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NORTH JERSEY
84
2015
JSTANDARD.COM
Celebrating
Moriah
Englewood school
marks semicentennial
page 32
IN THIS ISSUE
OurChildren
Our
About
Whats Up Doc?
Camps Galore
Purim Food & Fun
Supplement to The Jewish Standard March 2015
CELEBRATIONS
EVENTS &
Your
Bar/Bat
Mitzvah &
Wedding
Specialists
Venues
throughout Tri-State area
with menus to fit every
budget
201.833.0889
Jewish Slandered
A PURIM NEWS PARODY BY LARRY YUDELSON
Kosher restaurants
no longer kosher?
The Rabbinical Council of Bergen
County Etc. (RCBCE) will oppose
the opening of any more kosher
restaurants in Teaneck, to give a
chance for the towns supply of Orthodox synagogues to catch up.
We have more than 20 kosher
restaurants in this town, yet fewer
than 20 frum synagogues, said
Rabbi Ploni Almoni. Thats just not
seemly. Its a shanda for the goyim,
to be brutally honest.
Even if you count the Shabbos minyan in the apartments, the
breakaway Shabbos minyan in the
other apartments, the minyan that
was accidentally locked into the
apartments storage room six years
ago and is presumed dead, and the
permanent floating crap game and
pick-up mincha in the back room
of Lous Dry Cleaners, theres still
more food than prayer, the RCBCE
official continued. That will not do.
As the Torah says: Man cannot
live on sushi alone.
The RCBCE will implement its
new policy in a multipronged approach.
ON THE COVER: Children in Moriahs early childhood program have fun in one
of the schools outdoor playgrounds.
CONTENTS
NOSHES ...................................................4
ROCKLAND .........................................20
OPINION ............................................... 26
COVER STORY .................................... 32
TORAH COMMENTARY ...................46
CROSSWORD PUZZLE .................... 47
ARTS & CULTURE ..............................48
CALENDAR ..........................................49
GALLERY .............................................. 52
OBITUARIES ........................................ 53
CLASSIFIEDS ...................................... 54
REAL ESTATE...................................... 56
Noshes
POST-OSCAR:
Moore to premiere
in a darker satire
Map to the Stars,
a dark satire about
Hollywood, is
opening on Friday,
February 27; it is written
by BRUCE WAGNER, 60,
and directed by veteran
DAVID CRONENBERG,
71. The complex plot
focuses on the plight of a
former child star (Evan
Bird) and an aging
actress (Julianne Moore)
whose career is in
decline. Moore won a
best actress award for
her performance at the
2014 Cannes Film
Festival, and last week
she won the best actress
Oscar as well for her
performance as an
Alzheimers sufferer in
Still Alice. While
Cronenberg isnt a
household name, he has
a very long and praised
body of work ,and just
about everyone has seen
at least a few of his films.
Of his more recent work, I
thought that two Cronenberg films that starred
Viggo Mortensen were
particularly dramatically
compelling, if quite
violent. They are A
History of Violence
(2005) and Eastern
Promises (2007).
As everyone
knows by now,
PATRICIA ARQUETTE, 46, won the
best supporting actress
Oscar for Boyhood.
What I also know is that
she and Laurence
Fishburne are the only
stars of a CSI series to
have received an Oscar
nomination. Arquette,
who won an Emmy for
Bruce Wagner
David Cronenberg
David Shore
Special 0.99%
Financing*
Discover.
benzelbusch.com
1/21/15 2:48 PM
Coming soon.
Read. Follow. Join the conversation.
Jewish Federation
201.820.3907
ISRAEL FILM
VISIT WWW.JFNNJ.ORG/FILMFESTIVAL
PLEASE BE SURE TO PRINT AND BRING YOUR EMAIL CONFIRMATION. IT IS YOUR TICKET.
Tickets are going fast. Order online Now! Walk-ins may be turned away due to ticket availability. Check the website for updates.
FESTIVAL
Discussion following the lm with counterterrorism expert Olivier Guitta, Managing Director at
GlobalStrat, an international security and geopolitical risk consultancy rm.
MARC
7-22, H
2015
Local
Sounds of joy
Childrens choir ranked number one by congregation
Lois Goldrich
Tzipporei Shalom sings in the 2014 junior choir festival at Temple Avodat Shalom in River Edge.
into shul.
Both parents and choir members credit
directors Hanan and Avery-Grossman with
the groups success. And not only do they
make beautiful music, the singers by
their own report are having fun.
The directors both daughters of cantors didnt meet until they came to
Teaneck, despite the fact that they grew
up living some 10 minutes apart.
Ronit Hanan is a trained cantor but does
not hold that position in the Teaneck congregation. They created a position for me
as music director, she said. There are so
many phenomenally talented people here
and they havent had a cantor and didnt
want someone to take over and lead services every week. I lead sometimes, but
its still largely lay-led. Members really feel
engaged and involved.
As part of her job, Ms. Hanan helps
interested members learn how to lead services and hone their skills. Im able to be
an enabler, she said. She also helps lead
High Holiday services and conducts the
Bergen County chapter of HaZamir: The
International Jewish High School Choir.
Neither director remembers exactly
how and when Tzipporei Shalom was created, but Ms. Hanan thinks it was 1997 or
1998, when my daughter was in second
grade. A congregant approached us, and
From left, Tziporrei Shalom performs at the junior choir festival in 2013 and 2014. In 2013, Adina Avery-Gross and Ronit
Hanan, standing facing the children, lead; in 2014, that is Ms. Hanan conducting.
8 Jewish Standard FEBRUARY 27, 2015
Local
as long as they want, usually until sixth or seventh
grade. There are no auditions.
Anybody who likes to sing and can get to shul on
time is welcome, Ms. Hanan said, adding that by
seventh grade, the youngsters are busy with bnai
mitzvah, and by the time theyre in eighth grade they
can audition for HaZamir. The Bergen County chapter
of HaZamir, which has about 30 members this year,
meets at CBS.
The singers different ages do not affect the music,
Ms. Hanan said. Everyone will join in on the chorus,
but a small ensemble will do the wordier verses. In
addition, the older children may serve as section leaders and may even come up and conduct if the group is
singing a three-part round.
Neither director anticipated the choirs huge
success.
We had no idea, Ms. Hanan said. It was just an
experience for kids on a Shabbat morning. But it
worked so well that it became a holistic part of the
synagogue.
It became an important part of the childrens education as well, she added. We teach them Hebrew, Jewish culture, and musical terminology. They know the
meaning of an upbeat and a downbeat, a crescendo
and a diminuendo, legato and staccato. They also
learn about working together, teamwork, and blending as a group.
Ms. Hanan and Ms. Avery-Grossman choose the
music.
We keep our eyes and ears open, Ms. Hanan said.
When they hear something that might work, she often
transcribes and notates the piece before teaching it to
the children.
Tzipporei Shalom is precious to Ms. Hanan. I call
it Kvelling 101, she said. I get a huge kick out of the
kids, and I learn from them. The enjoyment goes both
ways. I adore sharing the joy of Jewish music with the
next generation. When the group exploded, it was just
the icing on the cake.
Ms. Avery-Grossman, a partner in the trademark
licensing agency Brandgenuity, notes that while
she and Ms. Hanan had never met before moving to
Teaneck, we grew up on parallel planes. The legend
goes that my dad recommended her dad for a cantorial position.
Echoing Ms. Hanans statement that the two had no
grand plan, she explained the way the group grew.
From a core group of about seven children, we grew
to 12 to 15, and by our fifth or sixth year had a critical
mass of 20. Now it fluctuates between 25 and 40.
Ms. Avery-Grossman said that there are many reasons for the groups success.
We dont just teach Hebrew songs, she said. They
sing in multiple languages, which is intriguing to them.
Theyve sung in Yiddish, Zulu, Hebrew, Lugandan,
and Ladino. Theyre challenged in new ways. We treat
them like musical professionals, make the music serious. They understand that they cant start singing
without a note and a count. Members are also taught
how to stand, how to use their voices like color, how
to present, and how to [achieve] dynamics. Were trying to make music.
She and Ms. Hanan work well together.
There has never been a competition about how
this is run. We bring different skills to the party. Ronit
has the musical training and skills. I studied voice but
I dont play the piano or have a degree. Im more irreverent, Ronit is more professional. We dont compete
for airtime.
As cantors daughters, she said, Its hard to be a
c
m
d
t
o
With a massive fan base, more than 20 million views on YouTube, numerous TV appearances and proven
success with three albums, Yeshiva Universitys student vocal group the Maccabeats has entertained
and inspired hundreds of audiences worldwide. Using nothing more than the unadulterated human voice,
a clean-cut presentation and a little Jewish humor, this unique group of singers
is able to connect with fans of all backgrounds and ages.
Purchase tickets online at jccotp.org/maccabeats or call Judi at 201.408.1450
GENERAL ADMISSION: $18 MEMBERS, $20 NONMEMBERS
PREFERRED SEATING: $30 MEMBERS, $36 NONMEMBERS
This concert has been generously underwritten by an anonymous donor. All proceeds benefit programs for senior adult services at the JCC.
KAPLEN
JCC on the Palisades TAUB CAMPUS | 411 E CLINTON AVE, TENAFLY, NJ 07670 | 201.569.7900 | jccotp.org
M
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/OrthodoxUnion
@orthodoxunion
Local
Local
and anyone who tests positive for a BRCA mutation is
brought in for one-on-one counseling. The program will
recommend specialists to follow up, and to develop a
plan that will be best for each person.
It is important to note that the prognosis for people
with BRCA mutations varies widely, Ms. Wiesman said.
If there are five women with BRCA mutations, one or
two may develop breast cancer and the others may be
in their eighties without cancer. How, she asked rhetorically, can it be that there are such differences between
cases? There are researchers out there trying to answer
that question.
About 5 to 10 percent of responders so far have been
men. Men with BRCA mutations also have a higher risk
of breast and other cancers, and can pass down the gene
to their children.
From my perspective, creating more awareness in
the Ashkenazi Jewish population will bring in people
who are in fact high risk, Ms. Wiesman said. In the last
few weeks, 80 percent of people who signed up were
high risk, based on NCCN guidelines. We ask ourselves,
why havent they come in sooner? Some have very significant family histories of breast cancer.
