Jewish Standard, August 26, 2016

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IN THIS ISSUE: ABOUT OUR CHILDREN & ROCKLAND SECTION

OPERA SUMMONS GHOSTS OF TRIANGLE FIRE page 6


FAIR LAWN MAN SEEKS TO SEED ONLINE CIVILITY page 12
HOW RABBI WEINBACH CAME TO SUFFERN page 14
AUGUST 26, 2016
VOL. LXXXV NO. 51 $1.00

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Along for
the ride
Flying to Israel
with a plane of
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page 26

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2 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

EHMC_oncdrummer_11x14.indd 1

5/6/16 12:29 PM

Page 3
Time anoints first-ever
Bacon Critic and hes Jewish
l Lots of people who dont

Satmar camps offer egg-xemplary


education in anti-Zionism
l Where better than summer camp
to work on your pitching arm?
But face it: Pitchings only for one
person at a time, so you have to do
more waiting than throwing. Its not a
great way to build your skills.
So give credit where credit is due
to a Satmar summer camp, which
whipped up a mass pitching exercise.
Yes, the chasidic boys seen in a
video published by Yeshiva World
News last week were all given their
own eggs to pitch at a slow-moving
limousine, which, they were told belonged to Israeli Prime Minister Ben-

jamin Netanyahu. (Of course it didnt,


but whatever.)
The Satmar famously never have
forgiven the Zionist movement for
wanting to create a Jewish state, in
spite of their rebbes explicit warning against it. They believe that God
was so angered by Jews adopting
Zionism that he sent the Holocaust
as punishment.
How much of this grim theology
was conveyed to the children is unclear from the video. They seem to
just be having fun throwing eggs.
Larry Yudelson

Israeli medalist auctioning


autographed Olympic name patch
l Who said money

cant buy you


Olympic glory?
Israeli judoka
Yarden Gerbi, who
won a bronze
medal in the
womens 63-kg.
judo competition
at the Rio Olympics, is auctioning
off her Olympic
name patch for
charity.
Gerbi has offered the name
patch for sale on
eBay, and agreed
to autograph it
with a dedication to the buyer.
She will donate the auction proceeds to the Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Gerbi said in her description on the auction website.
As of Wednesday morning, the
highest bid was $13,100. The auction
closes on Monday.
Gerbi earned Israels first Olympic

keep kosher say that there


arent many foods that thrill
them the way bacon does. So
when the website Extra Crispy
announced in June that it was
searching for a Bacon Critic
yes, with capital letters
some 1,500 eager pork lovers
applied for their dream job.
Given the fact that bacon is
unequivocally treif forbidden under kosher law there
was a smoky, meaty whiff of
irony when Extra Crispy
a Time Inc. site devoted to
breakfast and brunch culture
named Jewish food writer Scott
Gold as its inaugural bacon specialist.
The 39-year-old New Orleans native
will spend three months hitting the
road in search of the countrys best
bacon, a list he will disclose in November. Based on his introductory post on
Extra Crispy in which he reminisces
lovingly about a childhood filled with
poboys, muffalettas, and oysters lovingly deep fried and wrapped in bacon his weekly dispatches from the
bacon field likely will be worth reading.
Gold is a widely published journalist
and author of The Shameless Carnivore: A Manifesto for Meat Lovers.
And hes probably aware of the irony
of a Jew being hired to write about this
most beloved of breakfast meats. (He
declined to speak to me about it.) In
2013, he wrote an article for NolaVie (a
New Orleans culture site where he contributes a regular column named Food
Porn) describing how the Crescent
Citys cuisine helped turn him into a kosher heretic or in his words, baconcheeseburger-eating-Jew.
Consider the laws of kashrut: for
the religious and hungry Jew, pigs are
of course out, as are shrimp, oysters,

crabs, crawfish, catfish (dirty bottom


dwellers!), frogs, alligators, turtles basically all the fantastic fauna indigenous
to South Louisiana, Gold wrote.
As he explained, he made some
concessions with [his] heritage but
still often thinks about kosher law and
his non-obedience policy toward it.
Gold even dished on one of his favorite Jewish meals: a pastrami sandwich
from Katzs Deli in New York City,
complete with mustard, pickles, and a
can of Dr. Browns Cel-Ray soda. (Like
any proper up-and-coming writer,
Gold spent a requisite decade living in
Brooklyn before returning to New Orleans a few years ago).
It may be a dream job for many, but
Golds task to find the best bacon in
the country may be a difficult one
after all, as he told the New York Times,
bacon is rarely terrible.
Its possible that Gold could achieve
another first: Find a tasty, kosher bacon substitute thats as good as the
real deal. But whatever happens, you
have to hand it to a writer whos bringing home the bacon by, well, bringing
home the bacon.
Gabe Friedman/JTA Wire Service

Candlelighting: Friday, August 26, 7:19 p.m.


Shabbat ends: Saturday, August 27, 8:18 p.m.

For convenient home delivery,


call 201-837-8818 or bit.ly/jsubscribe

medal since the 2008 games in


Beijing. Another Israeli judoka,
Ori Sasson, won a bronze medal
in the mens judo over-100 kg.
competition.
The medal is for all of Israel, for
everyone who supported me and
cheered me on, Gerbi said after her
victory. Im waiting for someone to
wake me up. I gave my soul and it
paid off. Whoever said you cant succeed in Israel is wrong.JTA Wire Service

CONTENTS
Noshes4
briefly local 13
rockland14
oPINION19
cover story 26
Dvar torah............................................36
Crossword puzzle 37
calendar 38
obituaries41
classifieds 42
real estate44

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Jewish Standard August 26, 2016 3

Noshes

I like my fried chicken, my pizza, my


peaches and my gefilte fish. I had to cut
all that out.
Ravens linebacker, Super Bowl champion, and six-time Pro Bowler Terrell Suggs,
who also says that he considers himself to be half-Jewish and has a Jewish star
tattoo on his arm, on his weight-loss diet.

HANDS OF STONE:

A surprisingly
Jewish boxing movie
Hands of Stone tells
much of the life story of
boxer Roberto Duran,
now 65, who held several
major titles in the 1970s
and 80s and is ranked as
one of the best fighters
of all time. It got good if
not great reviews when it
played the 2016 Cannes
film festival. Using flashbacks, it shows Durans
early life in Panamas
slums. It also covers his
major bouts leading up
to his two epic title fights
with Sugar Ray Leonard
in 1980 (won the first,
lost the second). Duran
was trained by the almost legendary RAY ARCEL (1899-1994). Arcel,
who is played by Robert
DeNiro, coached dozens
of champions, including
great Jewish champions
like BENNY LEONARD
and JACKIE Kid BERG,
in a career than began
in the 1920s. Born Ramel
Arcel, he was named
after a grandfather who
died in a pogrom. Unlike most boxing trainers
of his era, Arcel was a
mensch in his business
dealings. And while you
expect a boxing trainer
to have street smarts, Arcel stood out because he
also had school smarts
he graduated from
Stuyvesant, a top New
York City public high
school that requires an
admission exam.

The Hollywood Reporter says that DeNiro plays


Arcel as a largely honorable, fatherly alta cocker
in a sometimes grubby
sport. ELLEN BARKIN,
62, and JURNEE SMOLLETT-BELL, 29, have supporting roles as, respectively, Arcels wife and
Leonards wife. (Opens
Friday, August 26.)
Reviews have heaped
praise on Venezuelan actor Edgar Ramirez, who
plays Duran. The director,
JONATHAN JAKUBOWICZ, 37, who also wrote
the screenplay, is a Venezuelan of Polish Jewish
descent. His first film,
Ships of Hope (2000),
is a documentary about
Jewish refugees reaching Venezuela just before
WWII. It won many
awards and HBO broadcast it throughout Latin
America. His other big
directorial hit is Secuestro Express (2005),
an action/crime thriller
which he also wrote. It
became Venezuelas biggest grossing film of alltime, outdoing imports
like Titanic and The
Passion of the Christ.
I just caught a PBS TV
airing of Newton Minow:
An American Story.
You really must see this
documentary, which will
be on PBS online in full,
for free. If you know anything about NEWTON

Ray Arcel

Jonathan Jakubowicz

Newton Minow

Jo Aleh

Jessica Fox

Anthony Ervin

MINOW, a very spry


90, its that he was the
chairman of the FCC in
the early 1960s and that
he took TV broadcasters to task for offering
viewers a vast wasteland of junky programs.
But theres much more,
including the remarkable way that Minows
life story touches on
so many things, including very contemporary
issues. An example: his
parents were poor Jew-

ish immigrants, but his


mother fought to have
Minows older disabled
brother get public
schooling and his
brothers disability made
the whole family better
people. Other examples
Minow clerked for the
Supreme Courts Chief
Justice in 1952, when the
famous school desegregation cases were pending, and we learn about
his commitment to racial
and gender equality at

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the court, at the FCC,


and at his law firm; he
was critical to the launching of communication
space satellites and indirectly in the development
of the computer chip, and
it was his law firm that
gave Michelle and Barack
Obama their first law jobs
and it was at his firm
they met and fell in love.
The program ends with
an apt talmudic quote
from one his three very
accomplished daugh-

ters (another daughter


is dean of Harvard Law
School). Enough spoilers!
Watch it!
Congrats to JO ALEH,
30 a New Zealander who
won the bronze medal
in the 470 dinghy class
sailing competition (she
won gold in 2012) and
Aussie JESSICA FOX, 22,
who won a bronze in the
canoe slalom K-1 class
(she won silver in 2012).
It wasnt a great Olympics in terms of the number of Jewish Olympic
winners or medals won.
Still, if you think about it,
any medal won by a tribe
member defies statistical odds. There are 7 to
8 billion people in the
world, and only 15 million
of them are Jewish
thats a little more than
one tenth of one percent
of the worlds population. The 2016 Jewish
medal count is three
gold, two silver, and four
bronze. That total is better than most countries,
including some with a
population way above 15
million. All the more reason to be aware of and
celebrate great athletes
like Aleh, Fox, gymnast
ALY RAISMAN (one gold,
two silvers); swimmer
ANTHONY ERVIN (two
golds), and Israeli judo
athletes OR SASSON, 26,
and YARDEN GERBI, 27
(who both won bronze).

California-based Nate Bloom can be reached at


Middleoftheroad1@aol.com

Discover.
benzelbusch.com
8/11/16 8:55 PM

upcoming at

Kaplen

JCC on the Palisades

My Name is Asher Lev


presented by palisades players:
summerstage-professional theater

Aaron Posners stirring adaptation of the modern classic


novel by Chaim Potok follows the journey of a young
boys struggle between art and faith.
Sat, Aug 27, 9 pm, Sun, Aug 28, 2 pm & Mon, Aug 29,
7:30 pm, Ticket prices: $15/$20

The Wandering Israeli:


A Musical Travel Journal
Join actor Elad Shippony and musicians Sagi Eiland and
Eran Edri as they interweave theater, storytelling and live
music into an exciting and humorous adventure along
the pathways of modern-day Israeli culture. This highlyacclaimed stage performance has been showcased at
Israels National Theatre The Cameri since 2008.

One bOys
struggle
between art
and faith

Thur, Sept 15, 7 pm in English, 9 pm in Hebrew, $28/$32

Come see what the J is all about!


Featuring sample classes in art, dance, drama and more;
the Thurnauer School of Music Open House, featuring our
famous instrumental petting zoo; community mitzvah
project to pay tribute to those who lost their lives on
9/11; moon bounce, balloonologist, face painter, roaming
entertainers, and giveaways and discounts!
Current and prospective members: Enjoy our water park,
gym, pools & fitness center. Current members: Show your
ID and receive a special gift!*

sun,
sep 11

Sun, Sept 11, 1-4 pm


*Must be current member in good standing,
1 per household, while supplies last.

community

teens

community

Register for Fall Classes

SAT/ACT/PSAT Prep Course

12th Annual Labor Day Piano Sale

Sign up early to get all the classes you want! Best


part, we now offer a new discounted full-year
registration option. Clases begin September 18.

with irwin dolgoff and Jerry silverstein

More than 75 new and pre-owned pianos for sale at


significantly reduced prices! Available: Baby Grand,
Grand, Concert Grand, Professional Upright, Studio
and more.

Check out our new online class finder tool at


jccotp.org/classfinder, and get personalized class
recommendations based on your childs interest,
ages and availability.
Visit jccotp.org for class line-up.

academic achievement

SATs dont have to be stressful or scary with our


uniquely designed course! Learn tips and tricks as
well as review the basics for the math and verbal
components.
Open House: Tue, Sept 6, 7-8 pm
Class: 6 Sundays, Sept 11-Oct 16, 8:30-11:45 am &
1 Thursday, Sept 29, 6:15-9:30 pm

Fri, Sept 2 & Sun, Sept 4, by appointment


Mon, Sept 5, open to the public

to register or for more info, visit

jccotp.org or call 201.569.7900.


Kaplen

JCC on the Palisades taub campus | 411 e clinton ave, tenafly, nJ 07670 | 201.569.7900 | jccotp.org
JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 5

Local
Burning music
New opera remembers
Triangle Shirtwaist fire
LARRY YUDELSON

ext month, on September 11,


the Puffin Cultural Forum in
Teaneck will present a new
opera, The Triangle Fire.
The date is not a coincidence, said
Leonard Lehrman, the operas composer.
The horrific pictures of bodies plummeting to their deaths from a burning building on 9/11 recalled the fire at the Triangle
Shirtwaist factory in 1911. One hundred
and forty six garment workers died in the
Triangle fire, most of them young Jewish or
Italian women, many leaping out windows
to their deaths with flames at their backs,
many crushed before locked exit doors.
The fire stood as the signal disaster in New
York Citys history for 90 years.
It was a tragedy that became a watershed in the fight for the rights of American
workers. Frances Perkins, a social worker
who headed the New York City committee
investigating worker safety after the tragedy and went on to become Franklin Delano Roosevelts secretary of labor and the
first female cabinet member, said that the
fire and its aftermath was the beginning of
the New Deal.
This is the fifth opera that Mr. Lehrman
has brought to the Puffin. It will be a concert performance, featuring only a piano
rather than a full orchestra. Some of Mr.
Lehrmans earlier operas dealt with radical
activists, including Emma Goldman, Nicola Sacco, and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. The
idea of this work, however, came from the
works librettist, Ellen Frankel. Ms. Frankel is better known as a writer her many
books include The Five Books of Miriam:
A Womans Commentary on the Torah
and as long-time editor in chief of the Jewish Publication Society for nearly 20 years
until retiring in 2009.
Ms. Frankel entered the world of operawriting somewhat by accident, she said.
Twenty years ago, the Los Angeles Jewish Symphony commissioned a work from
composer Andrea Clearfield. Women
of Valor featured the stories 10 biblical
women, and Ms. Clearfield wanted to use
What: Concert performance of
The Triangle Fire by Leonard
Lehrman and Ellen Frankel
Where: Puffin Cultural Forum,
20 Puffin Way, Teaneck
When: 4 p.m., Sunday, September 11
Admission: $10
Reservations: (201) 836-3514
6 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

Leonard Lehrman

Ellen Frankel

texts from The Book of Miriam for two


of them. Ms. Frankel happily gave permission. And then Ms. Clearfield asked Ms.
Frankel to write a new text for the character of Hannah.
I learned I enjoyed working with music
and composers, Ms. Frankel said.
When Ms. Clearfield was commissioned
to write an opera on the Golem of Prague,
she brought in Ms. Frankel for the libretto.
I was kind of hooked, Ms. Frankel said.
By now, she has worked with 10 different
composers.
Its a different process than writing a
book.
From the very beginning its collaborative, she said. You hand the words over
to a composer and then the next part of the
process is a negotiation between the music
and the words.
Sometimes a composer might want
another line in a stanza or extra syllables
in a line.
As the wordsmith Im a midwife to the
composer and to the music thats going to
be written, she said. Most people cant
name even a single librettist. Most people
dont know who wrote the words. They
remember Puccini or Verdi or Mozart, the
composers.
Ms. Frankel said she always has been fascinated by the Triangle fire.
My two grandfathers were tailors, she
said. One on the Lower East Side, one in
Brooklyn. One of my grandmothers also
sewed for a living, out of her house.
The idea of making an opera out of the
fire came during a contest at the Atlanta
Opera. It was a 24 hour contest, she
said. You write a scene in 12 hours that is
rehearsed for 12 hours and performed at
the end of 24.
I was paired at random with a composer.
They gave us props from the prop room.
Handed an old-fashioned, stove-heated
iron, she thought of the Triangle fire. Her
collaborator had never heard of it. We
wrote the piece, it was performed, it didnt
win, she said.

Headlines in the New York Tribune describe the tragedy of the Triangle Shirtwaist
fire.

Garment workers mourn the loss of 146 colleagues in the 1911 inferno.

But she wanted to pursue the idea further. Her composer in Atlanta couldnt
pursue the project, so she sought out a
new collaborator and eventually found
Mr. Lehrman. He loved the subject, Ms.
Frankel said. Hes someone who writes
about progressive causes and workers
and unions.
Much has been written and published
about the fire and its aftermath. The two
owners of the factory both Jewish were
prosecuted for negligence. They were
acquitted.

The transcript of the trial serves as the


starting point for Ms. Frankels libretto.
I couldnt put 2,000 pages of testimony in an hour opera, she said. I had
to pick moments where characters come
into powerful conflict, or where there
was a moment of comedy or a moment of
pathos. Its not as straightforward a process
as you would have in a play or a novel. In
an opera you have a string of moments that
are driven by powerful feelings.
In the first draft of the opera, Ms. Frankel
added drama at the expense of accuracy.

Local
She had one of the bosses infatuated
with one of the seamstresses, Mr. Lehrman said. He saved the life of one of the
workers at the expense of many others.
I was writing the opera last January and
February. My wife and I performed it in a
concert on Valentines Day. Then we started
talking with people and reading more.
Leigh Benin, a historian who has written on the fire and whose great aunt died
in it, told Mr. Lehrman that Youre going
to offend everybody.
In truth, Mr. Lehrman said, the factory
owner who Ellen imagined as sweet on the
seamstress was a family man who saved
his two daughters and lost several family
members, and the witness who testified
against him fought to get out of the burning building.
Ms. Frankel suggested cutting the scene.
Mr. Lehrman said I cant cut it. The opera
is based on it. Were going to rewrite it
based on actual facts.
In the end, We dont have a love scene,
but we have a very dramatic, very true-tolife scene.
Mr. Lehrman contrasts the decision to
rewrite the opera to be more accurate with
the dramatization that proved so controversial in the opera Death of Klinghoffer

by his Harvard classmate John Adams.


I dont think he did the right thing by
adding fictional elements, Mr. Lehrman
said. Were doing the right thing.
The finished opera does include one
element thats not from the history of the
Triangle fire. After the Atlanta project,
before I started expanding it, the Rana
Plaza tragedy happened in Bangladesh in
2013 and 1,100 workers were killed, Ms.
Frankel said. The owner of that building
is still being prosecuted. Its not clear who
is going to be blamed ultimately.
The workers in that building were making clothing for American retailers, insulated from American labor standards
because they were overseas, working
through complex networks of subcontractors designed to insulate the American companies from responsibility for
their workers.
Labor laws were enacted in America
after the Triangle fire, she said. Then we
exported the garment industry to the Third
World. There are still factories making
clothing that we all buy at cheap prices at
the expense of workers. The Triangle Factory fire is not over. The same conditions
exist, and the same tragedies keep occurring, and were all implicated.

In the very last scene of the opera, the


ghosts of the Triangle Fire join with the
ghosts of the Rana Plaza collapse to sing
about whats happening in the world and
how corporations are still doing what was
done by the two owners back in 1911, she
said.
The Triangle Fire is Mr. Lehrmans
11th opera, and his 222nd work overall. He
describes the music as very lyrical and
dramatic. A lot of it is almost ragtime in its
period feel.
Theres also a lot of abstract music, he
said. He made musical puns on the images
of the triangle and the ninth floor, where
the fire started and most of the workers
died.
Every time the word ninth is used, the
interval is a ninth. When triangle is mentioned, the octave is trisected, he said.
Mr. Lehrman began composing music
before he could read or write. I improvised when I was very young and wanted
to write it down to remember it, he said.
My parents gave me a toy piano with eight
keys and eight colors and I was drawing
with crayons, devising my own notation.
I started really seriously writing notation
when I was eight.
The first musical I wrote was about

The headstone of 17-year-old Tilli


Kupferschmid, who died in the fire.

atomic testing and American imperialism.


It was written during the Cuban Missile
Crisis and my junior high school wouldnt
touch it, he said.

Come give us a try!


JEWISH LIFE
ON CAMPUS
Friday, Sept. 9 7 PM
Saturday, Sept. 10 9 AM

ERIC FINGERHUT
PRESIDENT & CEO OF
HILLEL INTERNATIONAL

*Q&A following Kiddush.


Eric Fingerhut has devoted his entire professional life to public
service and higher education. He came to Hillel after a distinguished
and varied career, and was appointed president in July of 2013 as
the organization began its 90th year.

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JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 7

Local

A girl who codes


Teaneck student follows her computer dreams
RACHEL OKIN
Even when she was in middle school, Tali Weisinger of
Teaneck knew that she wanted to chase a career in math
or science.
Now, at 18, her dream will become reality. She is going
to study computer coding.
Tali has just graduated Bruriah High School in Elizabeth
and plans to attend Michlelet Mevaseret Yerushalayim, a
seminary in Israel, this year. She first discovered her interest in math and science in middle school at the Rosenbaum Yeshiva of North Jersey. I knew that I wanted to
be involved in the sixth grade ETK math and science program, and I got in, she said. We would do puzzles and
whoever won got a sweatshirt. I won first place and got
one, and it was just the best feeling.
When she was in tenth grade, Tali was fascinated by
computer coding. Her school became involved with the
Center for Initiatives in Jewish Education, a nonprofit
program whose goal is to upgrade the technology and
programs available to Jewish day schools and yeshivot so
the education they furnish is cutting edge. CIJE provides
teacher training and support, mentors, and organizes programs to make sure that the students are getting the most
out of their education. Tali joined the programs engineering track, and although it was an experimental program,
and she thought that it might be difficult for her at first,
she was ultimately glad that she stayed involved. My
teacher encouraged me to continue, she said. I am so
happy that I stayed in the program. I practiced using skills
I never even knew I had. We also got to visit Googles New
York headquarters, which was an amazing experience.
Once she was in the CIJE engineering program, Tali created two project prototypes. One, called EYE.TO, allows
ALS patients to communicate with the people around
them freely, with a laser acting as the patients pointer finger. The laser will point at whatever the patient is looking
at; that helps patients ask for what they need. Another
creation of Talis was the Color Clothing Coordinator, a
device that keeps blind or color-blinded people from walking out of the house in mismatched clothing. If it senses
that colors clash, it plays a discordant tone; if they match,
it plays a happier one. Tali says that she has a particular
interest in color blindness and blindness, which inspired
her to create the project.
In the summer of 2015, Tali worked at Viacom, the huge
media company in fact, its the worlds sixth largest
broadcasting and cable company. Viacom, headquartered
in Times Square, invited Girls Who Code, a computer coding program for girls going into the tenth and eleventh
grades, to visit for a day. Thats how Tali first heard about

Tali Weisinger of Teaneck connected with her love of


math and science through Girls Who Code.

