Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
OurChildren
Our
Children
About
Useful Information
for the Next Generation
of Jewish Families
IN THIS
ISSUE
NORTH JERSEY
85
2016
THEJEWISHSTANDARD.COM
Leonard Cohen,
1934-2016
The poet and singers life,
his time in Israel, and
his Yiddish translator
page 44
Melissa S., Closter, NJ, mother of two, entrepreneur, and breast cancer survivor
englewoodhealth.org
EHMC_breastcenter_11x14.indd 1
9/29/16 1:00 PM
Page 3
Pop star Regina Spektor:
Im Jewish because of anti-Semitism
l Regina Ilyinichna
Spektors piano pop
music is often described as bubbly
or quirky and a
whole range of other,
even more positive
adjectives.
The average listener never would guess
that she lived with
intense anti-Semitism
for years.
In a recent interview with the Guardian, the Russian-Jewish songwriter, 36,
opened up about the anti-Semitism
she faced growing up in Russia, where
Jews were not allowed to practice their
religion or customs for decades under
Soviet rule. She explained that the persecution forced Russian Jews to bond
with each other.
The only reason Im Jewish is probably anti-Semitism, she said. Think
about Soviet Russia religion is illegal.
So theres no cultural Judaism, no tradition. The only thing that made Jewish
people marry other Jews is that they
didnt want to be called kikes. They
knew they wouldnt hear the word zhid
come out of their husbands face when
they had their first marital fight. So its
the only reason a lot of us exist.
She explained that she felt harassed
for being Jewish even after her family
moved to the United States around the
time she was 9. That was during the late
1980s, when Jews finally were allowed
to go. The Spektors settled in Fair Lawn
with the help of HIAS, the Jewish immigration agency, and Regina attended
the Frisch School for two years before
switching to Fair Lawn High School.
Instead of being the Jewish girl in a
Russian school, I became a Russian girl
in a Jewish school,
Spektor said. I had
dumb teenagers telling me to go back to
my fking country.
Telling me we were
taking their jobs. I got
so pissed off I was
like, Youd better believe Im going to take
your job, Im going
to take your job and
three other jobs, too.
She added to the
Guardian that her
brother, a black-hat-wearing Orthodox
Jew, still often is a target of anti-Semitic
harassment.
They get on him, shouting Shalom,
that kind of thing, she said. But I see
anti-Semitism everywhere. Its built into
the fabric of our lives.
But while its anti-Semitism that
made her Jewish, her latest albums title
draws from Jewish roots. Remember
Us to Life came out in September, just
days before Rosh Hashanah; the phrase
is part of the holiday liturgy.
Spektor rose to fame in the mid2000s after touring with bands like the
Strokes, the Kings of Leon, and Keane.
However, shes probably best known
now for writing Youve Got Time, the
theme song for Orange is the New
Black. Shes performed at a number of
Jewish-themed events, from a concert
on the National Mall commemorating
the 60th anniversary of the founding of
Israel in 2008 to a White House reception celebrating Jewish American Heritage Month in 2010.
She is married to another Russian
Jewish musician, Jack Dishel, who
played guitar for the Moldy Peaches.
The couple has a 2-year-old son.
GABE FRIEDMAN/JTA WIRE SERVICE
CONTENTS
NOSHES4
BRIEFLY LOCAL 15
ROCKLAND16
OPINION 38
GALLERY 42
COVER STORY44
HEALTHY LIVING &
ADULT LIFESTYLES48
DVAR TORAH...........................................60
CROSSWORD PUZZLE61
CALENDAR 62
OBITUARIES 65
CLASSIFIEDS66
REAL ESTATE 68
Noshes
OPENING AVALANCHE:
Cinematic Hebrews
span the screen
Four movies with
major Jewish
connections open on
Friday, November 18. The
first is Bleed for This, a
biopic about real-life
middleweight boxer,
Vinny Pazienza (played
by Miles Teller). In 1991,
shortly after winning a
title fight, Pazienza was
in a very serious car
accident. He defied
doctors predictions and
orders not only by
walking again, but by
getting in the ring to
fight again. KATEY
SAGAL, 62, and TED
LEVINE, 59, co-star as
Vinnys mother and
trainer, respectively. The
movie is directed by BEN
YOUNGER,44, who grew
up Orthodox and made a
splash with his first
movie, Boiler Room
(2000), His best known
follow-up film, Prime
(2005), starred Meryl
Streep as a Jewish
psychiatrist flustered by
the romance between
her young adult son
(BRYAN GREENBERG,
38) and one of her
patients.
HAILEE STEINFELD, 19, stars as
Nadine in Edge of
Seventeen, a coming-ofage story that is a drama,
with some comedy.
Nadine feels confused
and alone when her best
friend starts dating her
Katey Sagal
Ted Levine
Sidney Lumet
PBS-ish stuff
Hailee Steinfeld
Kyra Sedgwick
4 JEWISH
18, 2016
32115 WinterSTANDARD
Event Strip Ad.inddNOVEMBER
1
N.B.
Hurry,
offers
end
soon.
Sunday mammograms
Local
Come together, right now
West Bank mayor making three stops in Bergen County
to tell stories of unexpected cooperation as well as unsurprising fear
ABIGAIL KLEIN LEICHMAN
In most parts of the world, having coffee with
friends in a sukkah hardly would be frontpage news.
But its different in Efrat, home to 16,000
Jews in the Gush Etzion region between Bethlehem and Hebron in the West Bank. When
the towns mayor, Oded Revivi, invited Arabs
from neighboring villages to share refreshments in his sukkah with about 30 Efrat residents on October 19, the Washington Posts
Israel correspondent wrote a story that began
Jewish settlers invited Palestinians over for
the holidays. All went well until the guests
headed home.
Though most of the guests got home without incident, the Palestinian Authoritys
security forces arrested four of them. They
were released four days later, after COGAT,
the Coordinator of Government Activities in
the Territories unit of Israels Defense Ministry, intervened.
The men also had to pay the equivalent
of about $15,000 call it a bribe or a fine
a sum that Mr. Revivi is actively raising to
reimburse them. He has been meeting with
them regularly to strengthen their resolve to
continue participating in the cross-cultural
encounters and dialogues.
They are quite proud and know they did
nothing wrong, Mr. Revivi, a 47-year-old
father of six, said. They are extremely upset
and hurt because they didnt expect to end
up in a prison cell for having a cup of coffee
with their neighbors.
He will discuss the episode during three
speaking engagements in New Jersey this
weekend. At Englewoods Congregation Ahavath Torah, he will speak in the main sanctuary at approximately 11:30 a.m. on Saturday
morning. He will focus on his longtime efforts
to build relationships with his Arab neighbors
and he will conduct a question-and-answer
session at seudah shlishit late that afternoon
in the Orthodox shuls social hall.
On Saturday night, he will speak at Congregation Rinat Yisrael in Teaneck, and on Sunday evening he will meet with current and
alumni Berrie Fellows in Cresskill. The Berrie cohort met with Mr. Revivi last summer in
Efrat and reported being captivated by his
leadership, energy, and focus on diplomacy,
said Berrie Fellow Marcy Cohen of Englewood, a member of the executive committee
of Ahavath Torah.
This is a leader who faces immense challenges, but has created a community, along
with others, where there is a sense of security
and calm, Ms. Cohen said. He has a specific
process he teaches to mayors of other cities.
6 JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER 18, 2016
Oded Revivi
Local
inai Schools, which provides personally tailored education to students with special needs in six day
schools in New Jersey, is working
with SAR Academy in Riverdale, N.Y., to
establish a pilot program there.
The program, its founders say, will open
in the fall of 2018, and at first will accept 6to 8-year-olds with a wide range of developmental disabilities and complex learning challenges. The next year, if all goes
according to plan, the school will expand
SAR, like the other schools that partner with Sinai, is a modern Orthodox day
school. Its philosophy and approach to
education and inclusion makes them ideal
partners for us at Sinai, Sinais dean,
Rabbi Dr. Yisrael Rothwachs, said.
We are delighted to partner with Sinai,
Rabbi Binyamin Krauss, SARs principal,
added. Bringing Sinai to SAR will allow us
to provide a place for the children of SAR
TOM DELUCA
JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER OF FORT LEE 1449 ANDERSON AVE FORT LEE NJ 07024
JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER 18, 2016 7
Local
Look at how Moses and Aaron experience their sisters death, he said. Look
at how it affected them, how they were
striving to continue to fulfill their leadership responsibilities in effect, their professional lives while mourning for their
sister. They had to bury her, and also to
lose her special leadership ability.
How did Moses, the kid brother, react
to the death of his older sister, whom
hed journeyed with in the wilderness for
40 years? Classical midrash focuses on
Mosess struggle to find water after Miriams death.