Ms. Wiesman, 30, who lives in Riverdale, N.Y., and is
the mother of a 4-month-old son, said that she herself is
not from a high risk family, so she has decided not to get
tested at this point. I feel like I do not need to know right
now, she said. Even though I advocate for the ability for
people to do testing in my own work, personally I am not
an information seeker in that way. During my pregnancy,
I didnt opt to do every genetic test out there.
The benefit of the genetic counseling process in lowrisk patients is that you dont have to get the test, she
noted. I have plenty of patients who meet with me and
decide that now is not the right time. The one thing
important for the community to recognize is that people who come from high-risk families, once they turn
25, if they dont want to get testing, thats fine. But they
should get screening as if they are at high risk. And the
insurance companies should cover high-risk screening. We treat people as if theyre positive until proven
otherwise.
Ms. Wiesman noted that women who test positive can
reduce the risk by increased surveillance through mammograms and breast MRIs, and by risk-reducing surgeries. The NCCN guidelines for screening high-risk women
includes getting an annual mammogram or breast
MRI from the time they are between 25 and 29. After
they turn 30, recommendations include a semiannual
screening, alternating mammograms and breast MRIs,
every six months. In addition, high-risk women should
consider transvaginal ultrasound and CA125 blood tests
every six months. Those tests are designed to detect
ovarian cancer, although they have not been proven to
detect ovarian cancer at an early and treatable stage.
The decision of whether or not to get testing is made
by the patient, Ms. Wiesman said. I just want people
to get the right care.
The Program for Jewish Genetic Health runs screening programs to test for BRCA mutations as well as
Jewish genetic diseases that affect offspring, including
Tay-Sachs and Canavan disease. Informative websites
sponsored by the program include www.BRCAcommunity.com, and www.MyJewishGeneticHealth.com. For
more information go to www.einstein.yu.edu/centers/
jewish-genetic-health.
For testing, go to brcacommunitystudy.einstein.
yu.edu
201-960-7709
CORE-PILATES DANCE YOGA
Sandi M. Malkin
Interior Designer
973-535-9192
Local
Super Women
Zero Motivation
Ronit Elkabetz. The film won best feature
at the 2014 Jerusalem Film Festival and was
an official selection at Cannes. Gett, like
so many other films in the festival, is being
shown in partnership with a synagogue or
community organization. In this case its
Teanecks Congregation Rinat Yisrael on
March 18. A discussion will follow the 7 p.m. screening at the
Teaneck Cinemas with Rabbi Jeremy Stern, executive director of
the Organization for the Resolution of Agunot.
Cupcakes, on the other hand,
is a lighthearted musical comedy
about a group of Tel Aviv friends
watching the kitschy Universong
(aka Eurovision) song contest.
Certain that they could do better,
they record a song on a cellphone,
and to their surprise, it becomes
Cupcakes
Local
It didnt take me
that long to write
the essay. I spent
some time
thinking about
how to approach
it and structure it.
ARIANNA SAMET
Arianna Samet
Come Home
for the Holiday.
Have plans for Passover? Consider yourself invited to
Jewish Home Assisted Living, where you can spend the
entire eight days as one of the family. Take part in our
famous gourmet Seder. Read from the Haggadah and
sing favorite Passover melodies with your new-found
friends. Break the matzah and enjoy home made charoset
prepared by one of our very own residents.
Did we mention your family is also welcome to join us
for the Seder? Plus, your eight-day stay with us includes
a cozy studio apartment, delicious Kosher for Passover
meals served in our warm and welcoming dining room,
and a full schedule of intriguing activities. What could
be more inviting?
Make your reservations to join us this Passover by calling
Anette McGarity at 201-666-2370.
201.666.2370 www.jhalnj.org
685 Westwood Avenue, River Vale, NJ 07675
Lauren Levant, Executive Director, Jewish Home Assisted Living
JEWISH STANDARD FEBRUARY 27, 2015 13
Local
MS
Dementia
(Couples Welcomed)
Stroke
201-937-4722
Chronic
Disease
Parkinsons
Fibromyalgia
www.FitnessSeniorStyle.com
TRADITION. EXPRESSION. REFLECTION.
NOW ON STAGE
THiS
iS
Jewish Culture
Downtown
DISCUSSION SERIES
LARRY YUDELSON
AJC in Action:
The Future of European Jewry
DISCUSSION
Anti-Semitism and
Political Extremism
in Hungary and Greece
SUN | MAR 15 | 2 P.M.
Free. Donations welcome.
WINE TASTING
The Covenant Kitchen:
Food and Wine for
the New Jewish Table
SUN | MAR 8 | 2:30 P.M.
$10, $7 students/seniors, $5 members
LoWER MANHATTAN | 646.437.4202 | oPEN SUNfRi
MoRE PRoGRAM & ExHiBiTioN iNfo @ WWW.MJHNyC.oRG
Public programs are made possible through a generous gift
from Mrs. Lily Safra.
Like us on Facebook
facebook.com/jewishstandard
14 JEWISH STANDARD FEBRUARY 27, 2015
Local
applies them to a kind of celebration of this
world, of the here-and-now.
So you find in Thunder Road the
singer exhorting Mary, who is kind of
reluctant to give herself over to a romantic
relationships, Weve got one last chance
to make it real / to trade in these wings on
some wheels. In the context of the song
it is clear that the singer is saying to the
woman, I cant offer you wings, were not
angels. Thats not going to happen, but
Ive got these wheels and Ive got this car
and we can go drive off.
Obviously thats a much less glamorous form of salvation, but it has the distinct
advantage of being real. Its something you
and I can reach for together. In that song
and that album, you get a very interesting
kind of alternative theology, a non-churchcentered theology about the here-and-now.
In his next album, Darkness on the Edge
of Town, however, Springsteen basically
changes his entire position. The album
deals to a great extant with the impossibility
of the kind of redemption he championed
in Born to Run.
More recently, in the last few albums
he seems to be drawing on the theological motifs much more comfortably, in a
kind of traditional sense. not reviving them
but using them in their traditional biblical
Six Steps TO
Successful
Financial
Planning
of the Talmud.
That is apparently a very late tradition
and that in and of itself is interesting, Dr.
Yadin-Israel said. There are a number of
earlier tannaitic sources that indicate that
Rabbi Akiva may have been a disciple of the
sages even his youth.
Or as Bruce Springsteen might have put
it: Maybe he was born to learn.
NJ Yac had
Offic e
1345 Queen Anne
Road, Teaneck, NJ
Refreshments will be served
RS V P:
njyachad@ou.org
Presenter
Local
JFS of Clifton holds inaugural event
More than 400 people attended the Jewish Family Service of Clifton-Passaics inaugural breakfast at the Venetian in Garfield
on February 15. Rabbi Heshie Hirth, dean
of the Yeshiva Ktana of Passaic, was the
guest of honor. The Somaich Achim award
was presented to longtime JFS board member and Somaich Achim founder Alan
Gutmann.
Therapist/philanthropist Dr. Sandy
Rappaport was awarded the JFS Advocacy
award for her support of JFS clients and
staff. With her support, JFS announced
the dedication of the Dr. Sandy Rappaport
Trauma Center for Children and Families.
A video presentation featured community rabbis and heads of the local yeshivas
expressing their gratitude for JFS and the
positive impact it makes on the families
and yeshivot in the community. Programs
run by JFS in the Passaic-Clifton community include the community case management program, Somaich Achim; the vocational assistance program, Project Chizuk;
the domestic violence and sexual abuse
prevention program, Project Sarah, and
the Sequoia program for senior citizens,
as well as child, adult, and family counseling for individuals and groups.
Recognition awards
The keynote speaker is Jill Starishevsky, an assistant district attorney in
the Bronx who specializes in prosecuting child abuse and sex crimes. She is
the author of My Body Belongs To Me.
For information, go to www.projectsarah.org or call (973) 777-7638.
350
sinGers
26
Cities
Countries
JoyFul Voice
choral f oundation
Matthew lazar Founder & director
presents
GAlA ConCert
Sunday, March 22, 2015 4 PM
Avery Fisher hAll lincoln Center
Kinor David Award
www.ZamirChoralFoundation.org
NJ Jewish Standard full pg ad.indd 1
uniteD stAtes
haZamir Baltimore
haZamir Bergen Cty
haZamir Boston
haZamir Brooklyn
haZamir Central Jersey
haZamir Cleveland
haZamir Columbus
haZamir Dallas
haZamir Hartford
haZamir Houston
haZamir Long Island
haZamir Los Angeles
haZamir Manhattan
haZamir Minneapolis-St.Paul
haZamir North Jersey
haZamir Philadelphia
haZamir Pittsburgh
haZamir Providence
haZamir Rockland
haZamir South Jersey
haZamir Westchester
isrAel
haZamir Ashkelon
haZamir Beit Shean
haZamir Jerusalem
haZamir Karmiel-Misgav
haZamir Kfar Saba
1:24 AM
JEWISH STANDARD FEBRUARY2/22/15
27, 2015
17
Local
Gross and
Schechter
Families
Where wii
you be foo
Pesach?
The Gross and Schechter families
invite you to celebrate Pesach 2015 in a
home away from home atmosphere. Come be
one of the family and not one of the crowd.
For more
information
contact
18 Jewish Standard FEBRUARY 27, 2015
upcoMing aT
Kaplen
Purim
Carnival!
aquatics
Kaplen
music
for
all
The Maccabeats
jccotp.org
or call 201.569.7900.
JCC on the Palisades Taub caMpuS | 411 e clinTon ave, Tenafly, nJ 07670 | 201.569.7900 | jccotp.org
Jewish Standard FEBRUARY 27, 2015 19
Rockland
Rabbi Meir Soloveichik to speak
at Monsey Community Synagogue
The annual Israel and Pearl Stern Memorial LecRockland County, said Jules Stern, who has
ture will take place on Sunday, March 15, at 10:15
sponsored the lecture in memory of his parents
a.m., at the Community Synagogue of Monsey,
for the past 17 years. He is a dynamic speaker
89 W. Maple Ave., Monsey. A brunch will follow.
and a genuine authority. Its going to be a very
Rabbi Dr. Meir Soloveichik will speak on the
exciting morning, hearing his take on current
topic, Jews for George: What Americas first
events.
