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THEJEWISHSTANDARD.COM
Pictures at
an exhibition
Page 3
Israelis give chickpeas
a chance, every day
l Were sorry.
CONTENTS
Noshes4
oPINION 22
cover story 28
Healthy living......................................38
Dvar torah............................................50
arts & culture 51
calendar 52
Crossword puzzle54
gallery 55
obituaries 57
classifieds 58
real estate61
Noshes
ALDENS ODYSSEY:
Alden Ehrenreich
Steven Spielberg
Randy Schoenberg
Allen Ginsberg
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Moise Katumbi
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Inclusive Orthodoxy from the grassroots up
Porat is launched; local founding committee members talk about it
JOANNE PALMER
Congregation Kehilat Jeshurun on Manhattans Upper East Side is filled to capacity as Porat is launched with a panel discussion.
6 JEWISH STANDARD MAY 20, 2016
Larry Krule
Rella Feldman
advocate for women in the modern Orthodox world we create a life where we can
be both a citizen of this world and a faithful
adherent to our inherited tradition.
Porat does not see itself as outside modern Orthodoxy; instead, its reinvigorating
the strength of modern Orthodoxy, Ms.
Feldman said. I have lived in Teaneck for
more than 40 years, and I have seen the Jewish community here change dramatically.
In its earliest days, one of its strengths
was its diversity, and the acceptable. It
wasnt a judgmental place when a community is small, it tends to be more unified.
When I first moved here, there was one
Orthodox synagogue, with about 100 families, two Conservative synagogues, and two
Reform ones. Today in Teaneck and Im
including Bergenfield and New Milford,
which didnt exist then we now have 18
Orthodox synagogues, one Conservative,
and one Reform.
With that growth has come a tremendous amount of divisions. I belong to this
synagogue, and we do this thing in this way.
You belong to that one, and you dont. The
differences arent very big. We have gotten
away from who we are as one people and
not that big a people. We have to be more
accepting and unified, and we have to be
open to non-Orthodox Jews as well.
Porat has arisen to strengthen the
Local
perspective of open Orthodoxy. You can
have speakers you dont agree with. You
can disagree. You can have a dialogue.
You cant close yourself off from everyone you disagree with.
One of the very emotional dividing lines
is the role of women, and how to make
room for women leaders, women educators, women who want to be some kind of
spiritual leaders, in our community. That is
an issue that has been pushed aside, but we
can push it aside no longer.
You cant put the genie back in the
bottle. Women are being educated, and
for some it sparks a passion, and that
grows into a passionate vocation. We can
no longer keep pushing those women
aside, as so much of the Orthodox world
does. When you meet these women, you
see that they are smart, they are sincere,
they are educated, and this is what they
are choosing to do. They cant be told
that they cant do it. They have come all
that way within the system; you cant say,
you want to be a doctor? You cant be a
doctor. You can be a nurse. Women can
aspire to anything in the secular world,
and some of them want to do it in the religious world as well.
Rabbi Avi Weiss stresses Porats lay-led,
up-from-the-bottom nature. It emerges
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Piano Girl
Painting an instrument, inspiring the elderly
LOIS GOLDRICH
Keren Straus of Teaneck, a junior at the University of Maryland, shows her custom-painted
piano, which will be donated to the Jewish Home Assisted Living.
public parks, markets and train
stations and even on ferries, the
pianos are available for everyone to play and enjoy. Each
piano is decorated by local artists and community groups.
Ms. Straus, who grew up in
Teaneck and graduated from
the Yavneh Academy and the
Frisch School, both in Paramus,
recalled that about a year ago,
I was hanging out with friends,
and one of them said he wanted
to bring pianos to campus, have
artists paint them, and put them
outside. The pianos would then
be auctioned off. But to his dismay, the student, Nachmi Kott,
learned that it would be too
expensive to bring the pianos to
campus. So he had to come up
with an alternate plan.
He started a group, Pianos for
Play, to get the project off the
ground. Recruiting other interested people including a creative director and someone with
financial experience, Ms. Straus
said they decided hed post
online that he was looking for
pianos. When the pianos came
and come they did, one after
the other he put them in his
apartment.
He kept posting, and started
collecting them, Ms. Straus said.
After he got all the pianos, he
posted for paint and got that too.
Next, Ms. Straus a studio art
major concentrating in graphic
design was picked as one of the
five artists charged with decorating a piano.
She didnt have much time to
work on it she got the piano
at the end of February, began
the project in March, and was
interrupted by spring break.
Kick-off Event
The third went to a local preschool. The last piano were still
figuring out, she added
The idea behind the project
was that we wanted more music
and art on campus, which Ms.
Straus described as too scienceoriented. We wanted people to
sit down and play, and for others to join in. Thats what happened. Someone was playing my
piano and a girl started singing. It
brings people together.
She feels a sense of ownership
over the piano she painted, Ms.
Straus added. I worked really
hard. Once we put it out, people
came over to see it, and it was
a great feeling. It made people
feel good. I wanted mine to go
to the Jewish Home. I remember
my grandmother was there for
many years when I was young.
Music was important to her. My
mother said if she hummed a
song, my grandmother would
react.
While she didnt paint the
piano with a New Jersey venue
in mind, once I got the idea, I
thought it would be really cool to
bring it back to Jersey. Her parents, Robin and Justin Straus, are
footing the bill to bring it home.
They found some Maryland
movers to take it, Ms. Straus
said. It will be at the Jewish
Home in its own room, as a focal
point. Its really cool.
For her part, Ms. Levant thinks
the idea is fabulous.
Its a way of connecting
youth with the older generation. Its really showing what
volunteerism is about getting
involved. I wish more youth
would think creatively like this
on how to impact the day-to-day
life of seniors. What Keren has
done is a true mitzvah. I hope it
will inspire others.
2016
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Dedicated. Devoted. Committed to working for the betterment of the Jewish people.
Three amazing women, Past Womens Philanthropy President, Stephanie Goldman, Rising Star, Michal Levison
and Lifetime Achievement Awardee, Judy Opper, were honored last week at Jewish Federation of Northern New
Jerseys Womens Philanthropy Spring Luncheon.
All three are united by their support of, and belief in, the work they do through Federation work that supports
the concerns of the Jewish people: Tradition, Zionism, Tzedakah, and Tikkun Olam. We pay tribute to them
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take it too seriously, Shlomi said. However, as the years progressed, I gained a
broader appreciation of the Tanach itself
and a richer for understanding of the Tanach, and that gave me the determination
to put in many hours of hard work in the
past few contests, culminating in the contest yesterday.