Midrash tells us that a well of sweet
water accompanied Miriam in the desert;
once she died, that source of water dried
up. Miriam represents water, and water
as a source of redemption, Dr. Cohen
said. Even her name, Miri-yam, has water
in it. Yam means ocean. Mosess struggle, from the rabbinic point of view, is to
learn how to draw water himself, to learn
that there is a source of redemption even
after she is gone.
And then Aaron dies, and the struggle
is to complete the journey without Aaron
and Miriam.
The rabbinic struggle emerges in both
a corporate and a personal way. How do
we survive the absence of those who represent our source of redemption?
How do we find the ability to continue
and to strive? In Miriams death the rabbis
confront that question.
Dr. Cohen is a lifelong Reform Jew,
ordained by HUC in 1972. The ride has
been a blessing for me, he said. To be
able to share this blessing with rabbinical
and cantorial and educational students,
who themselves will become leaders
that is the ultimate blessing.
CHAI LIFELINE
ANNUAL GALA
2016
Honoring
Soaring
Beyond
Giving families
the wings to fly.
E S TA B L I S H I N G
SUSAN MASCITELLI
Senior Vice President, Patient Services
and Liaison to the Board of Trustees
New York-Presbyterian Hospital
Maimonides Medical
Achievement Award
Camp Simcha
Appreciation Award
MOSHE BUCHEN
Camp Simcha
Appreciation Award
12.5.16
Chairs
Marriott Marquis
New York City
Master of Ceremonies:
ETHAN ZOHN
CHAIM ARYEH &
YAEL GITELIS
Gala Chairs
BRIAN HAIMM
Gala Chair
Gala Chairs
Local
A scene from the thriller Exam, the movie featured in Dr. Wendy Zierlers presentation.
bring your preset notions about being Reform or Orthodox. The Reform movement now is trying to do more
God talk, and Gene did a great job of getting rabbinical
students to talk about what they believe, and to get them
to take it seriously.
Exam is about a test, both literal and metaphoric.
So in the film, you take this corporate instance of testing, and it becomes an occasion to think about what tests
mean. Why do we student our students? Our employees?
Our children? Our culture? And what does Judaism say
about tests?
The class at Tiferet will be an analysis of the film,
but then it will look at the Jewish traditional and literary
approach to tests. It will include some rabbinic examples,
but generally speaking it will all go back to the Akeidah
to the Binding of Isaac. Abraham was repeatedly tested
to what end?
Studying cinema as text largely has been a Christian
enterprise, Dr. Zierler said; even the title she uses, Reel
Theology, with its obvious and satisfying pun, has been
overdone in the Christian world, she said; there are dozens of books about the theology of film. Why? From all the
way back to the beginnings of the movies, the theaters
were seen as the new temples. One of the puns thats used
frequently is sinema. They were worried, from the beginning, about trying to police what was in the movies.
Jews were making the movies and acting in the movies,
but they did not write about it in the same way. And that
was not because they didnt go to the movies. I can only
speculate about why, but it might be because theology
isnt a Jewish science. Jews do not tend to wax eloquent
over creed.
Dr. Zierler identifies as a feminist, and there is feminism
in Exam. I dont want to say too much about the film,
because it is a thriller, but there is one woman in it who is
important insofar as the film is offering a message about
what sort of virtue ought to be commended, she said.
Local
SACRIFICE
NOTHING
12 JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER 18, 2016
Local
excommunicated the chasidim. This time
he singled out Rabbi Shneur Zalman of
Liadi, who founded the Chabad movement
and the Lubavitch rabbinic dynasty.
Chabad chasidim preserve the memory
of that conflict through the annual celebration of 19 Kislev, the date Rabbi Zalman was
released from a Russian prison after being
set up by his ideological enemies, followers
of the Vilna Gaon.
What does this have to do with
Rabbi Soloveitchik?
Well, he was a sixth generation descendant of a student of the Vilna Gaon.
So the handshake between Rabbis
Soloveitchik and Schneerson was the peaceful resolution of their 18th century ancestors, the chasidim and the misnagdim.
Historic indeed, from that perspective.
Though, from another, maybe not
so much.
After the meeting, according to the book,
Rabbi Soloveitchik told a student that the
dispute between the chasidim and the followers of the Vilna Gaon was already
resolved by Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen.
But actually it was resolved before then, at
least for Rabbi Soloveitchiks family. Back
when he was 7 years old, his teacher was a
Lubavitcher chasid.
The rav spoke of him with such love,
ACHIEVE
ANYTHING
JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER 18, 2016 13
Local
Hows everything?
Teaneck family runs a baby gemach
because sometimes it isnt okay but it can get better
portable crib or stroller to accommodate visitors
from out of town.
Because any gemach must limit the population it serves so it does not become overwhelmed with requests, the Teaneck Baby
Gemach focuses on Jewish families in Bergen
County. (There is a separate baby gemach for
Passaic Countys Jewish families.)
But sometimes exceptions are made, and Ms.
Fried views them as opportunities for Kiddush
Hashem, literally sanctifying the name of God.
We never want to
embarrass anyone.
Chesed has to
come from
kindness and has
to lift a person up,
not lower them.
Once, a woman who does tremendous
chesed in the community contacted me from
the hospital to report that an underprivileged
non-Jewish family was not being permitted to
take their baby home because they didnt have
an up-to-standards car seat, she said. I had a
beautiful car seat in my garage at the time.
When the father came to pick it up, my husband was struggling with assembling a particular vacuum, she continued. The man said to
him, Oh, I used to sell that vacuum for 15 years.
Let me help you! I took it as a sign from Hashem
that it was meant to be for us to help him, and
for him to help us. We just try to do the right
thing.
In fact, Ms. Fried said that she detects a divine hand
guiding all the gemachs transactions.
For instance, Ill get a request for an Arms Reach CoSleeper, and two days later someone says they want to
donate an Arms Reach Co-Sleeper. Its really incredible.
Ms. Fried handles the donor and recipient logistics via
smartphone during her daily two-hour commute to and
from work, and welcomes volunteers to help sort, coordinate, or store donations from their own home.
When she is offered a donation that she cannot store
and for which she has no appropriate recipient, she refers
the donor to other baby gemachs in the tristate area to
help as many people as possible.
I want to inspire others who feel that they are just too
busy to handle anything else, Ms. Fried said. You can
always create your own way to do a mitzvah and incorporate it into your lifestyle. Having your own organization
means that you can run it on your own terms and during
your own time.
To get in touch with the Teaneck Baby Gemach, email
teaneckbabygemach@gmail.com.
To get in touch with the Passaic Baby Gemach, call Siggy
Berger at (201) 486-1492.
DAVID STEINBERG PHOTOGRAPHY
Briefly Local
Lecture features Israel official
The second annual Rabbi Dr. David M.
Feldman memorial lecture is on Sunday, November 20, at 8:30 p.m., at Ohr
Saadyah of Teaneck. Dr. Tal Becker, the
acting legal adviser to Israels Ministry
of Foreign Affairs and a senior fellow
at the Shalom Hartman Institute, will
discuss Discourse of Diplomacy in a
Turbulent Middle East.
Drs. Ben and Miriam Landau sponsor the lecture. The shul is at 554
Queen Anne Road in Teaneck. More
information is at www.ohrsaadya.org.
Professor Alan
Dershowitz
Dr. Tal Becker
Bernie Marcus
Ambassador
Danny Danon
Congressman
Ed Royce
NOWHERE
BUT HERE
At Yeshiva University, there are no sacrifices. YU is the full college experience, with an
exceptional education, countless opportunities to engage outside the lecture hall and
a caring community that meets individual needs.
Achieving their academic, recreational and spiritual goals is why YU students find
outstanding success when applying to graduate schools and entering their chosen
careers including 94% (44 students) accepted to medical school, 96% (27 students)
to dental school and 100% (60 students) to law school in the last year.
Scholarships and financial assistance make YU a reality for over 79% of students.
#NowhereButHere
Rockland
Traveling
to the job
Orangetown Jewish Center
volunteers work hard
and fast every November
JOANNE PALMER
Gloria Brettner, Rabbi Craig Scheff, Mikalah Weinger, Leslee Schwartz, and Allison Waldman create mosaics
that will go on benchtops in Kfar Ahavas new garden, which the Orangetown Jewish Center is building.
12-year-old boys.
The Orangetown groups stay in Israel is short usually the group meets in Israel on a Sunday, and finishes
work on that Thursday, so anyone who wants to be back
at home for Shabbat can do it easily. But the bonds that
form between the group members are strong, and aided
by the fact that most participants have been on the trip
many times. A few of them, in fact, have gone many times
since it began. She has gone only twice, so shes still new.
This year, Ms. Wilker added, there were only two new
From left, Linda Varon, Harriett Wolf, Adele Garber, and Ellen Levine build brick walls as they create flower beds in the new garden at Kfar Ahava.