Jews teach us about Americans Today.
Rabbi Soloveichik has lectured throughout
Rabbi Soloveichik is the rabbi at Congregation
the United States, in Europe, and in Israel, to
Rabbi
Shearith Israel in Manhattan and the director of
both Jewish and non-Jewish audiences. He has
Dr. Meir
the Straus Center for Torah and Western Thought
discussed topics relating to Jewish theology,
Soloveichik
at Yeshiva University. In 2012 he gave the invobioethics, wartime ethics, and Jewish-Christian
cation at the opening session of the Republican
relations. His essays on these subjects have
National Convention.
appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Commentary, First
Im excited to be able to bring Rabbi Soloveichik to
Things, Azure, Tradition, and the Torah U-Madda Journal.
Purim cards
vaccination helps protect entire communities by preventing and reducing the spread of infectious diseases, such as
measles, she said. Vaccinations in the United States have
helped end many diseases, including polio, and have
greatly reduced the number of cases of mumps, measles,
whooping cough, and chicken pox.
A program called Vaccines for Children provides free or
low-cost vaccines for eligible children, 18 or younger. For
more information about the VFC program or childhood
vaccines, call Tatiana Dolinsky in the health department at
(845) 364-2662, or go to the American Academy of Pediatrics website, www.aap.org/immunization. For more information about the health departments immunization program, go to www.rocklandgov.com/departments/health/
programs-and-services/immunization-program/
L Shana
L Shana
Tovah!
Tovah!
Wishing you
a sweetyou
newa sweet
year. new year.
Wishing
As your
local Dignity
Memorial
providers,
we wish you the best this Rosh Hashanah.
We reaffirm our
commitment
of service
to the
Jewish community.
We reaffirm our commitment of service to the Jewish community.
February 27....................................5:27 pm
Candlelighting
Shul to celebrate
Hellman-Garlick
Memorial Chapel
Hellman
Memorial Chapels
March
..........................................5:35
pm
1300
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15 State
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845-356-8600
March
13 ........................................6:42
pm
914-762-5501
845-356-8600
Our affiliate
Jewish Memorials
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a complete full
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Rockland
Non-Orthodox
Rockland starts
to organize
Local liberal Jews are struggling
to create alternative to chasidic dominance
Uriel Heilman
5/31/15
Rockland
Rockland
from page 21
Jewish Center, which is Conservative, led a group of rabbis who joined with the local NAACP chapter and Christian and Muslim leaders to organize a counterweight to the
East Ramapo school board. The interfaith group, Rockland
Clergy for Social Justice, which now includes 11 Conservative and Reform rabbis from around the county, began
holding public events and lobbying the state government
in Albany to intervene with the school board. Retired
teachers from at least one synagogue are volunteering to
teach and help public school students in East Ramapo
the vast majority of those students are black or Latino.
(Between 1989 and 2009, the proportion of non-white students in East Ramapos public schools skyrocketed from
38 to 93 percent, a result of an influx of immigrants and
white flight from the district.)
We decided were going to stand with the public school
community, even if it seems like were standing up against
our fellow Jews, Rabbi Baldachin said.
The common consensus was we have to be able to hold
onto our Jewish values, which meant taking care of our
neighbors even if theyre not Jewish and upholding the
value of education, he continued. We believe its important even to air dirty laundry in the face of injustice.
For many years, the Jewish community in Rockland was
a typical New York suburban community, with a mix of religious denominations and only a tiny chasidic community.
But by the 1990s the Orthodox presence had grown so
large and politically powerful that open conflict had broken
out between the Orthodox and other residents, including
non-Orthodox Jews upset about their communities changing character and appearance. In 1991, residents of the
9,000-person village of Airmont seceded from the town of
Ramapo in a bid to keep out chasidim, redrawing zoning
laws to bar synagogue construction in residential neighborhoods. Meanwhile, the Orthodox carved out their own hamlets, altering zoning laws to accommodate their large families and build denser communities.
In 2005, a turning point arrived in East Ramapo when
Orthodox members became the majority on the local school
board even though they send their children to yeshivas. The charedi-controlled board made drastic cuts to
school budgets as the Great Recession set in. Parents
were outraged as school sports, drama, music, and
arts programs were cut. Two public school buildings
were sold to yeshivas, one at a cut-rate price that later
was annulled by the state education commissioner.
And the board replaced its longtime attorney with a
more expensive law firm, which had a history of protecting Orthodox private-school interests in another
New York district, on Long Island.
School board meetings devolved into rancorous
affairs. Critics charged the board with plundering
the public school system to benefit Orthodox privateschool families and keep school taxes low. (In New
York, private-school students are eligible for public
funding for such expenses as special-education services, transportation, and textbooks.)
Defenders of the charedim said the education cutbacks were a consequence of recession-plagued district budgets, noting cuts in neighboring school districts and charging critics with anti-Semitism.
Authorities recently began investigating the school
board. The state attorney general indicted a real estate
appraiser retained by the board after a public school
building he under-appraised, the Hillcrest Elementary
School, was sold by the board to a yeshiva for $3.1 million, some $2.6 million below market value. After the
state education commissioner annulled the initial sale,
the school was resold to the same yeshiva last year for
$4.9 million.
Last June, the state appointed a special fiscal monitor to review the school boards actions and make sure
it was properly managing and accounting for state and
federal funds received.
The school board president, Yehuda Weissmandl,
called the monitors appointment deeply offensive.
The serial critics of our Board openly contend
that the Boards actions are suspect merely because
a majority of our members are elected from the Districts Orthodox and chasidic communities, Weissmandl wrote in a letter to the state education commissioner. They assume based on our religion
alone that we have stolen from the very children
we were elected to serve. This is nothing but hateful
bigotry.
The Jews behind Rockland Clergy for Social Justice
cheered the monitors appointment but say they want
more: legislation to give the new monitor the power to
veto school board decisions in real time.
On Wednesday, the group held another news conference supporting such legislation and said they
would be traveling to Albany next week to lobby for
it. Last week, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he expects
the state legislature to pass an oversight bill sometime
between April and June.
The rabbis involved in the clergy group hope their
campaign will show local residents both Jews and
non-Jews that theres more than one kind of Jew in
Rockland County.
We want to put forward a more positive image of
what it means to be Jewish in Rockland, said Rabbi
Craig Scheff of the Orangetown Jewish Center, which
is Conservative. He is a member of the clergy group.
Were taking a proactive role in reshaping the role
between Jews and non-Jews in the community in
order to protect the image of the Jews in Rockland
County against what was being seen in the press all
the time.
That effort comes in tandem with the campaign
to bolster non-Orthodox Jewish life in Rockland. For
years, the countys non-Orthodox institutions in such
Rockland
places as Nyack, New City, Nanuet, Montebello, and
Orangetown have been on the decline. Rabbi Baldachins 175-member synagogue in Montebello had
lost about 100 families in the five years he Baldachin
arrived in late 2013, he says. The Reform movements
Temple Beth El in Spring Valley and Temple Beth
Torah in Nyack announced two weeks ago that they
would be merging.
Federation donors are disappearing, JCC membership growth is flat, and the countys only non-Orthodox day school, the Rockland Jewish Academy in West
Nyack, ends after fifth grade. Now in its third year, the
nondenominational Jewish community day school has
83 students, up from 64 in its first year.
Its predecessor, the Reuben Gittelman Hebrew Day
School in New City, which was Conservative and ran
through the eighth grade, closed in 2012 after its student population fell by more than half over the preceding decade, from 350 in 2002 to 150 in 2012. Gittlemans building was sold to an Orthodox school known
as Ashar.
There are some people who fear New City will one
day turn into Monsey, though Im not nervous about
that personally, said Wendy Cowen-Smith of New
City, who belongs to the Conservative synagogue in
Orangetown. Monsey is like another world. Its very
segregated. The fact that an Orthodox population took
over Gittelman was very painful.
I blame that on a lot of things: families changing,
values changing. I think its more a symbol of us weakening than them strengthening.
Last fall, the local federation hired two Jewish
researchers at New York University, Stuart Himmelfarb and David Elcott, to run a survey asking current and former non-Orthodox synagogue members
about their engagement in Jewish life or their lack
of engagement.
Conducted in December and January, the survey
found not just significant synagogue membership
declines none of the countys 11 non-Orthodox
synagogues are seeing robust growth but also that
many of those who have stayed as members are
thinking seriously about quitting their synagogues.
Mr. Himmelfarb and Dr. Elcott also found that synagogue leaders have a much rosier picture of what
is happening in their congregations than their own
congregants do.
People are voting with their feet, said Mr. Himmelfarb, a senior fellow at NYUs Wagner School of Public
Service and CEO of B3/The Jewish Boomer Platform, a
nonprofit dedicated to engaging baby boomers in Jewish life. What we hope is one of the outcomes of our
study is that synagogues look a little more creatively
and with a little more risk-taking at what they do.
Theres been some movement in that direction. The
Rockland County Board of Rabbis, which is made up
exclusively of non-Orthodox clergy, is using a $50,000
federation grant to pay a Washington-area messaging and branding firm, Beth Singer Design, to help
rebrand Jewish life in the county in an effort to engage
unaffiliated Jews. The firms first meeting on the project in Rockland is set for March.
A federation-funded group called Rockland Jewish
Initiative, founded in 2012, launched a program to
ease entry into synagogue life by offering synagogue
membership discounts of up to $500 for new members and running workshops for clergy and synagogue
lay leaders about how to get more people into their
synagogues.
We want to avoid a scenario where synagogues just
die out, said Barry Kanarek, director of the Rockland
see rockland page 24
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from page 23
But with few exceptions the Orthodox dont really frequent the countys
non-Orthodox Jewish institutions, preferring to use their own social service
institutions, welfare networks, eldercare programs, and charities. That
leaves the federation to focus primarily
on non-Orthodox Jews.
Its not about us and them, Ms.