His past participation helped him make
educated guesses about what types of
questions would be asked, and he prepared accordingly. For example, he memorized the locations where the gentile
prophet Balaam blessed the Children of
Israel in the desert. And dont you know
they asked that, Rabbi Winkler said.
Shlomi is an active contributor to
Sefaria.org, a free library of Jewish texts
and commentaries and their interconnections in Hebrew and in translation created, edited, and annotated by an open
community. On his Sefaria bio, he reveals
that he is developing a Google add-on for
Docs for Sefaria and that he also is studying Arabic.
His father, Rabbi Nathaniel Helfgot,
spiritual leader of Teanecks Congregation
Netivot Shalom, gave a lecture to contestants parents about the book of Isaiah
while their children were taking the written portion of the quiz.
My wife, Rachel, and I are extremely
proud of and happy for our son, Shlomi,
on his placing first in the National Bible
Contest, Rabbi Helfgot said. Shlomi
worked really hard for the last few
months, often getting up at 5:30 a.m. and
reviewing Tanach for two hours before
he went off to school. We are so happy to
see that his commitment, hard work and
dedication allowed him to learn so much
and to achieve success.
We hope and pray he continues his
devotion to learning Torah and finding
meaning and inspiration in that endeavor.
Nechama said she attended a weekly
review class in Passaic given by Reuven
(Ruby) Stepansky, who has coached several
national winners in the past few years.
We prepared by going over the material many times, and making many lists of
similar phrases that appeared throughout
the syllabus, she said. In all, studying
involved hundreds of hours of work, but
it all paid off.
Nechama said that the hardest section
of the test required contestants to match
similar phrases throughout the syllabus in
their correct context.
I want to thank Mr. Stepansky, my parents and siblings, and most importantly
Hashem for helping me to get to this
point, she said.
For more information about participating in the National Bible Quiz, email Dovi
Nadel at dovin@jafi.org.
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Fact:
Israel is leading the
world in cyber security,
and researchers from
Ben-Gurion University
are leading Israel.
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Joanne Palmer
leaders, I and many others are going out of our way to reach
out to Americans and be a useful partner in education.
But, he continued, This is not my work. This is my calling.
It is what as a Muslim leader I feel most fulfilled when I am
doing. No religious leader and certainly no Muslim leader
can run away. It is our responsibility to educate the public
about Islam and Muslims, at a time when the religion and its
members are grossly misrepresented, at times even by its own
members.
Imam Antepli, who was born in Turkey and worked in
Myanmar and Malaysia with the Association of Social and
Economic Solidarity with Pacific Countries, began his work
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Local
on college campuses in 2003, at Wesleyan
University. He got to Duke in 2008. I am
the Blue Devil imam, and I love it, he joked.
Our basketball team is the biggest religion on
campus.
His campus group is similar to Hillel;
the big difference, though, is that there is
no national or international organization.
But private universities are investing in
TRUNKS
BEDDING
CA
ACCESSORIES
ACCESSORIES
LAUNDRY
MEMORIES
Jewish Standard MAY 20, 2016 17
Local
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The commemoration honored six survivors, shown here with their families. From left, Miriam Gluzman of Wayne, Ben Rubinstein of Fair Lawn,
Agnes Adler of Westwood, Alfred Strauss of Cliffside Park, Marianne
Pollak of Dumont, and Shlomo Biezunski of Fair Lawn.
Teaneck
Holocaust
memorial
The Jewi sh C ommunity Council of Greater
Teaneck held its annual
Yom Hashoah observance at Teaneck High
School. Survivor Helga
Marx Silbermann was this
years keynote speaker.
Ronnie Stern with his father, Holocaust surviPianist/vocalist Jonathan
vor Chaim Stern, and daughter, Rebecca Stern
Rimberg and violinist
Rauch.
Stephanie Kurtzman performed, along with the Yavneh Academy choirs, directed by Marsha Motzen.
There also was a reception for survivors and their families.
s
a
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a
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w
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e
a
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n
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a
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Legacy
Volunteering
Generations
Lucille J. Amster
Angelica Berrie
Tradition
Nancy G. Brown
Geri Cantor
Israel
Leadership
Mariam Davis
Jewish values
Sharyn J. Gallatin
Community
Adrienne M.
Greenblatt, MD
Marjorie
Immerman
Legacy
Giving Back
Lee Langbaum
Sue Ann Levin
Susan Penn
Pearl Seiden
Michele Sweetwood
Louise Tuchman
Arlene Zweifler
Anonymous
Jewish Federation
Zvi S. Marans, MD
Joan Krieger
LOJE, Chair
Local
Seven honorees announced
for BCHSJS annual gala June 8
The Bergen County High School of Jewish Studies, Bergen Countys only weekly
Hebrew high school, will hold its annual
gala on Wednesday, June 8, at Temple
Emanu-El of Closter. This years gala,
BCHSJS largest fundraiser, will honor
Susan and Dr. Deane Penn of Alpine,
Robin and Michael Baer of Fair Lawn,
Julia and Dr. Roman Kosiborod of Franklin Lakes, and Hanna Wechsler of Woodland Park.
Susan and Dr. Deane Penn are the first
recipients of BCHSJS LDor VDor award,
created to recognize people who further
Jewish continuity by actively supporting
programs for Jewish teens. The Penns also
lead by example with their philanthropy
and involvement in Jewish community
life in Bergen County and northern New
Jersey. Susan Penn is a member of the
boards of BCHSJS, the Jewish Association
for Developmental Disabilities, and the
Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey, the chair of Partnership2Gether, and
a member of AIPACs Northeast Regional
Council. Dr. Penn, the director of the
Center for Medical Weight Loss of Bergen County, also chairs the Partnership2Gether Medical Task Force, sits on the
board of the Jewish Home at Rockleigh,
chairs the board of health in Alpine, and
is co-chair of Israel Bonds.
Michael and Robin Baer and Julia and
Dr. Roman Kosiborod are the parent
honorees.
The Baers both are lawyers. Michael is
the executive vice president of the Fair
Valley Chabad
teen volunteers
at the honorary
event last year.
SRIVKI WEISBERG
On Tuesday, May 31, the Friendship Circle of Passaic County will hold its annual
evening of awards at the Chabad Center in Wayne. Volunteers will be honored for
their hours of giving to the Friendship Circle and its families.