16 JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER 18, 2016
Rockland
as a musician, who performed for the
residents, many of whom can neither
walk nor talk, but who appeared to take
pleasure from the music.
Aleh has four locations, and it takes
everybody, Ms. Wilker said. They have
to have care 24/7. Its a huge undertaking. They serve about 700 people. And
Aleh takes everyone who comes. It
doesnt matter who comes to them
what religion, what background, what
age. They take everyone. And therefore, she added, Aleh, which gets about
one third of its funding from the government, has a huge need for money.
Ms. Wilker, who lives in Bergen
County and is a longtime member of
Temple Emanuel of the Pascack Valley,
first learned about the trip circuitously.
Her son Dov is the regional director
of the American Jewish Committee in
Atlanta, Georgia, and Rabbi Scheffs sister, who also lives in Atlanta, is active in
the AJC and other Jewish organizations
there. Ms. Wilker and Rabbi Scheff first
met at a dinner for Atlantans at a meeting of the American Jewish Committees
Global Forum in Washington, D.C., when
they found themselves sitting next to
each other and began to talk geography.
This was 2014. Ms. Wilkers husband,
elcome home...
n Daily
845-359-7870
AT PALISADES
A Scharf Family Residence...
the most trusted name in Senior
Care for over fifty years.
www.esplanadeatpalisades.com
Great Rate and a Bonus on Each 1-Year Anniversary -with Your Choice of Passbook or Statement Savings!
AT PALISADES
0.75
BONUS**
% PLUS
APY*
0.25
Visit us today!
Y
NDA
U
S
N
OPE ROM
F
- 1PM
9AM
www.applebank.com
*For the Apple Bank BONUS Savings account, interest earned on daily balances of $2,500 or more at these tiers: $2,500-$24,999: .10% Annual Percentage Yield (APY), $25,000 and up: .75% APY. There is no interest paid on balances of
$0-$2,499. APYs disclosed effective as of September 6, 2016. APYs may be changed at any time at the Banks discretion. There is a minimum of $2,500 required to open the Apple Bank BONUS Savings account. $2,500 minimum daily
balance is required to avoid $10 monthly maintenance fee. Fees may reduce earnings. Funds used to open this account cannot be from an existing Apple Bank account. Maximum deposit amount is $3,000,000 per household. **Special bonus feature: A .25% simple interest rate bonus will be paid on each anniversary date of account opening on the lowest balance for that year (anniversary date to anniversary date). No bonus is paid if the account balance is less
than $2,500 on the anniversary date. Additional deposits during a given anniversary period do not affect the bonus interest payment. Deposits made to the account on any anniversary date will be used to calculate the lowest account
balance for the next anniversary period. The bonus interest is calculated on the lowest balance on deposit from one anniversary date to the next anniversary date. Simple interest rate bonus is subject to change at any time after first
anniversary date of account opening. Hypothetical example of how bonus works: Assume an account is opened on January 12, 2016 for $50,000. A $10,000 withdrawal is made on July 12, 2016. No other withdrawals are made prior
to the January 12, 2017 anniversary date. The low balance is now $40,000, so $100 in bonus interest will be paid on January 12, 2017.
9/6/2016
JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER
18,3:34:33
2016PM17
Rockland
Oldies dance party this weekend
The Nanuet Hebrew Center hosts an Oldies Dance party
on Saturday, November 19, at 7:30 p.m., featuring live
music by Forever Young and a doo wop/oldies band that
includes NHCs own Bruce Pollack on drums. There will be
snacks, coffee, cake, and a cash bar. Call (845) 708-9181 or
go to www.nanuethc.org.
Interfaith program
focuses on holidays
Schools
FROM PAGE 7
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.
november 18 ........................................ 4:15
Candlelighting
Hellman-Garlick
Memorial Chapel
Hellman
Memorial Chapels
november
2510977
.......................................
4:12
1300
Pleasantville
Briarcliff
Manor,
NY
15 State Street
Spring Valley,
NY
Pleasantville
Rd. 10510
Briarcliff Manor, NY 10510
15 State
Street Spring
Valley,
NY 10977Rd. 1300
914-762-5501 4:10
845-356-8600 2 .........................................
december
914-762-5501
845-356-8600
Like us on Facebook.
december
9
4:09
Our affiliate
Jewish Memorials
of .........................................
Rockland
a complete full
monument
and full
inscription
provider. and inscription provider.
Our affiliate
Jewish Memorials
ofservice
Rockland
a complete
service
monument
Large display on premises. 845-425-2256
Large display on premises. 845-425-2256
845-356-8600
www.hellmanmemorialchapels.com
DignityMemorial.com www.hellmanmemorialchapels.com
DignityMemorial.com
www.jewishmemorialsofrockland.com
www.hellmanmemorial.com
SCI #9a
JobHashanah
No 025012
ad 5
BVK SCI #9a JobBVK
No 025012
Rosh
adRosh
5 x Hashanah
5 8/18/05
V2x5
ir 8/18/05 V2 ir
facebook.com/jewishstandard
ONNAY
CHARD
USCAT
BLACK M
CABE
O
AUVIGN
RNET S
SCATO
INK MO
DUETTE
.
s
e
n
i
w
a n ce d
l
a
b
y
.
l
y
t
r
c
d
e
o
f
r
o
t
e
P
e e t . N ot
sw
o
o
t
t
o
N
Y
DONNA
USCAT
BLACK M
VIGNO
ET SAU
CABERN
SCATO
INK MO
DUETTE
.
s
e
n
i
n ce d w
a
l
a
b
y
l
y.
t
r
c
d
e
o
f
r
o
t
e
t
P
e et . No
CHAR
w
s
o
o
t
t
No
3/21/16 3:35 PM
GRAND
Dining
RISTORANTE
Fine Dining in
a Relaxed Atmosphere
Shower Packages
Other Packages Available, Call For Details
OPEN
THANKSGIVING
DAY
GRAND OPENING
CHINESE CUISINE
Excellent - Zagat
1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2014
www.VilaVerdeRestaurant.com
DAILY SEAFOOD
SPECIALS
BYO
201-843-1250
Dining
Mesn
Madrid
MAY 4, 2012
OFF
& Dinner
validfrom Meson Madrid in Palisades Park is well
known
forLunch
its authentic
cuisine
The Next Well10%
known for its authentic cuisine from Spain,
Monday-Thursday
for May.
Spain,
serving
only
the
freshest
seafood
as
serving only the freshest lobsters and seafood
Best Thing to
Must bring ad in. Valid for table check of $50 for dinner or
for large
lunch. Discount
for cash
payment only, tapas
not valid and as well as its large menu selections, tapas and
well as$30its
menu
selections,
with credit cards. Offer is only one per table and
Dining in Spain
daily specials.
daily specials
cant beincluding
used with otherSteak
offers. Mesn.
er
GW Bridge
t
ooms (25-150 guests)
rporate catering
vered offering a
ety of menus to
t your event
2016
READERS
CHOICE
Best Sushi
Restaurant
0003284569-01
Happy Science
3263869
ervice - Installation
The Next
Dinner
Best Thing to
Dining in Spain
A la Carte MenuMonday-Thursday
Available for May.
Decorating Sale
nganos
FREE
LiteRise
Cordless Lifting
System UPGRADE
with your purchase
of Silhouette
Window
Shadings
Must bring ad in. Valid for table check of $50 for dinner or
$30 for lunch. Discount for cash payment only, not valid
with credit cards. Offer is only one per table and
cant be used with other offers.
Open for
Lunch & Dinner
Located 1/2 Mile
from GW Bridge
Large Private
Parking Lot
We have Private Party
Rooms (25-150 guests)
FR EE
ES TI M AT
& IN STALES
L
www.goldendynastynj.com
RISTORANTE
$25.95
10% OFF Lunch & Dinner valid
unterdouglas.com
Every Sat. & Sun. 11am/Thurs. 6:30pm million books sold, 800 books
published,
& given
1,600+
201.313.0127 / nj@happy-science.org
Open
Thanksgiving
Eve, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve, New Years Eve
725 River Rd. #200, Edgewater, NJ 07020 lectures to audiences of 50,000+
(Edgewater Plaza building)
a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization
Traditional
te Home Decorating
CenterThanksgiving
SUSHI
FRANKLIN LAKES
ntonia's
1ST PLACE
FIRST
PLACE
CE
7 Y EA R S I N
PL
AN
TE
T
-I
1 ST
W
RO
2010-2016
I S and operated tire center today for outstanding service and selection.
Come to your locally owned
SPECIAL!
$
2.99
Plain
Garments
BLANKETS
SHIRTS
Bergen County
From Various Newspapers And Magazines.
$
(Laundered on Hangers)
$
1.00
12.00
Come
See Why We Are So Popular!