Sloyer said. Our agencies are not separating ourselves from that community.
But we all have a focus, and I just think
we have different missions.
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ewish Standard 5 x 4 ad
Non-Orthodox rabbis were among the clergy at a February 18 news conference where the Rockland Clergy for Social Justice called for more state
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Big bucks but a pittance for lives
has become a strong advocate for families affected by terrorism, and he has
forged a path through the often suffocating thick weeds in our judicial system, thwacking them out of the way as
he tackled and subdued such issues as
jurisdiction and political convenience.
The jury award is important because
in the early 21st century, the plaintiffs
alleged that the terrorists were either
financially or materially supported
by the Palestinian Authority of the
PLO, Mr. Flatow said. Although the
PLO (which is, Mr. Flatow said, an
umbrella name for a bunch of terrorist groups operating under its wings,
including Fatah, which is Abu Mazen,
Jewish
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jstandard.com
26 JEWISH STANDARD FEBRUARY 27, 2015
Correspondents
Warren Boroson
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Taking the
measure of
the Pesach seder
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t
.
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g
h
3
t
Opinion
about the water displacement of one and a half eggs. If
you are measuring by thumbs, the wine cup should measure two thumbs by two thumbs by 2.7 thumbs.
A shortcut would be to use wine cups that hold just
about 3 ounces of liquid.
Of course, this is a liberal measurement. There are
at least three different measurements, depending on
how certain a person wants to be to get it right: 3.3 fluid
ounces, 4.42 fluid ounces, and 5.27 fluid ounces.
Now here is the catch. This year, the first seder falls
on a Friday night. On an ordinary Shabbat, a Kiddush
cup should be at least 4.42 fluid ounces (although some
say 5.27 fluid ounces), and so this year, the first cup of
wine should also be either 4.42 fluid ounces or 5.27 fluid
ounces. That, of course, means that there has to be two
sets of Kiddush cups at the seder (the 3-ounce cup will
do for the other three cups) or just go with the higher
amount for all four cups.
It is time for the stopwatch. Each cup needs to be consumed, preferably in two or three swallows, depending
on your tradition, within two minutes (although some
say up to nine minutes).
Let us skip over matzah for now and check out our
needs for the maror, the bitter herb.
Different communities have different customs for
what to use as maror. The two most prevalent these days
are freshly grated raw horseradish and romaine lettuce.
Neither of these is particularly bitter, and the freshly
grated raw horseradish doubles as a way to instantly
clear up your sinuses even if you just inhale from a foot
or two away.
To fulfill this mitzvah, the minimum size is 26 cubic
centimeters. If you are using romaine lettuce, this is
where the ruler and the calculator come in. There are
large leaves and small leaves and medium leaves. Make
space on the table in front of you, lay out the lettuce,
and start measuring.
Because we are dealing with cubes, we have to measure length, width, and height. (Try not to measure in
cubic meters, because there are 1 million cubic centimeters in a cubic meter, and it may take all night to figure
out the amount of maror you need.)
Raw horseradish is much easier to figure out. This is
where the shot glasses come in. Grate the horseradish
and stuff the result into individual shot glasses. Make
each glass as stuffed as possible. Now get the stopwatch
out again. Eat the maror within two minutes.
Finally, we get to the matzah. The most lenient measurement for the motzi and for the afikoman is one each
that measures 7 inches by 6 1/2 inches. (Most boxed matzot are that size.) That is two whole matzot just for these
two parts of the seder. But after we make the motzi, we
also make a blessing on the eating of matzah, which
requires its own whole matzah. Fortunately, the matzah
needed for the Hillel sandwich need only be 7 inches
by 4 inches.
Back to the stopwatch: Eat each piece of matzah
within two minutes.
No matter how you slice it, that is about four matzot
per person. If you have 10 people at the table, you will
need three boxes of matzah each night just to fulfill the
ritual requirements.
Now we get to the four questions: Is this really what
Pesach is about? Shouldnt we be concentrating on why
we eat matzah and maror, rather than how much we eat
and how quickly? Is this what Moses meant when he
said the law is very near to you, in your mouth, and in
your heart, that you may do it? Is there any wonder so
many Jews think Judaism is a joke?
We have not even gotten to the food yet, or the cleaning. Tune in next time.
Opinions expressed in the op-ed and letters columns are not necessarily those of the Jewish Standard. The Jewish Standard
reserves the right to edit letters. Be sure to include your town. Email jstandardletters@gmail.com. Handwritten letters will
not be printed.
JEWISH STANDARD FEBRUARY 27, 2015 27
Opinion
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
Opinion
controversial
topic in the news
is whether or
not Israeli Prime
Minister Netanyahu should
give his planned speech on
Iran to Congress.
It is important first to
acknowledge how far we
Dr. Ben
have come in limiting Iran
Chouake
economically. The Iranian
currency has plummeted, its
exports and GDP have suffered, and its currency reserves are dangerously close to default.
Congress deserves credit, but so does
the Obama administration. This president
embraced the Iran sanctions legislation
passed during his first term in office, and
worked with other countries to make it
effective. No other president has enforced
sanctions against Iran as competently as
President Barack Obama. By contrast, during the eight-year presidency of George W.
Bush, not a single Iran sanctions bill even
got to the floor for a vote, despite President Bushs well-known affection for Israel
Iran is an expansionist terrorist state,
with proxies in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and
Yemen. Even thought it is crippled economically, it is advancing its WMD program and has managed to support the
wars in Syria and Yemen. A faulty agreement with Iran would undo all our hard
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because he presided over my bar mitzvah, decades ago. His concern over the
economic conditions of Israelis is commendable, but his piece neglected economic details that are important in Israel
and here.
The poverty line in Israel is defined
as half the median disposable income.
Because this number rises as the average income rises, it is not the best measure of the economy. Israels per capita
income has risen steadily since 1990.
The average income of the bottom quintile is a better measure of how a nations
poor are living. The shortage of affordable housing in Israel has been a chronic
problem, because of restriction on home
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Letters
construction. The law of supply and demand explains how
homes become unaffordable when policies prevent home
construction.
The Shulchan Aruch teaches that priority for charity
goes to the neediest, Jews, Israelis, and ones neighbors.
Therefore, it is appropriate to look at the lack of affordable
housing in Bergen County. Establishing a household here
is so expensive that the OU is urging members to move to
Houston, where life is more affordable. Young adults of all
strips delay marriage and home ownership because homes
in Bergen County are out of their reach. Here, as in Israel,
restrictions on home construction artificially raise the cost
of homes. I implore Rabbi Borovitz and my fellow readers to
loosen these restrictions so that our children and our neighbors can achieve the American dream of home ownership.
Joseph Dunsay
River Edge
respectfully but not timidly. There are so many Jewish organizations, but none speaks out strongly to the general public
(i.e. the mainstream media) when it comes to anti-Israel policies. There seems to be a fear of being perceived as not being
objective.
Should that be our concern when Israels very existence is
being threatened?
And finally, why dont we promote the idea of a Jewish president? We have had a Catholic president and an
African-American president. There is the possibility of
a female and/or Hispanic president. Why not a Jewish
president?
Susan Ebenstein
Fair Lawn
I have just read the February 23, 2015 letter sent to Prime Minister Netanyahu, inviting him to speak at a closed-door meeting with Democratic senators sent by Senators Durbin and
Feinstein. The letter complains that the invitation to speak
at a joint session of Congress was damaging to the bipartisan
support that Israel enjoys.
I find this ironic, since I have not read of Republican
requests for Democrats not to attend but have read of Democrats calling for their members not to boycott but to find
something else to do instead of attending. There also are
reports that members of the Black Congressional Caucus were
specifically requested to absent themselves.
There are those attempting to make it a racial issue by
claiming that the prime minister of Israel is dissing the black
president of the United States by presenting his interpretation
of what should be done about the Iranian march to nuclear
weapons.
I would suggest that Netanyahu agree to a meeting with
Democrats after his speech to the Congress but request that it
be on the record, if not an open meeting. What would they be
afraid of coming out in the open?
It seems the only split between the U.S. and Israel is
between Obama and his administration but not between
members of Congress or the American people.
I hope that the Netanyahu speech will be broadcast live by
the television and radio media in the United States, so that we
can hear what he has to say without any editing.
Howard Cohn
New Milford
!R
2015
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Cover Story
A school
grows in I
Englewood
Joanne Palmer
Lower East Side, a school that combined religious and secular studies in
a way that was progressive for its time
and they also wanted the luxury of
choice. They didnt want a one-school
city, as Hartford and even Boston were
at the time. What really attracted me
was the multiplicity of neighborhoods
that were hospitable to Orthodox people, Dr. Sohn said. But here there
were so many that if one didnt work
out, there was another.
Okay, so that narrowed their choice
to about six or seven counties in two
states. Now what?
We selected Englewood, Dr. Sohn
said. They made that decision in order
to send their children to the Moriah
School there.
Cover Story
Englewood
was a new,
young, vibrant
community, with
a school that was
less than 10 years
old at the time.
Torah, who had decided, years earlier,
that if his community was to flourish, it
needed a school, and whose shul housed
Moriah in its first years. And Rabbi Izzy
Grama Rabbi Israel Grama, that is, who
had gone from NCSY, where he was instrumental in building the Orthodox Unions
youth group, in Virginia, to become Moriahs founding headmaster was a very
nice man.
My wife was trained as an elementary
school teacher, and she was very oriented
to quality education, Dr. Sohn said. We
both felt that Moriah was a dynamic and
invigorating environment. We loved it.
(Readers, please note the word love. It
comes up often in this story, not about the
romance between two people but between
people and an institution.)
The shidduch between the Sohns and the
school, which goes from pre-kindergarten
through eighth grade, worked so well that
all three of the familys children graduated
from it, and all seven of their grandchildren
have studied there. (So far,two have graduated, and five are still there.)
Perhaps equally striking, the Sohns
younger son, Evan, who was in the class of
1981, now is the schools president.
Dr. Sohn tells a story about Evan to
illustrate Moriahs strengths. When Evan
was 5 years old, in kindergarten, they had
a talent show. So this little kid Evan
went into the principals office after the
show, and he said, Rabbi, you did a terrible thing. Everybody worked really
hard on their presentations, and you only
rewarded the winners.