Girls Who Code. I was very interested, Tali said. I didnt


realize how prestigious the program was. I applied, and
when I heard that I got in, I cried.
Girls Who Codes mission is to help girls realize that
their gender does not affect their ability to work in computer coding, and to help close the gender gap in technology. Girls Who Code was founded by Reshma Saujani, who
is its CEO. Ms. Saujani began her career in politics, striving
to be the first Indian-American woman to run for the U.S.
Congress. This is when she visited schools and noticed the
gender gap in computer classes. Her political career did
not work out, but instead she founded Girls Who Code for
a cause. She is the sweetest person ever, Tali said of Ms.
Saujani. She treats every girl in the program like her child
and remembers everyone.
Girls Who Codes summer program offers seven weeks
of intensive instruction in robotics, web design and development, and mentoring from female engineers and leaders. Since she finished Girls Who Code, Tali has become

its poster child. She even was featured in the programs


official advertisement video, which received some funding from Samsung; the organization also ran an IndieGoGo
campaign. As a student in Girls Who Code, Tali created a
video game called NYC Rush, in which players jump over
tourists in New York and clean up the city. After the player
loses the game, facts about New York City appear on the
screen. Tali took this project to a showcasing event in New
York, where she and three other students presented it. At
first it was very overwhelming and nerve wracking, but
soon everyone was congratulating me on my program,
she said. It was amazing. They all loved it.
This spring, Tali also was involved in the Yeshiva University Hackathon. The program, arranged by YUs computer
science club, allows computer programmers and software
developers to collaborate on projects. She and the others
on her team tackled the problem of class scheduling. The
program allows students to add classes and see which conflict with each other. Talis group won for its program and
received a prize.
Tali since has become a teachers assistant at Girls Who
Code, helping to teach computer science curriculum to 20
high school girls. She supports the teacher in classroom
discussions and helps maintain an enthusiastic classroom environment. She also tutors middle schoolers in
computer science after school, starting from scratch and
teaching them the basics of coding. I love teaching so
much, she said. I want to inspire them like Girls Who
Code inspired me.
Tali said that her friends and her family support her. I
even helped my friend from SAR High School, Rachel Fishman, get involved in Girls Who Code, she said proudly.
Girls Who Code is growing so much, but is still such a
personal place. It is my safe space. It helped me not only
with coding, but also with public speaking and working
as a team.
Outside of the Girls Who Code program, Tali also is
beginning to plan out her future. She has three older
brothers, a younger sister, and two sisters-in-law. One
brother is in the Israeli army. Tali is enrolled in her Israel
program through Touro College, and she is considering
moving to Israel.
Wherever she ends up, Tali knows that she will always
have a place at Girls Who Code. They are like a sisterhood, she said. Once you are a part of it, you never
leave. You will always be welcomed back. She is open to
whatever the future will bring, but in the meantime, she is
very happy pursuing her dedication to Girls Who Code. I
am very passionate about this cause, and am so glad to be
a part of it, she said. Right now, I am in the place where
I am supposed to be.

Join us for our Annual Gala Honoring


Ellen & Lloyd Sokoloff
and
Lisa Marcus Abromowitz & Steven Abromowitz

Sunday, November 13, 2016 Woodcliff Lake Hilton


For Sponsorship opportunities, journal ads and tickets please visit www.jfsbergen.org or call 201-837-9090
8 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

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JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 9

Local

Training rabbis as counselors


Two YU schools offer joint program to sensitize future leaders
ABIGAIL KLEIN LEICHMAN

10 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

COURTESY YESHIVA UNIVERSITY

arital discord, parenting


problems, eating disorders,
abuse, addictions these
and similar issues can affect
any family, but when they occur in Orthodox circles the rabbi often is the first person approached for help.
To better prepare Orthodox rabbis to
meet the emotional needs of their future
congregants or students, Yeshiva University has launched a first-of-its-kind partnership between a rabbinic training program
and a graduate school of psychology.
The joint pilot program of the universitys Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological
Seminary and its Ferkauf Graduate School
of Psychology accepted an initial nine
applicants from RIETS last spring. It is part
of a wider effort to equip new rabbis with
the knowledge base, skills, and disposition
to be effective counselors.
The growing need for rabbis and
religious educators to become more
informed, sensitive, and adept in the application of mental-health principles, along
with the reality that congregants increasingly view counseling skills as a critical
component of the rabbis job description,
makes this program essential to the training of well-prepared Orthodox rabbis,
Rabbi Menachem Penner, RIETSs dean,
said. It has the potential to significantly
change the American rabbinate.
Credits from the 10 graduate-level
courses, which cover such topics as substance-abuse treatment, couples and family counseling, crisis counseling, grief, loss,
and bereavement counseling and self-care,
and are designed to be taken over a twoyear period, lead to a certificate of completion. They also can be applied toward a
masters degree at Ferkauf.
Dr. Lawrence Siegel, Ferkauf s dean,
said that imparting the incredibly
nuanced and complex skills needed for
pastoral counseling will help shape an
ever-more-thoughtful and capable generation of Jewish leaders.
One of the nine students in the joint program is Yitz Richmond, 25, of Teaneck.
Nowadays theres a big emphasis on
the pastoral aspect of the rabbinate, and
by earning this certificate we can serve our
communities better, said Mr. Richmond,
who is in his third of four years at RIETS
and hopes to become a pulpit rabbi as well
as a psychotherapist.
Ive already had two classes at RIETS
about the issues the average rabbi will see
during his career, such as divorce, infertility, and mental diseases, he said. The
certificate courses enhance what weve
learned there.
The first course spoke about the

Rabbi David Pelcovitz teaches future rabbis how to cope with their own emotions as they confront other peoples traumas.

different schools of psychology, and


taught us that its important to find ones
own comfort level in the therapeutic profession. The second class taught us how to
develop an empathetic relationship with
clients and how to take care of ourselves.
Rabbi Neal Turk of Teaneck, who coordinates the mental-health training aspects in
the RIETS curriculum, said that self-awareness was emphasized as a critical component for rabbis-in-training by many mentalhealth professionals consulted by RIETS.
Having been a pulpit rabbi for many
years, I know that you deal with people
in different kinds of crises, and it brings
out a lot of emotions in yourself, Rabbi
Turk said. Rabbis going into the pulpit or
educational leadership must develop their
understanding of themselves so they can
be more effective, in the same way that
mental-health professionals need to go
through this as part of their training.
In the coming academic year, all student rabbis in the pulpit track will have
the opportunity to schedule individual
sessions with mental-health professionals
to talk things out. We want them to have
an address to go to here, as theyre being
trained, Rabbi Turk said.
Our hope is that through ongoing discussion groups well be able to increase
the emotional awareness of our students and provide them with the tools to

navigate their own stress and challenges,


said Dr. David Pelcovitz, chairman of Jewish education at the universitys Azrieli
Graduate School of Jewish Education and
Administration and an instructor in pastoral counseling at RIETS.
Rabbi Turk said that RIETS has included
mandatory pastoral psychology classes
for years, but this is taking it many steps
deeper. Were not turning them into psychologists or social workers. We are giving
them the ability to have a better understanding of themselves and of the issues
they will face, so that they will be better
pastors and better understand their reactions to things as they confront them.
The RIETS-Ferkauf program includes
six courses with Ferkauf staff and four
with RIETS instructors. That will impart
a much more substantial understanding
of the issues and how to deal with difficult
problems, Rabbi Turk said.
A second group of applicants will begin
the joint program next spring.
Each incoming RIETS class comprises
roughly 50 men, half of whom typically
aspire to be pulpit rabbis or educators.
Rabbi Turk has been beefing up efforts to
impart better pastoral skills and greater
self-awareness for these future rabbis to
meet challenges that inevitably will come
up, he said.
Among the new initiatives is a course

that exposes them to strategies for handling particularly difficult issues, such as
homosexuality and its effects on the entire
Orthodox family.
I always tell every single one of our students that they will deal with this earlier in
their career than I did, Rabbi Turk said.
And you can ruin someones life if you
deal with it the wrong way. There are no
easy answers or solutions.
He emphasized that rabbis must learn
to recognize when a problem is beyond
their expertise and needs the attention
of a professional counselor. Even after
referring to such a professional, the rabbi
should be prepared to continue holding
the persons hand through the process,
he said.
There is more awareness these days
that rabbis will be confronted with everything, Rabbi Turk said. When they are
confronted with a tough issue, I want them
not to have heard of it first in their office.
I want them to have heard of it here, to
remember which psychology professor
spoke about it, and to know they can call
him or her for advice.
The synagogue rabbi is seen as a community leader, he said, and the more successful you are as the rabbi of a community the more people will come to you with
their family issues. You have to have more
than just Torah learning under your belt.

JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 11

Local

Website aims to foster civil conversation


Fair Lawn man believes that positive change is possible
LOIS GOLDRICH

f it sounds hopelessly nave to expect


civility in todays supercharged political atmosphere or even to hope
for it David Teitelbaum of Fair
Lawn clearly didnt get the memo.
Instead, Mr. Teitelbaum, working
through his Facebook page, Political Writing Game, and his website, www.politicalwritinggame.com, is trying to achieve just
that.
Mr. Teitelbaum, who began work on the
project in 2010 but did not give it his full
attention until 2015, says if he had it to do
again, he probably wouldnt have called
the initiative a game, although it certainly made sense at the time.
I was looking to do something unique,
not available anywhere else, he said.
I felt there was a need for it. Generally,
when someone writes an article, the talkbacks trail off into nothingness, with a lot
of nastiness along the way. Its the same for
political forums.
He did find a site similar to the one he
wanted to create, dedicated to civil conversation. But even there with some
issues garnering between 50 and 200
comments you get bored following it.
Putting in the competitive aspect focuses
people on providing ideas that are interesting, where the comments are on target as well as accurate. The competitive
aspect was necessary to make the whole
system work.
In the case of his site, the game involves
both commenting on and rating current
discussions, looking at criteria such as
most entertaining, best discussion
introductions, and most informative.
Given the amount of incivility that often
accompanies partisan politics, Mr. Teitelbaum also is second-guessing his decision
to launch the project so close to a presidential election (although within 15 months
of the election, youre in electoral season,
he added). On the other hand, with his site
garnering some 10,000 likes, he hopes
he will be able to help educate undecided
voters. Not surprisingly, Mr. Teitelbaum
spends a good deal of time moderating
the site and if he wakes up at night, I go
straight to the computer.
The closer it comes to an election, the
less people want to be civil, he said. With
a Facebook ad showing a picture of a smiling Donald Trump and a smiling Hillary
Clinton and saying that It is possible
to discuss this in a serious and reasonable
way he drew more than 100 new likes
every day. He also has drawn in readers by
asking if they are worried about the day
after the election.
The fact is that we need to be able
to come together as a country that day
12 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

David Teitelbaum of Fair Lawn works to promote a political dialogue based on


facts and teachable moments.

after, he said. With a nod to Tisha BAv,


he said that he was inspired by the idea
of causeless hatred, the reason many
rabbis give for the destruction of the Second Temple. Its what were facing in
this country, he said.
Mr. Teitelbaum, who lives in Fair Lawn
with his wife, Ellen, is a longtime officer
and board member of the Gerrard Berman Day School in Oakland. David and
Ellen Teitelbaum have three children, one
of whom made aliyah in 2009.
A pension actuary for 39 years, Mr.
Teitelbaum was the majority owner and
CEO of Consulting Actuaries Incorporated
for 20 of those years. In 2010 he sold the
business to employees, and now he works
part-time for the firm, providing technical
assistance.
Political Writing Game is entirely selffunded, although its not out of the question that it will apply for nonprofit status
and seek donations at some time in the
future, Mr. Teitelbaum said.
One person posting on his Facebook
page said he had a feeling that the folks
who use the word civility expect me to bow
down to them. Dont hold your breath,
Mr. Teitelbaum reported. I responded
that the meaning of civility goes beyond
mere courtesy. As Americans, were basically on the same team working toward
common goals. The opposite of civility is
civil war. If were not careful, thats where
were headed.
That kind of comment, he believes,
reflects the great extent to which different groups are demonizing each other.
While he does not seek, say, to convince
Trump voters to end their support for that
candidate, there is a responsibility to

help Trump supporters support Hillary as


president, should she be elected.
Mr. Teitelbaum, who considers himself center-left and strongly pro-Israel,
said that he has friends who are conservative, more to the right. For years we
talked about our kids, but as they grew,
we started talking about politics and found
that we learned a lot from each other. I
often realized that each was working from
facts, but prioritizing them differently.
I came to the conclusion that intelligent
people with good intentions can come to
different conclusions.
Facts are very important to him, and he
does a lot of research to ensure that people
do not post inaccurate statements. When
I get comments on Facebook that bring in
information I never heard before, I research
it and respond, he said. In some cases, its
just off the wall, but people believe it.
I have no illusion about changing their
minds, he continued. I dont think I can,
and I dont expect to. However, I do try to
filter out things that are clearly wrong so
the undecided can make their decisions
based on what is true. Mr. Teitelbaum
hopes to demonstrate that even if people
disagree, that does not mean that those on
the other side are unreasonable, stupid.
or gullible.
On his website, articles, which span a
wide range of topics from economics to
education, reflect a variety of political
views. Over the course of the campaign,
weve tried to cover almost every issue,
he said, noting that articles seem to create the most interest when they get too
political. For example, he posted two
articles on his website, one pro-Trump and
one pro-Clinton, and invited people on his

Facebook page to check them out.


We received a tremendous number
of pro-Trump and anti-Clinton postings,
he said, noting that he drew no pro-Clinton comments, which is consistent with
everything else Ive seen on Facebook. I
thought it would have attracted more Clinton supporters.
Trump supporters, he said, often comment by saying things like Go Trump,
which he deletes. His people are organized, he said. They look at it as wanting
to help, if not with money then by getting
on Facebook, going to political webpages,
and spreading the word. Theres also a
lot of God, or religious references, he said
of the pro-Trump postings.
With some 1,000 people commenting
so far, Mr. Teitelbaum recently posted an
essay about Israel, exploring the concept
that there should be no daylight between
U.S. policy and Israeli policy.
Is that a good thing? I asked, adding
that as a supporter of Israel I wonder if
one, its best for Israel and two, if its right
for the U.S. It was one of the hotter topics,
he said, driving people to the website to
read the piece.
People who identified as Trump supporters were unconditionally pro-Israel,
he said. A significant number referred to
religion. Their reasoning was that God
said Israel should be supported and so it
doesnt matter whats good for the United
States. Most of those people did not appear
to be Jewish, he said, although he cannot
know that with any certainty.
There was one odd discordant note,
Mr. Teitelbaum added. Someone wrote
that he feels sorry for what the Jews went
through during the Holocaust, but in his
experience, Jews are rude and look down
on other people.
I didnt delete it, considering it a teachable moment, an opportunity, he continued. Instead, he responded online,
posting, While I appreciate your willingness to share your perceptions, I submit
to you that you may have fallen into the
generalization trap. I feel strongly that if
our country is to come together again after
this divisive election, it will be because of
the willingness of Americans to judge people based on their individual merits rather
than on their political, ethnic, or religious
identification.
Mr. Teitelbaum said that if the least popular person among Trump supporters is
Hillary Clinton, then the next is President
Obama. The third is Mitt Romney. I find
this to be important because it shows how
difficult its going to be to put the Republican Party back together after this election, he said.
His commenters call Mr. Obama a
SEE CIVIL CONVERSATION PAGE 25

Kelly Spitzley

Lois Mendelson

Kaplen JCC will honor three


at nurserys 20th anniversary
The Kaplen JCC on the Palisades hosts its
therapeutic nurserys 20th anniversary
celebration on Thursday, September 22,
at 6:30 p.m. Amber Sabathia and Kelly
Spitzley, leaders and longtime supporters
of the unique language-based program for
2- to 5-year-olds with special needs, are
the honorees. The school provides programming for bright preschool children
with various developmental challenges.
Lois Mendelson, Ph.D., the schools cofounder and director, will receive the
Visionary in Education award. Nina
Pineda, Eyewitness News 7 On Your Side
anchor, will be the master of ceremonies.
The therapeutic nursery school has
earned national recognition for its parent-child developmental language-based
model, philosophy, social skills curriculum, and high success rate in mainstreaming its students.
We are very grateful to have such committed leaders with this level of passion,
who we can recognize and honor for their
tireless advocacy for children and families
in our community, the JCCs CEO, Jordan

Shenker, said.
Amber Sabathia is a staunch supporter
of the therapeutic nursery. She and her
husband, the New York Yankees pitcher
CC Sabathia, co-founded the PitCCh In
Foundation to enrich the lives of at-risk
children and teens in inner cities. When
Kelly and Ray Spitzleys 2-year-old son
was diagnosed with autism in 2002, Kelly
turned her passions to autism activism.
The Spitzleys sent their son to the therapeutic nursery; Kelly has guided many
families to the nursery for help. Lois
Mendelson co-founded the school. She
also completed a five-year clinical training
program in child and adolescent studies
at the Institute for Child, Adolescent and
Family Studies.
The evenings proceeds will support and
enrich the JCC Therapeutic Nursery and
the services it provides to families. For
information on attending, making online
gifts, or placing personal or professional
ads in a commemorative e-journal, go to
jccotp.org/tn20, call Gineen Weiss at (201)
408-1439, or email tn@jccotp.org.

Alzheimers New Jersey selects


Rothman as new board chair
Russell Rothman is the new
then sat on its board for more
board chair of Alzheimers New
than 15 years; he was the driving force behind establishJersey. (The group formerly
ing the organizations annual
was known as the Alzheimers
fundraising Walk to Fight
Association Greater New Jersey
Alzheimers in Bergen County,
Chapter.) He replaces Kathleen Townshend Dugan, who
now in its 14th year.
served in the position for three
T h i s ye a r s N o r t h e r n
years and will become board
Regional Walk will begin at
vice chair.
Bergen Community College in
Born in Teaneck, Mr. RothRussell Rothman
Paramus on October 30. The
man raised his family in Oradell
Liberty State Park Regional
and now lives with his wife, Nina, in HackWalk will be at Liberty State Park in Jersey
ensack. He also is a national co-chair of
City on October 1.
the American Society for the Protection of
The walks start at 8:30 a.m. with registration and light breakfast. T-shirts will be
Nature in Israel and former president of the
distributed to all participants who attend
JCC of Paramus/Congregation Beth Tikvah.
the walks. There is no fee to register. CorMr. Rothman began his involvement
porate, company, and individual sponsorwith Alzheimers New Jersey almost 20
ships are welcome. Last year the walks
years ago, after his late mother developed
raised more than $1 million, and Alzheimthe disease when she was in her 60s. The
ers New Jersey expects almost 10,000
organization gave him the resources, supportive counsel, and services he needed to
walkers this year.
get his family through that difficult time.
For information, call (888) 280-6055, go
He became a volunteer with the group and
to alznj.org or email walk@alznj.org.

The Jewish Home Family


has introduced iN2L (Its
Never 2 Late) computer
units in its facilities and
programs after receiving four of them as gifts
from the Josephine Sanders Designated Fund of
the Jewish Federation of
Northern New Jersey.
The units at the Jewish Home at Rockleigh,
Gallen Day Center, Jewish Home Assisted Living, and Assisted Livings
A JHR resident reminisces about his childhood
neighborhood while viewing it with JHR recreMemory Lane feature
ation leader Daisy Tantay using one of the iN2L
innovative touchscreen
units she brought to his room.
JEWISH HOME FAMILY
technology designed
espec ially for older
and can be brought to residents rooms
adults.
or used with large groups. The unit is on
With the iN2L, we can facilitate activities that are cognitively stimulating,
a specialized cart that can be adjusted
physically engaging, entertaining, and
to any height and angle so someone
much more, said Jewish Home Family
who is bedbound can still participate.
The units have more than 3,000 apps
President and CEO Carol Silver Elliott.
and content items, including old movFrom live webcams in places like the
ies, music, games, puzzles, trivia, spiriSan Diego Zoo to flight simulator programs, from trivia and history to welltual programs, and wellness exercises.
ness activities, we have really put these
The company pushes regular updates
to good use in the first weeks that weve
to the units, further expanding and
had them.
diversifying their library.
Ms. Elliott said that within days of
Our Endowment Foundation, the
receiving and training staff to use the
endowment and planned giving division
units, one of our Memory Lane staff
of federation, provide special opportunities for funding innovative, creative,
called Lauren Levant, Assisted Living
and visionary project, Jason Shames,
executive director, and told her that
the CEO of the Jewish Federation of
she was working with residents and the
Northern New Jersey, said. I believe
iN2L, that her shift was over but that the
the iN2L computer units meet all three
residents didnt want her to stop. Thats
criteria. Im thrilled that that an endowthe kind of impact this program is having in its earliest days and weeks. Imagment created 30 years ago by the late
ine what more we can do with it.
Josephine Sanders is having such a positive impact today.
The iN2L units are completely mobile

Senator at Norpac meeting


A Norpac event for Senator Tim Scott (R-S.C.), chaired by
Adam and Dana Sasouness, Ben and Esther Chouake, Jack and
Moran Halpern, and Mort and Monique Katz, to be hosted by
the Sasounesses in Englewood, is set for Sunday, September
11, at 6 p.m. For information, email Avi@NORPAC.net or call
(201) 788-5133.

COURTESY NORPAC

Amber Sabathia

Senior-focused computer systems


a quick hit at Jewish Home Family

Senator Tim Scott

Naamat board names


Jerseyan to top posts
Jan Gurvitch of East Windsor was installed as a Naamat USA
national executive board member and fundraising co-chair
at the organizations recent gala celebration in Las Vegas, as
Naamat USA marked its 90th anniversary. The organization
provides vital services for women, children, and families
in Israel.