Incoming
Blankets Cleaned
Tuesday
to
SUV/Crossover
- FRIDAY 7am-6:30pm
Not
m CLOSED SUN.
SAVE $
FREE ALIGNMENT
CHECK.
GRAND OPENING
Like us on Facebook
BETWEEN 7-11 & CLIFFSIDE PARK H.S.
MON-FRI 8:00am - 5:30 / SAT. 8:00-12:00
Printed
and
distributed
by
NewspaperDirect
COPYRIGHT
AND
PROTECTED
BY
APPLICABLE
LAW
facebook.com/jewishstandard
JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER 18, 2016 21
Jewish World
Jason Greenblatt
URIEL HEILMAN
Jason Greenblatt
Greenblatt, who lives in Teaneck, has
worked as a real-estate lawyer for Trump
for 19 years, and he is one of two Jewish
lawyers whom Trump has said he would
appoint as his Israel advisers. An Orthodox Jew and Yeshiva University graduate,
Greenblatt studied at a West Bank yeshiva
in the mid-1980s and even did armed
guard duty there.
Greenblatt, who is the father of six children, does not have any political experience. He has said that he speaks with people involved in the Israeli government but
has not spoken to any Palestinians since
his yeshiva studies. He has cited the American Israel Public Affairs Committee as one
of his main sources for staying informed
about the Jewish state, and helped draft
Trumps speech at the lobbying groups
annual conference in March.
Greenblatt, who has said he supports
the two-state solution, has implied that
Trump will take a more laissez-faire
approach to peace building.
He is not going to impose any solution
David Friedman
David Friedman
Alongside Greenblatt, Trump named
Friedman, 57, as an Israel adviser. Friedman, a bankruptcy expert and partner
at a New York law firm, Kasowitz Benson
Torres & Friedman, is the president-elects
longtime attorney. The son of a Conservative rabbi with a family history of ties to
Republican presidential candidates his
family hosted Ronald Reagan for a Shabbat
lunch in 1984, the year the president won
re-election Friedman lives in Woodmere,
in Long Islands Five Towns, and owns a
house in Jerusalems Talbiyeh neighborhood, according to Haaretz.
Friedman has expressed doubt about
the future of the two-state solution, traditionally a pillar of bipartisan U.S. policy
in the region. Before the Republican Party
passed a platform that omitted references
to the two-state solution, he said it might
be time for the party to reject the concept.
The two-state solution might be one
answer, but I dont think its the only
answer anymore, he said in July.
Friedman also has said that annexing
the West Bank would not damage Israels
status as a Jewish state.
Jared Kushner
Jared Kushner
Kushner the 35-year-old scion of one of
New Jerseys most prominent real estate
families, and the husband of Trumps
daughter Ivanka since 2009 played a
Ivanka Trump
Ivanka Trump
Trumps daughter Ivanka, 35, who converted to Orthodox Judaism, has served
as the polished, softer face of her fathers
campaign. A successful businesswoman
whose brand is centered around her family name and says it empowers working
women, she stood by her father when
recordings were released that caught the
president-elect bragging, in crude terms,
about sexually assaulting women.
Ivanka reportedly has tried not
always successfully to have her father
tone down or walk back some of his most
inflammatory remarks, including having
called Mexican immigrants rapists, according to New York magazine.
She is the founder of the Ivanka
Trump Collection, a fashion and lifestyle
brand, and is the executive vice president of development and acquisitions
for the Trump Organization, her fathers
Boris Epshteyn
ILYA S. SAVENOK/GETTY IMAGES FOR SIRIUSXM
Boris Epshteyn
Epshteyn, 34, is a Republican political
strategist and staunch defender of Trump
who has appeared as the president-elects
surrogate on major TV networks more
than 100 times, the New York Times
reported.
A New York-based investment banker
and finance attorney, Epshteyn worked as
a communications aide for Senator John
McCains presidential campaign in 2008,
focusing his efforts on the Arizona senators running mate, then-Alaska Governor
Sarah Palin, whom Trump is reportedly
considering for interior secretary, according to Politico.
Epshteyn, a Moscow native, moved to
the United States in 1993. A fluent Russian speaker who has moderated a panel
encouraging investment in Moscow, he
may serve as an asset for Trump in navigating relations with Russia Trump has
expressed his desire to improve ties with
President Vladimir Putin.
Then again, Epshteyns temper may
make him less of an asset to Trump. TV
hosts described him as very combative and abrasive, and in 2014 he was
charged with misdemeanor assault after
he was involved in a bar tussle. The charge
was dropped after Epshteyn agreed to
undergo anger management training and
perform community service.
Stephen Miller
Miller, 30, has played a crucial role in
Trumps campaign, helping to warm up
crowds at rallies and drafting speeches,
including the president-elects acceptance speech at the Republican National
Convention.
Miller, who has described himself as a
practicing Jew, joined the Trump campaign in January, quickly rising through
the ranks to become one of the most
Jewish World
Stephen Miller
Steven Mnuchin
DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES
Steven Mnuchin
Mnuchin, a former Goldman Sachs executive, worked as Trumps national finance
chairman during the campaign.
Trump and Mnuchin have been friends
for 15 years. Before he was put in charge
BRIEFS
JNS.ORG
Lewis Eisenberg
SCREENSHOT FROM YOUTUBE
Michael Glassner
SCREENSHOT FROM YOUTUBE
Lewis Eisenberg
Eisenberg, the private equity chief for
Granite Capital International Group, is the
Republican National Committees finance
chairman. He was one of a small group of
Republican Jewish Coalition board members who did not flee from Trumps candidacy, and he was a major contributor to
groups backing Trumps election only
nine of 55 RJC board members gave to
Trump. He worked alongside Mnuchin to
raise funds for the candidate.
Eisenberg grew up in New Jersey, the Forward reported, and he has been floated as a
possible pick for commerce secretary in the
Trump administration. He was the chairman
of the Port Authority of New York and New
Jersey at the time of the 9/11 terrorist attacks
on the World Trade Center.
Michael Glassner
Glassner was not new to Republican presidential campaigns when Trump appointed
him as his national political director last
year. He worked as director of vice presidential operations for McCains 2008 campaign and ran George W. Bushs campaign
in Iowa in 2000. He has also worked with
Palin and Senator Bob Dole, a former presidential candidate.
Like many of Trumps Jewish advisers,
Glassner is outspoken in his support of
Israel. Before he joined the Trump campaign, he worked as the political director
for AIPACs southwest region. Glassner has
praised the anti-establishment movement,
and he told Jewish Insider that his experience with Palin and the fact that he lives
in New Jersey, not Washington, D.C., made
him a good fit for Trumps political outsider message. He also served as a senior
adviser to Eisenberg when he was the Port
JTA WIRE SERVICE
Authority chairman.
Jewish World
RON KAMPEAS
WASHINGTON Enforce the Iran deal.
Violate the Iran deal.
Leave it to Congress.
Do nothing.
President-elect Donald Trump will have an
array of options before him when he assumes
the presidency on January 21, according to
supporters and opponents of the deal. The
agreement, which Iran and six major powers led by the United States reached last
year, rolled back Irans nuclear program in
exchange for sanctions relief.
The open question as are so many questions about Trumps intentions is what does
the next leader of the free world want to do?
His peregrinations were evident when
Trump spoke to the American Israel Public Affairs Committees policy conference in
March. There, he claimed literally minutes
apart that he both planned to enforce the
deal and to scrap it.
My No. 1 priority is to dismantle the disastrous deal with Iran, Trump said at the time.
Then a few moments later: We will enforce
Silence
The deal essentially is done. Sanctions are
Jewish World
More than
390,000 likes.
Like us on
Facebook.
Sandi M. Malkin, LL C
Interior Designer
facebook.com/
jewishstandard
973-535-9192
Fact:
Enforcement
Worried that the world will turn away from the United
States should it pull out? Then make it clear that the Iranians are at fault, say conservatives who oppose the deal.
He has to start irst enforcing it, second doing a bunch
of stuff thats allowed that the [Obama administration]
hasnt been doing, said Omri Ceren of the Israel Project.
65
70
75
80
85
90
Rate
6%
6.5%
7.1%
8%
9.5%
11.3%
75.3%
77.8%
79.7%
81.5%
84.8%
86.4%
Tax Free*
* In the month you use cash to establish a gift annuity, a final calculation is made determining the portion that
will be paid to you tax-free.
10/14/16
3:20 PM
JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER
18, 2016
25
Jewish World
HOUSE
CALLS
Here are five things you should know about Bannon, who
will have the presidents ear.
1. Bannons site ran many columns that have been accused
of being anti-Semitic.
Breitbart News, one of the most vociferously pro-Trump
outlets during the presidential campaign, has been accused
of racism and Islamophobia. Jewish critics also have accused
it of anti-Semitism.
