests and presenting awards include Malcolm Hoenlein, Executive Vice-Chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations; Martin Gross, President of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy; Henry Schwartz, officer of the ZOA Board; and Sandra Stein, Esq., member of the ZOA Board who is with the law firm of Coughlin Stoia.

Author and TV host Rabbi Shmuley Boteach will be giving the invocation and lighting the Chanukah candles.  Rabbi Boteach has been called one of the top 10 influential rabbis in America by Newsweek magazine.  Also writes a weekly syndicated column for the Jerusalem Post.

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Preceding provided by Zionist Organization of America

Iran financing anti-Semitic films

December 1, 2009 1 comment

PARIS (WJC)–The French comedian Dieudonné M’bala M’bala has announced that he secured funding from Iran for films meant to “combat Zionism” in France. Dieudonné and the head of France’s Anti-Zionist Party, which Dieudonné helped to found earlier this year, said the support was obtained during a recent meeting with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran and that it would be used to finance film projects aimed at “combating Zionism head-on” in France.

“We have received a significant budget that will permit us to make films at the level of those made by Hollywood, which is the armed branch of Zionist culture,” said Dieudonné, adding that Hollywood films influenced by the “American-Zionist axis” were stigmatizing Arabs, among others. He said that his new movie projects filmed in Iran, and possibly Venezuela and Cuba, would be about slavery and colonialism.

Dieudonné told reporters that “Ahmadinejad is better loved in Iran than Sarkozy in France”. He commended the Iranian leader for “surviving a media lynch” and called protests against the hard-line leader’s re-election in June “Zionist propaganda”.

The well-known French comedian has been convicted and fined in the past for anti-Semitic statements, including likening Jews to slave traders, and for hosting a performance in which a notorious Holocaust denier is awarded a prize by an actor dressed as a Jewish concentration camp prisoner. He also referred to Holocaust remembrance as “pornographic”.

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Preceding provided by World Jewish Congress

Ivan Demjanjuk’s attorney fails in efforts to change judges and prosecutors

December 1, 2009 Leave a comment

MUNICH, Germany–On the opening day of the trial of suspected Nazi war criminal Ivan Demjanjuk in Munich, his attorney said it was unfair for his client to be charged for following orders when his superiors were never charged.

Demjanjuk, 89, a former autoworker who lived in near Cleveland, Ohio, and was extradited in May to Germany, appeared before the court in a wheelchair, covered by a blanket. He barely uttered a sound during the proceedings and appeared to have his eyes closed even as his lead attorney, Ulrich Busch, said that the judges and prosecutors should be removed from the case for being prejudiced against his client. The request was denied.

Busch said the court had acted unjustly by refusing in the past to bring to trial those who had given orders to murder and preferring instead to try his client on suspicion of following orders.

Without suggesting that Demjanjuk was a murderous ‘Trawniki’ guard at Sobibor in Poland, as the prosecution charges, Busch said that the Trawnikis – many of them Soviet POWs who were trained by the SS – were just as much victims as Jews forced to work for the Nazis in concentration camps.

Demjanjuk has denied the charges and claimed he had been a Soviet prisoner of war in a German camp. If convicted, Demjanjuk could face a jail term of up to 15 years. In 2002, the US Justice Department charged Demjanjuk with being a guard at Sobibor and revoked his citizenship for lying about his Nazi past in order to gain citizenship.

In the early 1980s, Demjanjuk had been accused of being the notorious guard ‘Ivan the Terrible’ at the Treblinka death camp. He was deported to Israel in 1986 and sentenced to death in 1988, but the Israeli Supreme Court overturned the conviction in 1993 after finding reasonable doubt that he was in fact not the guard in question. Monday’s proceedings began an hour after the scheduled start time in order to accommodate the 250 accredited journalists and observers, among them a number of Holocaust survivors.

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Preceding provided by World Jewish Congress

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