Jan Gurvitch

JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 13

PHOOTO PROVIDED

PHOTOS COURTESY JCCOTP

Briefly Local

Rockland
A lifes journey
Rabbi Elchanan Weinbach talks about his passion for Jewish living
JOANNE PALMER

hen
Rabbi
Elchanan Weinbach of Congregation Shaarey
Israel in Suffern was asked to perform a funeral, he was upset.
Not at being asked to officiate
although hes new to the community, hed already put his name in
the regular rotation at local Jewish funeral homes but at the
situation.
I was told that this would be
an easy one, Rabbi Weinbach
said. It would be just me and
the funeral director. The woman
about to be buried had no relatives other than cousins who
were abroad and could not return
home in time.
But that wasnt easy. It was
lonely; not a fitting way to mark
the end of anyones 83 years of life.
He talked to his wife and four
adult children about it, and my
daughter, Ora, said that this is so
sad, but maybe if you put it up on
social media, maybe some of my
Facebook friends will see it. He
did, and then, Rabbi Weinbach
Rabbi Elchanan Weinbach can recount a life of both spiritual and geographical journeys.
said, It went viral.
(Not that Im sure exactly what
movement rather than conform to any
quantifies going viral, he added. But a lot
movements expectations for it.
of people heard about it.)
So about 30 people came to the funeral
Rabbi Weinbachs father, Rabbi
of Francine Stein, about whom they
David Weinbach, was the principal of
know only the dates of her birth and
MTA or, more formally, the Yeshiva
death, gender, and religion and that
University High School for Boys in
she taught piano at Juilliard. Rabbi Weinupper Manhattan, so Elchanan went to
bach intends to find out more about Ms.
school there. It was quite a commute,
Stein, but for now, he knows that she was
he understated. More than that, there
buried with respect and dignity. He also
was the essential oddness of having his
spiritual awakening. The Judaism I had
knows that he brought up his daughter,
father be principal, but I ended up being
been brought up with didnt speak to me
like his three sons, with an understandthe principal for three of my kids, and it
ing of Jewish values that by now is instincat all, he said. It was too dry, too formal,
worked out fine, he said.
tive for all of them.
too staid. Once he realized that Judaism
His parents also were part of a partnerJewish values, Jewish spirituality, Jewship that owned sleepaway camps, so the
didnt have to be like that, though, he had
ish passion, Jewish inclusivity, Jewish
family would spend every summer there;
to search for what he wanted. He transferred to Yeshiva Shor Yoshuv in Far Rocksearching all have been important to
his mother, Lee, moved from behind the
away. Now, Shor Yoshuv is big, he said, but
Rabbi Weinbach, 54, as he has made his
scenes over time, to being the face of the
then it was an intimate place, and I really
sometimes surprising way from his Orthocamp, her son remembered.
dox childhood in Woodmere, one of Long
sensed that when the people there prayed,
All in all, it was a public childhood.
Islands Five Towns, through a career that
they were really reaching out to God.
After high school, Rabbi Weinbach
frequently balanced pulpit work with
I found my passion for Judaism there.
enrolled at Yeshiva University, which was
education, back and forth, until the balSoon, finding even Shor Yoshuv not
obvious continuity but my academic
ance would shift once again, to the selfquite intense enough, Rabbi Weinbach
career did not flourish, he said. I wanted
styled traditional shul on Montebello
went to study in Israel. I was sitting in
Ultimate Frisbee. So he transferred to
Road. Now, Rabbi Weinbach, an Orthothe beit midrash at Shor Yoshuv, and I got
Brooklyn College.
dox expat, oversees a congregation that
very angry, he said. I had been through
It was in that thoroughly secular environment that Rabbi Weinbach had a
chooses to remain unaffiliated with any
the entire yeshiva system, and no one had

ever shown me anything that had


passion. So I decided that I would
learn and then bring it to the Jewish
community.
He chose a fairly conventional
path, spending his two years in Israel
at Yeshivat Hamivtar in Efrat, and
then going back to YU, where he was
ordained; he also earned a masters
degree in education from YUs Azrieli
School. During that time, he continued to work in summer camps, and
with youth retreat programs.
In 1988, he and Yocheved Blond
(who sometimes is known by her
English name, Evabeth), an elementary school teacher, married, and
my idealistic wife and I set off to
bring passion wherever we went,
he said.
First that was White Plains, where
Rabbi Weinbach was assistant
rabbi at the Hebrew Institute, but
I wanted my own shop, so they
moved to Newport News, Virginia,
where he headed Congregation
Adath Jeshurun. We had a lot of
successes, made a lot of friends, and
were able to reach out to the community in a way that made people
really feel accepted, he said. Among
those successes was a Chanukah
party; the first five couples through
the door there were intermarried,
he said. Applying the balance that
has marked his approach throughout his career, without compromise, we were able to make people
feel accepted.
How did he do that? We just dont
judge, he said. Im just happy
youre here.
There are lines that the halacha
presents, and I hope that anyone Im
dealing with understands that I cant cross
them, but that never stops people from
getting along.
Needing schools for their children as
they grew older, the Weinbachs moved to
Miami, where Rabbi Weinbach taught in
the Hillel Academy. But he missed leading
a community from the bimah, so when he
was offered the opportunity to start a new
shul while retaining his job at the school,
he took it. As rabbi of the Highland Lakes
Shul for two years, he started a thriving
community, but it was a recipe for total
burnout, he said.
There were Lubavitchers, charedim,
baale teshuvah all living in the same area,
and they wanted to start a synagogue, he
said. By the time I left, we also had the

My idealistic wife
and I set off to
bring passion
wherever we went.

14 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

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opened a window for me into the Syrian
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His next move, back into the pulpit,

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was to become assistant rabbi


at Adath Israel in Hillside, N.J.,
one of the shuls created and
overseen by the Elizabethbased Teitz family. A few years
later, he also became the principal in the boys upper school at
the Jewish Educational Center,
another Teitz-run institution.
It was a dream come true, he
said. I was always going back
and forth between the rabbinate and education. Here I could
do both.
Still, he was restless, and in
Yocheved and Elchanan Weisbach
2008 he took the opportunity
to become the head of Shalhevet, a modern Orthodox day school in
but Western high culture? Youre hurting people by shutting them off from
Los Angeles. But it was pretty brutal,
it. Thats not a problem in the modern
because it had been a K-12 school, but
Orthodox community, he added, but it is
after the stock market crash we had
when you move farther right.
to shut down everything but the high
Shaarey Israel is his first non-Orthoschool. It was a tough experience.
Two of his children were college studox community. It was formed by the
dents by then, and living in New York,
merger of the Monsey Jewish Center
and Yocheved and Elchanan Weinand Shaarey Tfiloh; seven years ago the
bach wanted to be closer to home, so
renamed congregation opened its new
they moved to Philadelphia, where he
building, a large, beautiful place with a
headed the Kohelet Yeshiva, another
sanctuary through which light streams
Orthodox day school. There, Rabbi
and whose stained-glass windows reflect
Weinbach did such unorthodox things
bright colors onto pale surfaces.
as taking students to a poetry slam in
The shuls practice is basically midinner-city Philadelphia.
century Conservadox; seating is mixed
It was great, he said. We really
but the services are firmly non-egalitarian, with women allowed on the bimah
broadened the school.
only when the ark is closed and the sifrei
But Rabbi Weinbachs self-definition was shifting, and he was growing
Torah inside.
increasingly uncomfortable hiding it. So,
Its going great, Rabbi Weinbach
in June, he and Yocheved moved to Sufsaid. All of the congregations essential
fern. It was my coming out as an Othostructures are intact. We have twicedox ex-pat, he said. I still have my loydaily minyans, great adult education,
alties, I still gain a lot of sustenance and
and a great staff. All the pieces are in
spiritual depth from the things I always
place, and we will turn its proud history
gained sustenance and spiritual depth
into a relevant future.
The people are so dedicated to the
from, but the way Orthodoxy is defined
shul that they have stuck with it, and
today well, Im out of it. I cannot find
they really care. I love speaking, I love
a place in the Orthodox community the
teaching, and I have an enthusiastic
way it functions today.
audience, he said.
Its partly a matter of his beliefs, he
The synagogue has a Hebrew school,
said, which have shifted from what he
and Rabbi Weinbach is able to draw on
sees as absolutely black and white to
his experience as an educator to help it
include a bit more gray. Its partly a matter of increasingly stringent practice,
grow. Theyre letting me be innovative,
which he sees as unnecessary and inapand were bringing iPads to the school,
propriately exclusionary.
he said.
There are three changes he would like
The location is challenging, in that the
to see in the Orthodox world.
non-charedi population seems to be in
I would like more respect paid to
retreat, but he thinks growth is possible.
other Jews, he said. Its not only OrthoThere are Jews who drop out of charedi
dox Jews who are serious, passionate,
life but do not want to leave it all behind.
and making serious sacrifices for JudaIf we start to attract those dropouts
ism. I would like to see respect for the
he mused.
passions and the seriousness of the
So now, openly acknowledging his
non-Orthodox.
split with Orthodoxy but still profoundly
I would like everyone to remember
influenced by it, hoping to bring other
that everything that can be measured is
Jews closer to the passionate spirituality
probably less important than the other
that is sometimes under the surface of
stuff.
Jewish life but always there, Rabbi WeinAnd I would like for them to stop
bach has high hopes for Shaarey Israel,
hurting the lives of children by giving
for the Rockland Jewish community, and
them so little room to be individuals.
for himself as a leader, educator, and
No one needs pop culture, he added,
open-minded friend.

Rockland
Montebello

You are
Cordially
Invited

Montebello Jewish Center

to find a synagogue
to call home. View
the many friendly
and welcoming
congregations
in our area.

n
s

e
w

s
t

34 Montebello Road
Montebello, N.Y. 10901
(845) 357-2430
www.montebellojc.org
Rabbi: Richard Hammerman
Cantor: Michelle Rubin
Educational Director: Michelle Rubin
Montebello Jewish Center, an egalitarian
synagogue affiliated with the Conservative
movement, brings the beauty and depth
of Jewish tradition to Western Rockland
and Bergen Counties. We are a congregational family, living a life of commitment
to Jewish values and aspirations. We are
searching and learning together, improving our lives and the world beyond. Our
community is welcoming to everyone. It is
a place for people of all sexual orientations,
backgrounds, and knowledge. We welcome interfaith families and those searching for their place in the Jewish community.
We are a congregation who loves to sing,
laugh, learn, question, and practice our
creativity with people we have known for
years and those whom we have just met.
The MJC congregational family prides
itself on its warm community of multi-generational individuals and families who are
passionate lovers of the Jewish community
and Israel. We strive to create a home for
vibrant, participatory, and musically inspiring prayer, engaging educational classes for
all ages and interests, as well as innovative

social programming. We are committed to


cultivating a love of Judaism for our youngest members, inspired through our youth
groups and religious schools, as well as our
continuing learners who enjoy a myriad of
programs and classes.
We look forward to meeting you at services or our next event!

from across Rockland County.


NCJC is also proud of our strong Hebrew school program, which provides our
children with a solid foundation of Jewish
knowledge while instilling a love of being
Jewish. Teachers and youth staff convey a
deep love of Judaism while giving students
the tools necessary to become knowledgeable participants in the Jewish community.
The NCJC is also proud of our strong Hebrew school program, which provides our
children with a solid foundation of Jewish
knowledge while instilling a love of being
Jewish. Teachers and youth staff convey a
deep love of Judaism while giving students
the tools necessary to become knowledgeable participants in the Jewish community.
The NCJC Youth Community brings children and families together for meaningful
social, cultural, and religious programming
with their peers. Our families are committed to building an intentional Jewish
community and making a difference in and
around Rockland County.
At NCJC, there are a multitude of entrance points available for people of all
ages, including but not limited to daily
morning and evening services, young family holiday programming, continuing education opportunities for adults, and social
events for seniors.
Rabbi David Berkman, Rabbi Jeremy
Ruberg, and the rest of the NCJC family
would love to get to know you. Please call
the office for more information at (845)
638-9600, check us out at newcityjc.org, or
just come by!

New City
New City Jewish Center
47 Old Schoolhouse Rd.
New City, N.Y. 10956
(845) 638-9600
ncjc@newcityjc.org
New City Jewish Center has been at the
heart of Jewish Rockland for more than 50
years. We view community engagement
as central to our mission and our members
proudly serve in positions of leadership
and as volunteers in virtually every major
Jewish communal organization in Rockland
County. We are a warm and inviting congregation, a Jewish home where lifelong
friendships are formed.
The NCJC Early Childhood Center is a
fully licensed preschool program, providing
a stimulating environment for children, rich
in Jewish learning. From Mommy and Me
to pre-K, our outstanding program includes
enriching activities for growing minds,
including yoga and movement through
sports. Additionally, a full array of family experiences are offered, including our
monthly M&M Shabbat, attracting families

Make Your Own Connection


Theres Something for Everyone at New City Jewish Center

e
d

At New City Jewish Center, tradition is vibrant and


ever evolving. It is the joy of participating in our timehonored rituals as well as the satisfaction of creating our
own NCJC community traditions. It connects us to our culture
through festive celebrations, educational experiences, life moments, and social
activities. It is also what connects us to YOU.

We Uplift

n
t
,

Join us and connect with your heritage. Youll make lifelong bonds for the present and future.

Connect. NCJC is a dynamic center where children and families share in the joy of

We Educate

We Enrich

Learn. Participate in lifelong and diverse learning opportunities, an active K-12

youth community, daily minyan, holiday programming, social action, young members
association, adult education and more with innovative programming that reflects the
interests of our members. In our schools, experienced and creative educators, from
preschool through our award-winning Hebrew school and on to high school, bring
the Jewish experience to life incorporating classes with special family programs
enabling children and parents to learn and rejoice together.

Celebrate. Come be inspired at a Shabbat or holiday service. Bring your family to

Jewish living and learning. Our community is what makes this synagogue both
spirited and spiritual.

We Inspire

We Celebrate

In this New Year, let NCJC be your sanctuary your place to worship, learn,
celebrate and connect.

We Connect

f
,
47 Old Schoolhouse Road

New City NY 10956

celebrate life events with our congregational family. Our rabbis and cantor will help
you delight in the knowledge of Torah and find your place as an active participant on
the bimah and beyond. We firmly believe that it is through celebration that we
cultivate a love of Jewish traditions, learning and Israel.

(845) 638-9600

www.newcityjc.org

New City Jewish Center ... Make your connection

JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 17

Zydeco Revelators

Zydeco festival at the Esplanade


The Esplanade at Palisades is holding a family-friendly
Louisiana-style Zydeco Festival on Sunday, September 25,
from 2 to 5 p.m. A live band, Zydeco Revelators, will perform, and there will be food and dance lessons by Fran
Berbette.
The festival costs $10 in advance and $15 at the door.
Proceeds benefit the Charles G. Mueller Military Order of
the Purple Heart, a Rockland County nonprofit organization for military veterans, including generations of combat-wounded veterans who served in World War II, Iraq,
and Afghanistan.
The Esplanade at Palisades is at 640 Oak Tree Road in
Palisades. The luxury senior residence offers many amenities, including three kosher meals served daily in its dining
room. For information, call (845) 359-7870 or go to www.
esplanadeatpalisades.com.

Wishing the World


a Sweet
New Year
Montebello Jewish Center

The book club at the Nanuet


Hebrew Center in New City
discusses Wild Swans by
Jung Chang on Wednesday,
September 7, at 12:30 p.m.
Lunch at noon; a discussion
will follow. Its at 411 South
Little Tor Road, off Exit 10
of the Palisades Interstate
Parkway. (845) 708-9181 or
www.nanuethc.org.

The Holocaust Museum


& Center for Tolerance
and Education in Rockland will screen Watchers
of the Sky to launch its
bimonthly film screenings.
Amy SaNogueira, the museums director of education,
will be the moderator at an
informal discussion following the film. The screening
is set for September 8 at
6:30 p.m. in the Technology Center at Rockland
Community College.
Ms. SaNogueira also will
lead a discussion of The
Storyteller by Jodi Picoult
on Tuesday, September 27,
at 12:15 p.m. A box lunch
will be served.
The center is at 145 College Road in Suffern.
For information on either
meeting, call Jo at (845) 574-4099, go to holocauststudies.
org, or email HolocaustRCC@gmail.com.

L Shana
L Shana
Tovah!
Tovah!

A Conservative, egalitarian, inclusive, people-oriented


congregation led by Rabbi Richard Hammerman,
Cantor Michelle Rubin and Dr. Alan Plumer, President

Jewish education courses

The Adult Education Center at the Jewish Federation &


Foundation of Rockland County offers Midreshet Rockland adult Jewish education courses. The Florence Melton
Join us! Religious School K-7 Adult Education
School of Adult Jewish Learning, led by Rabbi Paula Mack
Youth Programming Young Couples Club Sisterhood &
Mens Club Social Action Choir Participatory Services:
Drill, meets on Thursdays beginning October 20. A variWeekdays, Shabbat, Holy Days & Festivals
ety of new courses this fall include The Israel You Never
Knew with Leslie Goldress, The Writings of Elie Wiesel
Become part of our family!
with Rabbi Daniel Pernick, and Children of Abraham
Montebello Jewish Center
(Understanding Islam) with Sharon Halper.
www.montebellojc.org 845-357-2430
34 Montebello Road, Montebello, NY
For information, call the director of adult education,
Roberta Seitzman, at (845) 362-4200, ext. 130, or email
Community Yizkor Service
4:00Steven
pm on Dranow
Yom Kippur
Jamieand
Larry A. adulteducation@jewishrockland.org.
Model Harvey Schwartz
Jamie
and Steven
Dranow General
Larry A.Manager
Model Harvey Schwartz
L. Rosenthal,
Gregg Brunwasser
Michael
Gregg Brunwasser Michael L. Rosenthal, General Manager

Wishing you
a sweetyou
newa sweet
year. new year.
Wishing

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Jazz concert
features duel
of pianists
The JCC Rockland presents
The Music Event of the
Year with the dueling pianos of Dick Hyman and Bill
Bill Charlap
Charlap in a once-in-a-lifetime interpretation of Gershwins Rhapsody in Blue.
The concert, on Saturday,
October 22, at the Rockland
Community College Cultural Arts Center in Suffern,
begins at 8 p.m.
Dick Hyman has recorded,
composed, and performed
Dick Hyman
in more than 1,000 albums,
founded the Jazz in July concerts at the 92nd Street Y, and will be a National
Endowment for the Arts Jazz Master Fellow in 2017.
Bill Charlap has performed with many leading
artists, including Tony Bennett and Wynton Marsalis. He won a Grammy award last year for Silver
Lining: Songs of Jerome Kern with Tony Bennett.
He has been the artistic director of 92nd Street Ys
Jazz in July Summer Festival and is the director of
jazz studies at William Paterson
The concert is made possible through the generosity of Simona and Jerome A. Chazen. For information, call Elena Heydt at (845) 362-4400, ext.
106, email jazz@jccrockland.org, or go to jccrockland.org/jazz.

Military bridge in New City


The West Clarkstown Jewish Center hosts military
bridge with lunch, refreshments, and prizes on
Sunday, September 25, at noon. The synagogue is
at 195 West Clarkstown Road in New City. For information, call (845) 352-0017.

NCJW offers lecture


on Civil War women
Civil War re-enactor Sue Hegmann, dressed in
period costume as a Southern lady, presents
Women in the Civil War for the Rockland section of the National Council of Jewish Women on
Wednesday, September 7, at 7:30 p.m. The talk will
be at the JCC Rockland, 450 W Nyack Rd, in West
Nyack. Refreshments will be served. For information, go to ncjwrockland.org.

Seeking school supplies


Rockland Jewish Family Service is holding a backto-school drive through August 31. Drop off items,
including backpacks, pens, crayons, paper, notebooks, glue sticks, highlighters, tissue boxes, and
rulers at RJFS, 450 W. Nyack Road, Suite 2, in West
Nyack and help make the first day of school successful for local families in need. Gift cards and
donations also are welcome.
For information, call Marissa at (845) 354-2121,
ext. 177, or email her at MSherman@rjfs.org.

GERI REICHART

Upcoming
films/book
discussions

PHILIPPE LEVY-STAB

Rockland

Editorial
Some thoughts on Israel

lying to Israel and


then back in four
days, sitting on an
airplane for more
hours than any sane human
being would like to sit on an
airplane, its hard not to pine
for the days when youd get
on a boat in New York and sail
across the Atlantic and then
the Mediterranean, dressing
for dinner, strolling across the
decks, developing friendships
with promising strangers
And then you realize that
youre being ridiculous.
First of all, if I had been born
into the age of steamships, its
unlikely that I would have been
rich enough to afford passage
except in steerage.
Second, and far more important,
although air travel can be extraordinarily unpleasant, its also fast. There
is no place in the world too far to
fly to.
Thats why Nefesh BNefesh can
do what it does take new olim to
new lives in Israel without entirely
breaking the hearts of their families.
And much newer technology
Skype, FaceTime, and similar apps
keeps the way the people we love
look alive in the hearts of other people far away.
Now, we can live far apart from the
people we love without resigning ourselves to never seeing them again. Its
hard to imagine how anyone could
have steeled herself to that knowledge. Making aliyah then would have
been so much harder than it is now.
Watching Nefesh BNefesh also
made me think about the difference
between galut the Hebrew word
that means exile and diaspora,
the Greek-derived English word that
means dispersion. When you are

in exile, you yearn to return. When


you are in the diaspora, you can live
in a happy, fulfilled life outside your
ancestral homeland. It seems that
people who make aliyah had been
living in galut, while people who do
not merely are in the diaspora.
Now that travel is easy and technology subverts distance, the differences
between those people who make aliyah and those of us who do not seem
less stark, and that can only be a good
thing. Those of us whose hearts are
in the East and those others of us
whose hearts are in the East Coast
can meet often.
We can help Nefesh BNefesh as
it smooths the path for would-be
new olim, providing them with the
practical and logistical support that
can make or break a transcontinental move.
We can help even more by going to
Israel ourselves even if we dont plan
to move there. The physical beauty
and emotional, moral, and spiritual
complexity of the country is so much
deeper than the caricatures it evokes,

and the more we make that


clear, the more we help.
When I looked at the
new olim, I was struck by
their wide range. Some
were charedim, some
were tattooed, with many
uncomfortable-looking
piercings. The only thing
they seemed to share was
the wild excitement that
animated them when they
stepped off the plane.
And its hard not to be
struck by the range of
people in Jerusalem, a city
not celebrated in the outside world for its tolerance
of difference. There are
deeply devout Jews, Christians, and Muslims, each dressed in
layers of cloth that seem to defy the
beating sun, looking picturesque but
sweating mightily. There are secular
people no doubt also Jews, Christians, and Muslims, but without the
external signifiers its hard to know
wearing barely anything at all, even
in Jerusalem.
On Emek Refaim, the trendy street
at the heart of the expensive Germany Colony, there were posts at
the sidewalk, separating pedestrians from traffic. Someone had put a
hat on each of many posts. Each hat
was different. It was charming. It was
hilarious. It was brilliant. I have no
idea what it was and can find nothing
about it on the internet.
One hat, though, had fallen off its
post. As I walked by it, I saw a Muslim woman, in a hijab, casually reach
down, pick up the hat, and replace it
where it belonged.
Thats the kind of world we should
live in. Thats the kind of world that
sometimes exists, sometimes in Jerusalem. 
JP