In May, Breitbart ran a column with a headline calling
anti-Trump conservative writer Bill Kristol a renegade Jew.
The column, by conservative activist David Horowitz, said
Kristol led a small but well-heeled group of Washington
insiders who aimed to undermine Trump, even though
BOGOTA
Military
Collections
Wanted
Swords,
Knives,
Helmets, etc.
TOP $
for Antique
Sterling!
201-880-5455
CELL 917-887-6465
CELL
CELL 917-887-6465
917-887-6465
We
We buy
buy anything
anything old.
old. One
One piece
piece or
or house
house full.
full.
WILL TRAVEL.
TRAVEL. HOUSE
HOUSE CALLS.
CALLS.
WILL
FREE
Estimates!
Jewish World
ANDREW TOBIN
WITH JUST
With a Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF) Charitable Gift Annuity, you can receive
dependable high-rate tax-advantaged income payments for life, while benefitting Israels
soldiers with a wide range of educational, recreational and social services programs.
Examples of Current FIDF Annuity Rates
Age
90+
9.5%
75
6.4%
85
65
8.1%
5.5%
Please call us to establish your charitable gift annuity TODAY and help sustain Israels future.
Jewish World
Karen Kadosh
leaves the U.S.
Embassy in Tel
Aviv with her
parents.
ANDREW TOBIN
Honoring:
TICKETS
SPONSOR
Seating: $5
0
ADVANCE
Purchase:
$32
SENIOR Ci
tizens: $25
AT DOOR:
$35
Group rate
s av
ailable
(formerly the Y)
Hosted
By:
Corporate
Sponsors:
973.339.0900
973.859.2700
Jewish World
Breakfast
Tastes Better
withButter
Attendees at the Jewish Federations of North Americas General Assembly in
Washington, D.C., listen to a panel discussion on politics.
RON SACHS
Condemn
or court?
Bannon appointment poses dilemma
for Jewish groups seeking access to Trump
RON KAMPEAS
WASHINGTON Offer an open hand
or a closed fist, or maybe both. Name
names. Dont name names, just hint.
Quietly adjust wording.
Welcome to the second week of the
World of Trump, Jewish organizational
edition.
Week 1 was fraught enough, with
Jewish statements marking Donald
Trumps surprise election ranging from
the confrontational to its a new day
accommodation.
Then President-elect Trump named
Stephen Bannon as his chief strategist.
The appointment of Bannon, formerly
the CEO of Breitbart, the right-wing news
site that has been the clearinghouse for
the alt-right movement, has been the
buzz in the hallways and at lunch tables
at the Jewish Federations of North Americas annual General Assembly meeting
here this week. More than 3,000 Jewish
communal professionals and lay figures
from 120 communities are here, and
almost all of them are talking about it.
Comments on the record, though,
were rare, a reflection of the bafflement
prevalent in the Jewish community at
how to deal with a president-elect who
has no experience in public office and
won the presidency through a scorchedearth campaign.
The Anti-Defamation League and a
range of liberal Jewish groups have condemned Bannons appointment.
It is a sad day when a man who presided over the premier website of the
alt-right a loose-knit group of white
nationalists and unabashed anti-Semites
and racists is slated to be a senior staff
member in the peoples house, Jonathan Greenblatt, the ADLs CEO, said in
a statement on Sunday evening, after
upcoming at
Kaplen
1776
presented by palisades players:
the Jccs resident theater company
Community
Fall Boutique
Dont miss this annual shopping extravaganza
featuring womens fashions, sunglasses, childrens
clothing and accessories, decorative home
furnishings and much more! Its the perfect
place and time to pick up holiday gifts for family,
friends and you! For more information, contact
201.408.1412. All proceeds to benefit the Leonard
and Syril Rubin Nursery School.
Sun, Dec 4, 10 am-5 pm & Mon, Dec 5, 9 am-5 pm
FiLm
kids
Kids Club
Let us handle the end of the day craziness for you!
We provide doorto-door transportation, snack, and
homework help. If your child is enrolled in an after
school class, well escort them to that too. Kids Club
is a terrific place to unwind with lots of games, books
and open playtime. Join anytime during the year, call
201.408.1467 for details.
Grades K-6, Mon-Thur, Sep-Jun, After school-6 pm
JCC on the Palisades taub campus | 411 e clinton ave, tenafly, nJ 07670 | 201.569.7900 | jccotp.org
Jewish World
Baking
Tastes Better
withButter
From left, Matt Brooks, director of the Republican Jewish Coalition; Noam
Neusner, former speechwriter for President George W. Bush; Tevi Troy, deputy
health secretary under President George W. Bush; Jeff Berkowitz, former
research director of the Republican National Committee; political fundraiser
Lisa Spies, and panel moderator Jacob Kornbluh of the Jewish Insider at the
Jewish Federations of North Americas General Assembly in Washington, D.C.
Condemn
FROM PAGE 29
Jewish World
Left, panelists talk about Jewish Heroes and Villains at the Jewish Comic Con
in Brooklyn. Above, the audience listens.
PHOTOS BY BEN SALES
Jewish World
Everything
Tastes Better
withButter
Yossi Klein Halevi, left, and Abdullah Antepli are co-directors of the Muslim
Leadership Initiative.
NETANEL TOBIAS/SHALOM HARTMAN INSTITUTE
Jewish World
Dialogue
FROM PAGE 33
WE LOVE TO SAVE
BRIEFS
AT
CSBK!
36 Month Preferred CD
1.60
APY1
14 Month CD
1.00
%
APY2
25 Month CD
1.25
%
APY2
Bonus Savings
1.00
%
APY3
973-473-2200
Clifton Fair Lawn Garfield Hoboken Lyndhurst Montclair
Wallington Wayne Woodland Park
Disclosure: 1. Preferred CDs: Annual Percentage Yield (APY) effective as of 10/31/16. Preferred Checking is an interest bearing checking account with a $5,000 minimum daily balance requirement to avoid fees. APY without Preferred
Checking is 1.35%. 2. CDs: Annual Percentage Yield (APY) effective as of 10/31/16. Minimum to open is $500. Fees may reduce earnings. Penalty for early withdrawal. 3. Bonus Savings Account: Annual Percentage Yield (APY) effective
as of 10/31/16. Minimum opening deposit of $10,000 required, which must be made with funds not already on deposit at CSBK. To qualify for a Bonus Savings Account, you must have, or open, a CSBK Simply Free or Preferred Checking
Account; if checking account is closed, your Bonus Savings Account will be changed to our regular Step-Up Savings Account and earn the stated rate for that product. Rates are tiered based on balances: 1.00% APY paid on balances
of $100,000 or more; balances of $10,000 - $99,000 earn .50% APY; balances from $0 - $10,000 earn .25%. A minimum of $50 required to avoid monthly maintenance fee. Rates subject to change or cancellation without notice. See a
client specialist for more information. Member FDIC. CSBK (Clifton Savings Bank) 2016.
Israel has announced the appointment of a new ambassador to Turkey in what is viewed as the final step in reconciliation and normalization between the two countries.
Eitan Naeh, Israels deputy ambassador in London
and a former Israeli ambassador to Azerbaijan, has been
selected for the post, the Foreign Ministry said. Naeh
joined the Foreign Ministry in 1991, where he specialized
in Turkish affairs, and was posted in Ankara in 1993.
Last month, Turkish media reported that Kemal Okem,
a close adviser to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, had
been selected as envoy to Israel.
Erdogan had expelled the Israeli envoy in 2010 during
the fallout from the Israeli commando raid on the Mavi
Marmara flotilla. Both countries agreed to restore relations last summer.
JNS.ORG
Jewish World
SASSON TIRAM
ELIANA RUDEE
A couple making aliyah, wrapped in an Israeli flag, get off an El Al flight in 2014.
RCBC
RCBC
Includes:
Roast Turkey
(12-16Lbs. pre-roasted weight)
Choice Of Chestnut Or Bread Stuffing (3 Lbs.)
Giblet Gravy (1 Quarts)
Candied Sweet Potatoes (3 Lbs.)
FULL LINE OF
Homemade Cranberry Sauce (1 Quarts)
WINES AND LIQUORS
s
Fruit Platter
Choice Of Soup (3 Quarts)
Crudite Platters
Chicken, Vegetable,
Deli Wraps Fish Platters Mushroom Barley Or Butternut Squash
Cake and Pastry
Choice Of Pie Or Cake (Select One)
Platters
Apple, Chocolate Cream, Pumpkin Or Meltaway
201-692-0192
MAADAN.COM or GLATTKOSHER.COM
WE OFFER REPAIRS
AND ALTERATIONS
TALLESIM CLEANED SPECIAL SHABBOS RUSH SERVICE
837-8700
Mitzvah Day
Seniors
The great
outdoors
Volunteers prepared flowerbeds for the winter, removed
more than 50 bags of trash
and brush in parks and historic sites, and planted bulbs
that will flower in the spring.