Pamela Schuller, a nationally known inclusion advocate, will share her story of
growing up with Tourette Syndrome, and turning that challenge into professional
and personal success.
The Friendship Circle programs include Friends at Home, holiday programs, parent workshops, and camps. For information, go to FCpassaiccounty.com or call
(973) 694-6274.
Keep us informed
We welcome photos of community events. Photos must be high resolution jpg files. Please include a detailed caption
and a daytime telephone. Mailed photos will only be returned with a self-addressed stamped envelope. Not every
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In Memoriam
Jewish values
Ella Berman
Belle Bukiet
Tradition
Generations
Marion Cutler
Miriam Josephs
Israel
Ellen Kaufman
Leadership
Zelda Levere
Adele Rebell
Community
Martha Richman
Barbara Seiden
Giving Back
Responsibility
Legacy
Yvette Tekel
Beate Voremberg
Helen Wajdengart
Zvi S. Marans, MD
Joan Krieger
LOJE, Chair
In Memoriam
Jewish Standard MAY 20, 2016 21
Editorial
Warm Israel talk
in chilly Paramus
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thejewishstandard.com
22 JEWISH STANDARD MAY 20, 2016
Correspondents
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Opinion
Understanding Orthodoxy
prayers that precede Shacharit.
On the other hand, there is biblical evidence to suggest giving up land
is not so great a sin, or may not be a
sin at all, if what is received in return
is worth the price. Solomon gave 20
cities in the Galilee to Hiram, king of
Tyre, yet the biblical text offers no
condemnation. That is because of
what he got in return: The building
materials for Gods House, and for his
own. Certainly, if land can be traded
for pieces of cedar wood, it can be
traded for peace, because the preservation of human life is its goal.
The price would be worth it, too, if
the peace offered is a true peace,
one that battles terrorism with vigor,
that includes all of the states now
opposed to Israel, that has a system
that puts peace into practice through
such means as trade and tourism. If,
as Trump suggests, Israel is not prepared to make peace, it is because
no one so far has offered a realistic
approach to it.
There are other sins, however, that
are great sins according to all authorities, and these, too, need to be considered, because halacha always has
insisted that avoiding these sins is
paramount.
These sins are pikuach nefesh
(threat to life) and shefichut damim
(the needless spilling of blood). Shefichut damim is why King David was
denied the honor of building Gods
house. His hands were too sullied
with blood.
Pikuach nefesh is considered to
be pre-eminent in religious Judaism.
Almost nothing not even Shabbat,
or the laws of kashrut takes precedence when life is threatened.
This is derived from a verse read a
couple of weeks ago in the Torah portion Acharei Mot. You shall keep My
laws and My rules, by the pursuit of
which man shall live said our Sages
of Blessed Memory, shall live by
them, not die by them. (See Leviticus 18:5 for the biblical verse, and BT
Yoma 85b, BT Sanhedrin 74a, and BT
Avodah Zarah 27b for discussions of
and exceptions to its meaning.)
Trading land for peace makes no
sense if no peace will result from
doing so. Believing a President
Trump will sit on his hands and not
push Israel into making a bad deal
also makes no sense, however.
Opinion
A local
spotlight
on Israel
Last Thursday, local officials
raised the Israeli flag over
the Bergen County administration complex in Hackensack as the county marked
Yom Hazikaron and Yom
Haatzmaut Israels Memorial Day and then its Independence Day.
Here, two of our op eds
by Lee Lasher and Daniel
Shlufman are slightly
edited versions of remarks
they gave at that ceremony.
A third op ed, by Laura Fein,
is a report on the ceremony
and a reflection on Israel.
Local officials and lay and professional local Jewish leaders were among the crowd at Bergen Countys flag-raising ceremony
marking Israels Memorial Day and Independence Day. Tracy Silna Zur of Franklin Lakes (on the right side of the photo, wearing
dark pants and a dark jacket), the vice chairwoman of Bergen Countys Board of Chosen Freeholders, was instrumental in
arranging the ceremony.
lazing sunlight
illuminated Yom
Haatzmaut this
year.
It was a physical reminder
of the brilliant impact Israel
has on the Jewish people
and the world at large. At
the celebration of Israels
Laura
democracy hosted by BerFein
gen Countys executive and
freeholders, leaders of our
government, schools, and
the Jewish community gathered to honor
a nation whose re-establishment after a
2,000-year hiatus is an unambiguous modern miracle.
Earlier in the week, the galleries were
packed as the entire New Jersey legislature stood to recognize outgoing Israeli
Consul Ido Aharoni and voted, 39 to 0,
on legislation to counter BDS. Gatherings
across our area drew hundreds to revel in
Israels music, food, and dance.
Over and over, my mind returned to
a simple but powerful refrain from the
ubiquitous Hamilton soundtrack: Look
around, Look around, How lucky we are
to be alive right now. So often, we who
love Israel wring hands over its problems, but this week I felt nothing but
gratitude to live in these amazing times
for the Jewish people.
I am part of the first generation born
post-1967, when a confidence sprung
from the Israelis victory in the war
replaced the anxious fragility of the early
Jewish state. I was privileged to grow up
blissfully taking Israels existence for
Laura Fein is the director of the Jewish
Community Relations Committee of the
Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey.
24 JEWISH STANDARD MAY 20, 2016
Opnion
Opinion
Iranian mullahs, and who gave Cubas fossilized communist regime a new lease on life, is about to fly to Japan.
Once there, he will highlight the grave dangers of nuclear
war in the city that has become a synonym for Armageddon: Hiroshima.
Opinion
The USS Arizona capsizes after being hit by a bomb in the Japanese attack
on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.
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Cover Story
Finding a
Jewish home
Photographer Doris Levin of Fort Lee shows
her work at the Jewish Home in Rockleigh
Joanne Palmer
here certainly are techniques that
you have to learn to become a
good photographer. Composition,
lighting, what lens to use, at what
exposure.
But to be a good portrait photographer, to be able to look through a camera
at a strangers face and know how to convey the
essence of that stranger so that other strangers will
look at it and know her, demands that and more.
To take a good portrait, it is good to have lived
enough yourself so that you can really see the person at the other end of your camera.
By the time Doris Levin of Fort Lee went to eastern Europe in 2002 to photograph Jews there, she
was in her mid-70s. Now, with some of her work
on display at the Jewish Home in Rockleigh, she
looks back on a long, eventful, risk-taking, both
Cover Story
Cover Story
Cover Story
for Reagan in the White House but left
politics after that presidency ended they
made Regent thrive. It was stressful, Ms.