KEEPING THE FAITH

A challenge
and a checklist
for the High
Holy Days

he month of Elul, Judaisms premier penitential preparation period, begins a week


from this Sunday.
For Sephardim, it marks the start of the
daily recitation of Slichot, the penitential prayers
leading to the High Holy Days. Ever since the mid18th century, Ashkenazim, too, have a liturgical change as Elul begins: For 51 days, from Elul 1
through Hoshanah Rabbah during Sukkot, which
closes out the repentance period, they add Psalm 27
to their morning and evening prayers.
How and why Psalm 27 became the Psalm of the
Days of Awe is a matter of speculation. Suggestions
range from finding possible references to the High
Holy Days and Sukkot in the text (a credible assertion) to kabbalistic interpretations.
I would like to offer yet another explanation for the
why of it: Psalm 27 represents the request we make
of God at this time a request we get the answer
to on Yom Kippur, when
we read Isaiah 57:14-58:14,
the haftarah that morning.
Between the two readings,
we get a firm understanding of how lives should
be lived in the year to
come and every day of
every year.
Consider these excerpts
Shammai
from Psalm 27:
Engelmayer
One thing I ask of the
Lord, only that do I seek:
to live in the house of the
Lord all the days of my life. Hear, O Lord, when I cry
aloud; have mercy on me, answer me. Do not hide
Your face from me. Show me Your way, O Lord, and
lead me on a level path. (See Psalm 27:4-11.)
And here is Gods answer, from Isaiah 58:
Declare to My people their transgression, to the
House of Jacob their sin, God demands of Isaiah. To
be sure, they seek Me daily, eager to learn My ways.
SEE CHALLENGE PAGE 20

Opinions expressed in the op-ed and letters columns are not necessarily those of the Jewish Standard. The Jewish Standard reserves
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JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 19

Op-Ed
Challenge
FROM PAGE 19

Like a nation that does what is


right, that has not abandoned
the laws of its God, they ask Me
for the right way; they are eager
for the nearness of God:
Why, when we fasted, did
You not see? [they ask.] When
we starved our bodies, did You
pay no heed? [Tell them, it
is because] on your fast day
you see to your business, and
oppress all your laborers!
Because you fast in strife and
contention, and you strike with
a wicked fist!
Is such the fast I desire, a day
for men to starve their bodies?
Is it bowing the head like a bulrush and lying in sackcloth and
ashes? Do you call that a fast, a
day when the Lord is favorable
[to your pleas]?
No, says God through Isaiah.
Rather this is the fast I desire:
To unlock fetters of wickedness, and untie the cords of
the yoke so the oppressed may
go free; to share your bread
with the hungry, and to take
the wretched poor into your
home; when you see the naked,
to clothe him, and not to ignore
your own kin.
Then, when you call, the
Lord will answer; when you
cry, He will say: Here I am. If
you banish the yoke from your
midst, the menacing hand, and
evil speech, and you offer your
compassion to the hungry and
satisfy the famished creature,
thenyou can seek the favor of
the Lord.(See Isaiah 58.)
This is not God asking us to say
Im sorry. I wont do it again. It
is not God asking us to engage
in empty ritual. This is Gods
challenge to us to focus on what
is wrong with our world and to
work to fix it.
We have turned entertainers
and sports figures, and even
some politicians, into role models. We ignore their faults or
make excuses for them (think
Olympic swimmer Ryan Lochte
and his three teammates), but
we still honor them.
Together, Psalm 27 and Isaiah
58 demand that we stand up to
the moral and ethical challenges
around us, and actively engage
in correcting them.
Isaiah 58 offers a checklist for
us to follow.
Workers rights: God, through

Isaiah, says that even on the Sabbath of Sabbaths, Yom Kippur,


we ignore that the Sabbath commandment, at its most basic, is a
commandment to recognize the
essential equality of all people.
As a society and as individuals,
how do we treat our employees?
God says we oppress all [our]
laborers. He is not talking just
about the people we employ,
but about all employees. The
checklist therefore includes
whether we actively seek equal
pay for equal work; whether we
actively seek a fair and just system of maternity leave, for men
as well as for women; whether
we actively seek a truly living
minimum wage.
Individual rights: Psalm 27
demands that we unlock fetters of wickedness, and untie
the cords of the yoke so the
oppressed may go free. So on
the checklist go these questions: What do we do about
unlock[ing] fetters of wickedness here and elsewhere
throughout the world on any
given day, or in any given year?
Do we really care about the
plight of the downtrodden, or
are we concerned only with ourselves, and at the very most, our
immediate circle?
Care for the disadvantaged:
We are told to feed the hungry,
shelter the homeless, and clothe
the naked, understanding
that God makes these national
requirements, not just individual ones we put on the checklist
whether, for example, we buy
feed the poor coupons at the
supermarket checkout counter when we shop for ourselves.
We also put on the checklist
whether we support candidates
for public office who support
social assistance programs, or
those who would trash those
programs so we can get to keep
more of our money through
tax cuts?
Do we hide our eyes from the
truth around us and claim to be
a nation that does what is right,
that has not abandoned the laws
of its God, laws that Isaiah 58
clearly implies have little to do
with ritual and everything to do
with creating a just and equitable world?
Elul is coming. We would do
well to consider carefully our
answers to Gods challenge.

20 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

Pluralism: Its not what you think

luralism is a big tent. And


read Hebrew and learning to leyn
Im going (to try) to love
Torah. A process of readying myself.)
everyone in it.
Once I was there, I was all in.
In his book, ReimagShortly thereafter I acquired a
ining Leadership in Jewish Organiwonderful mentor, friend, and colzations, Dr. Misha Galperin said,
league. One of the debates we often
There are two ways to deal with
engaged in was the notion of egalitarian vs. non-egalitarian prayer. You
new information: assimilation and
can imagine what side of the arguaccommodation. You can assimilate
Lisa Harris
ment I was on.
new information into your old underGlass
standing. Or you can accommodate
These debates were devoid of
new information by changing your
vitriol. Rather, they were how we
paradigm to adjust to new facts.
passed the time while carpooling to
It seems that everyone is trying to sway your
professional group meetings. After five years (yes,
opinion. We are exposed to constant information
five years) of debate my (Orthotive-Conservadox)
bombardment. Literally an avalanche of words and
friend offered the following, My father would not
voices careening into our ears and eyes and minds.
have prayed in an egalitarian setting. As such, how
I take respite from this cacophony through quiet
can I say Kaddish for him in one? And just like
introspection. Quiet introspection is hard to come
that he won the argument.
by. You have to want it. Seek it. Make time for it.
Just like that, he opened my mind.
In it, I am able to take time to follow Dr. Galperins
I assimilated and accommodated this aha
advice to assimilate and accommodate.
moment into my foundational approach to my
Quiet introspection did not take dedication
work. It enabled me truly to appreciate that everyone seeks meaning, and hopefully finds a way to
on my part in my youth. (Although thats not the
express it in ways that are personally meaningful
term I would have used to label activity or lack
to her or him.
thereof.) Simply, there were fewer inputs, and the
Fast forward 10 years. Now, it is me who is sayquiet space was more natural. More available. (I
ing Kaddish for my father. My friend and I are at
recently reminisced with my husband about the
conference. It is a free evening, and everyone is
hours I whiled away laying on a grassy hill next to
scattering. I am running around looking for 10
the house I grew up in, just watching the clouds
people for a minyan. I get to nine and the only
roll by and thinking.)
other person around is my friend. Without a word,
This time for reflection, this quiet space, was
he walks into my minyan. Without a spoken word,
a gift. One I fear weve not (Ive not) sufficiently
I understood that he walked in to make 10 for my
passed on to my children. Today, quiet space is a
minyan because he understood that this was for
tool that enables me to assimilate and accommodate information and integrate it into my vision,
my father, and this was how my father prayed. For
and to plan for its actualization.
my father, this was kosher. And because my friend
It was in this space that my dedication to plubelieves in the power and necessity of pluralism,
ralism was born. I am a feminist, a product of my
he led by example.
generation, with my formative years coinciding
He stood for me and with me. In doing so he
with the movement called Womens Lib. I grew up
completed, what turned out to be a 14-year lesson
at time when women were questioning the restricto his student.
tions of our gender and were pushing back hard.
This commitment to pluralism provides a foundation for my work and my thought. I know that
As a young girl I remember questioning my
there is no single right answer. I know that I can
rabbi about why I was not permitted to read Torah
value and appreciate what others value, even if it
or count for a minyan. (Lets just say the situation was complicated and slightly dysfunctional.
is not my choice. I know that I am privileged to
I came from a secular non-observant family. We
share that framework with others.
were members of a traditional Conservative synaUltimately, we are one people. Ultimately, we
gogue led by an Orthodox rabbi, Martin Schlusare stronger together. I have been there when we
sel zl.) Rabbi Schlussel was patient with me. He
have come together during times of crisis. I pray
did his best to answer my questions from the only
we will improve at coming together when we are
framework available to him. But alas, he also used
not in crisis. That we can learn to appreciate and
a black ballpoint pen to cross out the word Shabvalue one another in authentic ways.
bat on my bat mitzvah certificate, lest anyone
For sure, I am not perfect at it. I must remind
should think that a girl would have a Shabbat bat
myself to be open to truly listen to ideas that
mitzvah on his watch. (My bat mitzvah took place
conflict with my beliefs. This does not always
on a Sunday, and there was no Torah but I did
mean that I adapt to them, merely that I honor
chant the haftorah. Please see previous comment
the speakers and their right to speak. That I seek
about complicated.)
areas of commonality with these speakers and that
Fast forward 13 years, and I am a Jew who is
I assure them a place at the table, so they may add
seeking. At 26, I am exposed for the first time to
freely to the cacophony of ideas and opinions that
the notion of Conservative egalitarian prayer. After
ought to be heard.
years of seeking, you might have thought Id jump
right in. But the notion took getting used to. (This
Lisa Harris Glass in the chief planning officer of the
getting used to process included re-learning to
Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey.

JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 20

Opinion

Gaining strength through


empathy: a close look at Chazkeinu

hen I first heard about


Chazkeinu, I was enthusiastic but concerned.
While the idea of a
peer-led phone support network for
females with mental illness or who
have a loved one with mental illness is
a fantastic idea, I know firsthand how
difficult it is to get a mental health initiative off the ground. After all, the seeds
for Refaenu, the nonprofit organization that I founded, which focuses on
mood disorder support and awareness
in the Jewish community, were planted
10 years before it was started officially,
and the initial Refaenu online support
forum that preceded the formation of
the formal organization didnt gain the
momentum I had envisioned. Its been
a lot of work to set up and maintain the
twice-monthly support groups that we
run in Paramus for people with mood
disorders and their loved ones, and still
more effort goes into ideas and projects in the pipeline. So while I loved the
Chazkeinu initiative, hoping for its success, I couldnt help but be a little worried on behalf of the team behind it.
But thats the thing the very nature
of Chazkeinu is its team-like environment. Founded by five women living
in different places, the idea behind
Chazkeinu is to find support through
connections with others. Or, in reference to the root word, chazak, which
means strength, Chazkeinu aims to
strengthen ourselves through strengthening each other. Clearly, this is something I deem important in the work Ive
done as well. It is stated best on Chazkeinu websites, chazkeinu.org:
Chazkeinu promotes empathetic
support and positive connections
amongst those coping with their own
mental illness, or that of a loved one, to
help each other feel safe, understood
and uplifted amidst their struggles.
The phone group meets twice
a week, on Mondays at 9 p.m. and
catering to international callers on
Wednesdays at 1 p.m., both Eastern
Standard Time. Someone speaks for
about 20 minutes, followed by an open,
moderated forum where dialed-in participants can reflect on what the speaker
has shared and how it resonates with
their own experiences, either by speaking briefly themselves or by sending in
a message to be read by the moderators.
The guest speaker is either a woman
sharing her personal story, or a mental
health professional or rabbi who takes
on more of an educational and informational role. Guest speakers are recorded
for later listening by those who cannot
be on the call during its set time, but
comments by participants following

fundraising events also are


the guest speaker are
on their wish list.
not recorded.
The bottom line in terms
Chazkeinu started
of hopes for the future
with 15 participants on
is to spread awareness
the first call and has
and empower those who
reached more than 50
are suffering.
participants on some
No one deserves to sufcalls. The calls are
fer in silence, one of Chazdesigned to protect individual anonymity to
Dena Croog
keinus founders told me.
whatever degree a perWe want people to look at
son is comfortable with,
mental illness as they do a
providing options like muting participhysical illness, with acceptance, desire
pants who are not speaking, allowing
to help, and without judgment.
for questions to the guest speaker to
I couldnt agree more. I know
be emailed in, and not requiring that
were going to get there, but I also
listeners give their real names or even
know its going to take time, work,
speak at all.
and dedication.
I had the opportunity to be a guest
And yes, I do understand peoples
speaker on last Monday nights call.
concern for privacy and confidentiality. It comes up often when people iniI talked about my own struggle with
tially consider attending Refaenu supbipolar disorder as well as the creation
port groups, and the worry about it is
of Refaenu. It became clear to me how
probably the biggest holdup in terms of
empowering it is to be on a Chazkeinu
initial attendance. But how great will it
call, for participants as well as for the
be when we get to a point as a society
guest speaker.
where not only can those affected by
I find that the objective behind
mental illness talk about it among themRefaenus in-person support groups
selves, but with the general community
and Chazkeinus phone support groups
as well? I look ahead to a time when the
are one and the same. That is, as one
stigma will have subsided, to the extent
of Chazkeinus founders told me before
that people and their loved ones will
the call, to combat stigma by being
feel comfortable being public about
open and honest, and to connect with
their struggles and triumphs without
others who understand the particular
the worry of being shamed or labeled.
struggle of living with mental illness. It
As Refaenu continues with its supis this sense of understanding, which
port groups and plans for future projresults from connecting with others in
ects related to mental health awarethe same boat, as I like to say, that helps
ness and education, I get excited with
people break free from isolation and the
each new mental health initiative in the
feeling of otherness.
Jewish community. Every grassroots
A project of Shabbat.com, Chazkeinu has received assistance with
organization like Chazkeinu, Refaenu,
funding, hosting, and creation of its
or Elijahs Journey (another important organization that focuses on suiwebsite, general PR, and networking.
cide awareness and prevention) is a
Chazkeinus main resource for women
step forward in lifting the veil that has
faced with mental illness is the semiovershadowed mental illness for way
weekly phone call, but it does offer a
too long.
few other services as well. A Partner
I encourage others to participate in
Program matches up two women in
the movement because at this point
similar situations, who then can communicate outside of the group calls and
it is becoming a movement whether
give individual encouragement. Theres
by seeking support for themselves or a
also a new Davening Group, where parloved one, or through hands-on involveticipants can add their own names, or
ment in these organizations.
those of loved ones faced with mental
Above all, lets keep the doors of communication open. Its important to keep
illness, to a list, and receive a list of others for whom to pray in whatever mode
the conversation going.
of prayer works best for the person,
Dena Croog is a writer and editor in
whether that be in a formal synagogue
Teaneck and the founder of Refaenu,
setting or in private.
a nonprofit organization dedicated
Future plans may include a website
to mood disorder awareness and
blog, forums, and newsletters.
support. More information about the
The founders also hope to organize Shabbatons and retreats to give
organization and its support groups can
participants the opportunity to meet
be found at www.refaenu.org. You can
face to face and hear speakers in peralso email dena@refaenu.org with any
son. Phone meeting sponsorship and
questions or comments.

Anti-Semitism
something
old thats
new again
Lots of things are pretty
tough, Kathy. This is just a
different kind of war.

Dave Goldman

he quote is familiar to people who


have seen the 1947 movie Gentlemans Agreement. It is a story about
the insidiousness of anti-Semitism in
the United States post World War II. The story
follows a journalist, played by Gregory Peck,
who finds a good hook for a story he wants to
tell. A Christian, he will live as a Jew for 10 days.
Because he has just arrived in New York from
California, there will be no history to cloud his
new identity. He is a widower; his mother and
his young son agree to go along with him. Even
the people he works with at the magazine will
know him only as a Jew.
What he experiences in this 10-day period is
what you could call being Jewish on steroids. It
affects his personal life. He falls in love with a
young woman the Kathy who Dave Goldman
is addressing in the
quote above who
actually gave him
the angle for the
story but doesnt
understand that
disgust enc ased
in silence cannot
fight this centuriesold hatred.
Martha
The story was
Cohen
written by Laura
Z. Hobson and produced by Darryl Zanuck. Zanuck, who was not
Jewish, was the only movie mogul who had the
guts to take this story to the screen. The Jewish
studio bosses were afraid to touch it. The film
includes a scene, set in the editors office, that
reflects the other moguls attempt to convince
Zanuck not to produce it. Thank goodness he
didnt listen.
Many people today have no idea about the
daily anti-Semitism that pervaded the country, not excluding New York City. Like many of
you, I was born at a time where anti-Semitism
seemed like a thing of the past. Only ignorant
people, like All In The Familys Archie Bunker,
and other kooks held these beliefs. We felt sure
that when they spoke up, all the nice people,
the good people, would speak up, too.
After all, we didnt grow up, like many of our
parents, in a time when want ads clearly said
only Christians need apply. My own mother
SEE ANTI-SEMITISM PAGE 22

Martha Cohen is an award-winning producer


and creative executive. She lives in Fort Lee with
her husband and son.
JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 21

Sandi M. Malkin, LL C
Interior Designer

Anti-Semitism
FROM PAGE 21

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Opinion
encountered this when she wanted a
job as an operator at the phone company. None of us think of whether we
should or shouldnt wear a Jewish star
for fear of being ostracized, or whether
to wear a cross necklace in order to be
considered for that phone company job.
And who would think that we would be
called Christ-killers or denied a place to
live based on our names? In fact gentlemans agreements potent if unwritten
understandings ensured that no Jew
would sully the neighborhood. Thus,
we cannot truly understand the impact
a strong, vibrant Israel has on our daily
lives unless our parents or grandparents
explained to us the impact of anti-Semitism on their lives.
We have been lucky. All those worries
seemed to belong to history.
So why has a film released in 1947 suddenly become relevant?
Though there are many heart-wrenching anniversaries this summer, including
the 15th anniversary of the Sbarros restaurant bombing, the 25th anniversary
of the Crown Heights riots, and the 22nd
anniversary of the AMIA bombing, it is
the Olympics that stirred the thought of
Gentlemans Agreement.
Finally, after 44 years of unrelenting work led by Ankie Spitzer and Ilana
Romano, widows of two of the Israeli
athletes murdered in 1972, the International Olympics Committee held a commemorative ceremony in the athletes
village before the official start of the
Rio Olympics. It was not the moment
of silence at the beginning of the opening ceremonies the widows had been
working for all these years a commemoration on the world stage but it
is a beginning.
And yet, at the same Olympics, we
would see the Lebanese team bar the
Israeli delegation from sharing their
bus to the opening ceremonies. What
were the consequences for this obvious breach of the Olympic spirit? Rather
than cut the Lebanese team from the

ceremony unless its shared the bus,


the Israeli team was sent in a separate vehicle.
Other incidents included the refusal of
the Egyptian judo competitor to shake
hands with his Israeli opponent and
unconfirmed reports of a Saudi athlete
forfeiting his match rather than competing with an Israeli. The Egyptian judoka
evoked an IOC reprimand, but only
after the Egyptian Olympic Committee
recalled its athlete to Egypt. There were
no other official responses. Considering
the number of incidents and the IOCs
insufficient reaction, we must ask if a de
facto Gentlemans Agreement has permeated the Olympics.
And so, the absolute necessity of the
moment of silence for the massacred
Israeli athletes at the beginning of the
televised opening ceremonies is obvious.
The good people of the world must not
be silent, like the fictional Kathy. They
must demand it. It must be crystal clear
that no gentlemans agreement will
be tolerated at the Olympics, now and
by generations to come. We must fight
for it because only that would be the
ultimate repudiation of the heinous act
antithetical to what the Olympics are
supposed to stand for practicing sport
without discrimination.
Honoring the memories of these athletes, whose murders were completely
incompatible with the Olympic movement, will be a reminder to any athlete
that nothing but mutual understanding
and respect will be allowed at any Olympic game. Couple this with the explicit
understanding that any athlete who does
not act within these guidelines will not
only be expelled from the games but will
be joined by his or her countrys entire
contingent of athletes.
Is this tough punishment? Perhaps.
But considering that hatred that plays out
on the field of sport rarely stays there,
we have to win this different kind of war
before it develops into the old, ordinary,
very deadly kind. And this time, we must
all lead in this battle. We cant count on
having another Darryl Zanuck.