Here, Boy Scout Troop 226
and the Pack 613 Webelos Den
of Teaneck clean up debris at
Paterson Great Falls National
Historical Park.
Blood drives
The community collected, sorted, and distributed food, toiletries, warm coats,
and clothing for homeless and disadvantaged men, women, and children.
Members of Shaar Communities, pictured, distribute food at CUMAC in
Paterson.
Donors helped save lives by donating more than 150 pints of blood at five synagogues in northern New Jersey.
The Jewish Community Center of Paramus/Congregation Beth Tikvah hosted an
American Red Cross blood drive.
Photos courtesy JFNNJ
Gallery
Chaya Kohn
Ari Sugarman
Ari Sugarman of Teaneck, Chaya Kohn of Monsey, N.Y., and Rachel Zimmerman of
Chicago, shown with her son, Nochy, who has Perthes disease and is supported by
Chai Lifeline, all were part of Team Lifeline and ran in the New York City Marathon
on November 6. Yossie Leff of Spring Valley, N.Y., and Florence Haut and Adam
Sasouness, both of Englewood, were also on the 21-member team who ran for the
children and families of Chai Lifeline.
Courtesy Chai Lifeline
IDF Sgt. Ari Abramowitz went to the Valley Chabad Hebrew School on November 13 to launch a mitzvah project with the
students. Last year, more than $1,700 was raised for IDF lone soldiers. In anticipation of their bnai mitzvah this year, the
class will raise funds for the troops and show appreciation for their duties.
Courtesy Chabad
Jewish Standard NOVEMBER 18, 2016 37
Editorial
The delegation from the Jewish
Federation of Northern New Jersey,
one of the Jewish Agency for Israels
biggest funders, met with Natan
Sharansky, the former refusnik who
has served the Israeli government
in many ways, including in its
relationship with the diaspora, and
who now chairs the Jewish Agency.
Back row, from left, Julie LipsettSinger, Erica Silverman, Leonard
Cole, Joan Krieger, Bruce Brafman,
and Jayne Petak. Second row, Lisa
Marcus Abramowitz, Lisa Harris
Glass, and Natan Sharansky. Seated,
Roberta Abrams and Donna Kissler.
Jewish
Standard
1086 Teaneck Road
Teaneck, NJ 07666
(201) 837-8818
Fax 201-833-4959
Publisher
James L. Janoff
Associate Publisher Emerita
Marcia Garfinkle
Editor
Joanne Palmer
Associate Editor
Larry Yudelson
Community Editor
Beth Janoff Chananie
About Our Children Editor
Heidi Mae Bratt
thejewishstandard.com
38 JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER 18, 2016
Correspondents
Warren Boroson
Lois Goldrich
Abigail K. Leichman
Miriam Rinn
Dr. Miryam Z. Wahrman
Advertising Director
Natalie D. Jay
Classified Director
Janice Rosen
Advertising Coordinator
Jane Carr
Account Executives
Peggy Elias
Brenda Sutcliffe
International Media Placement
P.O. Box 7195 Jerusalem 91077
Tel: 02-6252933, 02-6247919
Fax: 02-6249240
Israeli Representative
How Abrams
way trumps
divided America
Production Manager
Jerry Szubin
Graphic Artists
Deborah Herman
Bob O'Brien
Founder
Morris J. Janoff (19111987)
Editor Emeritus
Meyer Pesin (19011989)
City Editor
Mort Cornin (19151984)
Editorial Consultant
Max Milians (1908-2005)
Secretary
Ceil Wolf (1914-2008)
Editor Emerita
Rebecca Kaplan Boroson
,
t
Opinion
Gomorrah in this weeks parashah, Vayera. Only, because of
what happened on Election Day and in the days following,
this story and its aftermath have a great deal of relevance
for us today.
This nation is like Abram and Lot: divided to the point
that it cant find common ground on which both sides
can live. Half the voters in our nation cheered on election
night as Donald Trump swept to victory. Half the voters in
our nation woke up the next morning filled with great and
unsettling fear.
I do not recall riots and demonstrations breaking out in
my lifetime following a presidential election, but there continue to be such in the wake of this election from coast to
coast, with thousands of people taking to the streets, some
carrying signs saying Not my president and others chanting Donald Trump go away. Racist, sexist, anti-gay.
Something else I do not recall, in this case from 16 years
ago: Al Gore won the popular vote in 2000, but a Supreme
Court decision gave George W. Bush the Electoral College,
and that was that. Some people talked about reforming the
Electoral College or scrapping it, but no one actually did
anything about it.
That is not the case this time. One candidate won the
popular vote by about 2 million votes and apparently set
a record for the most votes ever cast for a presidential candidate but that candidate, Hillary Clinton, lost the Electoral
College vote. So a petition began circulating, urging electors to cast their votes for the winner of the popular vote.
Within the first 24 hours, that petition amassed 3.5 million
signatures.
Confronted with a split in his camp, Abram chose separation you go your way, Lot, and Ill go mine. If you go right,
Ill go left.
Some time after that split, however, that world war
referred to above broke out. The Mesopotamians won and
took the spoils, which included Lot and his family, and all
they possessed.
When Abram learned of this, he did not say, a plague
on Lot, we split up because we couldnt live together
peacefully. Without a moments hesitation, he ordered
his private army into battle, and he enlisted the armies of
his three allies.
Abram and Lot may have had their differences; they
may have gone one to the right and the other to the left,
but in the end, they still were family. And family takes
care of family.
America is a family, too.
At noon on January 20, 2017, the name of the president of
the United States will change from Barack Obama to Donald
Trump, and there is nothing anyone can do to change that.
We, all of us, regardless of where we stand, have no choice
but to accept that. Our system of government requires that
we come together after an election.
We, all of us, also have no choice but to be vigilant for the
next two years and even the next four. We, all of us, have no
choice but to get involved in our political system from the
ground up if we want to avoid the chaos of Election 2016.
Donald Trump needs watching. Democrat, Republican,
Independent, it does not matter; all sides found something
objectionable about him and the things he says and does.
We need to pray for him to be the best president for all the
people anyone ever could be, but our eyes and ears and
minds must be focused on the actions he takes, the people
he appoints, and the programs he seeks to initiate.
The future of this country depends on such vigilance.
American-style democracy depends on it. Our lives and the
lives of our children and grandchildren depend on it.
Abram could have said Lot was no longer his problem,
but he did not. Family is family.
We, all of us, are Americans; we are family. We are sorely
divided, and it will only get worse unless we find a way to
live together.
An argument for
the sake of heaven
demands the ability
to listen. It also
demands the ability
to be malleable, to
change your way
of thinking or living
when someone
elses perceptions
ring true.
for the sake of heaven they put aside ego and the need
to win at all costs. By not descending into ad hominem
insults and dismissal of the truth of the other participant in the argument, the parties to the argument
bring to light different facets of ultimate truth. In this
way, they arrive at as much truth as human beings are
vouchsafed. This truth, which is the end product of a
combination of deeply held principles tempered by a
willingness to yield in the face of a point of view that
resonates with the mind or the heart, endures and
has a powerful impact on the lives of those who hear
and accept it.
An argument for the sake of heaven demands the
ability to listen. It also demands the ability to be malleable, to change your way of thinking or living when
someone elses perceptions ring true, even though you
wish to cling to the familiar. These capabilities, however, mostly characterize saints, and most of us, including this writer, are far from being saints. The pity is that
too many of us no longer even aspire to saintliness.
This failure to be in touch with our higher selves
not only hurts others but devalues ourselves as
well. The biblical tradition holds that humanity was
The opinions expressed in this section are those of the authors, not necessarily those
of the newspapers editors, publishers, or other staffers. We welcome letters to the editor.
Send them to jstandardletters@gmail.com.
Opinion
Undoubtedly,
many members
of the Jewish
community are
flummoxed by
Donald Trumps
presidential
election win.
regressive than anything that resembles
the word progress.
The plan fact is that under the last
eight years of a declared progressive,
healthcare costs, cost of living, and
income inequality went up, while work
force participation, the ease at which
small businesses could engage in the
economy, and the standard of living for
millions of Americans went down. Where
were the shiva services being held in the
Jewish community for the tens of thousands who lost their jobs in the energy
sector? Where were the protests against
Opinion
Linda
Hertzberg
Susan
Hertzberg
Some claim that Donald Trumps presidential win parallels the appointment
of Adolf Hitler as Germanys chancellor
in 1933. But that invites easy dismissal as
hyperbole, inasmuch as Trumpism (at
least so far) does not embrace the genocidal aspirations propelling Nazism.