But everybody worked hard, and they
all deserved commendations. And the
principal called up my wife and he said, I
have just been put down by a kindergarten
child and he was 100 percent correct.
And then they mimeographed
because that was what they used in those
days they mimeographed letters of commendation to all of the kids who were in
the talent show.
Evan Sohn said that it is not unusual for
people who have graduated from Moriah
to return to Bergen County as adults and
send their own children to their alma
mater. We have more than 60 alumni
parents, he said. I am not alone in that.
We started a program at graduation last
year, where alumni parents gave their kids
their diplomas. I think that we had 12 last
year, including one Moriah couple. Out of
the 150 or so staff members, 13 are alumni,
he added.
For me, its incredibly exciting to walk
the halls of the school I grew up in, he
said. I am now watching my children in
the school. We had a Shabbaton two weeks
ago at Ahavath Torah. It was amazing. Two
hundred children davening, leyning, leading the services. Its absolutely beautiful,
this connecting of the generations.
At the end of the day, nothing is more
important for us than the strength of our
Jewish community, and nothing is better
for its strength than creating great, strong
ties for our children. Theres nothing more
important for the survival and strength
of the Jewish people than having great
schools.
Shira Ashendorf of Teaneck, who now
has three children in Moriah and is on the
board of the parent association, graduated
from the school in 1979. The school was
vitally important in her development both
as a person and as a connected Jew, she
said. Because her father, Rabbi Neil Winkler, was the leader of the Young Israel of
Moriahs principal, Dr. Elliott Prager, greets students on the first day of school.
Jewish Standard FEBRUARY 27, 2015 33
Cover Story
Fort Lee, a town with a vibrant but small
Orthodox shul and little other Jewish
presence, much of her Shabbat social life
revolved around her school friends. Her
group is close now, as it was then, she said.
It just so happens that all of my Facebook
friends are Moriah friends.
The school recently dedicated the
library. It was so exciting! Ms. Ashendorf
said. I called it Facebook live. I got to see
all the people I connect with on Facebook
in person! We were running around like
little bat mitzvah kids, squealing and hugging each other.
We know all about each other, we know
about each others kids and what theyre
doing because of Facebook, but we got to
hug in person.
We will always be this close community. Not just people who happened to go
to the same school, but a community of
people who love each other, love Torah,
love the rebeyim who taught us.
I remember most of all when we would
Evan Sohn,
center, then a
Moriah student,
grew up to be
president of
its board.
PHoTo CoUrTeSY
Dr. norman SoHn
Rabbi Shelly Applbaum marches with the banner in a Salute to Israel parade in
Manhattan.
Moriahs 1983 championship basketball team.
Rabbi Applbaum looks at an unfurled sefer Torah with a group of young children.
Cover Story
Last spring, early childhood students showed off what they made for Math Day.
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love that he had for the students.
He really lived and breathed those students.
Rella Feldman of Teaneck was Moriahs president
from 1996 to 2000. She has five children, who each graduated from Moriah, and now she is the grandmother of
14; eight of them live in Israel, but the other six are at
Moriah.
My children range in age from 43 to 28, and all have
nothing but extremely fond memories of their time at
Moriah, and they all have friends from those days, she
said. Part of the job of an elementary school is to create
positive feelings, to form the groundwork and foundation for all education, especially Jewishly. We want to
give the kids a positive, warm, and fuzzy feeling. My kids
have that.
In this, as in so many other ways, Rabbi Applbaum
was key to that process. He had wanted to be an architect, but his parents convinced him that it would not be
a good job for an Orthodox Jew, because of Shabbes,
she said. It would be too hard for him to keep those 25
hours sacred because hed be pressured to work. So
he went to rabbinical school. But he was a natural
architect nonetheless, and his instinct for the practical
proved as useful to Moriah as his instinct for emotional
connection and educational innovation.
Ms. Feldman, like many longtime Moriah parents and
grandparents, has watched the school grow.
The schools neighborhood is very imposing.
The houses, set way back from the road, surrounded
by stately old trees, are huge, gorgeous, classic, wellmaintained, and old. It is a neighborhood of taste,
money, proportion, and gravitas.
Its not necessarily the neighborhood thats likely to
welcome a school children are noisy, and their buses
rumble and hoot and take up lots of space. But improbably enough, there Moriah sits, a school of about 1,000
children, behind an old house that once was home to
Alfred and Ethel Frisch, who were among the schools
founders.
The school started with five acres; as it expanded
another five were added, behind another house. Thats
to comply with the rules that say that a school is fine, as
long as it is not visible from the street. Thats why the
3493212-01
two houses remain they are the schools frontage on
napoli
3493212-01
the street.
5/17/13
napoli
The school itself unfurls from the center where it
subite
5/17/13
began,
canali/singer
subite with halls leading out in all directions. New wings
offer new opportunities. Rooms that once would have
canali/singer
carrol/BB
been painted a dull cream or tan or an insipid bile green
carrol/BB
now
are inbybright,
vivid colors. Tables and chairs come
This
ad is copyrighted
North
Jersey Media Group and may not
be with
reproduced
in any form, orso the room can be reconfigured easily,
wheels
This
ad
is
copyrighted
by
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replicated in a similar version,
Jersey Media
Group
and
may not
without
approval
from
North
some
tables
in the back are high, with high chairs,
be and
reproduced
in any form,
or
Jersey
Media
Group.
replicated in a similar version,
to allow
students
changes of angle and position. Light
without
approval from
North
Jersey Media Group.
floods in from all over.
Students regroup in various ways, aided by the cutting-edge technoloy and a grant from the Avi Chai
Foundation, the Kohelet Foundation, and the Affordable
Jewish Education Project, which help them afford all the
wonderful new stuff.
So what makes Moriah special? Evan Sohn, the president, answers the question. We have an incredibly educational program, with incredible support services, special services, and enrichment programs.
We have an incredible parent body. We have 390
families, and well over 250 parents volunteered for
something last year. And thats despite the fact that a
significant percent of our community are families with
two working parents.
We now have an afterschool program called Moriah
Plus, an afterschool program organized and run by parents. My fourth-grader is taking fencing at Moriah Plus.
Its amazing!
Opinion
ove, as the song goes, is in the air. If the latest media reports are accurate, the United
States and the Iranian regime are closing in
rapidly on a deal over the mullahs nuclear
ambitions.
Admittedly, the source of this nugget of hope was
Joseph Cirincione a former Capitol Hill operative
who now serves as the president of the Ploughshares
Fund, a liberal foreign policy think tank, having gotten
there via the Center for American Progress, another
think tank that serves as a reliable echo chamber for
the Obama administrations edicts, both foreign and
domestic. Moreover, Cirincione was speaking to Laura
Rozen of the Mideast-focused website Al-Monitor;
Rozens writings on the Iran negotiations, remember,
have positively fizzed with enthusiasm for Obamas
outreach to the Tehran regime. (A decent reporter
would have pointed out that the concessions Obama is
making fly in the face of successive U.N. Security Council resolutions demanding a halt to Irans uranium
enrichment activities, and might have even dropped
in a line or two about the regimes abysmal human
The Iran nuclear programs heavy-water reactor at
rights record. But thats for another time.)
Arak.
NANKING2012 VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
The point is that theres some reason to take all this
glowing optimism with a pinch of salt, given where its
operations from Lebanon to Syria because it is owned
coming from. Still, its worth paying attention to what
by the Iranians. It means surrendering the suspects in
Cirincione had to say.
the 1994 bombing of the AMIA Jewish center in BueIf we get a deal that is close to the terms the adminnos Aires, in which 85 people were murdered, for trial.
istration has set out, and I believe we will, it is going
And if there is an Iranian connection to the recent
to be a very good deal, Cirincione told Rozen. One
death, in suspicious circumstances, of Argentine Spethat will surprise and please even many of the critics.
cial Prosecutor Alberto Nisman, who spent more than
Thats going to be one hell of a deal! Im a critic, and
a decade investigating the AMIA atrocity, then that
Im looking forward to being surprised and pleased.
also needs to be judged in a court of law.
Of course, the thing about a surprise is that you
Number four: Iran will recognize the right of Israel,
dont want to ruin it by telling the gift recipient what it
the Jewish state, to exist in peace and
is that theyre about to unwrap. So heres
security. It will pay reparations to the
my guess at the outcome that will make
families of those Israelis whove lost loved
us believe that Christmas (or Chanukah)
ones as a result of Iranian-backed terror.
has come early.
It will apologize for having turned HoloNumber one: Iran will sign an internacaust denial into a state doctrine. And it
tional agreement confirming its intent
will consign that doctrine to the trash can
not to develop nuclear weapons. Iran
of history, where it belongs.
will submit to a permanent International
Number five: Iran will announce
Atomic Energy Agency monitoring regiwithin a year free, internationally
men. Not a single centrifuge will spin
Ben Cohen
observed, multiparty elections. As part
without IAEA inspectors knowing about
of its preparation for that election, it will
it. The IAEA can enter Iranian nuclear
release all political prisoners, many of
facilities at will, without having to make
whom are held in the hell on earth that is Tehrans
prior arrangements, and will share intelligence and
Evin prison. It will permit freedom of speech in the
information immediately with Irans neighbors and
media, it will lift any bans in place on social media
with the U.N. Security Council. Any Iranian nuclear
platforms like Twitter and YouTube, and it will close
official engaged in suspect activity will be fired on the
down its repugnant English-language mouthpiece,
spot. In essence, Irans civilian nuclear program if it
Press TV. Finally, it will permit freedom of worship,
must have one will be under international trusteecurbing its persecution of Christians and Jews and endship, and no enrichment activities that could result in
ing its apartheid policies toward the Bahai minority.
weaponization will be permitted.