Congregation Bnai Israel


An Innovative Conservative Synagogue

53 Palisade Avenue, Emerson, NJ


201-265-2272 www.bisrael.com

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22 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

Dorothy McGuire and Gregory Peck in a scene from Gentlemans


Agreement

Opinion

Peace with Egypt


mostly rings hollow

Serving the Jewish community


of Bergen County for 12 years

ts not the end of the


successors ever made any
world just because
serious effort to educate
an Egyptian athlete
the younger generation to
refused to shake hands
accept peace. The Egyptian government-conwith his Israeli counterpart at the Olympics in Rio
trolled media, mosques,
de Janeiro.
and schools continued
After all, the Egyptian is
to spout hatred of Israel
the one who violated judo
and Jews.
Stephen
etiquette. Hes the one
As a child, Islam El SheFlatow
haby no doubt was inculwhom the fans booed.
cated with the same antiI wont lose any sleep over
Israel and anti-Semitic
his petty insult, and I doubt
hatred that dominated Egyptian society
many Israelis will either. But the incident, as small as it was, does offer some
before there was a peace treaty. Real
food for thought about much bigger
peace never took hold. The treaty has
issues, such as the prospects for peace
been, and remains, little more than a
between Israel and her Arab neighbors.
long-term cease-fire.
The Judo Snubber, Mr. Islam El SheNow, a cease-fire is of course much
haby, was born on August 1, 1982. In
better than gunfire. But a cease-fire is a
other words, he was born nearly five
fragile thing. If its not backed by deep,
years after Anwar Sadats visit to Jerusawide-ranging societal support for peace,
lem. Four years after the successful Camp
then it could be broken at any time, by
David negotiations. Three and a half years
some new leader who decides he prefers
after the signing of the Israel-Egypt peace
war. And because the Egyptian public
treaty. Three months after the final Israeli
has been educated and conditioned for
withdrawal from the Sinai.
war all these years, it will back him up.
Which is to say that El Shehaby has
Thats the problem with Islam El Shehaby. He continues to view Israel as the
never known anything but peace with
enemy, all these years later. Thats why
Israel. Throughout his entire life, Egypt
he could not bring himself to shake the
has been at peace, not at war, with the
hand of his Israeli judo opponent. There
Jewish state. So if El Shehaby hates
may be peace, but hes ready for war
Israel, its not because of anything in his
ready and willing.
personal experience. Hes not a bitter
Which is why so many Israelis are
war veteran. He didnt watch his friends
reluctant about the idea of establishdie in some tank battle with the Israelis.
ing a Palestinian state next door. If 34
There has to be some other reason to
years after the peace treaty was signed,
explain his hostility. And there is.
an Egyptian athlete still will not even
The peace treaty requires both parties
shake hands with an Israeli, what does
to abstain from hostile propaganda
that portend for peace with the Palestinagainst each other. Former Israeli Prime
ians, whose entire society is drenched in
Minister Menachem Begin insisted on
hatred of Israel and Jews?
that clause because he understood that
The consolation that Israelis can
for peace to last, it has to be between
derive from peace with Egypt is that
peoples, not just between leaders.
although its shallow, at least most of
Leaders, of course, come and go.
the Egyptian army is separated from
Sadat was assassinated in October 1981,
Israel by the Sinai. A Palestinian army,
even before Israels final withdrawal.
however, would be just a few miles from
Begin resigned from office in October
Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Jerusalem. Thats
1983. For peace between Israel and
too much of a risk to ask Israelis to take.
Egypt to endure, both countries had
They have every right to wait until they
to consciously educate their people to
see meaningful changes in Palestinian
accept it.
society before they start talking about
The Israeli public didnt need much
taking those kinds of chances. The
convincing. The Israelis, after all, were
non-handshake in Rio de Janeiro is a
the victims. They were the ones who
reminder of that reality.
were desperate for peace. And even

JNS.ORG
those who had some qualms about Israels enormous concessions giving up
Stephen M. Flatow of West Orange, an
the entire Sinai peninsula, surrendering
attorney who practices in Fairfield, is the
the oil fields, tearing down the Jewish
father of Alisa Flatow, who was murdered
communities in the Yamit region soon
in an Iranian-sponsored Palestinian
retreated from their opposition.
terrorist attack in 1995.
Not so in Egypt. Neither Sadat nor his

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9 a.m. - 1 p.m., Paramus Campus
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if you plan to take the
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H A C K E N S A C K

M E A D O W L A N D S

P A R A M U S

JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 23

Opinion

Jill Steins big (green) lies

he far left U.S. Green


needs to be led by social
Party marked a sigmovements, not just by
nificant milestone
political parties operating
in the current camin elected parliaments.
paign cycle when CNN broadBut the newfound envicast a town hall meeting featurronmentalism of the 1970s
ing its presidential candidate,
didnt displace all the old
Jill Stein, and her running
loyalties. The practice
mate, Ajamu Baraka.
of making the PalestinBen Cohen
It was a chance for the
ians the supreme cause
largely obscure party to build
of global justice warupon the momentum generriors only intensified. The
ated by Senator Bernie Sanders bid for
ingrained habit of turning a blind eye to
the Democratic Party nomination with a
human rights abuses committed by postprogressive platform untainted, as Stein
colonial regimes against their own citiand Baraka emphasized again and again,
zens continued.
by the paw prints of corporate lobbyists,
The American incarnation of the Green
special interest groups, and dubious forParty is no differeign governments.
ent. Precisely for
Lacking the kind of media broadcast
that reason, we
training that turns our minted politicians
have to interpret
into eternally smiling talking heads, on
Steins descripthe CNN stage Stein and Baraka certainly
tion of her partys
looked like fairly ordinary people suddenly
platform as based
plunged into the limelight of politics. That
on the principles
should be seen as a plus for them, particuof international
larly at a time when political discourse is
l a w, h u m a n
marked by a distrust of elites.
rights, and ecoBoth Stein and Baraka spoke earnestly,
nomic justice as
and their body language mirrored that
an outright lie.
tone. For much of the debate, Baraka wore
Unfortunately,
a scholarly frown, while Stein carried herbecause of CNNs
self with the kindly, caring bedside mansoftball approach
ner that befits a medical doctor. So you
to the two canmight think it was a consummate perfordidates, viewers
mance all round, and a great opportunity
we re n t g ive n
for a party that has no chance of actually
a chance to see
winning the election, as its candidates
where the parreadily concede, to insert itself into the
tys real loyalties
American debate.
lie. For one thing, Baraka was allowed to
Except for one confounding note; the
get away with his appalling description
Green Partys self-image is built upon a
of President Obama as an Uncle Tom
series of lies, as I will explain.
unchallenged. For another, the partys
To understand how those lies came
support for the anti-Semitic Boycott,
about, some context is in order. If the
Divestment and Sanctions campaign tarGreen Party doesnt sound like an espegeting Israel went unmentioned.
cially American construct, thats because
The reality is that Stein, Baraka, and
it isnt. The notion of an environmentaltheir fellow activists are giving uncondiist political party is a European one, and
tional support to a campaign that seeks
it was in the countries of Western Europe
to destroy the state of Israel outright. BDS
that green parties first emerged, from the
isnt about peace; its about dismantling
ashes of the failed student revolt at the end
the national sovereignty of a member state
of the 1960s.
of the United Nations. So much for internaThis was particularly true in Germany,
tional law, then.
whose Green Party lit the path for its imiAs for human rights, its instructive that
tators elsewhere. There, the failure of
this debate took place at the same time as
mass protest led some left-wingers into
warplanes deployed both by Russia from
the terrorism of the Baader-Meinhof gang,
an airbase in Iran and by the Bashar al
much of it directed against Israeli and JewAssad regime in Damascus struck merciish targets. Others got involved in bizarre
lessly in the Aleppo region of Syria. Surely
and sometimes disturbing experiments in
the sight of thousands of dead and traucommunal living. Against those two tramatized children should lead us to charge
jectories, the most sensible option was the
both Assad and Russian dictator Vladimir
political current that birthed the Green
Putin with war crimes?
Party, which presented environmentalism
Not according to Stein. Heres what
as an innovative way of opposing capitalshe had to say on the subject on a recent
ist economics, and which also underlined
visit to, where else, Moscow: The Obama
that political change is a process that
Administrations obsession with toppling
24 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

Above, Jill Stein at an Occupy Wall


Street rally in 2012. Left, she speaks at
a Green Party presidential town hall
event in Mesa, Arizona, in March.
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

the government in Damascus is fundamentally inconsistent with winning the fight


against Islamic State (ISIS)... This isnt a
clever foreign policy, its disastrous militarism. Leave aside the minor lie Obama
actually has kowtowed to the Russians
over Syria and should be given due credit
and focus on the major one: namely, the
spectacle of someone who describes herself as a human rights advocate supporting the survival of one of the most vicious
regimes the Middle East has ever seen.
On the CNN debate, Stein spoke in favor
of an arms embargo on the entire Middle
East. Though she didnt say so explicitly,
the main focus here is upon Israel, and
European Green parties long have been
enthusiastic supporters of preventing the
Jewish state from defending itself. But her
proposal also would affect our Muslim
allies in the region, like the Kurds and the
secular and nationalist elements of the Syrian opposition.
This icy indifference to the suffering of millions of Arabs oppressed by an
Arab dictator, along with the dogmatic
insistence that outrages perpetuated by
Islamist terrorists like al Qaeda and ISIS
are solely a reaction to rampant western

colonialism, tells us only that the U.S.


Green Party stands with the dictators, the
fanatics, and the bullies. Even the call for
economic justice is laughable; Stein had
no problem with paying homage to Putin
in Moscow, even though he surrounds
himself with oligarchs and gangsters. And
neither she nor Baraka had anything to
say about Iran, where economic justice
is about as meaningful a concept as the
rights of women or the right to form an
independent labor union.
I havent even mentioned Barakas
shady collaborations with 9/11 conspiracy
theorists or Holocaust deniers, though,
which serve merely to confirm the extremist foundations of Green Party politics. The
overriding point is this: in the politically
turbulent years that indubitably lie ahead
of this election, the Green Party will position itself as an alternative for Americans
who care about democracy, the environment, access to higher education, and a
reformed criminal justice system. Those
are decent goals, and they are irreconcilable with the monumental violence and
injustice that come with supporting dictatorships that have bombed an entire
nation back into the stone age. For that
reason, and many others, the Green Party
is a fraud.
JNS.ORG

Ben Cohen, senior editor of TheTower.org


and the tower Magazine, writes a weekly
column for JNS.org on Jewish affairs and
Middle Eastern politics. His work has been
published in Commentary, the New York
Post, Haaretz, the Wall Street Journal, and
many other publications.

Local
Civil conversation

Here are excerpts from comments on


Israel. Mr. Teitelbaum said he looked
to engage the commenters by asking
for clarification, requesting evidence
to back their statements, or rephrasing them to make them acceptable to a
wider range of readers.
The United States is an enabler and I
expect that I will be called an anti-Semite
for saying this.
Israel always has our back but Obama
does not like Israel.
We must continue to support Israel
until we know that it is not going to
be destroyed.
The Republicans think Israel is our
51st state.
Many countries owe Israel a debt for
taking out Osirik. If they hadnt, Iraq
might have done much more than just
take Kuwait.
Israel, land of the freeloader.
There also were a number of statements indicating that we should support Israel for religious reasons. Ive
learned the hard way not to engage

FROM PAGE 12

Muslim and a traitor to his country,


Mr. Teitelbaum said. While he generally
deletes such statements, if commenters
raise a specific point, he will leave it on
and dispute it, if it is inaccurate. For example, accusations that FEMA has established
concentration camps around the country
have been shown to be a hoax. Mr. Teitelbaum hopes that when the average visitor
sees that canard anywhere on the internet
in the future, he or she will remember the
moderators response.
The more people who sign on, the
more people can get educated in different areas, Mr. Teitelbaum said. He
is always looking for feedback and for
ways to improve his site, he added. With
more contributors, therell be more discussions. I ask people to write about anything theyre interested in. They dont
have to be a great writer or do research.
They simply have to come up with an
idea, think about it, and write even one
paragraph.

people who make religious statements,


Mr. Teitelbaum said. However, I dont
delete them unless they cross the lines
I have set.
Examples of those kinds of comments include:
I support Israel. They are
Gods people.
Concerning Israel the Lord said, I
will bless those that bless you and curse
those that curse you. How much plainer
do you want it !!!
Mr. Teitelbaum is hosting a discussion
on the Iran deal, pointing out that the
Democratic platform both supports the
deal and commits the party to preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons. Acknowledging that the restrictions
end after 15 years, he asks whether Democrats are being nave or devious. Perhaps, he suggests, their plan is to force
Iran to extend the deal or face new sanctions after the 15 years.
The response was nearly 100 percent anti-JCPOA, he said. ( JCPOA
stands for the Joint Comprehensive

Plan of Action, the Iran deals formal


name.) Some commenters believed
that either Russia or China would make
sure Iran is able to go nuclear. I challenged them to come up with a reason
why it would be in the interest of those
countries to do so. I also had a discussion with an opponent of the deal who
feels that we should go to war with Iran.
He and I were clearly not going to vote
for the same person in this election,
but I searched for common ground and
ultimately got him to agree with the following statement:
My hope is that our next President
will be vigilant about enforcement and
skilled enough to organize a coalition
of countries willing to fight to stop Iran
from getting the bomb. If Iran understands we are strong, serious, and capable of destroying them, we may not have
to fight at all.
This is an example of what I try to do.
Make people realize that while we may
judge a situation differently, our goals
are not that different.

BRIEFS

3,500-year-old artifacts find safe harbor

Satmar decree reportedly bars women


from pursuing higher education
Chasidic rabbis from the Satmar sect
reportedly have issued a decree barring
women from pursuing higher education.
The Yiddish-language decree says college education for girls is dangerous
and against the Torah, and that no
girls attending our school are allowed to
study and get a degree, according to the
Independent, the British-based online
newspaper.
According to the Independent, the
decree was issued by Satmar leaders in
New York and applies to members of the
sect worldwide.
Responding to the report, the Board
of Deputies of British Jews said in a statement, according to U.K.s Jewish News:
The mainstream Jewish community

would certainly reject this view. Both


Jewish girls and boys should all have the
opportunity to go to university if that is
what they want to do.
The Satmar decree said the sects
schools will not hire women whove
been to college or have a degree.
We have to keep our school safe and
we cant allow any secular influences in
our holy environment. It is against the
base upon which our [institution] was
built, the decree said.
Satmar is the largest sect of charedi
Orthodox Jews in the United Kingdom,
according to the Independent, which
said the countrys charedi Orthodox
population is estimated at 30,000.


JTA WIRE SERVICE

Egypt chief says Putin is ready


to host Israeli-Palestinian talks
Egypts President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi
claimed in an interview that Russian President Vladimir Putin is ready and willing
to host direct peace negotiations between
Israeli and Palestinian leaders in Moscow.
Unfortunately, the case is like stagnant water and requires international
will and effort, the Daily News Egypt
quoted El-Sisi as saying in an interview
held with editors of Egyptian newspapers. There is more and more conviction on behalf of the Israelis of the
importance of the peace process, which

is a positive indication.
El-Sisi, who supports the recent
French initiative for peace talks, also
said that the internal fighting between
Hamas leaders in Gaza and Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbass Fatah faction continues to be an obstacle to reaching an agreement.
Egypts president hopes that both
Israelis and Palestinians will allow his
country to play an integral part in renewing ties that broke down in 2014.


JNS.ORG

Ancient metal artifacts up to 3,500 years


old recently were given to the Israel Antiquities Authority by a family whose father
had collected them from the sea in Hadera,
a city in northern Israel.
The Mazliah family inherited the artifacts from their late father, who pulled
the objects from the sea while he was
employed at the Hadera power station.
After realizing they belonged to the state,
they contacted IAA and invited representatives to their home to inspect the items.
IAA discovered the objects had fallen
overboard from a metal merchants ship

in the early Islamic period.


The finds include a toggle pin and the
head of a knife from the Middle Bronze
Age, IAAs curator, Ayala Lester, said. The
other items include two mortars and two
pestles and fragments of candlesticks that
date to the Fatimid period in the 11th century CE. The items were apparently made
in Syria and brought to Israel. The finds
are evidence of the metal trade that was
conducted during this period.
The Mazliah family will receive a certificate of appreciation from the IAA for turning over the artifacts. 
JSN.ORG

Seven Palestinian weapons mills raided


by combined Israeli forces in West Bank
Israeli security forces raided seven illegal
Palestinian weapons mills in the Hebron
and Bethlehem area, in the largest crackdown of its kind over the last year.
The raids were carried out by five
IDF battalions, the militarys Judea and
Samaria Division, the Shin Bet security
agency, and the Judea and Samaria District
Police in an effort to root out illegal weapons production and trading.
IDF and Border Police troops found 22
lathes in seven separate weapons factories. Dozens of firearms, weapons parts
and cartridges were also uncovered in the
operation. The lathes and weapons found
were seized by security forces.

Two suspects were arrested in connection with the production and trade of
weapons. One of the suspects is believed
to be a top weapons dealer in the area. He
is currently being held by the Shin Bet for
questioning.
Some of the guns found in the raid were
foreign models while others were made in
the increasingly sophisticated local weapons mills. Along with the firearms, security
forces found stolen bullets, knives, handcuffs, nunchucks, flak jackets and American army uniforms, according to Israeli
media reports.


ISRAEL HAYOM/JNS.ORG

JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 25

COVER STORY

Following their dreams


Nefesh BNefesh flight takes
many people, including locals,
to a new life in Israel

JOANNE PALMER

Emotion runs high as a mother says


goodbye to her son, off to be a soldier.
26 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

irports are odd places


all at once grimy and
antiseptic, charmless and
exciting, hectic and boring. They are witness to
beginnings and endings, joy and grief,
tears of happiness, tears of sorrow.
Emotion and logistics battle for priority.
There is bad food and well, no. There
is bad food and more bad food.
Although no one makes aliyah on a
Nefesh BNefesh flight or to put that
in English, no one moves to Israel to set
up a new life there on a flight chartered
by the Israeli nonprofit agency called
Nefesh BNefesh without having done
a huge amount of preparation, its at
the airport, as new immigrants prepare
to board the plane for a new life, that
emotions surface publicly.

Last week, I found myself in a ropedoff section of a departure terminal at JFK


Airport in Queens, listening to speeches
and watching the faces of the new immigrants the olim, as theyre called,
people who are ascending to Israel as
they prepare to say goodbye to their old
lives, in the very physical form of their
relatives, right there next to them, and
move on to their new ones.
Its impossible to know exactly what
another person is feeling, but it is possible to know what his or her external
experiences are. I went to Israel with
the Nefesh BNefesh charter that took
off on Tuesday, August 22, and landed
early on Wednesday morning. Twentyfour new olim from our coverage area
were among the 233 changing their lives
that day, and I got to watch as they took
those huge, terrifying, glorious steps.
Another unavoidable truth about

airports is that they involve lots of snaking


lines, huge amounts of hurry-up-and-wait, and
a fair amount of uncertainty. (Is this the right
line? Really? I know that it seems to be, but
what if Im wrong? Should I go there instead?
And is that other line moving faster than this
one? Not fairrrrrr!!!!!)
We were told to get to the airport at
9:30 in the morning. Maybe because it was
mid-August, traffic was far less awful than
expected. There already were long lines of
olim, waiting to be interviewed by the El Al
security screener and then hand over their
luggage. The mood seemed tense but upbeat.
It was early. The dream was close.
After the luggage was checked in, everyone
was invited downstairs for a ceremony, which
originally had been called for 10 but started at
around 11 oclock. The speakers included both
the founders of Nefesh BNefesh, Tony Gelbart, now its chairman, and Rabbi Yehoshua
Fass, its executive director, as well as Israels
consul general in New York, Danny Dayan.
They all were appropriately inspirational and
high-minded; all were interrupted at regular
intervals by airport announcements. (Welcome to Terminal Eight! Be sure to have your
bags with you at all times)
Emotion ran high in that crowded section of
the vast terminal, although it wasnt the speakers who were eliciting it. There would have
been no need for them to have done that, had
they wanted to. Here, young people about to
join the IDF sat with their parents, who were
about to say goodbye to them and let them go
by themselves to face possible danger. Here,
young parents with their babies and toddlers
sat with their own parents, preparing to part.
As it turned out, Rabbi Shmuel Goldin of
Congregation Ahavath Torah in Englewood
was among the parents saying goodbye to their
children. Shmuel and Barbara Goldin have five
children four sons and a daughter and on
Tuesday their third son, Yehuda, and his family were about to make aliyah.
Rabbi Goldin is not typical of the parents
at the airport, I realized quickly. His second
son, Yossi, and his wife, Shifra Cooper Goldin,
who grew up in Teaneck, made aliyah a few
years ago, and all the Goldins will be together
in Israel this week, when they convene for a
family wedding. Also, Shmuel and Barbara
Goldin plan to make aliyah themselves once
he retires from his pulpit, so our emotion was
somewhat muted, he said. We knew wed see
them very soon. A lot of other people saying
goodbye to their kids dont know when theyll
see them again.
Even given his own situation, Rabbi Goldin
said, what I knew but didnt necessarily expect to feel, because you get so caught
up in the logistics, in the details, but Nefesh
BNefesh gives you a chance to feel it allows

you to take a step back and realize what youre


doing. That youre able to have the opportunity to go back and live in our land. That everyone making aliyah is making the journey that
so many of our forefathers prayed to be able to
do. Theyre taking the historic step back to our
land, which we were forced to leave so many
years ago.
And to have it happen only two days after
Tisha BAv, the fast day that commemorates
many of the multitude of sorrows that have

Yael and Yonatan Orlinsky and their three


sons moved from Bergenfield to Israel.

The youngest baby


on the flight was
less than a month
old, and the oldest
adult was 85.
engulfed the Jewish people, and fell this year
on August 13. Nefesh BNefesh allows you to
do that.
He pointed out something that Id noticed
the huge range of people making aliyah. The
youngest baby on the flight was less than a
month old, and the oldest adult was 85. There
were men in black hats and women in sheitels,
men in kippot and women in long skirts, there
were women in jeans and men in T-shirts,
men and women in IDF shirts, and men and
women with tattoos. (Okay, not many of them,
but significantly more than none.) They came
from 25 of the 50 American states, from as far
away from JFK as Arizona and Texas. Its a
vast array, Rabbi Goldin said. Everyone has
a place in Israel. Thats the Jewish state.
Once the talks were over, finally it was time
to go. There were sniffles. There were tears
running down cheeks, and there were suspiciously bright eyes. There were goodbyes.
But wait! Not quite. There was another line,
as we waited for doors to open. More red eyes.
More sniffles. More looking at watches. More
deep emotion, often making it impossible for
anyone to say very much at all.
Then the doors opened, people said final
goodbyes, and those of us going on the plane
got on another very long line.
Many lines later, we all got on the plane,
and it took off, rising high above the clouds,
and for 11 hours we sat in that metal cylinder,
in that weird timelessness of air travel, knowing that we were hurtling over the ocean and
then the Mediterranean, across countries and
continents and time zones, but feeling nothing
other than the occasional bump.
During the trip, I talked to some of the local
olim.
Amit Vogel, 17, of Ridgewood, wore an IDF

Amit Vogel, second from left, stands with


her Israeli-born parents and her younger
brother at JFK.

Ian Griggs, who has lived in Woodcliff Lake


and Fort Lee, sets off to start his new life
in Israel.
ALL PHOTOS BY SHAHAR AZRAN
JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 27

Cover Story

New immigrants kiss the ground as they get off the plane. Theyre about to join the Israel Defense Forces.

Two new immigrants beam at the camera.

T-shirt, signaling her intent to join the


Israel Defense Forces. Shes just graduated
from high school, she said, and is making
aliyah because I have always wanted to
give to Israel. I knew since I was in about
third grade that I wanted to go to the army,
that I wanted to contribute something.
I thought that this was the right time.
And my parents support me.
Her parents, Talia and Ayal, both were
born in Israel; her mother is the daughter
of Holocaust survivors. Amit is the middle
child; her little brother, who is 11, is in
middle school, but her sister, 19, will make
aliyah next week. Were not doing this
together because the logistics didnt allow
it, Amit said. She has many cousins in
28 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

Israel, and she grew up speaking Hebrew.


Despite those cousins, because she has
no first-degree relatives in Israel, she will
be considered a lone soldier, Amit added,
and shes looking forward to the support
she will get.
Her ties to the Jewish people do not
stress religion, she said. We celebrate
the holidays, but I dont identify with any
movement, she said. But my sense of
connection with the people is very strong.
After the army, Amit plans on going to
college she doesnt know where and
after that maybe shell become a social
worker. I like helping people, she said.
But for now, shes keeping her options
open. When I get there, Ill figure it out.

Ian Griggs, 39, grew up in Montvale


and made aliyah from Fort Lee. Hes
worked in television and social media
and as a marketer and screenwriter; hes
self-deprecating and funny, and ready for
something new.
He grew up as a member of Temple
Emanuel in Woodcliff Lake but was not
particularly observant. As the oldest sibling in a family of four, he felt protective of
his younger brothers and sister; your role
as a big brother is to keep everyone safe
and happy, he said. So when his sister
Alison, a spiritual person, became more
and more Jewishly observant, it piqued
Ians interest. He became more observant
too. (But no, he said, the very hipster-style
fedora he was sporting was not a religious
statement, just a sartorial one.)
Soon Alison, by then married and very
observant, had moved to Israel, and Ian
visited her there often. I would go at
least once a year, often more, and every
time it became harder to leave my three
nephews, he said. Gradually, the idea
that he too should move to Israel grew.
I will do ulpan for five months to learn
Hebrew, he said. And then Ill look for
work. He has many connections, including some to the Knicks hes a diehard
supporter, he said, and the chance of
working for the team somehow is not
unrealistic. And if that doesnt work out,
he said, something else will.
My parents are kind of sad to see me
go, but they realize that its the right move
for me, he said. And if he meets someone, falls in love, and marries that
wouldnt displease anyone in his family.