There is, however, a closer analogy
that should inform and influence our
responsibilities and obligations to protest against Trumpism.
American minorities including Jews
but also others are facing not the
Nazi anti-Semitism and racial bigotry
of 1933 but the German anti-Semitic
political movement of 1880. That movement arose after the Bourse (stock
Opinion
Trumpism
FROM PAGE 37
and by mocking disabled people. Taking a page out of the anti-Semitic playbook, the candidate vilified the media
and other elites as distorting globalist influences protecting the undesirables, thereby dog whistling anti-Jewish
groups to their campaign.
Notwithstanding our historical obligation to combat anti-Semitism (and all
hatred), some argue that we should not
oppose Trumpism because Mr. Trump
also ran on a pro-Israel platform, and
the now anti-Israel agitators and policies, mainly associated with liberal
organizations and politicians, pose
the greater threat. Irrespective of the
immorality of such an approach and
it is truly immoral to ignore the hateful
statements Mr. Trump has made, especially now that he can make good on his
threats Jewish interests today include
both those affecting Israel and those
impacting the diaspora.
Just as diaspora Jews are called upon
Joseph B. Soloveitchik, the great modern Orthodox sage, made clear during
the evil days of the Holocaust, we must
publicly protest against the oppression
of the helpless, the defrauding of the
poor, the plight of the orphan. . . .
No religious cult is of any worth if
the laws and principles of righteousness
are violated and trampled upon by the
foot of pride.
Letters
Trumps win called
divine intervention
for the U.S. to go forward. It may be considered as both a saving and a warning. We
can repent by noting the need for correcting
the structure of family and out-of-wedlock
births that encumber every aspect of society and particularly creativity the reason
for our existence.
Sidney Kaplan, Fort Lee
Irresponsible journalism?
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
(201) 645-1307
Never change
another battery!
HOL207 MS047973
Cover Story
Cover Story
FIRST PERSON
Leonard Cohen,
my father, and me
Cnaan Liphshiz
Remembering
Leonard Cohen,
whose Jewish-infused
poetry and songs
inspired generations
Ron Kampeas
eonard Cohen, the
Canadian singer-songwriter whose Jewishinfused work became
a soundtrack for melancholy, has died. He
was 82.
It is with profound
sorrow we report that legendary poet,
songwriter and artist Leonard Cohen has
passed away, his Facebook page told the
world. We have lost one of musics most
revered and prolific visionaries.
It did not give a cause of death.
He died on Monday, November 7, in
Los Angeles, his death was announced on
Wednesday, November 9, and his private
funeral, in his childhood synagogue in
Montreal, was held on Thursday.
Cohen, a Montreal native born in 1934,
was playing folk guitar by the time he was
15, when he learned the resistance song
The Partisan while working at a camp
from an older friend.
We sang together every morning, going
through The Peoples Song Book from
cover to cover, he recalled in his first
Best Of compilation in 1975. I developed the curious notion that the Nazis
were overthrown by music.
As a student at McGill University,
Cohen became part of Montreals burgeoning alternative art scene, which
burst with nervous energy. That was a
time when tensions between Quebecs
French and English speakers were coming to the fore.
His influences included Irving Layton,
the seminal Canadian Jewish poet who
taught at McGill, and like Cohen grappled
I developed the
curious notion
that the Nazis
were overthrown
by music.
factor in his deciding to leave Montreal,
was recorded by Judy Collins and became
a hit, launching his career.
Cohen sang in his limited bass and wrote
his songs so he could sing them. They
would have been dirges but for their surprising lyrical turns and reckoning with joy
in unexpected places.
In Bird on the Wire, one of his most
covered songs, he recovers from a crippling guilt when he finds inspiration in a
beggar, and then in a prostitute: And a
pretty woman, leaning in her darkened
door/ She cried to me, Hey why not ask
for more?
Cohen embraced Buddhism but never
stopped saying he was Jewish. His music
more often than not dealt directly not
Cover Story
just with his faith but with his Jewish
peoples story.
His most famous song, covered hundreds of times, is Hallelujah he has
said its unpublished verses are endless,
but in its recorded version is about the
sacred anguish felt by King David as he
contemplates the beauty of the forbidden
Bathsheba.
Cohens version, released in 1984, did
well in Europe. (In a video on German
TV he is backed by a childrens choir hiding behind a faux Greek set.) John Cale
recorded a piano-driven version for a
Cohen tribute album in 1991. Jeff Buckley
heard that version and used it as the basis
for his own six-minute cover, reinterpreting on his guitar the arpeggios Cale had
used to accompany the song.
Running longer than six minutes,
Buckleys version became the go-to for
extended TV show montages depicting
trauma and melancholy song in the late
1990s. Cales version was used in Shrek
in 2001, and that did it. The song became
inevitable.
First We Take Manhattan, recorded
in the late 1980s when Cohen was living
in Europe much of the time, plumbs the
anger of a modern Jew traveling through
a postwar consumerist Europe that has
become adept at ignoring its Jewish ghosts:
I love your body and your spirit and
your clothes
But you see that line there moving
through the station?
I told you, I told you, told you, I was one
of those.
Cohen was droll, but also reverent: Each
of his explanations of his songs on 1975s
Best Of is sardonic except for one, for
Who by Fire.
This is based on a prayer recited on the
Day of Atonement, was all he wrote.
Cohen, in his 70s in the late 2000s,
again began to tour and record; a manager
had bilked him of much of his fortune. He
released his final album, You Want It
Darker, last month.
He often toured Israel, and he expressed
his love for the country Cohen toured for
troops in the 1973 Yom Kippur War but
Leonard Cohen entertains Israeli troops on the southern front during the 1973 war with Egypt and Syria as Gen. Ariel
Sharon listens appreciatively.
Liphshiz
from page 45
Leonard Cohen clutches his trademark fedora during his 2009 concert in Israel.
and Israeli parents who had lost children to the conflict. While I recognize
the universality of grief, I found that the
rhetoric of this particular parents circle risked creating a moral equivalence
between terrorists and their killers.
I had expected more from Cohen,
whom I fortunately got to see, after all,
when he toured Europe in 2012.
But my father took a different view.
The discussions we had on this point
became yet another case in which
Cohen, from his tower of song, informed
both my outlook and my relationship
with my father, who is by far my best
debate adversary.
Cover Story
Daniel Kahn credits Leonard Cohen with inspiring him to become a songwriter.
achieving goals that they had set, compared with the control group of those
who did not record their gratitude.
In a similar study, participants consistently reported feeling more energetic,
alive, awake, and alert. Expressing and
feeling gratitude has also been found
to inspire pro-social behavior such
as generosity, compassion, and charitable giving.
Gratitude even helps in hard times, as
it correlates resilience to adversity. So
at this years Thanksgiving table, give it
a go!
Temima Danzig, LCSW, is an awardwinning dialysis social worker and a
psychotherapist in private practice in
Teaneck. She can be reached at (201)
357.5796 or visit her website atwww.
temimadanzig.com
Tenafly
A SSISTED L IVING
55 Hudson Ave. Tenafly, NJ 07670
201-510-2060
Clinicians trained in the subspecialty of palliative care work together with the patients
disease-directed care team, helping to better
meet the patients needs with a team-based
approach. The team includes nurse practitioners, physicians, social workers, dietitians,
chaplains, pharmacists, registered nurses,
and others.
The team helps patients gain control of
their illness by exploring their goals of care,
better understanding their treatment options,
and avoiding unwanted care. A partnership
develops that includes the palliative care
team, the patient and the patients family.
Patients are relieved to have assistance with
understanding what to expect and how to
handle it, and difficult decisions can be made
with more information and insight.
Palliative care also provides comfort and
support for family members or other caregivers. It can help both patients and their families cope with the challenges of living with a
serious illness. As family members receive
support, they can, in turn, better support
their loved one during illness.
More than
343,000 likes.
At Valley, we recognize the difference that
palliative care can make in the quality of life
for our patients, Balentine said. We started
with an inpatient palliative care program and
today also offer palliative care in the outpatient setting or for homebound patients at
home in the privacy of their residence. This
service is an extra layer of support for an
improved quality of life for our patients.
For inpatient palliative care services within
Valley Hospital, any patient or family member may request a consultation by asking their
physician or nurse.
For outpatient palliative care services,
which are provided at Valleys Luckow Pavilion in Paramus, any patient or family member who is considering outpatient palliative
care can ask their physician for a referral to
the program.
In addition, Valley Home Care offers palliative care services to patients directly in their
homes. For more information on both services, call (201) 634-5699.
Like us
on
Facebook.
facebook.com/
jewishstandard
2016
READERS
CHOICE
FIRST PLACE
Someone You
LYVE
Deserves...