Levin said.
Ms. Levin discovered that not only
would computers help her run her business this was in the early 1990s, when
business owners were making that discovery one at a time, often reluctantly but
she had an affinity for them. She computerized her business records and even
commissioned and ran an early website.
I went to Long Island City, to a place with
geeky guys and geeky women and one
of them told me that for $100 he would
build me a website. I gave him $100, and
he built it.
Eventually, Amazon did in Regent, as
it had so many other businesses. By that
time, the Levins were ready to retire.
The Levins oldest child, Jackie, had
made aliyah to marry a kibbutznik, Aryeh
Shani. She moved to Kibbutz Afek, and the
couple had four daughters. In the early
1990s, the family came back to the States
for a few years. Doris and Mort moved
to Manhattan so the girls could go to
school in Scarsdale; when Jackies family
returned to Israel, Doris and Mort decided
that they preferred city life. They stayed
NOTICE
ANNUAL MEETING OF JEWISH FEDERATION OF NORTHERN NEW JERSEY
Thursday, June 23, 2016 at 6:00 p.m. at Yeshivat Noam
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT, pursuant to Article II, Section 2 of the By-Laws of the above named Corporation, the Annual Meeting of its members
will be held on Thursday, June 23, 2016 at 6:00 p.m. at Yeshivat Noam, 70 West Century Road, Paramus, NJ 07652.
Jason M. Shames, Chief Executive Ofcer
and Executive Vice President
VICE PRESIDENTS
SECRETARY
Jayne Petak
David Nanus
INCOMING
PRESIDENT
Stephanie Goldman
IMMEDIATE
PAST PRESIDENT
Zvi S. Marans, MD
Sarita Gross
Daniel Herz
Geoffrey Lewis
Nathan Lindenbaum
Susan Penn
Will Rukin
Benay Taub
Louise Tuchman
Larry Weiss
Fran Weingast
Other members may be nominated for election as Trustees by the ling of a petition in the ofce of the Chief Executive Ofcer and Executive Vice President within fteen (15) days
after such notice. Each petition shall be signed by not fewer than twenty-ve (25) members who will be qualied to vote at the Annual Meeting.
THE FOLLOWING WILL BE CONTINUING THEIR TWO (2) YEAR TERMS AS TRUSTEES
Gale S. Bindelglass
Ruth Cole
Julie Eisen
Jodi Epstein
201-820-3900
32 Jewish Standard MAY 20, 2016
Karen Farber
Fred Fish
Merle Fish
Joan Krieger
Jewish Federation
Daniel Shlufman
Leon Sokol
Donna Weintraub
Tracy Zur
www.jfnnj.org
Cover Story
welcome outsiders, she said; her sonin-law was born into it, which gave her
some entre, but after that she had to
earn peoples trust.
She was drawn to photograph older
people. She was attracted to the stories in their faces. She has an album
beautifully printed pictures tacked to
lusciously heavy off-white paper in a
sturdily bound book with the photos
on the right and the stories on the left.
Some of the photos do not come with
stories. Some of the people who are pictured chose not to tell their stories; others, suffering from Alzheimers, no longer remember them. But each has a face.
In 2001, Doris and Morton Levin went
on a tour of eastern Europe led by the
author Chaim Potok. In Vilna, they met
Dovid Katz, the Yiddishist we profiled
in this newspaper a few weeks ago. We
sort of became friends, and he told us
about the dire straits in which the people whose Yiddish dialects he was collecting found themselves.
These rapidly aging Jews were not
Holocaust survivors but refugees. They
had fled before the Nazis invaded Lithuania in June 22, 1941, spent the war in
Tashkent or the Urals or other obscure
Call 797-7254
NOTICE
Jewish Federation
201-820-3900
www.jfnnj.org
Jewish Standard MAY 20, 2016 33
Jewish World
Is he serious?
Netanyahu keeps calling for talks with Abbas
BEN SALES
TEL AVIV For a leader often accused of
not wanting to talk peace with the Palestinians, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu sure does a lot of talking about
wanting to talk to the Palestinians.
In a series of three statements this
month, Netanyahu repeatedly stressed the
need for peace with the Palestinians. He
called the peace process one of his highest priorities and hinted that a renewal of
talks might be underway.
Responding to a question about the
peace process on Twitter on May 12,
Israels Independence Day, Netanyahu
said theres nothing I want more or am
more active on, in many ways you dont
know. Later that day, speaking to foreign
diplomats in Jerusalem, he asked for help
arranging a meeting between himself and
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas.
I have taken steps that no other prime
minister in Israels history has taken to
advance peace, he said. Every minute
that President Abbas refuses to accept my
call for peace robs Palestinians and Israelis of the opportunity to live without fear.
Netanyahus commitment to a Palestinian state, even in theory, has remained
a question mark and divided observers
of Israeli politics since he took office in
2009. Both his defenders and his critics
point to different sets of gestures and statements hes made that signal support for, or
opposition to, a two-state solution. In the
lead-up to elections 14 months ago, he dismissed the possibility of a Palestinian state
on his watch.
But in a talk to North American Jewish federations last November, he said he
remain[s] committed to a vision of two
states for two peoples where a demilitarized Palestinian state recognizes the
Jewish state, and Israel will continue to
work for peace in the hope that what is
not achievable today might be achievable
tomorrow.
At the same time, Abbas repeatedly has
declined another round of negotiations,
I have taken
steps that no
other prime
minister in
Israels history
has taken to
advance peace.
BENJAMIN NETANYAHU
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, center, shakes hands with Deputy IDF Chief
of Staff Yair Golan as he stands with President Reuven Rivlin at an Israeli Independence Day ceremony honoring soldiers on May 12.
YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90
are concessions he wont make for security reasons, for historical reasons, and the
nation agrees with him.
Others point to Netanyahus decadeslong opposition to Palestinian statehood
before 2009. Since the building freeze,
they note, Netanyahu has expanded settlements throughout the West Bank. And
in March 2015, two days before Israeli
elections, Netanyahu told the Israeli news
website NRG that a Palestinian state would
not rise while he is prime minister.
Gershon Baskin, who has acted as a conduit between the Netanyahu government
and Palestinian leaders, said that Abbas
thrice has offered to begin secret direct
talks with Netanyahu. Each time, Baskin
said, Netanyahu has refused.
The point isnt negotiating anymore
its making decisions, Baskin said.
[Netanyahu] doesnt do anything in terms
of policy to show that a two-state solution
is what he wants. Nothing on the ground
indicates that.