Nothing in the above list is inconsistent with the
Number two: From the beginning, Irans nuclear
principles of the U.N. Charter, which is based on the
program has involved concealed facilities, like the
twin importance of individual freedom and responsiFordow plant, which weve discovered despite the
ble, prudent, diplomatic state behavior. Hence, if the
regime, not because of it. Henceforth, there will be
deal we are supposedly about to get conforms to those
no more concealed facilities. Iran will be compelled to
principles, then hallelujah.
reveal any clandestine activity. If it refuses, then we hit
Somehow, though, Ive got a feeling that once we
the regime with biting sanctions immediately.
excitedly unwrap that gift box, well find that its
Number three: Iran will announce an end to its supJNS.ORG
empty.
port for rogue regimes and terrorist organizations.
That means no more backing for the vicious regime
Ben Cohen writes about Jewish affairs and Middle Eastern
of Bashar al-Assad in Syria. It means no more money,
politics for JNS.org, Commentary, the New York Post,
weapons, or political support for Hamas. It means disHaaretz, Jewish Ideas Daily, and many other publications.
banding Hezbollah, which has been able to expand its
Jewish World
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C O R P O R AT E A C C O U N T S
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has surrounded himself with foreign policy advisers who have worked for
his father and brother as he eyes a run for the presidency.
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and part of a cohort within that administration considered closest to Israel, and Paul Wolfowitz, like Hannah
a prominent neoconservative thinker, and as deputy
defense secretary an architect of the Iraq War.
Two of his brothers top Jewish Cabinet officials,
Michael Chertoff, the former Homeland Security secretary, and Michael Mukasey, the ex-attorney general, also
are advising Jeb Bush.
Bushs frustration with the comparisons was evident
last week at his signature foreign policy rollout at the
Chicago Council on Foreign Affairs.
For the record, I love my brother, I love my dad, I love
my mother as well, hope thats OK, and I admire their service to the nation, he said. But I am my own man.
Bush also devoted a significant chunk of his speech to
praising Israel and criticizing President Barack Obama
for his foreign policy, particularly having to do with the
Iran nuclear talks now under way.
Nuclear weapons in Iran was once a unifying issue
within American foreign policy, said Bush, who also
noted that he had visited Israel five times. Leaders of
both parties agreed to it. When he launched his negotiations, President Obama said that that was the goal to
stop Irans nuclear program. Now we are told that the
goal has changed. The point of these negotiations is not
to solve the problem, it is to manage it.
Republicans and Israels government have criticized
the emerging deal for allowing Iran to maintain limited
uranium enrichment, which they say leaves Iran as a
threshold nuclear weapons state. Obama administration officials say there are other guarantees that will
keep Iran from acquiring a weapon.
As much as Bush focused his speech on Obama as the
template he wanted for favorable comparison, questions about whether he prefers his fathers policies or
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Purim
Afterword
Sholem Aleichem (1859-1916), the great
Yiddish humorist, always wrote stories
about to the holidays. The comedy and
pathos of Purim in a shtetl are reflected
in this touching little story. His narrative
accurately reflects the tradition of sending
platters or sweets to friends and relatives
that is still practiced today. An entire sociopolitical dynamic surrounded the sending
of shalakhmones. A woman always had to
somehow balance the return platter so it
should reflect the initial offering. Too little would be insulting; too much would
be self-aggrandizing. And you must never
ever send back the same plate to the person who sent it.
The shalakhmones were delivered by
children who earned a few kopecks in
tips for their service. In addition to cakes
and pastries, coins also were sent to those
people who needed extra income, like
the narrators teacher. The daughter of
the teacher, or rebbi, is actually collecting
shalakhmones, not giving them. She goes
from house to house and gathers a few
coins to supplement the meager income
of the rebbi, who taught little boys in his
house.
The chubby boy is bringing sweets
from the shtetls rabbi and thats why,
in addition to coins, there are also
paper ruble notes on the plate,
for the peoples generosity was
enhanced for the shtetls leading
religious figure. He too earned a
meager salary.
And Velvel, the shamesh, or
sexton, who took take care of the
synagogue, and went from door
to door early weekday mornings
to wake the men up for services,
also needs to supplement his small
salary. Note that he apologizes
for delivering the shalakhmones
himself. Usually, this was done
by children; it was not dignified
for an adult to go from house to
house delivering the Purim sweet
platters. But, as we learn, Velvel
had lost his only child, a daughter,
and so he himself has to go from
household to household to offer
his Purim sweets and to collect
something for himself.
Curt Leviant is the author or
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Dvar Torah
Celebrating Purim with surgical precision
Choir
can get 6-year-olds to enter and end in unison is the ninth miracle of Chanukah. Some
things they shouldnt be able to do, but
they do it because we set a high standard.
And the young singers respond, she
said. They grow in confidence, being up
in front of people. And there are some
with true talent.
She said she hears from the childrens
teachers how even the youngest choir
members raise their hands in school and
say they performed a particular song.
Then they sing it.
They take it with them, she said,
recalling that her own now 24-year-old
son and 21-year-old daughter remember
even the trickiest songs they performed
with Tzipporei Shalom. It becomes part
of them. Theyre so young, spongy, and
impressionable. They never forget it.
Singing is a huge part of the congregation, she said, citing Tavim, Kolenu
a musical minyan Tzipporei Shalom,
a Russian choir, and Ronit who constantly teaches new melodies to the congregation. Were always looking for ways
to improve the music so it can help people
connect and grow and be inspired.
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Down
1. On a ____ (like a possible shuk
purchase)
2. It could be exchanged for about
4.6 shekels in early 2015
3. Former Labor leader Peretz
4. Miluim, IDF-wise
5. Many Israel dwellers from Africa,
recently
6. Grape used for sweet kiddush wine
7. ____ Kandelikas (Chanukah song)
8. What one might do with some karbanot
9. Made Judenrein
10. Weaken, like Jacobs leg (literally!)
11. King Davids nephew
12. Israel Ballet dancers move
13. What one may bring back from Eilat
21. Kashrut, for one
22. Gads brother
25. 1/20 of a Biblical shekel
26. Like some Knesset members, during
a heated debate
27. Greasy like latkes
28. Prepare tzitzit
29. Tel Aviv cinema
30. Big kvetch
31. Haggadah verb
32. Bei Mir ____ Du Shein (Sammy
Cahn/Saul Chaplin hit)
36. Place to find three wise men
or more
37. ____ Nof (Jerusalem neighborhood)
38. British leader who was friends with
Chief Rabbi Jacobowitz
40. Histadrut member, at times
41. Org. which helps Israeli Persians?
43. Israels weekly Spanish paper
44. Rock ____ (Chanukah song)
45. Possible kumsitz instrument
48. A little Ladino?
49. Tabernacle state?
50. What a teen may do before the
bagrut
51. Rosh Hashanah honey-making locale
52. Canadian Jewish actress Strong who
voiced Dil Pickles on Rugrats
53. Adverb describing Gods reign
54. What some men do not do during
sefirah
55. Feature of the Golden Age of Spain
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JONATHAN E. LAZARUS
Alan Wolfe
Calendar
Bromberg on her guitar,
11 a.m. Youngsters, with
their families, join the
service in the sanctuary
for concluding hymns,
followed by Kiddush
lunch. 475 Grove St.
(201) 444-9320 or www.
synagogue.org.
Andrew Keltz
Alan Schmuckler
Cabaret in
Englewood: Join
Congregation Kol
HaNeshamah for
entertainment from singer/actor
Andrew Keltz and songwriter/
pianist/actor Alan Schmuckler.
They will perform favorite
American standards, from jazz
to inspirational folk music, on
Saturday, March 7, at 7:30 p.m.
Wine tasting and hors doeuvres
will precede the music. The
performance is at St Pauls, 113
Engle St. For information, call
(201) 816-1611 or email RSVP@
KHNJ.org.
MAR.
Friday
FEBRUARY 27
Shabbat in New City: PJ
Library hosts Bim Bam
Shabbat at 16 Handles
in New City, N.Y., 4 p.m.
The pre-Shabbat music
program for toddlers
and preschoolers
includes Shabbat-related
songs led by Camp
Ramah staff members,
stories, grape juice, and
challah. Yogurt will be
discounted. 170 S. Main
St. Lara, (845) 362-4200,
ext. 180, or lepstein@
jewishrockland.org.
Shabbat in Ridgewood:
Temple Israel and Jewish
Community Center
offers family services
for 4 to 13-year-olds,
led by Cantor Caitlin
Bromberg on her guitar,
7 p.m. Oneg Shabbat
follows. 475 Grove St.
(201) 444-9320 or www.
synagogue.org.
Saturday
FEBRUARY 28
Shabbat in Closter:
Temple Beth El hosts an
informal tot Shabbat,
focusing on Purim, led by
Rabbi David S. Widzer
and Cantor Rica Timman,
5:15 p.m., and a familyfriendly service at 6:45.
221 Schraalenburgh
Road. (201) 768-5112.
Shabbat in Emerson:
Congregation Bnai
Israel holds its monthly
family program with its
Esther Extravaganza,
in celebration of Purim,
6:30 p.m., followed by
a family-friendly service
at 7:30. 53 Palisade Ave.
(201) 265-2272 or www.
bisrael.com.
Shabbat in Ridgewood:
Temple Israel and Jewish
Community Center
offers tot Shabbat,
led by Cantor Caitlin
Congregation Gesher
Shalom/JCC of Fort Lee
offers Club Shabbat
for second- to sixthgraders and Torah Tots
for 3- to 6-year-olds
with their parents, 11 a.m.
1449 Anderson Ave.
(201) 947-1735.
Springsteen and
scripture: Dr. Azzan
Yadin-Israel of Rutgers
discusses Salvation,
Redemption, and Raising
Cain the Lyrics of
Bruce Springsteen
and the Bible at
Congregation Beth
Sholom in Teaneck,
7:30 p.m. Hors doeuvres
and beverages.
354 Maitland Ave.
(201) 833-2620 or
office@cbsteaneck.org.
Cabaret in Wyckoff:
Temple Beth Rishon
offers cabaret-style
music including classical,
Broadway stage and
opera, contemporary
compositions, jazz,
classic rock, and a
performance by the
Syncopated Seniors Tap
Dance Troupe, 7:30 p.m.