Particularly him.
Next, I talked to two local families.
Yonatan and Yael Orlinsky lived in Bergenfield until Tuesday; Yonatan grew up in
Teaneck, and his parents, Mindy and Hendry, and his brother, Judah, and his family
live there still.
But Yonatan, Yael, and their three boys
one is 7 years old, one is 4, and the baby
is 18 months are making aliyah. Yael is a
nurse practitioner, and Yonatan is a lawyer who specializes in international law
and has a job waiting for him at Greenberg Traurig, a small office thats part of
a huge international Miami-based firm.
Yael doesnt have a job yet, and plans to
spend some time settling her children into
their new lives before she looks for one,
but because the idea of nurse practitioners is new to Israel, shes excited about
the opportunity. She can help a new field
grow, Yonatan said.
The family is making aliyah because it
was our dream to live in Israel, he said.
We talked about it when we were dating,
and kept on talking about it when we got
married. Israel is a miracle, and we have
the opportunity to live there an opportunity Jews didnt have for 2,000 years.
We see how the Jewish community in
Teaneck has flourished, and now we have
the chance to contribute to the flowering
of our homeland.
Avi and Yael Pinsky lived in Teaneck
with their daughters the older one is 3
1/2 and the younger one is 1 until Tuesday. Even when I was single, this was my
dream, Yael said. This is our land. I want
to be able to raise our kids with our values.

Cover Story

NIne years ago, Jewish Standard correspondent Abby Leichman, second from right, and her
husband made aliyah from Teaneck.

Yael grew up in Teaneck, and her parents, Rachel and Yitzhak Furst, still live
there. My parents are supportive of us,
she said. Hopefully, in their retirement,
they will make aliyah too. Avis an accountant, and he has a job lined up; Yael, a
teacher who worked at Yeshivat Noam and
Ben Porat Yosef, will wait and see where
aliyah takes us before she decides to look
for work outside the home. Shes fluent in
Hebrew; Avis okay, they said, but he has
a learning curve, they agreed.
The plane, full of children and young
adults and emotion and excitement, is
oddly quiet. At one point, the men gather
to daven. The young people in the shirts
that say Olim lTzahal marking them as
immigrants who are about to join the IDF
talk and flirt and laugh.
And then there are announcements, and
the olim put on the hats and bracelets that
mark them as new Israelis, and then we
start descending through the fluffy whiteness that our brains tell us are clouds but
our senses say are magic palaces, and
then, finally, we land.
As we wait to get off the plane, the IDF
contingent sings Od Yavo Shalom Aleinu,
the stirring ode to peace, and then they
walk off at the head of the queue, some of
them wrapped in Israeli flags, many of them
kneeling to kiss the oil-pocked tarmac.
Once everyone is organized into buses,
we are taken to a large hangar for, surprise, another ceremony. But first there is
loud, live music the musicians are on the
stage inside, and their music is broadcast
outside too. There are hordes of people
waiting to meet the new immigrants, and
everyone is shrieking, hugging, kissing,
crying, dancing. The emotion is so explosive that you think that if someone were to
light a match, it would go boom.
But it doesnt feel the way it did in New
York. There it was nerves, anticipation,
edginess, the need to say goodbye, to

move on, to move. Here, in Ben-Gurion,


its more pure. Its excitement. Its joy. Its
even to some extent disbelief. Theyve
waited for so very long. Can this possibly
be real? Well, yes. It is!
Pure joy.
The ceremony was streamed live, and
parents watched. That night, Barbara and I
watched them coming off the plane, Rabbi
Goldin said. On the one hand, yes, reality
will hit tomorrow, but on the other hand,
this is not unrealistic. This is also reality. No
one will be singing and dancing all the time
if you do, you wont succeed but if you
dont ever sing and dance if you lose sight
of the higher dimension of what youve just
done you also wont succeed.
Nefesh BNefesh allows us to do both.
The ceremony featured many dignitaries, including Israels grandfatherly president, Reuven Rivlin. As they had in New
York, everyone who spoke thanked everyone else. After a while, attention wandered.
There was a theme, though, that permeated all the talks, on both sides of the trip.
Youre coming home, everyone said.
Welcome home.
How can that be? Is there any need to
denigrate the places people had lived,
where they had grown up, where many of
their families still lived?
Oh no, Abby Leichman, a longtime Jewish Standard correspondent who made aliyah with Nefesh BNefesh nine years ago
and now lives in Maale Adumim with her
husband, Steve, said. Oh no. Thats not at
all what theyre saying.
When they said we were coming home,
I heard home with a capital H, Abby said.
That we were coming Home. Her real
homes had been in Yonkers, where she
grew up, and then in Teaneck, where she
lived for many years, she said. Now Maale
Adumim really is home, but that took a
long time. But it was Home right away.
When she and Steve landed, in 2007,

The Leichmans were welcomed in their home, Maale Adumim.

Nefesh BNefeshs 50,000th new immigrant, Rebecca Glanzer of Brooklyn,


center, was given a formal welcome. She is flanked, from left, by Rabbi Yehoshua
Fass, Israels President Reuven Rivlin, its aliyah and absorption minister, Sofa
Landver, and Tony Gelbart.

we were the first off the bus from the


plane, and we saw the line of female soldiers waving flags, and then the music
a brass band started to play, she said.
It was a stark contrast to the stories my
paternal grandparents told me about
how they felt when they got off the boat
at Ellis Island, when they emigrated from
Hungary. That was very scary officials
looked for reasons to turn immigrants
away, she said. But she, like the other
immigrants, were welcomed with love,
and literally with open arms everyone
just wanted to hug her.
Nefesh BNefeshs 50,000th oleh
walked off the plane on Wednesday. The
flight included 75 IDF enlistees, 10 medical professionals, and representatives
of a wide range of other professions.
Nefesh BNefesh which does not work

in a vacuum, but with help from a range


of governmental and semi-governmental
organizations, including Israels Ministry
of Aliyah and Immigrant Absorption, the
Jewish Agency for Israel, Keren Kayemeth
LeIsrael, JNF-USA, and Tzofim-Garin
Tzabar will continue to help everyone
on the plane settle into a new life in Israel,
providing help in finding jobs, housing,
and other kinds of support.
When I came home from Jerusalem,
where I stayed for a few days, I flew on a
regular commercial flight. Like the charter
flight, it was El Al; it involved lines, waits,
odd bumps, cloud palaces, bathroom
lines, food provided at inexplicable times
and unavailable at others, and background
claustrophobia. But it did not include the
nearly palpable hopes and dreams and
fears and yearnings of a planeful of people.
JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 29

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Khalil Shikaki announcing the poll findings last week at a conference in Jerusalem.

Courtesy of IDI

Poll: Most Israelis, Palestinians


oppose current bilateral peace plan
Andrew Tobin
JERUSALEM Most Israelis and Palestinians oppose
the kind of peace deal that has been under negotiation
in the past, a new poll found.
Nearly 60 percent of both Israeli Jews and Palestinians said they were against the permanent status
agreement they were presented based on previous
Israeli-Palestinian peace talks, according to the joint
poll by leading Israeli and Palestinian think tanks. (No
statistics for Israeli Arabs were provided.) But about
a quarter of those opposed would reconsider if the
deal were part of a broader regional peace based on
the Arab Peace Initiative. (That plan, also known as
the Saudi Initiative, is a 10-sentence proposal for an
end to the ArabIsraeli conflict that was endorsed by
the Arab League in 2002 at the Beirut Summit and reendorsed at the 2007 Arab League summit.)
It is very clear that a majority of Israelis and Palestinians at this point have responded with opposition to the
package, Khalil Shikaki, the director of the Palestinian
Center for Policy and Survey Research, said. However,
we were able to easily change their minds simply by adding the Arab peace component. We got close to 55 percent support for the package when it is an Arab-Israeli
peace rather than just a Palestinian-Israeli peace.
The Palestinian think tank and the Israel Democracy Institute, a leading research center in Jerusalem,
surveyed 1,184 Israelis, including both Jews and Arabs,
and 1,270 Palestinians, revealing little consensus on the

parameters of peace and mistrust and fear of the other


on both sides along with some hope for flexibility.
Some 59 percent of Israelis and a slight majority of Palestinians, 51 percent, support a two-state solution to the
conflict, the poll found. But a majority of Israelis (57 percent) and nearly half of Palestinians (47 percent) think
that a majority of their people opposes that solution.
This has far-reaching implications, because if you
feel you are part of the minority, you will be less outspoken and proactive and confident, Tamar Hermann, the academic director of the Israel Democracy
Institutes Guttman Center for Public Opinion and Policy Research, said. If you belong to the majority but
you believe you are part of the minority, you will act
like the minority. Its a spiral of silence.
One in five Israeli Jews and one in three Palestinians
want a one-state solution, meaning a single state for
Israelis and Palestinians rather than an independent
Palestinian state alongside Israel. Last year, 51 percent
of both Israelis and Palestinians supported a two-state
solution, according to a similar survey conducted annually by the Palestinian center with the Truman Institute
for the Advancement of Peace at the Hebrew University.
The peace deal offered in the latest poll provides for
a demilitarized Palestinian state, reciprocal national
recognition, Israeli withdrawal to its pre-1967 borders
with territorial swaps, the reunification of 100,000
Palestinians with families in Israel, the division of
Jerusalem and its holy sites, and the end of conflict
and claims. A multinational force would be set up in

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Jewish World
Half of Israeli Jews, 61 percent of
Israeli Arabs, and 70 percent of
Palestinians agree: Nothing can be
done thats good for both sides;
whatever is good for one side is
bad for the other side.
the Palestinian state, and Israel would
maintain two early warning stations in
the West Bank for 15 years.
While 55 percent of Israeli Jews and
59 percent of Palestinians oppose the
deal, a minority of Israeli Jews and Palestinians (39 percent) back it, as do
90 percent of Israeli Arabs. Twentysix percent of those Israeli Jews would
be willing to change their minds if the
Arab states agreed to peace based on
the Arab Peace Initiative, and 25 percent of those Palestinians would do the
same if Israel accepted the initiative,
which was first proposed in 2002.
There is little trust between Israelis and Palestinians, the poll revealed.
The vast majority of Palestinians (89
percent) feel Israeli Jews are untrustworthy, and most Israeli Jews (68 percent) feel that way about Palestinians.
A minority of both Israelis and Palestinians (43 percent) believe the other
side wants peace, and large majorities
on both sides (77 percent of Israelis and
73 percent of Palestinians) think the
chance of an independent Palestinian
state being established in the next five
years is very low.
Half of Israeli Jews, 61 percent of
Israeli Arabs, and 70 percent of Palestinians agree: Nothing can be done thats
good for both sides; whatever is good for
one side is bad for the other side.
Sixty-five percent of Israelis say they
fear Palestinians, while 54 percent of
Palestinians say they do not fear Israeli
Jews, according to the poll. Israelis and
Palestinians tend to perceive each others national motives to be much more
extreme than they do their own sides.
Most Israelis (64 percent) and a large
minority of Palestinians (43 percent)
support mutual recognition of Israeli
and Palestinian national identities.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus
insistence on that was an obstacle in
the last round of American-led IsraeliPalestinian peace talks, in 2013-14.
Among both Israelis and Palestinians, religious observance and political leaning are predictive of backing
for the proposed peace deal, the poll
found. Secular and left-wing Israeli Jews
are more likely to be supportive, while
more religious and right-wing Israeli
Jews are less likely to back the plan.
Just 16 percent of Israeli settlers in the
West Bank are on board, compared to

40 percent of non-settlers.
Similarly, less religious Palestinians
are more supportive of the deal than are
the more religious, and there is a large
difference in support between Fatah and
Hamas voters 57 percent versus 25 percent. Fatah is the political party of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas. Hamas is the Islamist terrorist
group that governs the Gaza Strip.
Who should broker peace? A large
plurality of Palestinians (44 percent)
prefer multilateral negotiations, while
a similar number of Israeli Jews (40
percent) prefer bilateral talks between
the Israeli government and the Palestinians. Just 18 percent on both sides favor
a unilateral approach.
When asked to choose among four
potential mediators of talks, an Arab
forum of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and
Jordan was the most popular among
both Israeli Jews and Palestinians (26
percent and 22 percent, respectively).
All the other proposed options the
United States, the European Union, and
the United Nations are acceptable to
one side but unacceptable to the other.
The leadership of an Arab forum is of
course interpreted differently by the two
sides, Hermann said. For Israelis, it
means they are jumping over the heads
of the Palestinians and negotiating their
future with others. [Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor] Liberman is very much in
favor of this arrangement. From the Palestinian point of view, as they feel weak
in a bilateral framework, they prefer to
have a multilateral framework with their
big brothers.
Egypt and France are both pushing initiatives to revive Israel-Palestinian peace talks. Palestinian leaders
demand that Israel freeze settlement
construction and agree to negotiate
based on its pre-1967 borders as preconditions for talks.
Most Palestinians (62 percent) blame
the Israelis for the failure of previous
rounds of negotiations, while most
Israeli Jews (52 percent) blame the Palestinians. U.S. special envoy Martin
Indyk, who oversaw the latest failed
attempt, reportedly assigned most
of the blame to Israel, while the State
Department said that no one is to
blame but both sides did things that
were incredibly unhelpful.
JTA Wire Service

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Jewish World
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Clockwise from
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were among 13
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Growing up in Uganda, Sarah Nabaggala often would


have to walk to a well to retrieve drinking water.
Shoshana Nambi, from the same village, Mbale,
remembers a childhood where they had little and
wasted nothing.
So Nabaggala was surprised when the kids at Camp
Coleman, a Reform Jewish overnight camp in northeastern Georgia, complained about bunks with hot showers and ubiquitous taps with running water. Nambi had
trouble watching her campers leave towels, socks, and
even shoes behind at the beach.
The kids had so much stuff with them, said Nambi,
who ran programs at Camp Coleman this year. So many
clothes, so many piles of towels, and parents kept sending them care packages of bubble gum and nail polish
paint and stuff like this. It was really funny to see that.
Nambi and Nabaggala, both in their second year as

Jonathan Pollard
to appeal decision on
parole requirements

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Jonathan Pollards attorney announced plans to appeal


a federal courts ruling not to lift the restrictive parole
conditions on the convicted spy for Israel.
On Tuesday, Eliot Lauer said he would file a notice of
appeal over the Aug. 12 decision in Manhattan District
Court, The Jerusalem Post reported.
In his appeal, according to the Post, Lauer plans to
argue that the parole requirements are arbitrary and
Pollard poses no security risk, since he has not had

staff at Coleman, were two of 13 Ugandan Jews who


came to the United States this summer to work as counselors at Reform overnight camps. They are part of an
initiative by the Union for Reform Judaism to strengthen
connections between Ugandan and American Jews.
This may have been the first time they realized there
were Jews in a place like Uganda, Dan Lange, URJs associate director of camping, said of the campers. Our
commitment is to exposing the kids to global Jewry
not only to know they exist, but to interact with them.
Ugandas Jews, known as the Abayudaya, are a
2,000-member community that lives in rural villages in
the countrys eastern hills. Conservative rabbis began
visiting the community two decades ago, and most of
the Abayudaya practice Conservative Judaism. Despite
support from the diaspora, the community remains
poor.
The counselors received free flights and visa sponsorships from URJ, as well as a salary. Before they arrived,

access to classified government information for more


than three decades.
The parole terms issued upon Pollards release from a
federal prison last November after serving 30 years of a
life sentence require him to stay in his New York home
from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m.; to submit any computer he uses
for inspection, and to wear a GPS-monitoring device at
all times. The device means that Pollard, who is Orthodox, is forced to violate Shabbat observance, his lawyer
said. He also must remain in the United States for five
years, despite his desire to move to Israel.
In her ruling, Judge Katherine Forrest ruled that the
U.S. Parole Commission had a rational basis for imposing the stringent parole conditions, noting Pollards

Jewish World
the Ugandans received advance training in American
culture from Jewish Agency for Israel staff, who also
tutor Israeli camp counselors.
All of the Ugandan counselors came away from
camp saying the same things that American counselors and campers say year after year: They loved their
friends and they want to go back.
But they still experienced culture shock, from the
cabins to the cafeteria to the soccer field.
Used to playing soccer with a ball made of recycled
bags, the Ugandans marveled at the variety of sports
at camp. Accustomed to fresh meals prepared over the
course of hours, they had to adjust to food from the
fridge ready in minutes. In Uganda, they were never
on a schedule. At camp, they had to abide by fixed
periods and planned activities.
A few of the counselors remembered their campers
routinely leaving food uneaten on the table something unthinkable in Uganda that they warned the
American kids against. But at other times the meals
seemed too small.
One day at camp, in the first week, we had salad
and sandwiches, said Yonatan Loukato, a counselor
at Eisner Camp in the Massachusetts Berkshires. We
didnt eat much. We thought maybe real food is coming. Then we heard them sing the prayer for finishing
food.
Campers were curious about life in Uganda, the
counselors said, asking about everything from the
daily rhythm of the villages to African wildlife. Each of
the six camps where the Ugandan counselors worked
held at least one event a panel or similar program
where they could tell the campers about their home
country.
They had fun questions about animals, Nambi
said. Theyre all very disappointed that I dont have
lions or something.
The Ugandan counselors also were surprised at
how the campers interacted with them. In Uganda, a
few of the counselors said, adults tell children what
to do and the children listen. At camp, giving the kids

Shoshana Nambi, from


Mbale, Uganda, spent
the summer running
programs at Camp
Coleman, a Reform
Jewish summer camp
in Georgia.
BEN SALES

instructions involved a constant negotiation. Some counselors found the dynamic jarring. Others said it showed how
confident and analytical the kids were.
The kids in Uganda, when you tell them to do something,
they do it immediately, Nabaggala said. People were very
outspoken here and pretty assertive.
Once they acclimated, the counselors said, they came to
enjoy the American Jewish mainstay of a summer of lakes,
tents, and Shabbat services. A few learned how to swim at
camp. Samuel Matiya Kigondere, who also worked at Eisner, looked forward each week to Shabbuddies, a Shabbat
program where two people would spend the day getting to

know each other. Loukato loved that the whole camp wore
white on Shabbat. Its a practice he plans to continue back
home.
The counselors said they plan to stay in touch with the
campers and their families once they return to Uganda. In
one case, the families of campers from the Greene Family
Camp in Texas donated money to dig a well for a Ugandan
Jewish community. Another camps families raised money
to purchase water filters to send to Uganda.
Everyone is welcoming, Loukato said. I happened
to make a lot of friends, regardless of age or race. I felt at
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expressed desire to leave the United States for Israel,


where his wife lives and where he was granted citizenship while in prison.
She also noted that the commission also had
reviewed a letter from the U.S. director of national
intelligence, James Clapper, stating that documents
Pollard had compromised remain classified at the levels of top secret and secret.
Pollard, 62, pleaded guilty in 1986 to conspiracy
to commit espionage in connection with providing
Israeli contacts with hundreds of classified documents he had obtained as a civilian intelligence specialist for the U.S. Navy.


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JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 33

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Chasidic men celebrate a wedding in Israel,


where marriage and divorce are legally under
the authority of the Orthodox chief rabbinate.

YAAKOV LEDERMAN/FLASH90

Jewish World

How Israeli women are gaining


in the fight for Jewish divorce
ANDREW TOBIN
JERUSALEM In this case, the sins of the
son are the sins of the father.
Israels Supreme Rabbinical Court
this month sentenced a charedi Orthodox man to 30 days in jail for pressuring
his son to withhold a divorce from his
wife for more than a decade. By upholding a lower rabbinical court decision, the
high court gave its blessing to an unprecedented approach to freeing women from
unwanted marriages.
The Orthodox rabbis who adjudicate
divorce in Israel all of whom are men
have come under fire in recent years
for not doing enough on behalf of such
women, commonly called chained
women, or agunot in Hebrew. In
response to mounting public pressure, and
due to an influx of new judges selected in
a process that includes more women than
ever before rabbinical courts appear to
be edging toward more aggressive action
against husbands who refuse to give their
wife a get, or Jewish divorce.

I believe and hope that a new spirit of


caring and understanding of the womans
position as a victim of get refusal and as an
agunah is spreading throughout the entire
system, Rachel Levmore, a rabbinical
court advocate who provides legal counsel to chained women, said.
Levmore directs the Agunah & GetRefusal Prevention Project at the International Young Israel Movement and the Jewish Agency for Israel.
As the old guard are replaced, many
of the new appointments are much more
in touch with the reality of Israeli society
and the standing of women within Israeli
society as a whole and within Jewish law
specifically, she said.
Shai Doron, a spokesman for the interim
director of the Rabbinical Courts Administration, Rabbi Shimon Yaakobi, agreed.
There are more new judges in the rabbinical court and they bring a new attitude, Doron said. There is a stronger
attitude toward those who refuse to give a
get in the last few years, so thats the reason there is more punishment.