But others insist it is Abbas offering
the Mixed Messages, as the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy titled a recent
report on the Palestinian leader and Israel.
It is not just that Abbas and the P.A.
turned their backs on any peace talks with
Israel a position they have hewed to ever
since turning to the international community for unilateral actions, wrote David Pollock, the Kaufman fellow and director of
Project Fikra at The Washington Institute.
It is also that they had decided thenceforth to seek independent statehood for
themselves without paying any price at all
to Israel neither the end of claims and
conflict, nor a compromise on refugees,
nor formal agreement on any other issue.
In other words, their objective was land
without peace.
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Jewish World
A sign welcomes visitors to the Satmar chasidic village of Kiryas Joel, New York,
and urges respect for local traditions.
URIEL HEILMAN
Moster, the founder and executive director of Yaffed, an organization that lobbies
lawmakers to force Orthodox yeshivas to
offer quality secular studies in addition to
Torah studies.
Youre not gaining anything by depriving people of an education, Moster said.
The very Satmar rabbi that made that
speech also encourages people to earn a
living, to his credit, but at the same time
hes the one who has jurisdiction over the
yeshivas that are depriving chasidim of the
very tools necessary to earn that living.
So what do people end up doing?
Oftentimes they resort to criminal activity
and other shenanigans to earn that living.
Two months ago, FBI investigators
were in Kiryas Joel, nearby Rockland
County, and Brooklyn, investigating
alleged fraud by chasidic institutions in
the federal governments E-rate program,
which funds schools and libraries purchases of technology equipment and
Internet service. Authorities reportedly
are looking into whether the yeshivas
actually spent the money they obtained
from the federal government for technology in the schools.
Adding to the pressure, on Tuesday,
the New York Daily News and New Yorks
public radio station, WNYC, published and
broadcast a joint investigative story scrutinizing the outsized number of low-income
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Holyname.org wins
bronze Stevie award
201.666.2370
Scripps
5/12/16 10:29 AM
id you know that skin cancer is highly preventable? Because May is National Skin
Cancer Awareness Month, we want to
highlight the fact that our lifestyle choices
contribute greatly to our chances of getting skin cancer. The most preventable risk factor for all skin cancers is sun exposure.
Repeated overexposure to the sun can lead to
premature aging and skin cancers called basal cell
carcinoma, squamous cell
carcinoma, and malignant
melanoma, which is the deadliest form of skin cancer. Current estimates are that one in
five Americans will develop
skin cancer, according to
the American Academy of
Dermatology.
The most effective way to
Dr. Tamar
reduce your risk of skin canZapolanski
cer, regardless of your skin
type or whether or not you
tan easily, is to protect your skin daily with a broadspectrum sunscreen with a sun protection factor of
at least 30, which protects against the suns harmful
ultraviolet radiation. Sunscreen should be applied at
least 20 minutes before going outdoors and reapplied
every two hours, even on cloudy days, and after swimming or sweating.
Sunscreen protects against harmful radiation from
the sun by absorbing, reflecting, or scattering the suns
rays on the skin. They are available in many forms,
including creams, lotions, gels, ointments, wax sticks,
and sprays, as well as in cosmetic products like makeup and lipstick.
The best thing you can do for your skin is to make
sunscreen a part of your daily routine all year round,
even on cloudy days, when 80 percent of the suns
rays can still penetrate the clouds. Sunscreen can be
applied under make-up.
Here are some additional tips to help you decrease
your risk for developing skin cancer:
Wear protective clothing, such as a long-sleeved
shirt, pants, a wide-brimmed hat and sunglasses,
when possible.
Seek shade when appropriate, and remember
that the suns rays are strongest between 10 a.m. and
4 p.m.
Protect children from sun exposure by having
them play in the shade, wear protective clothing, and
apply sunscreen.
Use extra caution near water, snow, and sand.
They reflect the damaging rays of the sun, which can
increase your chance of sunburn.
Get vitamin D safely through a healthy diet that
may include vitamin supplements.
Avoid tanning beds. Ultraviolet light from the sun
and tanning beds can cause skin cancer and wrinkling.
If you want to look like youve been in the sun, consider using a sunless self-tanning product, but continue to use sunscreen with it.
Check your birthday suit on your birthday. Any
time you notice anything changing, growing or bleeding on your skin, see a dermatologist. Skin cancer is
very treatable when caught early.
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Remember the way life used to be before your spouse/partner was
diagnosed with dementia? Remember dinner in a nice restaurant?
The chance to socialize and have fun?
The Jewish Home Family and Noahs Ark want to make that
experience possible for you again. Please join us for our first Sweet
Memories Supper Club, a special event specifically for couples who
are living with one partners diagnosis of dementia.
May 26, 4 PM
Noahs Ark
he debate continues
on when to start getting mammograms
and how often to get
them. Last year, the American Cancer Society issued new
screening guidelines. Before that
announcement, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force a panel
of independent governmentappointed physicians drew up
Dr. Mindy Goldfischer is the chief of breast
its own guidelines. The Ameriimaging at Englewood Hospital and
can College of Obstetricians and
Medical Center.
Gynecologists has recommendations too.
every year. While the incidence of breast
According to the new ACS guidelines,
cancer in premenopausal women is low,
women with an average risk of breast
such cancers are known to be more
cancer should start getting mammograms when they are 45 and continue
aggressive, so it is even more important
once a year until they are 54. The ACSs
to scan these women every year. The
old guidelines had recommended that
Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium,
women in that same risk group get yearly
funded by the National Cancer Institute, found that among premenopausal
mammograms starting at 40.
women, biennial screenings found
The USPSTF recommends that women
a higher proportion of tumors with
between 50 and 74 who have an average
advanced stage.
risk of breast cancer get mammograms
Q: Some studies suggest mammograevery other year.
phy in younger women is not as helpMeanwhile, the American College of
ful because it leads to false positives
Obstetricians and Gynecologists maintained its recommendations that women
and heightened anxiety. What is your
with an average risk of breast cancer
response to that?
Dr. Goldfischer: Mammography
start getting mammograms at age 40.
is not as helpful in women who have
With so much conflicting information causing confusion, Dr. Mindy
dense breasts at any age. Those most
Goldfischer, chief of breast imaging at
likely to have dense breast tissue are
Englewood Hospital and Medical Cenpremenopausal women, typically up
ter, weighs in on what these guidelines
to age 55.