Cabaret singers include
the shuls students,
with accompaniment
by pianist Judy
Kessler. Instrumental
performances are by
violinists Amelia Feiner
and Sylvia Rubin, pianist
Ella Feiner, and guitarist
Andrew Mester. Also,
a memorial tribute by
the congregations
rock band, Jimmy and
the Templetones, to a
band member, Irwin
Tessler, who died last
year. Members include
vocalist Gale Bindelglass,
drummer Jimmy Cohen,
lead guitarist Adam
Friedlander, keyboardist/
flutist Jane Koch,
guitarist/harpist Ilan
Mamber, bass guitarist
Jack Seidenberg, and
saxophonist Jeff Wilson.
Cheeses, hors doeuvres,
Trivia in Paramus:
Congregation Beth
Tefillah offers Twisted
Trivia, 8 p.m. Dinner,
raffles, spinning wheel,
and trivia. Tickets
available online at
cbtparamus.org/
store. 452 Forest Ave.
(201) 265-4100.
Music in Ridgewood:
Temple Israel & JCC
offers Winter Music
Saturday, a chamber
music concert
with violinist Barak
Shossberger, cellist Talya
Buckbinder, and pianist
Tomer Gewirtzman,
8 p.m. Dessert served.
475 Grove St. (201)
201-444-9320 or www.
synagogue.org.
Sunday
MARCH 1
Purim in Teaneck:
Temple Emeth has a
carnival with prizes,
a skit, games, and
food, 10 a.m.-noon.
1666 Windsor Road.
(201) 833-8466.
Purim in Leonia:
Congregation Adas
Emuno has a service with
Megillah reading and
spiel, The Shnook of
Esther, written by shul
president Lance Strate,
10 a.m. 254 Broad Ave.
(201) 592-1712 or www.
adasemuno.org.
Purim in Paramus:
The JCC of Paramus/
Congregation Beth
Tikvah holds a
carnival with games,
bounce house, kiddie
corner for younger
children, goldfish, and
refreshments, including
nut-free. E. 304 Midland
Ave. (201) 262-7691 or
www.jccparamus.org.
Purim in Wayne:
Shomrei Torah
has a carnival and
costume parade,
11:30 a.m. 30 Hinchman
Tuesday
MARCH 3
Patricia Lemer
Autism talk in
Washington Township:
Preschool program in
Woodcliff Lake: Temple
Emanuel of the Pascack
Valley holds Club Katan
for children who will
begin kindergarten in
September, 10:15 a.m.
87 Overlook Drive.
(201) 391-0801, ext. 12.
Countys community
shlicha, discusses the
upcoming elections
in Israel at Montebello
Jewish Center, 7 p.m.
34 Montebello Road,
Montebello, N.Y.
(845) 362-4200, ext. 115.
Youth theater in
Wayne: The Ys Rosen
Performing Arts Center
at the Wayne YMCA
offers Peter Pan Jr.,
performed by more than
50 area children, 2 p.m.
Produced in partnership
with Pushcart Players.
The Metro YMCAs of the
Oranges is a partner of
the YM-YWHA of North
Jersey. 1 Pike Drive.
(973) 595-0100 or www.
wayneymca.org.
Monday
MARCH 2
Purim in Wayne: Temple
Beth Tikvah has a
carnival, 4-6 p.m., with
a gift basket raffle and
juggling performance.
950 Preakness Ave.
(973) 595-6565.
Wednesday
MARCH 4
Caregiver support in
Rockleigh: A support
group for those caring
for the physically frail or
people with Alzheimers
disease meets at the
Gallen Adult Day
Health Care Center at
the Jewish Home at
Rockleigh, 10-11:30 a.m.
Topics include long-term
care options, financial
planning, legal concerns,
and the personal toll
of caregiving. Shelley
Steiner, (201) 784-1414,
ext. 5340.
Purim in Woodcliff
Lake: Temple Emanuel
of the Pascack Valley
holds western-themed
celebrations. At 4:15 p.m.,
Calendar
there will be a young
family Megillah reading
and carnival with games,
rides, and food. At 7,
there will be a traditional
Megillah reading with a
Wild West theme. Dress in
western gear. 87 Overlook
Drive. (201) 391-0801 or
www.tepv.org.
Purim in Ridgewood:
Temple Israel & JCC
begins its celebration
with games, hot dogs
and hamantaschen, and a
costume parade, 6 p.m.;
Megillah reading at 7. 475
Grove St. (201) 444-9320.
Purim in Leonia:
Congregation Adas
Emuno has its party and
game night, with pizza
and dessert and an encore
performance of the spiel,
The Shnook of Esther,
written by shul president
Lance Strate, 6:30 p.m.
Wear costumes and bring
a favorite game. 254
Broad Ave. (201) 592-1712
or www.adasemuno.org.
Purim in Tenafly:
Lubavitch on the Palisades
has its annual Grand
Purim Bash with Megillah
reading at 6:30 p.m. and
again at 9:30. 11 Harold
St. (201) 871-1152 or www.
chabadlubavitch.org.
Thursday
MARCH 5
Purim in Tenafly:
Lubavitch on the
Palisades hosts Purim
in France, with gourmet
French cuisine, fine
French wines for adults,
and masquerade in French
attire, 5 p.m. 11 Harold St.
(201) 871-1152 or www.
chabadlubavitch.org.
Purim in Pompton
Plains: The Chabad
Friday
Purim in Paramus:
The JCC of of Paramus/
Congregation Beth Tikvah
has various Megillah
readings, 7 p.m., followed
by a grand Purim festival,
with food, music, dancing.
304 East Midland Ave.
(201) 262-7691.
Childrens program
in West Nyack: The
Rockland Jewish
Academy offers a
Sifriyat Pijama BAmerica
Hebrew story time with
activities and a snack,
1:30 p.m. Sifriyat Pijama
continues on April 12. 450
West Nyack Road. Judy
Klein, (845) 627-0010,
ext. 104, www.
rocklandjewishacademy.
org, or kleinj@
rocklandjewishacademy.
org.
Shabbat in Mahwah: As
part of the One Book
One Community project,
sponsored by the Jewish
Federation of Northern
New Jersey, Beth Haverim
Shir Shalom offers a
Middle Eastern Shabbat
celebration with dinner,
in conjunction with this
years book selection,
The Golem and the
Jinni by Helene Wecker,
7 p.m. Also singing with
the cantor and folktales
about jinnis and golems.
280 Ramapo Valley Road.
(201) 512-1983 or www.
bethhaverimshirshalom.
org.
Shabbat in Teaneck:
Temple Emeth offers
services for families with
young children, 7:30 p.m.
1666 Windsor Road.
(201) 833-1322 or www.
emeth.org.
Saturday
MARCH 7
Israel film festival: The
Jewish Federation of
Northern New Jersey
begins its Israel Film
Festival with Hill Start
at the Tenafly Cinema 4,
9 p.m. Holy Name Medical
Center in Teaneck and the
Israeli American Council
are among the sponsors.
(201) 820-3907 or www.
jfnnj.org/filmfestival.
Sunday
Purim in Wayne:
Shomrei Torah has
an original spiel,
Esthers Very Special
Purim Party, 1 p.m.
30 Hinchman Ave.
(973) 696-2500 or
shomreitorahwcc.org.
In New
York
MARCH 8
Wednesday
MARCH 4
Toddler program in
Tenafly: As part of the
shuls Holiday Happenings
program, Temple Sinai
of Bergen County offers
music, stories, crafts,
and snacks, with a Purim
theme, for pre-k children
and their parents, 9:30 a.m.
1 Engle St. (201) 568-3035.
Sunday
MARCH 8
Singles
Sunday
MARCH 1
Singles mixer
in Bergenfield:
Congregation Beth
Abraham offers a
singles mixer, Back
to the 80s, 7:30 p.m.
Food, trivia, music,
light dinner. Prizes for
best 80s costume.
396 New Bridge Road.
Facilitators present.
(201) 522-4776.
Friday
MARCH 6
Singles Shabbaton
in Teaneck: Sharon
Ganz & Friends host a
Shabbaton weekend
for Orthodox Jewish
singles, 25-39, at
Congregation Bnai
Yeshurun. There will be
three Shabbat meals,
Oneg Shabbat, singles
mixers, discussions, and
a Saturday night party.
Shadchanim invited.
Sharon, (718) 575-3962
or (646) 529-8748.
Sunday
MARCH 8
Senior singles meet in
West Nyack: Singles
Cookbook talk
and wine tasting:
Authors Jeff and Jodie
Morgan will join Russ
& Daughters Mark
Russ Federman for
a discussion about
the Morgans new
Hadassah holding
concert fundraiser
The Paramus-Bat Sheva chapter of Hadassah and Temple Beth El of Hackensack are
holding a joint fundraising trip on Sunday,
March 8, at 7 p.m. to The Lincoln Legacy
performed by the award-winning Ridgewood Concert Band. The Ramapo College
Chorale, directed by Dr. Lisa Lutter, also will
particpate. The concert is at Westside Presbyterian Church, Varian Fry Way and North
Monroe Street in Ridgewood. Tickets are $20.
For information, call (201) 342-5065.
Calendar
Concert honors memory
of Stephanie Prezant
The Kaplen JCC on the Palisades presents More Songs
that She Loved, the third
annual tribute concert in
memory of Stephanie Prezant.
It will be on Saturday, March
14. Doors will open at 8:15 p.m.
for the 8:45 concert.
Three years ago, Stephanie Prezant died in a rockclimbing accident. Her parents, Elana and Jeffrey Prezant
have sought opportunities to
help others struggling with
this kind of grief. In addition
to this annual concert, More
Songs that She Loved, they
established Holding Hands, a monthly
support group in collaboration with Jewish Family Service of Bergen and North
Hudson, which offers friendship and
understanding to families who are grieving the death of a child of any age from
any cause.
The March 14 concert, featuring community musicians and vocalists, will
celebrate the memory of Stephanie Prezant and her enthusiasm for life. Stephanie attended the JCC nursery, studied
dance in its School of Performing Arts,
and served as a teen role model for her
peers. She participated in JCC Holocaust
Memorial commemorations and competed on the Team Palisades dance team
at the Maccabi Games in 2003, when the
JCC was a host site. She continued to
dance at games in Boston, Richmond,
mounting efforts to delegitimize the Jewish state, and other global challenges.