As part of a system dating back to the


Ottomans, Jews in Israel must marry and
divorce through state rabbis, whose decisions are based on civil as well as Jewish law halacha. Divorce is handled
by regional rabbinical courts and the
Supreme Rabbinical Court.
Women who are not granted a divorce
cannot remarry under halacha and often
are shunned by the charedi community.
Any children they might have with another
partner are allowed to marry only other
illegitimate children in Israel, as are
generations of their descendants. By contrast, the offspring of a recalcitrant husband and another woman are considered
legitimate, and generally are able to move
on with their lives. This gives the husbands
much more power than their wives when
it comes to divorce.
The plight of chained women has made
headlines in Israel and abroad in recent
years, as womens rights and religious
groups, many of them led by religious
Zionist women, have worked to highlight
the issue and push for change. Activists on

behalf of chained women say that changing public attitudes have encouraged
harsher action by rabbinical courts against
recalcitrant husbands.
More and more pressure is being put
on the rabbinical courts to adopt a friendlier approach to interpretation of Jewish law, Yedidia Stern, a researcher at the
Israel Democracy Institute think tank who
seeks solutions to the problem of chained
women, said. What is interesting to me is
the spearhead [of the movement to reform
agunot law in Israel] is religious women in
Israel. Most activists are [modern] Orthodox religious women, and they are basically expressing some kind of moderate
feminist approach to halacha.
Partly as a result, we see lately more
and more cases where very well-known
rabbis in the rabbinical court system in
Israel are willing to step forward and to
help those women who are being refused
by their husband to get a get.
At the same time, Stern added, charedi
Orthodox rabbis in Israel including Chief
SEE DIVORCE PAGE 40

JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 35

Dvar Torah
Ekev: Connecting through
our stomachs (and our words)

ts the end of the meal that I most


anticipate. Odd, I know. Most people
cant wait to begin to eat, tasting the
food on their plate, enjoying what
lies before them. Dont get me wrong; I
love to eat, especially when I am in the
company of great people. But with the end
of a meal comes a special opportunity to
give thanks for the food I have just eaten
together with those at my table.
In this weeks Torah portion, Ekev, we
read the verse that is the source text for
what we now call Birkat HaMazon (and
also to the blessing before we eat, ensuring our meals are bookended by words of
praise and thanks). When you have eaten
your fill, give thanks to the Eternal God for
the good land given to you. (Deuteronomy
8:10) There are three significant aspects of
this verse: satisfaction, gratitude, and connection to the land of Israel.
The concepts of being satisfied with what
we have eaten and giving thanks fit together
naturally. But does this mean we only have
to say these words if our bellies are stuffed,
or if we have loved every bite of what we
have eaten? No. In fact tradition teaches
that we offer these words of thanks even if
we have eaten a piece of bread or matzah as
small as the size of an olive.
Why? Perhaps to remind us that feeling satisfied doesnt necessarily mean
feeling full. Perhaps to remind us that
even the smallest bite of food is worthy

of thanksgiving. Perhaps to
Israel, alone, is significant.
make it possible for the largBut I believe there is an even
est number of people to fuldeeper level of meaning for
fill this commandment, since
us to be gleaned.
one must not necessarily
Our relationship to the
have feasted to offer thanks.
physical land taught to us
And, finally, I believe, to
throughout the Torah is
draw attention to those who
about the way we care for
live with food insecurity. We
those around us. We must
are each commanded to offer
watch over and protect
Rabbi Rachel
thanks for eating, which necthe vegetation and animals
Steiner
essarily implies a commandBarnert
entrusted to us, as caregivers
ment to ensure that everyTemple,
of the world. When harvestone has access to food. Each
Franklin Lakes,
ing our vineyards and fields,
Reform
time I eat and recite these
we must leave what grows at
words I am reminded to
the corners and what drops
work toward reducing food
from our arms for those who
insecurity: bringing food for pantry colare hungry. Every seven years we take a
lections, volunteering in the community
break from farming and enjoy the bounty
garden at Barnert Temple where the fresh
of our fields together, equally, with each
produce is donated to the Center for Food
member of our community. Drawing our
Action, working to eliminate the systems
hearts and minds to the mutual covenantal
that continue to make it hard for everyone
promise of land must also direct our hearts
to have access to healthy food.
and minds to translating those values into
The third part of our verse draws us to
relevant, modern day decisions.
the covenantal land promised to the IsraWhen possible, my family buys and eats
elites, the land of Israel. So, some might
food that is sustainably grown, harvested
ask, does this mean we only have to offer
and delivered. Some of the questions we
thanks for food grown in Israel? Or only if
consider are: How are the workers who
we are eating our food while on that land?
cared for the farm and who harvested the
Nope. Even the 13th century Spanish sage
produce treated and compensated? What
Nachmanides teaches that these words
chemicals or antibiotics were used and
draw us to give thanks for the land no
what is their impact not only on our food
matter where we dine. This connection to
but also on the greater ecosystem? How

were the animals treated while they were


alive? How humane was their slaughter?
Where does the profit from my purchase
go, what organizations are supported,
directly or indirectly, with the money I
spend on food?
Eating is a holy activity. Before we eat,
we acknowledge our connection to being
part of something bigger than just ourselves, the gift of having sacred resources
before us that we turn into food that sustains us. At the conclusion of our meal,
when we have had our fill, we give thanks.
And we commit ourselves to living out the
ideals embedded in this ancient verse,
which compels us to make well informed,
Jewish decisions about what we eat.
The text(s) for Birkat HaMazon vary in
length and can be found in many prayer
books, bentchers (a small book that contains
many blessings related to eating), or online.
Interested in trying out offering a blessing
after you eat but you dont know the full
prayer? Never fear. The Talmud (Berachot
40b) shares the story of a shepherd named
Benjamin who offered an abbreviated version in Aramaic, his native, secular language. You can begin by offering your own
words of thanksgiving, which might lead
you to learning the traditional prayers.
Or, you can start with Benjamins offering:
Brich rachamana, malka dealma marey
dhai pita. Blessed is the merciful One, ruler
of the world, creator of this bread.

BRIEFS

Diplomat steps up effort


by Israel among Muslim
West Africa nations

After Golan Heights


explosion, Israel strikes
Syrian military target

Israels Foreign Ministry Director Dore Gold visited the


African country of Guinea, a Muslim nation that does
not have diplomatic relations with Israel.
Golds three-day trip to West Africa included a visit
to Conakry, the capital of Guinea, to meet with President Alfa Conde and 10 government ministers.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently
announced plans to visit many West African countries
by the end of the year, hoping to improve Israeli-African relations by focusing on shared interests in development and ways to fight Islamic terrorism.
In July, Netanyahu traveled to West Africa to reestablish ties with Guinea. A few days later, Gold also
visited the president of another Muslim African nation,
Chad, which also has no diplomatic ties to Israel.

After a mortar shell exploded on the Israeli


side of the Golan Heights, the Israeli Air Force
struck a Syrian military missile launcher near
Quneitra.
The mortar fell in an open area and no
warning sirens were activated. No casualties
or damages were reported.
While the shelling was considered part of
internal fighting in the Syrian region, the Israel
Defense Forces said that Syria is still responsible for errant fire occurring in its borders and
any effort to threaten Israeli sovereignty or its
citizens wont be tolerated.
This is the second counter-strike from Israel
within two days; the first was an airstrike on
Hamas targets after rocket fire hit Sderot, near
Gaza on Sunday.

JNS.ORG

JNS.ORG

Researchers are on the trail


of skin cancer breakthrough
Researchers have discovered how melanoma spreads through the
body, a breakthrough they hope will lead to the cancer becoming nonthreatening and easily curable, according to a new Tel Aviv
University study done in cooperation with the German Cancer
Research.
The study, which looked at the spread of melanoma, was published in a Nature Cell Biology article.
Scientists found that before they spread, melanoma tumors send
out small vesicles with molecules that trigger structural changes in
the skin that prepare it for receiving cancer cells, and transporting
them further. The scientists also found chemical substances that
can stop the process, which raises hope that cancer-treating drugs
could be developed.
The threat of melanoma is not in the initial tumor that appears
on the skin, but rather in its metastasis, cancer cells sent off to colonize in vital organs like the brain, lungs, liver and bones, Dr. Carmit Levy, the lead researcher at the human molecular genetics and
biochemistry department of TAUs Sackler School of Medicine, told
the Jerusalem Post.


36 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

JNS.ORG

Crossword

LITERATURE SURVEY BY YONI GLATT


KOSHERCROSSWORDS@GMAIL.COM
DIFFICULTY LEVEL: CHALLENGING

Jewish World
BRIEFS

Uber buys Israeli autonomous


driving startup for $680 million
The ride-sharing service Uber is buyinh the
Israeli startup Otto Motors, which converts
regular trucks into autonomous ones, for
$680 million, Israel Hayom reported.
Otto, founded by Israeli entrepreneur
Lior Ron and other former employees of
Google, Apple and Tesla, manufactures
artificial intelligence, cameras and sensors that can be connected to a vehicle
and give it the capability to operate without a driver. The startup is currently testing trucks with the high-tech capability in
the San Francisco Bay area.

Ottos technology could revolutionize


the trucking industry, especially since one
in three truckers currently are involved
in serious accidents each year. The technology can provide a path to sustainable
commercial transportation, Ottos online
blog states.
Uber is not the only American company
to acquirre an Israeli startup working with
autonomous driving. Earlier this week, the
Ford Motor Co. announced it had acquired
SAIPS, an Israeli startup focusing on selfJNS.ORG
driving technology. 

Israel imports 20 police


service dogs from Czech Republic

Across
1. Implore (for tzedakah)
4. Where Melchizedek was High Priest
9. Like Einstein
14. Lod to Beit Arye dir.
15. Perlman might play one
16. Much of R.L. Stines work
17. Mitchell novel about the end of the
8th plague?
20. Israels locale, technically
21. Those, to Gracia Mendes Nasi
22. Start of the Sabbath?
23. Walker novel about dye used for
some hangings in the Mishkan?
28. Este, Danielle, and Alanas band
29. Israeli composer Holz whose first
name might signify the land
30. Mashuga
33. Make (a golem)
35. He starred in the Lethal Weapon
movies for Richard (Donner)
39. Catchphrase of Cher Horowitz
41. Wiesel novel regarding Maariv time?
44. Ring success for Roman Greenberg
45. Gadgets for Simon & Garfunkel
47. Surrealist Joan behind The Penalties
of Hell or The New Hebrides
49. Elite makes it
50. ___ You (Drake single)
53. Gathering places during the time of
Titus
55. Warren novel about the servants of
Solomon?
61. ___-fi (Jane Yolen genre)
62. Possible shape of a bronze snake
made by Moses
63. Actress Harareet
64. Wharton novel about a Simchas Beit
HaShoeva?
69. One of the original avot, originally
70. Motzetz user
71. Israel bond rating
72. ... cedars from Lebanon to make
___ for thee (Eze. 27:15)
73. Tzitzit woes
74. Where Vanessa Bayer sometimes
plays a Bar-Mitzvah boy, for short

The solution to last weeks puzzle


is on page 43.

Down
1. Sired, biblically
2. Son of Shet
3. Funny Disney character Eric Goldberg
made Jewish
4. And G-d ___ everything... (Gen 1:31)
5. Start of a question in The Bangles
Eternal Flame
6. Lang. Josephus might have spoken
but did not write in
7. Drug of choice in the Weinsteinproduced The Cider House Rules
8. ___ Ramon (var.)
9. Is hopping mad (like a bovine sacrificial animal)
10. Common (enough) animal cry in Tel
Aviv
11. City with many Russian Jews
12. Get ready for bread
13. Actors Danson and Levine
18. ...to ___ according to his needs
(saying popularized by Marx)
19. One of a resting 25
24. Klutz
25. Judaic animal
26. He brought DeMarcus to Israel in
2015
27. Ruling
30. Big traif item
31. Great-great-grandson of David
32. Hummus, e.g.
34. Studio (mostly) started by Jews
36. Kvetch
37. Home of the Tisch sch.
38. Start of a fast?
40. Kaparot option
42. Zeydes stereo
43. 1982 Steven Lisberger film (with a
2010 sequel)
46. Seinfeld and Rhoda
48. NFTY, e.g.
51. End of a 2000 Coen brothers hit
52. Keitels Reservoir Dogs character
pulled several
54. Amoraic Rav
55. Company that makes Halvah
56. Joshuas soldiers as they waited to
ambush the Ai
57. The K in CK1
58. Phoenixs Her co-star Rooney and
her sister Kate
59. Firm Hebrew name
60. Snir or Prat
61. Chalav option
65. Shabbat item, for some
66. Leonard Cohens Bird ___ Wire
67. It might prevent the saying of
Kiddush Levana
68. Important Israelis: Abbr.

Israel received 20 police service dogs from


the Czech Republic that will be used to
capture and neutralize criminal suspects
and identify explosives, weapons, drugs
and money, Arutz Sheva reported.
The one-year-old dogs will undergo six
month of training before being integrated

with the existing 220 police service


canines.
Senior dog trainers and a veterinarian from the polices animal training unit
conducted a thorough search in the Czech
Republic for the highly-specialized service
JNS.ORG
dogs. 

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JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 37

Calendar
(201) 244-6702, www.
areyvut.org, or social@
areyvut.org.

Monday
SEPTEMBER 5
Laws of the Tannaim:

Renowned comedian Freddie Roman


performs at a benefit for the Orangetown
Jewish Center in Orangeburg, N.Y., a
Conservative synagogue that draws
from Rockland and Bergen counties, on Sunday,
September 25, at 7 p.m. Roman, also an actor and
singer, is best known for his frequent appearances at
Borscht Belt hotels in the Catskills. Up-and-coming
comedian Miguel Sanchez, who performs regularly
throughout the Hudson Valley, also will be there. Wine
and cheese will be served before the performances.
8Independence Ave., Orangeburg. (845) 359-5920,
ext. 2, theojc.org, or asfeldman36@gmail.com.

SEP.

25

Friday

Saturday

AUGUST 26

AUGUST 27

Shabbat in Wayne:
Temple Beth Tikvah
hosts Shabbat Under
the Stars led by its
new spiritual leader,
Rabbi Meeka Simerly,
beginning with outdoor
services, 6 p.m., and a
potluck picnic. Attendees
should bring a servedcold main or hearty
side dish/salad enough
for 8 to 10 people. The
shul will provide cold
drinks and dessert.
If it rains, services
and dinner indoors.
950 Preakness Ave.
Janice, (973) 694-1616,
tbtmembers@aol.com, or
www.templebethtikvahnj.
org.

Shabbat in Jersey
City: Temple Beth-El
hosts a casual, musical
intergenerational
Shabbat for everyone
7 and older. Music by
the Rockin the Rafters
Band led by Ben Rauch.
Oneg follows. 2419
Kennedy Boulevard.
(201) 333-4229 or www.
betheljc.org.

Road. (973) 694-6274 or


Chanig@optonline.net.

Tuesday
AUGUST 30
Blood drive in Teaneck:
Holy Name Medical
Center holds a blood
drive with New Jersey
Blood Services, a
division of New York
Blood Center, 2-8 p.m.
718 Teaneck Road.
(800) 933-2566 or www.
nybloodcenter.org.

Ukelele festival in
Whippany: The annual
New Jersey Uke Fest,
presented by the Folk
Project, continues at
the Ukrainian American
Cultural Center of New
Jersey. Ukulele workshops
and a concert, 7:30 p.m.
60C North Jefferson
Road. 973-370-4UKE
(4853) or njukefest@
folkproject.org.

Monday
AUGUST 29
Senior program in
Wayne: The Chabad
Center of Passaic County
continues its Smile
on Seniors program
with chair yoga, at the
center, 11 a.m.. 194 Ratzer

38 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

Wednesday
AUGUST 31
Comedy in River Vale:
The Jewish Home
Assisted Living continues
its Billie Kramer Summer
free concert series with
comedian Vinnie Mark,
7 p.m. 685 Westwood
Ave. (201) 820-3904 or
www.jhalnj.org.

Mini golf in Paramus:


Areyvut invites families
to play at the Paramus
Mini Golf Course, 7
p.m. Proceeds support
Areyvuts work in
promoting kindness,
charity, and social action
among Jewish youth and
teens. 314 Paramus Road.

Jonathan Milgram,
Ph.D., author of From
Mesopotamia to the
Mishnah: Tannaitic
Inheritance of Law in
its Legal and Social
Contexts, discusses
How to Study the
Laws of the Tannaim
in the 21st Century,
at Congregation Rinat
Yisrael, 8:45 a.m. He
is also an associate
professor at the Jewish
Theological Seminary.
389 West Englewood
Ave. (201) 837-2795 or
www.rinat.org.

Tuesday
SEPTEMBER 6
Book club in Paramus:
Belle Rosenbloom
facilitates a discussion
on Saving Sophie
by Ronald Balson at
the JCC of Paramus/
Congregation Beth
Tikvah, 6:45 p.m.
Refreshments. East
304 Midland Ave.
(201) 262-7691 or
jccparamus.org.

Maria, a survivor of armed conflict in Guatemala.



RITA VILLANUEVA WITH YAHAD-IN UNUM.

Queens photography
exhibit focuses on
Holocaust/genocide
The Kupferberg Holocaust Resource Center and
Archives will host the U.S. premiere of Yahad-In
Unums photography exhibit, Women at the Frontline of Mass Violence and Genocide, at Queensborough Community College. The exhibit is in partnership with the French organization Yahad-In Unum,
a global human rights organization focusing on
researching and denouncing genocidal and mass violence, that created the exhibit.
The exhibit, which includes 19 photographs and
video testimonies from female survivors of genocides
spanning over 60 years, including the Holocaust, will
run until September 15. In cooperation with Remember the Women Institute, there will be a reception and
panel discussion on Sunday, August 28, from 1 to 3
p.m. For information, go to www.qcc.cuny.edu/khrca.

Singles
Sunday
AUGUST 28

Sunday

Dance/dinner in Clifton:

SEPTEMBER 11

North Jersey Jewish


Singles 45-60s, a group
sponsored by the Clifton
Jewish Center, hosts
a Caribbean Islandsthemed dance with DJ
entertainment by Nathan
Mark Music, 5 p.m. Buffet
dinner. 18 Delaware St.
(973) 772-3131 or www.
meetup.com.

Seniors meet in West


Nyack: Singles 65+
meets for a social bagels
and lox brunch at the
JCC Rockland, 11 a.m. All
are welcome, particularly
if you are from Hudson,
Passaic, Bergen, or
Rockland counties. 450
West Nyack Road. Gene
Arkin, (845) 356-5525.

Announce
your events
We welcome announcements of upcoming events.
Announcements are free.
Accompanying photos must
be high resolution, jpg files.
Send announcements 2 to 3
weeks in advance. Not every
release will be published.
Include a daytime telephone
number and send to:

pr@jewishmediagroup.
com 201-837-8818 x 110

Friday
SEPTEMBER 2
Shabbaton in Baltimore:
A shabbaton for shomer
Shabbat singles 40+
is held over Labor
Day weekend at Ner
Tamid Congregation.
Home hospitality,
catered meals, speed
dating, wine tasting,
entertainment, Melave
Malka, and concert.
Sunday brunch with boat
ride around Baltimores
Inner Harbor. Email
ShalomSingles2016@
gmail.com.

Staples opens for Sinai sale


Staples at 466 Hackensack Ave. in Hackensack will be
open to the community on Sunday, August 28, from 8
to 10 a.m. The special opening was inspired by friends
of Sinai Schools, who donated gift cards to Sinai students to help them buy school supplies. The event is
sponsored by Yosepha, Yitzie, Erica, Tzvi, Tehila, and
Atara Solomon.
Sinai will provide everyone with coffee, donuts,
giveaways, and the opportunity to shop without having to stand on line. Donations to Sinai will be gratefully accepted.
The store is in the Home Depot shopping plaza.
www.sinaischools.org.

T
C
e
6
T
t
c
z
C

b
h
F
r
h

Calendar

Join Sharsheret for NYC Marathon


Team Sharsheret has slots available
for runners who want to join them in
the New York City Marathon on Sunday, November 6. As team members,
participants will raise awareness about
breast and ovarian cancer as they support Sharsherets national programs.
Team Sharsheret will provide
round-trip airfare from anywhere in
the continental United States to the
New York metropolitan area, provide
oficial Team Sharsheret running gear,

and participate in a training program


with a certiied coach.
Sharsheret the Hebrew word for
chain is a national not-for-proit
organization that supports young
women and their families, from all
Jewish backgrounds, who face breast
cancer.
For information, call (866) 474-2774,
(201) 833-2341, go to www. sharsheret.
org, or email atheletes@sharsheret.
org..

Limmud FSU, in partnership with the Shem Olam


Institute and the Nativ
organization, is hosting
a rare photographic survey of the life of Elie Wiesel at the Israeli Cultural
Center in Moscow. Yoel
Rappel, the founder and
director of the Elie Wiesel
Archive at Boston University, is curating the exhibit,
which opened this week.
It showcases milestones of
Wiesels life from his youth before and
during the Holocaust, to his work as a
novelist, journalist, Jewish leader, and
Nobel Prize-winner. Elie Wiesel died in
New York in July; the exhibit opened this
week and will continue through the end
of September.
Among those who were expected at
the opening were Berel Lazar, the chief
rabbi of Russia; Yuri Kenner, president

PHOTO BY ITZHAK ELHARAR

COURTESY SHARSHERET

Elie Wiesel photo


exhibit opens in Moscow

of the Russian Jewish Congress; Sofa


Landver, Israels Minister of Immigrant
Absorption; Pinchas Goldschmidt, president of the Conference of European
Rabbis; Mikhail Chlenov, secetary general of the Euro-Asian Jewish Congress;
Dr. Temur Ben Yehuda, Israeli-Russian
Business Council chair, and Chaim
Chesler, founder and chairman of Limmud FSU.

Kaplen JCC hosts piano sale


The Thurnauer School
of Music at the Kaplen
JCC on the Palisades in
Tenafly and Forte Piano of
Paramus will hold its 12th
annual sale of upright,
grand, and electronic pianos, all at greatly reduced
prices, over Labor Day
weekend. The sale will be
on Friday, September 2,
and Sunday, September 4, from 10 a.m.
to 6 p.m., by appointment only; on
Monday, September 5, it will be open to
the public from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The sale will feature a selection of
new and preowned acoustic and digital pianos from famous manufacturers

such as Steinway, Bosendorfer, Schimmel, Baldwin, Knabe, Yamaha, and


Roland. It will be in the Taub Auditorium at the JCC, 411 East Clinton Ave.,
Tenafly. For information or to schedule an appointment, call (201) 265-1212
or (800) 742-6655.

Johnny Mathis at bergenPAC


The Bergen Performing Arts
Center in Englewood presents Johnny Mathis: The
60th Anniversary Concert
Tour on Saturday, September 24, at 8 p.m. The
concert is part of the Benzel-Busch Motor Car Corp.
Concert Series.
Born in 1935, Mr. Mathis is
best known for his popular
hits including Chances Are, Its Not
For Me To Say, and Misty. He has
recorded more than 80 albums and
has sold millions of records worldwide.

During his career he has


had three songs inducted
into the Grammy Hall of
Fame, achieved 50 hits
on Billboards Adult Contemporary Chart, and
is sixth on the all-time
album artist rankings in
the history of Billboards
pop album charts.
The theater is at 30
North Van Brunt St.
Purchase tickets at www.bergenpac.
org, www.ticketmaster.com, or via the
box ofice, (201) 227-1030.