False positives refer to calling a
means.
woman back for an additional mammoQ: How do you explain these different
gram view or sonogram, not necessarily
recommendations from various groups?
a biopsy that turns out to be benign. At
Dr. Goldfischer: The guidelines differ
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center,
because the organizations evaluated the
we have found that patients are grateful
data differently. There are two big differences. The USPSTF made its recommenfor the careful scrutiny of their results
dations based on benefits to the populaand are relieved when the results are
tion and on modeling studies, whereas
benign.
the ACS made its recommendations
There is the rare woman who is anxious about having a mammogram,
based on benefits to individuals and on
regardless of whether theres been a preactual data.
vious false positive result. In these cases,
USPSTF put a great emphasis on the
the screening can be scheduled so that
harms of screening, including false
the mammogram is reviewed while the
positives, biopsies, anxiety, and overdiagnosis, while the ACS did not stress
patient waits.
those factors. Instead, the ACS stressed
Even in dense breast tissue, many
that the real issue of risk is related to a
cancers can be identified. A 3D mammography/digital breast tomosynthesis,
womans menopausal status, not her
for example, has improved the detection
age.
of masses in dense breast tissue. Breast
Q: What do you recommend for a
ultrasound also is an excellent method
woman with an average risk of breast
for evaluating dense breast tissue and is
cancer?
commonly recommended for women of
Dr. Goldfischer: Women with an
average risk as a supplement to annual
average risk should begin having mammograms at 40 and continue to have one
mammography.
Therapy at Home
201.833.0234
WWW.BTHREHAB.COM
Therapy Clinic
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in the works.
We are not trying to be a startup that
sells out after a couple of years, he said.
We are looking for strategic investments
and we are in communication with companies that would sell our product and
invest in our company so we can increase
our manufacturing capacity.
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their severely obese patients.
We are proud of our outstanding outcomes and quality in bariatric medicine,
which isnt only about our work in the
OR, Stefanie Vaimakis, chief of bariatric
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care for our patients, which maximizes
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Holy Name Medical Centers commitment to quality bariatric care begins
with appropriately trained staff and the
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To earn the MBSAQIP designation, Holy
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center, which provides a positive working environment for employees at all levels, Manny Gonzalez,
Holy Names vice president of human resources, said.
The Medical Center shows its employees how much
they are valued by empowering them to use their skills
and creativity and providing opportunities to advance
professionally while offering benefits and amenities
aimed at improving their quality of life.
According to NJBIZ, the survey and award program
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the state entered the two-part process to determine
the 100 Best Places to Work in New Jersey. Part one
consisted of evaluating each nominated companys
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One in five Americans suffers from a behavioral health condition.
Its among the top five reasons for hospital admissions and re-admissions and
the most expensive one, costing the U.S.
healthcare system some $45.3 billion
annually.
Tel Aviv University biomedical engineer
Uri Nevo decided to create a smartphonebased solution for patients and their psychiatrists that could continuously and
unobtrusively monitor changes in behavior and address them before they get out
of control.
There are medications to stabilize
patients but no objective tools for assessing
a patients mental state, said Keren Sela,
a researcher from Nevos lab who helped
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We worked on the technology for the
first year and then started clinical trials
in three large mental health centers here
in Israel, she continued. That helped
us improve the technology and learn
about detecting different behavioral situations in patients with severe mood disorders. We are now looking to expand to
the United States.
Thyroid
still are being monitored today, provided strong proof of concept. The
app showed 90 percent sensitivity
and specificity in identifying outpatient mental state.
It detected significant changes in
behavior about a month before the
doctor knew about a mental deterioration, Sela said.
The Lifegraph founders now are
seeking external funding as well as
partners in pharma, health insurance, telemedicine or other healthcare sectors to penetrate the U.S.
market. Sela says potential customers include pharma companies looking to provide wider and more innovative services beyond medication.
She and the third cofounder, Asaf
Liberman, earned their postgraduate
degrees in Nevos biomedical engineering lab and now work for Lifegraph
full time. Still based at Tel Aviv University, the company has been funded by
Ramot (the universitys tech-transfer
company) and by the Office of the Chief
Scientist of the Israeli Ministry of Economy and Industry.
Wishing you a
Happy Passover
from page 45
Wishing you a
Happy Passover
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Dvar Torah
Parshat Emor: Stitching together
the realms of heaven and earth
Lasher
BRIEFS
logic and to peoples legal needs, sometimes in farflung places, centuries, and circumstances. Despite the way we may think
of such issues the Torah speaks and we
obey (or we dont) the actual practice
of halacha is that we hold the Torah dear
and sacred, and we move forward into a
sometimes unrecognizably foreign and
demanding world of experiences, holding
fast to that which we have found to be holy
and useful in addressing the new.
Lag BOmer, coming this week, places
a human and rabbinic historical situation over the biblical substrate of the
requirement to bring the omer, a sheaf of
grain, as a communal sacrifice in this
time of year.
Rather than seeing such connections as
tenuous or flimsy, however, perhaps we
can learn from such development that the
fire of revelation continues to burn brightly
for those who care to see. It is in this manner that one (set of ) ruling(s) shall be for
you and for the stranger who lives among
you, for I am the Lord your God (Leviticus 24:22). By building on such precedents
and taking the demand that we follow the
Torah seriously, we Jews become a long
but flexible cord stitching together the
realms of heaven and earth.
JNS.ORG/ISRAEL HAYOM
FROM PAGE 25
He
s
75
and his musical
fans look back
Mexicali Live celebrates
Bob Dylans birthday
LARRY YUDELSON
Calendar
304 Midland Ave.
(201) 262-7691 or
grandmamimil@verizon.
net.
Barbecue/picnic in
Emerson: The Mens
Club of Congregation
Bnai Israel hosts a
community outreach
barbecue and picnic,
with games, in honor of
Lag BOmer, rain or shine,
11:30 a.m. 53 Palisade
Ave. (201) 265-2272 or
www.bisrael.com.
Genealogy in Wayne:
MAY
22
Friday
MAY 20
Shabbat in Teaneck:
Dr. Rachel Korazim
is the Rabbi Barry
Schaeffer Memorial
scholar-in-residence
at Congregation Beth
Sholom; her overall
theme is Windows to
Israeli Society through
Literature. Tonight, her
topic is The Other as
Mirror; she will look
at Biblical Motifs
Challenging Views on
Shabbat morning and
Complex Images of
Peace and Hope in the
afternoon. Meals, with
reservations, precede the
lectures. 354 Maitland
Ave. (201) 833-2620 or
office@cbsteaneck.org
Shabbat in Emerson:
Congregation Bnai
Israel welcomes Shabbat
with songs, prayers, and
an intergenerational
drumming circle,
7:30 p.m. 53 Palisade
Ave. (201) 265-2272 or
www.bisrael.com.