The series will launch with an evening with David Harris, AJCs executive
director, on Tuesday, March 3, at 7 p.m.
On Wednesday, March 11, at 7 p.m., Simone Rodan-Benzaquen, director of AJC
Paris, will speak. Deidre Berger, director
of AJC Berlin, will conclude the series on
Wednesday, March 18, at 7 p.m.
Tickets are free and donations are
welcome. Reserve tickets in advance by
going to www.mjhnyc.org. All programs
take place at the Museum.
Gallery
1
Obituaries
Edgar Booth
Arthur Grabow
Industrial Supply.
He is survived by his wife
of 50 years, Marjorie, sons,
Gary (Lynn Imanaka) of
California, and Corey (Amy)
of Illinois; brothers, Stanley
(Ellen), and Philip ( Joyce),
and four grandchildren.
Donations can be made
to the American Parkinson Disease Association.
Arrangements were by
Robert Schoems Menorah
Chapel, Paramus.
Betty Jacobs
Sylvia Morgan
201.843.9090
1.800.426.5869
Lillian Raff
Michael Raske
prepared with
information provided
by funeral homes.
Correcting errors is
the responsibility of
the funeral home.
Department of Pathology
and Clinical Laboratories,
New York Infirmary Beekman Downtown Hospital,
New York City.
He is survived by a
brother, composer Robert
Stern of Massachusetts; a
nephew, Aaron Stern; two
great nieces; and the family
who cared for him in his
final years, Ia Skhulukhia
(Ilia Kamladze), and their
children.
Arrangements were by
Robert Schoems Menorah
Chapel, Paramus.
Sondra Schaare
Sondra F. Schaare, ne
Fermaglich, 79, of Pompton
Plains died on February. 24.
Born in New York City,
she was a fashion designer.
Predeceased by her husband, Allan, she is survived
by a son, Jeffrey Ruff of
New City, N.Y.; a brother,
Dr. Daniel Fermaglich of
Massachusetts, and two
grandchildren.
Arrangements were by
Eden Memorial Chapels,
Fort Lee.
201-791-0015
800-525-3834
Pre-Planning Specialists
Graveside and Chapel Services
series. This
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The Moriah School, a coed Jewish day school in Englewood, NJ, seeks
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54 JEWISH STANDARD FEBRUARY 27, 2015
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Shomer Shabbos
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Party Planner
Exile
FROM PAGE 48
bank.
The decision to reduce the interest rate for March 2015 by 0.15 percentage points to 0.10 percent is
consistent with the Bank of Israels
monetary policy, which is intended
to return the inflation rate to within
the price stability target of 1 to 3
percent a year over the next 12
months, and to support growth
only heightens his exegesis. As a professor of political science and director of the
Boisi Center for Religion and Public Life at
Boston College (very catholic, lower case
c, and very nurturing) Wolfe decided after
many books to turn the spotlight on his
own traditions and religion, confronting
the ideological, ritualistic, and historical
fault lines undergirding Judaism.
His analysis touches on different brands
of Zionism and their level of acceptance
among the main streams of Judaism; patterns of flight and emigration; the effects
of the Jewish Enlightenment; tensions
and bias from those living in Israel toward
those in the galut, expressed as shilat
hagolah, or negation of the diaspora;
the twin phenomena of the Holocaust and
the emergence of the state of Israel, and
the recalibrated equilibrium of all these
incredible forces on a post-generation
knowing only an ascendant Israel and a
dominant United States.
Wolfe speaks to me strongly and directly
as a first-generation American, an unaffiliated Reform Jew who gives reflexively to
the federation among other philanthropic
organizations, and who feels explicitly
exilic in his cultural tastes and politics.
My affiliation with JCC Metrowest, which I
trace back to its lineage as the High Street Y
in Newark, is essentially for its superb gym
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www.jstandard.com
56 Jewish Standard FEBRUARY 27, 2015
Add Texture
www.classicmortgagellc.com
Go Custom
Hand-painted ornamental ceilings and overhead
murals also make a big statement.
The wow factor is best-achieved with handpainted artistry, says Michael Boudreault, decorative
finish specialist and mural painter.
Get the look yourself with self-adhesive vinyl stencils from companies such as the Modello Design Group
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Pick a color that is one or two shades lighter than
See ceiling page 58
Real Estate
Pharaoh fills our seder tables, though afterward we
ease the tension by singing about frogs in his bed.
In synagogue, the words of the sorcerer Bilam,
who the rabbis called harasha, the wicked, even
begins our prayers with the words Mah tovu How
goodly.
At Chanukah, if we did not have the severe decrees
of King Antiochus, we would not only be minus a
dilemma in December but a holiday, too.
The biblical antihero calls to us as well. In discussions about the Torah portion Korach, which is named
for the man who rebels against the authority of Moses,
I sometimes find it easy to take his side. Wasnt he just
a misunderstood nonconformist?
And though I first heard the story of the golem as a
child, I am still confused: Was the Rabbi Judah Loew
of Pragues monster of mud a hero or a villain? Or was
he a little of both?
The truth is that in villains we see a little of ourselves. An idea in Jewish thought is that we are all born
with both an evil inclination, yetzer hara, and a good
one, yetzer hatov. Does this internal duality connect
us to Haman? Perhaps for the part of our psyches that
conjures up ways to wipe out opposition before we
consider how wrong it is.
In terms of reconciling the villain inside, thankfully
most of dont have Darth Vader as a dad. But we do
imagine, and even know, what we look like in black.
And on Purim, if you put a light saber in our hands,
even if it is a toy, we know that somehow the force
wouldnt be any fun without the bad. Jta Wire serViCe
Edmon J. Rodman is a JTA columnist who writes on
Jewish life from Los Angeles. Email him at edmojace@
gmail.com.
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1-3 PM
2014
READERS
CHOICE
FIRST PLACE
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
(201) 837-8800
Cell: 201-615-5353
2015 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.
Crown molding paired with a ceiling medallion adds overhead drama and
shows off designer light fixtures.
CreatOrs.COm phOtO COurtesy Of WilsOn Kelsey desiGn
ceiling
FrOM page 56
Think Ahead
Theres one caveat to ceiling upgrades:
If you plan on selling soon, keep it simple. Though a finished ceiling can add
appeal, buyers may not have the same
taste in decor, so subtle is better. Opt
Like us on
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58 Jewish standard FeBrUarY 27, 2015
Jeffrey Schleider
Broker/Owner
Miron Properties NY
201.266.8555
T: 212.888.6250
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Ruth Miron-Schleider
Broker/Owner
Miron Properties NJ
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Temple
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lb.
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Sweet
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89
2/$
MEAT DEPARTMENT
99
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79
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Lemon, Apple,
Cherryheads,
Hot Tamales
16 oz
Silver Tip
Roast
Save On!
Klik
Chocolate
Bags
4/$
Save On!
Ferrara
DAIRY
$ 79
Assorted
Liebers
Mini
Wows
3/$
Qt.
4/$
0.8 OZ
Baking Bar
Paskesz
Kedem
Concord
Mini
Grape Juice Marshmallows
Save On!
16 oz
Israeli Quinoa
Chefs Choice
64 % Cocoa
3
$ 99
4
$ 99
Olive Jalapeo
Sweet Chili
$ 99
Lb
Savory Dips
Frozen
Duck
Shufra
Whole Baby
Corn
Save On!
Osem Bamba
Snack
Qt.
& Barley
Save On!
$ 99
5
99
89
H a p p y Pu r i m
4
Lb
Turkey
Thighs
Manischewitz
Egg
Noodles
40 OZ
22 OZ
Lb
Save On!
2/$
$ 99
Mushroom $ 99
$ 99
Lb
Save On!
3/$
bunch
MARKET
Chicken Soup
Shoulder
London Broil
$ 89
Lb
2/$
Cilantro
Or Dill
Gourmet Salad
DELI SAVINGS
Homemade Soups
Loyalty
Program
Ground
Chuck
$ 99
Mazola
Corn
Oil
lb.
$ 49
Lb
Save On!
99
Chicken Combo
Drums & Thighs
$ 99
Organic
Yellow
Peaches
Fresh
Chicken
Cutlets
Super Special
bunch
Taste of Summer
lb.
2/$
at:
Visit Our Website om
et.c
www.thecedarmark
Cedar Markets Meat Dept. Prides Itself On Quality, Freshness And Affordability. We Carry The Finest Cuts Of Meat And
The Freshest Poultry... Our Dedicated Butchers Will Custom Cut Anything For You... Just Ask!
Thin Cut
for
lb.
2/$
Red, Orange
or Yellow
Peppers
Your
Choice!
Fresh
Broccoli
Strawberries
8/$
Organic
Fresh Picked
39
Family
Pack
Fresh
Idaho
Potatoes
Fresh
Hass
Avocadoes
lb.
Loyalty
Program
U.S. #1
MARKET
TERMS & CONDITIONS: This card is the property of Cedar Market, Inc. and is intended for exclusive
use of the recipient and their household members. Card is not transferable. We reserve the right to
change or rescind the terms and conditions of the Cedar Market loyalty program at any time, and
without notice. By using this card, the cardholder signifies his/her agreement to the terms &
conditions for use. Not to be combined with any other Discount/Store Coupon/Offer. *Loyalty Card
must be presented at time of purchase along
with ID for verification. Purchase cannot be
reversed once sale is completed.
CEDAR MARKET
CEDAR MARKET
PRODUCE
89
Fine Foods
Great Savings
4 OZ
Save On!
Fruit
2/$
1.35 OZ
$ 99
Save On!
Kosherific
Shapes & Sticks
Aarons
Turkey Variety
Pack
$ 49
24 OZ
Original
Richs
Coffee Rich
99
9 OZ
12 OZ
Original Only
Amnons Pizza
8 Slice
$ 99
36 OZ
Save On!
Gardein
Crispy Tenders
$ 99
9 OZ
We reserve the right to limit sales to 1 per family. Prices effective this store only. Not responsible for typographical errors. Some pictures are for design purposes only and do not necessarily represent items on sale. While Supply Lasts. No rain checks.