SWAN
LAKE
THURSDAY | SEPTEMBER 22 | 8:00PM
presented
by

O N E N I G H T O N LY !
Purchase tickets at www.BergenPAC.org and TicketMaster.com
Charge by phone: 201.227.1030, or 866.448.7849, in person at the BergenPAC Box office,
or any participating TicketMaster outlets.
Visit www.RussianGrandBallet.com for more information.
JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016 39

Jewish World
Divorce

YAAKOV LEDERMAN/FLASH90

FROM PAGE 35

Ashkenazi Rabbi David Lau, who sits part


time on the Supreme Rabbinical Court
are increasingly willing to interpret Jewish
law in favor of women.
In the case of the father who was sentenced to jail time and fined some
$40,000 media reports have highlighted that his daughter-in-law suffered a
debilitating stroke in 2005 during a family vacation to Israel from New York. The
son, who comes from a wealthy and influential chasidic family, then abandoned
his wife and their two children, refusing
a divorce for 11 years, even after the rabbinical court ordered him to grant one.
None of the family members names have
been made public.
An injunction preventing the father
from leaving Israel was issued earlier this
year, when the father was in the country
on a family visit. He is now in Israel, and
the injunction will remain in force pending
a final decision on his case.
The Tel Aviv Rabbinical Court, which
sentenced the father, called it one of the
harshest cases of igun [chained to a
recalcitrant husband] the rabbinical court
system has ever had to deal with, according to Haaretz.
All these cases are not easy for the
woman, but this case is especially powerful, the chained womans attorney, Aviad
Hacohen, dean of the Academic Center of
Law and Science in Hod Hasharon, said.
She is really miserable. She just wants to
be a free woman.
I cant find any reason why her husband is refusing. Its pure cruelty.
The fathers attorney, Eliad Shraga, did
not respond to a request for comment.
But his office told Haaretz in March that
divorce refusal is unacceptable and
must be eradicated.
At the same time, it seems that the
court floundered and decided to fix a
wrong with a wrong, choosing to mistreat
the elderly father rather than punish the

No one knows how many chained


women there are in Israel. Estimates
range from hundreds to thousands.
A handful of recalcitrant husbands
sit in prison at any given time.
recalcitrant son, the office said.
Shraga has appealed the fathers
sentence to Israels Supreme Court,
where Hacohen is representing the
daughter-in-law.
Also last month, the Israeli media
reported that the Supreme Rabbinical
Court sentenced a recalcitrant husband to
five years in jail for adamantly refusing to
give his wife a divorce.
As the public discourse about chained
women has changed, so have the rabbinical courts. About a third of the roughly
100 judges serving on the courts were
appointed in the past year, following a
nearly decade-long freeze on new appointments. That includes 22 new regional
court judges and all 10 of the full-time
judges on the Supreme Rabbinical Court.
The new judges look somewhat different
than their predecessors. In the past, judges
overwhelmingly were charedi. Only one,
the Tel Aviv court judge who ruled against
the father, held an academic degree, and
few judges in the regional courts and none
in the high court had served in the Israel
Defense Forces.
Among the new regional court judges,
eight are rabbis from the religious Zionist
movements, sometimes known as modern
Orthodoxy, who tend to be more egalitarian in their interpretation of Jewish law
than charedi, or fervently religious, rabbis.
Three have academic degrees, including
one doctorate, and seven served in army
combat units. Five of the Supreme Rabbinical Court judges served in the army.
But Rabbi David Stav, a prominent

religious Zionist rabbi, said the problem


of chained women is only getting worse
in Israel. He said prenuptial agreements
like the increasingly popular version
offered by his religious services group,
Tzohar, but opposed by much of Israels
religious establishment are the only realistic solution.
We should understand that what has
been done so far is not solving the problem from its roots. We cannot not get to
the point of helping the women two or
three years after the story has begun. We
have to understand that this time is a tragedy for the agunah, he said.
No one knows how many chained women
there are in Israel. Estimates range from
hundreds to thousands. A handful of recalcitrant husbands sit in prison at any given
time. According to partial numbers provided by the rabbinical courts, sanctions
ordered by judges jumped to 168 in 2013,
from an annual average of about 60 over the
previous 12 years, but incarcerations stayed
about the same, at 19. Judges can send recalcitrant husbands to jail for up to five years
and renew the sentence indefinitely.
Short of incarceration, rabbinical
courts can revoke state-issued licenses
and personal credit cards, levy fines, and
forbid other Jews to interact with recalcitrant husbands. In one case, the courts
even backed the internet shaming of a
recalcitrant husband. Rabbinical judges
historically have been hesitant to go too
far with such tactics because Jewish law
requires that divorce must be granted voluntarily to be valid. Where to draw the

line is matter of debate among scholars


of Jewish law.
But more women than ever are now
helping to draw that line, albeit indirectly,
since Orthodox rabbis, from whose ranks
rabbinical judges are drawn, must be men.
After decades of male dominance, the
11-member Rabbinic Judges Appointments
Committee that selected the new rabbinical judges had four female members,
thanks to a 2013 law requiring it. The law
itself was forced by a 2011 Supreme Court
ruling on a petition by the womens rights
group Emunah that froze the committees
work until women were added.
(In January, the High Court of Justice
ruled that women must be allowed to
contend for the position of rabbinical
courts director.)
After seven years of inactivity, last September the committee appointed the
regional rabbinical court judges. And last
month, the committee filled the vacant
high rabbinical court seats.
Levmore, who is also an activist for
chained women and wrote her doctorate and influential academic work on the
issue, said she saw firsthand how having women on the committee impacted
the applicants and the appointment process. She interviewed all the applicants at
length, and said the discussions changed
the thinking of many of them, as well as of
the committee.
The four women [ Justice Minister
Ayelet Shaked, Knesset member Revital
Swid of the Zionist Union list, attorney
Efrat Rosenblatt, and Levmore] formed a
voting bloc, she said. This voting bloc
influenced the appointment process not
in a total manner, but it did have influence
on the appointment process.
Last week, Levmore was able to pat herself on the back after the panel of three
Supreme Rabbinical Court judges she had
interviewed and appointed issued what she
called a stunning 47-page ruling upholding the jail sentence of the father of the
JTA WIRE SERVICE
recalcitrant husband.

BRIEFS

Gazas last tiger is Jordan-bound


The last remaining animals in a Gaza zoo
deemed the worlds worst will be moved
to Jordan via Israel.
Foreign volunteers with Four Paws, an
international animal welfare group, prepared the animals to leave the Khan Yunis
Zoo, which has been closed to visitors since
2014, Agence France Press reported.
The 15 animals among them a tiger,
gazelle, pelicans, monkeys, and porcupines
were scheduled to cross into Israel through
the Erez checkpoint on Wednesday morning.
The tiger is the last of its species to
remain in Gaza.
Khan Yunis Zoo has been known as the
worst zoo in the world since it became
40 JEWISH STANDARD AUGUST 26, 2016

public last year that the zoo was crudely


mummifying the animals that died in their
care and displaying them, Four Paws said
on its website.
Four Paws has been active in providing
emergency food and supplies to the animals, but now we have the chance to rescue
them all for good.
According to the Times of Israel, the
Khan Yunis Zoo once housed more than
100 animals, but has suffered financially as
a result of Gazas multiple wars with Israel.
Zoo owner Ziad Aweda blamed the zoos
problems on the harsh conditions of life,
the weak economy and the severe blockade.
JTA WIRE SERVICE

Israeli troops rescue chasidic group


illegally visiting Josephs Tomb in Nablus
JERUSALEM Israeli troops rescued
a group of charedi Jews who attempted
to visit Josephs Tomb in the West Bank
city of Nablus.
Two of the some 60 Jewish pilgrims
who visited the holy site were injured
by Palestinian rock throwers. Half of the
Jewish visitors, Breslover chasidim, were
detained by police after being extricated
from the site. The chasidim also threw
rocks at the local Palestinians.
Josephs Tomb is also holy to Muslims and Christians. Israeli Jews must
receive permission to visit the purported burial place of the Jewish

patriarch; the visits must be coordinated with the Israel Defense Forces.
Nablus is under military and civilian
control of the Palestinian Authority.
Under the 1993 Oslo Accords, the site
was to remain under Israeli control.
The Israeli army evacuated it in October 2000 during the second intifada
and it was burnt down by Palestinians.
It was renovated and restored, but then
torched and vandalized again.
Jewish worshippers, in coordination
with the IDF, make monthly nocturnal
pilgrimages to the refurbished site.


JTA WIRE SERVICE

Obituaries
Marilyn Bell

Marilyn Bell, ne Tauber, of Cresskill, Cliffside


Park, and Teaneck, died
August 19.
She was a Prime Minister Menachem Begin
award recipient for
service as a womens division/county/and Teaneck
chair for State of Israeli
Bond campaigns and a
Jewish National Fund
Circle of Excellence award
recipient for service to the
American Jewish community and the State of
Israel. Among her many
other activities, she was
a Sunday school teacher
at the Teaneck Jewish
Center, president of the
Ladies Auxiliary of JWV
and Bergenfield ORT, a
Hadassah life member,
and a writer/director of
many local fund-raising
shows. She recently created and directed the
annual musical presentations at the Jewish Home
at Rockleigh.
She is survived by her
husband of 69 years, Dr.
A. Milton, sons, Steven
(Carol), Larry (Lydia), and

Jerold (Candice); nine


grandchildren, and 15
great-grandchildren.
Contributions can be
made to the N.J. Veterans Memorial Home,
Paramus, or the Jewish Home at Rockleigh.
Arrangements were by
Gutterman and Musicant
Jewish Funeral Directors,
Hackensack.

Hannah Klein

Hannah Klein, 101, of


Tinton Falls, formerly of
Teaneck, died August 18.
She was member of the
Stopnitzer Society in New
York City.
Predeceased by her
husband, Sidney, and a
daughter, Merry Solomon,
she is survived by a son,
Gary of New York City,
and four grandchildren.
Arrangements were by
Eden Memorial Chapels,
Fort Lee.

Sheila Levin

Sheila Levin, 85, of Fort


Lee, formerly of Teaneck,
died August 17.
An interior designer,
she owned Panache

The Christopher Family


serving the Jewish community
since 1900

Paterson Monument Co.


MAIN
Paterson, NJ 07502
317 Totowa Ave.
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681 Rt. 23 S.
973-835-0394 Fax 973-835-0395

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Robert Schoems Menorah Chapel, Inc


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Interiors in Fort Lee for


many years.
Predeceased by her
husband, Gerald, and a
brother, Harold Horowytz,
she is survived by children, Gail Tunis (Eric),
Gary (Ruth Lu), and Janis
Quinn (Stephen); a sister,
Marcia Dick (David); sisterin-law, Vera Horowytz;
brother-in-law, David
Levin; grandchildren, and
great-grandchildren.
Donations can be sent
to American Cancer
Society for colon cancer
research. Arrangements
were by Gutterman and
Musicant Jewish Funeral
Directors, Hackensack.

Sophie Nadler

Sophie Nadler, ne Arbus,


97, of Wayne, formerly of
Paterson and Elmwood
Park, died August 23.
She was a bookkeeper
at Coral Dye House in
Paterson and a member
of the Abe Arbus Family
Circle and Hadassah.
Predeceased by her husband, Nathan, she is survived by daughters, Patty
Nadler and Abbe Weber

201-791-0015

(Sam); two grandchildren,


and one great-grandchild.
Arrangements were by
Louis Suburban Chapel,
Fair Lawn.

Pearl Schargel

Pearl Schargel, ne
Nadler, 95, of Teaneck and
Washington Township,
died August 21.
Predeceased by her
husband, Julius, a son,
Eric, and siblings, Sheila
Perlowitz, Hilma Katz, and
Melvin Nadler, she is survived by children, Halle
and Robert, and nieces
and nephews.
Contributions can
be sent to the Washington Township Volunteer Ambulance Corps.
Arrangements were by
Gutterman and Musicant
Jewish Funeral Directors,
Hackensack.

Anita Strauss

Anita F. Strauss, 85, of


Waldwick died August 17.
Arrangements were by
Louis Suburban Chapel,
Fair Lawn.

Obituaries are prepared with information


provided by funeral homes. Correcting errors is
the responsibility of the funeral home.

Veterans are Honored Here

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Jewish Standard AUGUST 26, 2016 41

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Real Estate & Business

FEATURED
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room in this spacious, bright house. Plenty of space for entertaining guests or a large family. Drink your
morning coffee while sitting on the deck overlooking the koi pond and lush green backyard. High ceilings
throughout and Guest quarters in addition to a huge rec room in the large basement.

Contact Esther Shayowitz at 201.638.5858 for more information.

558 Warwick Avenue, Teaneck $1,485,000 5 Bedrooms 3.5 Bathrooms

One of a Kind Custom Tudor Colonial set on park-like approximately 94 x 146 property. Elegant Entry
Hall, grand living room with fireplace, formal dining room, updated kitchen with large granite island and
separate breakfast/family area. Spacious finished basement. 2 car detached garage with loft.

Contact V&N Realty at 201.692.3700 for more information.

127 Highgate Terrace, Bergenfield $839,000 5 Bedrooms 4.5 Bathrooms

administered antibiotics.
These new products feature Empire
Koshers new logo and package design
reflecting Empires natural and organic
product values. The pre-sliced products
come in resealable packaging that has a
reduced environmental footprint compared to the tubs previously used.

Teaneck Chamber of Commerce


donates $500 to Do Wonders
Charity for womens wigs

Empire Kosher has introduced a new


line of natural deli meats and poultry hot
dogs. The new deli represents the firstever line of kosher uncured deli meat
products. They are produced without
any artificial preservatives. These products are minimally processed, have no
added nitrates or nitrites, and are made
from turkey and chicken that are never

Graciously updated five bedroom colonial on Bergenfield/Teaneck border. Living Room, Formal Dining
Room, modern eat in kitchen adjacent to expansive family room overlooking lush back property. Bonus
office or den on first level. Large master suite plus 4 additional bedrooms on second level.

Contact Esther Shayowitz at 201.638.5858 for more information.

The Teaneck Chamber of Commerce has


partnered with the Do Wonders Charity
(www.dowonderscharity.org), a program headed up by Lillian Lee of Lillian
Lees Salon on Teaneck Road in Teaneck
that offers wigs at no costs to women battling cancer that cannot otherwise afford
a wig of their own while going through
chemotherapy treatments. The partnership was at the third annual Ladies
Night Out event that took place in June,
and the Chamber committee voted to
donate $500 of the proceeds that were
raised that evening to Do Wonders
Charity.
When the committee first heard
about Do Wonders, said Jennifer Glass,
vice president of the Chamber and chair
of the event, it was an easy decision for
us to make. We all know someone that
battled cancer and saw the pain they
went through when they lost their hair.
As women, we know how important it
is to look good, which in turn makes us
all feel good. By helping these women
get a wig from Lillians organization, we
felt like we can really be there to make a

difference.
I was thrilled to be the beneficiary
organization of this years Ladies Night
Out event, said Lillian Lee, founder of Do
Wonders Charity, and was thrilled that
the Chamber was able to raise $500 for
these women. It really touched my heart
when I got the news that the Chamber of
Commerce wanted to support my organization. It affirmed my belief in people
that no matter how busy we get we all
want to help. For anyone that still wants
to help, Im always accepting donations
of new or gently used wigs to offer to my
clients in addition to tax-deductible monetary donations too.
To receive additional information on
the Teaneck Chamber of Commerce,
its activities, programs, membership
or to get on their e-mail list, please visit
the Chambers website at http://www.
teaneckchamber.org; contact the Chamber office at (201) 801-0012 or e-mail at
info@teaneckchamber.org. You can also
find out more by liking the Chamber
on Facebook at http://www.facebook.
com/TeaneckCoC.

1077 Bromley Avenue, Teaneck $549,000 4 Bedrooms 2.5 Bathrooms

True Center Hall Colonial with large Living Room/fireplace. Formal Dining, Eat in Kitchen, Family room
with sliding glass doors to large patio and lovely back property. Master bedroom with master bath, three
additional spacious bedrooms. Full basement with finished family room, small office, and work area.

Contact Debra Botwinick at 201.851.1035 for more information.

560 S Forest Drive, Teaneck $585,000 4 Bedrooms 2.5 Bathrooms

Truly elegant Colonial with spacious living room/fireplace, music room, formal dining room, updated
kitchen with granite counters, Bosh stovetop. Mostly Anderson casement windows, stunning deck
overlooking private back property. Master bedroom with full bath. Fully tiled basement.

Contact V&N Realty at 201.692.3700 for more information.

vera-nechama.com 201.692.3700
44 Jewish standard aUGUst 26, 2016

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Real Estate & Business


Kohelet Foundation offers six $36,000 prizes to Jewish day school educators
Theres a set of new prizes for Jewish day school education, and theyre big. The Kohelet Foundation has
announced that next month it will start accepting nominations for six prizes of $36,000, which it plans to award
anually.
The prizes will be awarded to educators or teams of
educators who currently work in Jewish day schools
and whose work skillfully demonstrates a progressive
approach to education. A prize will be awarded in each
of six categories:
o Interdisciplinary integration
o Real-world learning
o Learning environment
o Differentiated instruction
o Development of critical and/or creative thinking
o Risk taking and failure
We know there are incredible, creative and highly effective teachers doing this work in the field right now, said
Holly Cohen, Kohelet Foundations executive director.
We want to inspire them to share what they know about
developing the minds and hearts of their students.
The first five categories are critical to excellent

education. By honing in on these, we hope to surface


work that demonstrates the elements that matter most
in the classroom, said Rabbi Dr. Gil Perl, the Kohelet
Foundation chief academic officer.
In explaining the sixth category, Perl noted, In
schools, failures are too often seen as an endpoint, not
as a crucial step toward success. To foster a growth
mindset in students, we have to begin by fostering it in
our teachers. Cohen added Were shifting the paradigm from failure is bad to responsible risk-taking and
failure breeds success. Thats a game changer for the
field of Jewish education.
To submit an entry, educators will share their work
by uploading it directly to the Kohelet Prize website at
www.koheletprize.org, any time between September 29
and 11:59 p.m. on November 29. A panel of judges in the
fields of education, psychology, and neuroscience will
select the winning entries.
To promote an open source culture within the field, the
Kohelet Foundation plans to create a searchable database
of all entries. The database will be accessible, after the
close of submissions, via the Kohelet Prize website.
The Kohelet Prizes will be awarded in early 2017. For

more information, visit: www.koheletprize.org.


Established in Philadelphia in 2008, the Kohelet Foundations work focuses primarily on Jewish day schools and the
institutions that support and promote them. By creating and
implementing programs that are replicable and accessible and
awarding a variety of unique and targeted grants, the Kohelet
Foundation hopes to transform what is possible for Jewish day
schools and their communities nationwide.

TM

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EXQUISITE

$865,000

Gracious 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath colonial w/open flow & fabulous layout, hardwood
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doors to large deck & beautiful .5 acre property.

FORT LEE THE COLONY

1 BR 1.5 Bath. Renovated. Mountain view. $149,900


1 BR 1.5 Bath. Updated. Full river view. $189,900
2 BR 2.5 Baths. Total renovation with laundry. Redesigned.
Full river view. $325,000
Corner 3 BR 3.5 Baths. Total renovation with laundry.
Spectacular in size and layout. Must see! $695,000
Serving Bergen County since 1985.
Thank you for your trust in me.
Allan Dorfman

Broker/Associate

201-461-6764 Eve
201-970-4118 Cell
201-585-8080 Office
Realtorallan@yahoo.com

HOUSE FOR SALE

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TENAFLY
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Bergenfield, NJ
Asking $550,000.00
Call 201-446-6873

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75 x 130 Lot. Beautiful exterior


and landscaped property.
Framed interior - needs mechanicals/sheetrock/finishing needs contractor to finish framed interior. 4 large bedrooms,
3 1/2 baths, large living room, dining room, kitchen, game/
tv room, large, deep 2-car garage, 15x 24 oval above ground
pool. Perfect for kosher kitchen and/or nanny. Close to houses
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R O C K L A N D

Larry DeNike
President

MLO #58058
ladclassic@aol.com

Daniel M. Shlufman
Managing Director

MLO #6706
dshlufman@classicllc.com

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(201) 837-8800
Jewish Standard AUGUST 26, 2016 45

Real Estate & Business

SELLING YOUR HOME?

Call Susan Laskin Today


To Make Your Next Move A Successful One!
BergenCountyRealEstateSource.com

Cell: 201-615-5353

2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.
An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned and Operated by NRT LLC.

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46 Jewish Standard AUGUST 26, 2016

Hadassahs 98th convention


awards honors and grants
Oscar-winning actress and
NY Times best-selling author
Gwyneth Paltrow received
Hadassahs The Power of
Our Dreams Award at the
Jewish women organizations
recent 98th national convention in recognition of the values she shares with Hadassah and for her role as a
business woman and health
activist.
Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations, accepted the Henrietta
Szold Award for outstanding
humanitarian service.
Hadassahs 98th National
Convention also honored
world-renowned cardiologist Dr. Nanette Kass Wenger
and featured appearances by
celebrated mother-daughter
authors Letty Cottin Pogrebin and Abigail Pogrebin,
Iron Dome weapons system
Gwyneth Paltrow
developer Natan Barak, and
the first woman Speaker of
its 2006 statement for LGBT rights, and
the Knesset, Dalia Itzik. Nearly 1,000
called upon federal, state, and municipal
Hadassah members, associates, and supporters attended.
governments to enact new public accommodation and nondiscrimination meaThe four-day convention last month
sures especially in the areas of employincluded the passage of four new Hadassah Policy Statements on the issues of
ment, education, housing, and health.
Zionism, U.N. Reform, LGBTQ Equality
Meanwhile, the Hadassah Foundation, which invests in social change to
and Caregiving.
empower girls and women in Israel and
Hadassahs Policy Statements represent the organizations official stance
the United States, announced $180,000
on a wide variety of issues facing our
in grants to six American organizations
nation, Israel and other international
that strengthen the leadership skills and
matters of concern. Policy Statements
capabilities of Jewish girls and young
are debated and voted on at national
women. Since 2000, the foundation has
meetings by Hadassahs National Board
awarded approximately $7.3 million to
and delegates from our membership.
nearly 90 nonprofit organizations. With
Once approved, statements become
this latest round of grants, the foundation has awarded a total of $550,000 to
official policies of the organization
Israeli and American groups in 2016, up
and serve to define Hadassahs overall
from $450,000 awarded in 2015.
agenda and advocacy priorities. Hadassah, as a charitable organization classiThis latest round of grants to orgafied under section 501(c) (3) of the Internizations in the United States is part of
nal Revenue Code, is strictly nonpartisan
the foundations multi-year initiative
and is prohibited from any direct or indi inaugurated in 2014 to strengthen
rect support or opposition of candidates
leadership development opportunities
for public office.
for young Jewish women in the United
In response to worldwide increased
States. Three of the 2016 grantees are
anti-Zionism, often masking anti-Semireceiving a renewal grant for their protism, Hadassah reaffirmed its commitgram, and three are first-time grantees.
ment to Zionism expressed by supportIt is of the utmost importance to invest
ing the Hadassah Medical Organization
in the leadership abilities of young Jewish
and other Hadassah projects in Israel,
women, said Rabbi Suzanne Offit, chair
and by promoting and engaging in Zionof the Hadassah Foundation. We are
ist education and advocacy in the United
proud to support the forward-thinking
States and worldwide.
and creative professionals who are devoting themselves to this critical population.
Hadassah reaffirmed and expanded

The Art of Real Estate


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T: 201.266.8555 M: 201.906.6024
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www.MironProperties.com/NJ
Jewish Standard AUGUST 26, 2016 47

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