Shabbat in Closter:
Temple Beth El holds
services featuring the
Shabbat Unplugged
Shabbat in Teaneck:
10 a.m. 53 Palisade
Ave. (201) 265-2272 or
office@bisrael.com or
www.bisrael.com.
MAY 21
Shabbat in Closter:
Shabbat learning in
Teaneck: Rabbi Yona
Shabbat in Emerson:
Certified yoga
instructor Andrea
Collier, a co-president
of Congregation Bnai
Israels sisterhood, joins
Rabbi Debra Orenstein
in incorporating
yoga postures into
the morning prayers,
MAY 22
Minyan in Alpine: The
Saturday
Sunday
Goodman, national
director of education in
the Yeshivot and Ulpanot
Bnei Akiva Educational
Network in Israel and
the former director
general of the national
Bnei Akiva movement
in Israel, talks about In
What State Is The State?
The Challenges Facing
the Religious Zionist
Movement in Israel
Today: An Israeli Rabbi
and Educators Insight,
at Congregation Beth
Aaron, 6:55 p.m. 950
Queen Anne Road. www.
bethaaron.org or (201)
836-6210.
Monday
MAY 23
Ladies lunch/
discussion in Wayne:
The Jewish Womens
Circle of Chabad of
Passaic County offers
a discussion with Chani
Gurkov, noon. 194 Ratzer
Road. (973) 694-6274 or
email Chanig@optonline.
net.
Wednesday
MAY 25
Mickey Marcus lecture
in Tenafly: Dumont
historian Dick Burnon
talks about Mickey
Marcus: American Hero
During the 1948 Israeli
War for Independence
at a meeting of the
Senior Activity Center
at the Kaplen JCC on
the Palisades, 11:15 a.m.
Excerpts of the 1966 film
Cast a Giant Shadow,
starring Kirk Douglas as
Mickey Marcus, will be
shown. 411 East Clinton
Ave. (201) 569-7900, ext.
235, or www.jccotp.org.
Tuesday
MAY 24
Jewish learning in
Teaneck: Lamdeinu,
a center for Jewish
learning that meets
at Congregation Beth
Aaron, offers a class,
Children and Matan
Torah in the Middle
Ages, led by Dr. Julie
Goldstein, 10:15 a.m. 950
Queen Anne Road. www.
lamdeinu.org.
Sassy Reuven
The Raid on Entebbe:
Congregation Keter
Torah and Friends of
Lubavitch of Bergen
County welcome
scholar-in-residence
Sasson Sassy Reuven
to mark 40 years from
the hostage rescue in
Entebbe. A veteran of
the Israel Defense Special
Operation Forces who
was in the IDFs elite Red
Beret paratrooper unit,
he will give a firsthand
account of the operation,
8 p.m., at Keter Torah,
600 Roemer Ave.,
Teaneck. (201) 907-0180,
(201) 907-0686, www.
ketertorah.org or www.
chabadhouse.com.
Calendar
Thursday
MAY 26
Dinner for people
with dementia: The
Jewish Home Family
holds its second Sweet
Memories Supper Club
at Noahs Ark Restaurant
in Teaneck, 4 p.m. The
meal is for couples
with one member
who has a dementia
diagnosis. Support staff
on hand. 493 Cedar
Lane. Reservations,
(201) 518-1176.
Sunday
MAY 29
Israeli history in Jersey
City: Congregation
Bill Phillips
Singles
Sunday
MAY 22
Brunch/mingle: North
In New York
Tuesday
MAY 24
Disability/rehabilitation
expo in Brooklyn: The
Bina Stroke & Brain Injury
Assistance organization
holds its annual Disability
& Rehabilitation Expo
at the Palace, 780
Jason Liebman
Melissa Miller
Tina Johnson
Cantor Romalis
to be honored at
jubilee concert
Temple Beth Tikvah plans its final Jubilee event of the year
with a concert to honor retiring Cantor Charles Romalis on
June 5, at 4 p.m.
The concert features the New Jersey Cantors Concert
Ensemble, the Temple Beth Tikvah Choir, and several surprise guests. Cantor Romalis will be recognized by the AmeriCantor Charles
Romalis
can Conference of Cantors for his achievement as TBTs cantor for 50 years. A reception will follow the concert.
For information on Temple Beth Tikvah, call (973) 595-6565 or go to www.
templebethtikvahnj.org.
Crossword
ITS SHOWTIME! BY YONI GLATT
Calendar
KOSHERCROSSWORDS@GMAIL.COM
DIFFICULTY LEVEL: MEDIUM
HaZamir
performing
at Carnegie
Hall.
LEV AVERY-PECK
and the students respective congregational rabbis will present diplomas and
gifts to the 35 graduates.
The Bergen County High School of
Jewish Studies is a regional Sunday
school program for students in grades
eight to 12. For information, call (201)
488-0834 or go to www.bchsjs.org.
More than
214,000 likes.
Like us on
Facebook.
facebook.com/
jewishstandard
Across
1. Show about an Israeli import of the
1930s?
5. Locale of a last stand
11. ...and the bush ___ not consumed
(Ex. 3:2)
14. Slurpee alternative with many flavors
certified by the OU
15. Gives a public dvar Torah
16. Marx follower?
17. Show about David when he worked for
Saul?
19. Magen David Adom letters
20. Natalie Portmans role in Goyas
Ghosts
21. Dolph Schays in 1948
23. Rare striped kosher animals
26. Hillel and Yirmiyahu (Abbr.)
28. Noun suffixes (or an anagram of
20-Across)
29. Judean sound?
30. Sacrificial sound?
31. What many Nazis traded the Alps in
for
32. Show that teaches 5-Down when to
hit and when to speak?
36. Title group in Elle Kings 2015 hit
37. Anderson who often casts Jason
Schwartzman
38. Work by Samuel Bak
39. Prelude ___ Kiss (Craig Lucas play)
42. Yeshiva University based show?
45. C Lanzbom sometimes uses them
48. Capp and Capone
49. What one often does after a blessing
50. Newly nuclear country
51. Israeli director Nesher
52. He famously played 5-Down
54. Pet Einstein lovingly (in Back to the
Future)
56. Dwelling for Abraham
57. Org. for Dershowitz
58. Josephs show about his relationship
with Pharaoh?
64. Impersonated (Woody Allen)
65. Roths work, compared to Spielbergs
66. Rabbi Akiva, for much of his life
67. Koufax was one, once
68. Spewing false information about Israel,
on many college campuses
69. Show about how many times G-d said
hed flood the Earth?
Down
1. Ramah or Moshava supervisor-to-be,
briefly
2. Israeli brother
3. It comes at the end of Shavuot?
4. Like many athletes in Israel
5. See 52- Across
6. Ben Canaan and Gold
7. Casspis team, on the scoreboard
8. Shekels dispenser
9. Bubbelehs
10. Comes ___ surprise (Like Billy Joel
selling out the Garden)
11. Show about Haman?
12. Strive to play like Perlman
13. Tests given in a Scientology scam
18. Verse opening for G-d?
22. Tref sound
23. There are 6.5 million Jews in Israel, ___
(approximately)
24. Three time New York mayor
25. Sounds while having a good shvitz
26. ___ HaDerech
27. Rolled items
30. Community or band
31. When Tevye sings Tradition
33. Has the rights to (like Israel of the
Golan)
34. Give a heter
35. Theodore Bikels rock metal?
39. ... and it is a rare thing ___ the king
requireth (Dan. 2:11)
40. Director Preminger
41. Part of the IFA
42. Skye of Say Anything
43. High Priest with disappointing sons
44. Police in Casablanca
45. One might ruin your Shabbat nap...
every 17 years
46. Language on many Israeli signs
47. Show about an annual Israeli occurrence on 5th Avenue?
51. Son of Zilpah
52. 1991 Harrison Ford title role
53. Lang. on many Israeli signs
55. Mark from a Jerusalem Post editor
56. Made like Samson with fox tails
59. Before, to Bialik
60. All Jews, in a sense
61. Minority in Israel, with Jews
62. Paul Newman in Cars
63. Esau feels it for Jacob
Gallery
1
Deadgrass is the Jerry Garcia tribute project of musicians C Lanzbom and Matt
Turk. In Jewish circles, Mr. Lanzbom is
better known as one of the members of
Soulfarm, and Mr. Turk is the musical
director of the Downtown Synagogue in
Tribeca, in Manhattan. Deadgrass generally plays the songs of the Grateful Dead,
but the Grateful Dead frequently played
the songs of Bob Dylan and even toured
with him for a time, so on Tuesday night,
Mr. Lanzbom said, you can expect to
hear the words and music of Dylan with
the rhythms and stylings of Mr. Garcia.
Q: What was your first Bob Dylan song?
C Lanzbom: Whoa! I was probably, like,
maybe 10 or 11 years old. My older brother
turned me on to a lot of different music.
Q: What was the song?
A: Probably something like Subterranean
Homesick Blues.
56 JEWISH STANDARD MAY 20, 2016
Deadgrass is, from left, Russell Gottleib, Clarence Ferrari, C Lanzbom, Dave Richards, and Matt Turk.
DEADGRASS
Obituaries
Robert Feldman
Alan Lieber
Elizabeth Lyttle
Dorothy Rose
Philip Weinstein
PHILIP S.
WEINSTEIN
Harold Horowytz
Harold Horowytz died peacefully on May15
after a wonderful life filled with the joy of
family. His acumen in the food business was
always evident at Zabars where he worked for
over 40 years. Beloved husband of Vera for
65 inseparable years. Treasured and devoted
father of Mark (Rae Gladstein), Roni (Jim
Ackerman), and Sheri (Craig Tendler).
Cherished and adored grandfather of Josh
(Maria), Adam, Matt (Carol), Alicia, Daniel,
Josh, Helena (Sam), and Amanda, and
great-grandfather of Jonathan, Marissa, and
London. He will be missed by those whose
lives he enriched with his genuine kindness
and larger than life spirit. Arrangements
were by Robert Shoems Memorial Chapel,
Paramus, NJ. Shiva will be observed through
Monday at 867 Columbus Drive in Teaneck,
NJ. Donations can be sent to Temple Bnai
Sholem, New Bern, N.C.
Paid notice
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60 JEWISH STANDARD MAY 20, 2016
2015
READERS
CHOICE
A supplement to
BRIEF
FROM PAGE 37
Douville said. We dont even call it occupied territory, its Judea and Samaria, using the biblical
names for the West Bank preferred by those who
do not consider the areas occupied under international law.
The right wing is not great on nuance, Knappow countered in an interview.
In dueling op-eds in the Detroit Jewish News last
summer, unavailable online, Knappow and Douville explained their positions.
Partners for a Progressive Israel, for its part,
notes its membership in Zionist umbrella bodies
and its roots in Hashomer Hatzair, a storied leftist
Zionist movement.
In terms of the camp of Israel supporters, they
are dividing us, theyre not allowing gray areas, its
entirely not kosher, said Maya Haber, a Pittsburghbased member of the national Partners for a Progressive Israel who launched a petition last week
urging Walk for Israel to include the group and
Americans for Peace Now as sponsors.
We have called for a targeted boycott of settlements goods as a means to help end the occupation, the petition says. To be clear, as Zionists we
do not support a boycott of Israel proper. Rather
we accept Israels territorial distinctions, and boycott only those areas in which Israel itself exercises
military rule and not extend civic governance to all
its residents.
Knappow reapplied this year; Douville wrote
back saying the rejection still stood, unless the
groups had changed their policies. In the interview, Douville said that members of Partners for
a Progressive Israel are welcome to participate as
individuals. Knappow passed.
If theyre going to boycott me, Im going to boycott them, he said.
Alan Gale, associate director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Detroit, would
not comment on why Jewish policy umbrellas like
the JCRC, the federation, and the Jewish community center stopped organizing the Walk for Israel.
Knappow said it was too bad the walk was no longer in the hands of the JCRC or another more representative umbrella body.
When the JCRC was involved, there were no
problems, he said.
This year, the JCRC is not among the walks cosponsors, although it has been in other years since
Douvilles coalition started organizing the event.
Gale would not comment on why the JCRC dropped
out this year, but said the organization maintained
a relationship with Douville and would be collecting Israeli foods at the Walk for Israel launch site
for distribution to the homeless.
As we speak, I am preparing an eblast reminding potential walkers to bring Israeli food products
for donation, to be collected in boxes we will have
at the walk starting area, Gale wrote in an email.
JTA Wire Service
TM
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