*The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Nursing Home Compare ratings
Fantasy football
becomes reality for
Adler Aphasia center
Harry Carson, Pro Football Hall-of-Famer and
former captain of the New York Giants, was
honored by the Adler Aphasia Center with its 2016
Advocacy Award at their recent annual gala. While
in attendance, he posed with center members
who are currently participating in a Fantasy
Football group, as part of therapy to build their
communication skills.
This life skills group has been one of the most popular offered at the center. An Adler league was created and members with aphasia are using technology
(iPads) to participate in this group. Each week members get to choose players and discuss the latest events
in football. The winner of the league will receive an
football autographed by Carson.
For more information, visit AdlerAphasiaCenter.org
or call (201) 368.8585.
Israeli-German
medical team gives
14 children gift of life
Save a Childs Heart and
Deutsches Herzzentrum perform
lifesaving catheterizations in
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Viva Sarah Press
Fourteen Tanzanian children underwent successful
heart catheterizations during the first Israeli-German
Wolfson Medical Center/Deutsches Herzzentrum joint
medical mission to Dar es Salaam this month.
The five-day medical mission supported by Save
a Childs Heart Canada and Ein Herz fr Kinder
included a German team from the Deutsches Herzzentrum in Berlin under the leadership of Professor Felix
Berger and an Israeli team from the Wolfson Medical
Valley Health Systems cancer care team now works with Mount Sinai
Health System. In addition to having Mount Sinai doctors practice at
Valley, we collaborate so we can be even better at preventing and
beating cancer. Heres Alexs story.
Alex was a healthy runner and mother of two.
Cancer was never on her radar because she
didnt have a family history. Then, at a yearly
wellness visit, Alexs doctor discovered
a cancerous lump in her breast. After careful
consideration, she chose Valley a decision
that resulted in finding undiagnosed cancer
in her other breast.
See how Alexs decision changed her life
at MyStory.ValleyHealth.com.
10/18/16
1:37 PM
Jewish Standard NOVEMBER
18, 2016
51
a pt
of Fily...
THE PROMENADE
AT CHESTNUT RIDGE
845-620-0606
LICENSED BY NYSDOH
PROMENADESENIOR.COM
Come Fe O Wm
PROMENADESENIOR.COM
Wishing you a
Happy Passover
The Chateau
At Rochelle Park
96 Parkway
Rochelle Park, NJ 07662
201 226-9600
96 Parkway
Rochelle
Park,
NJ for
201-226-9600
Sub Acute
Rehabilitative
Care
Center
Hospital After Care
Wishing you a
Happy Passover
The Chateau
At Rochelle Park
After care is so important to a patients recovery once a patient is released from the
hospital the real challenges often begin the challenges they now have to face as they
try and regain their strength and independence.
96 Parkway
Rochelle Park, NJ 07662 Sign up for the
201 226-9600
Jewish Standard daily newsletter!
Here at The Chateau we combine the very same sophisticated technologies and
techniques used by leading hospitals with hands on skilled rehabilitative/nursing care.
Sub Acute care ensures that patients return home with the highest degree of function
possible.
Ventilator Care/Vent-Dialysis
IV Therapy
Tracheotomy Care
Physical, Speech and Occupational Therapy
Physician Supervised Wound Care
On-Site Internal Medicine Physicians
24 Hour Nursing Care
2016
READERS
CHOICE
Visit www.thejewishstandard.com
and click on SUBSCRIBE TO THE DAILY
For
more information,
information,or
ortotoschedule
schedulea tour
a tour
TheHealth
Chateau
Rochelle
For more
of of
Alaris
at at
The
ChateauPark,
at
please
call
our please
Admissions
201 336-9317
Rochelle
Park,
call ourDepartment
AdmissionsatDepartment
at 201 336-9317
JewishStandard
N E W
J E R S E Y
R O C K L A N D
After
care is so important to a patients recovery once a patient is released from the
52 Jewish Standard NOVEMBER 18, 2016
hospital the real challenges often begin the challenges they now have to face as they
try and regain their strength and independence.
using the data in these reports to continuously improve our safety measures
in accordance with our commitment
to meet the highest standards and
were confident these efforts are seen
in our A rating.
Protecting patients from harm is the
most important charge for any hospital,
said Leah Binder, president and CEO of The
Leapfrog Group. We recognize and appreciate A hospitals vigilance and continued
dedication to keeping their patients safe.
Developed under the guidance of
an expert panel, the Leapfrog Hospital
Safety Grade uses 30 measures of publicly available hospital safety data to
assign A, B, C, D, and F grades to more
than 2,600 U.S. hospitals twice per year.
It is calculated by top patient safety
experts, peer-reviewed, fully transparent and free to the public. Holy Name
Medical Center was one of 844 hospitals
to receive an A, ranking among the safest hospitals in the United States.
Discover
more ways
to live well
at
home.
A reference for
breast examiners
A dermatoscope, which enlarges and
illuminates an area of the skin to obtain
an optimal image for diagnosis, is an easily adaptable existing technology that
requires little training at a reasonable
cost, Naimer and Silverman say.
The tool can provide 10-fold magnification and a three dimensional image,
without distortion, to distinguish conclusively between normal and abnormal tissue. The dermatoscope can help
identify causes of nipple pain ranging
from asymptomatic candida infection to
extremely painful minute lesions.
Improved wound surveillance and
standardization for purposes of research
documentation are additional benefits
anticipated with the use of breast dermoscopy, the researchers said.
The authors stated that they hope
broader adoption of this readily available method for observing an area suspected of causing discomfort will lead to
more correct, targeted clinical appraisals of nursing-related nipple pain.
Our eventual aim is to prepare an
atlas with the full spectrum of normal
and pathological states that any physician or health practitioner who joins the
community of breast examiners can use
as a reference, Naimer and Silverman
Israel21c.org
concluded.
201.750.3077
jewishhomeathome.org
Jewish Home at Home is a not for profit, non-sectarian program
open to all seniors regardless of race, religion or ethnic origin.
JH@H Ad 2k16 CL v2.indd 1
2:14 PM
Jewish Standard NOVEMBER8/26/16
18, 2016
53
Celebrating
32 Years Serving
Bergen & Rockland
Residents
Always a Nurs
e On-Call 24/7
A&T
HEALTHCARE
Accredited
JCAHO
Wellspring Village
Im passionate about serving people living with dementia and their families.
I did my homework before joining the Brightview team and Wellspring
Village is the finest program of its type in the area. I cant wait until we
open. If someone you care about is living with dementia and needs assistance,
please give me a call. Jennifer Barbieri, Wellspring Village Director
Families tell us everyone benefits because the outstanding care and support
we provide reduces worry and stress.
Fitness Center
*Lunch by appointment only and must be accompanied by a full tour of our community.
201-836-7474
www.FiveStarPremier-Teaneck.com
Pet
Friendly
INDEPENDENT
LIVING
ASSISTED
LIVING
Jewish Standard NOVEMBER 18, 2016 55
certain cases.
You dont need pots, soil, or even a
green thumb. Water, light, acidity, temperature, humidity, and nutrients all are
monitored by sensors and controlled by
a smartphone app. The system dries the
leaves at the end of the grow cycle so
theyre fully ready for consumption.
An embedded HD camera provides a
live stream of images during the process
for users to share via the app, which also
offers explanatory video clips.
The Leaf system is available online in the
near future at a preorder price of $2,990
through early 2017, for shipping next September. A $300 deposit is required; the
balance will be collected at time of shipment and the deposit can be refunded up
until that time.
Initially we will be shipping to the USA
and Canada, says Ofir. We are currently
working on international distribution partnerships to be able to ship worldwide.
Leaf will realize additional revenues
from renewables: carbon filters to keep
odors from escaping the unit, and disposable nutrient pods from Advanced Nutrients, one of Leaf s strategic investors.
The pods fit into the machine like ink cartridges in a printer.
The Leaf system comes with all the nutrients needed to grow the cannabis
plants.
Ofir was born to Israeli parents in California, where marijuana was legalized for
medical use in 1996 and is now approved
for recreational use as well. The family
moved back to Israel in 2000, when he
was 11.
His previous startup, Alcohoot, invented
a smartphone breathalyzer and was sold
to an American company a couple of
CALL US TODAY!
(551) 224-8080
Free Consultation
56 Jewish Standard NOVEMBER 18, 2016
Assisted Living
In Your Own Home
Serving Bergen,
Passaic & Hudson Counties
Personal Home Health Care
- Anxiety
- Social Challenges
- Depression
- Life Transitions
- Adjustment to - Stress Management
Chronic Illness
Now
Open!
Stay
Active!
MS
DEMENTIA
BALANCE
STROKE
FIBROMYALGIA
WE OFFER:
Personalized Training
Group Fitness Classes
Seminars
TO IMPROVE:
Strength
Core
PARKINSONS
Balance
Cognitive
Fitness
201-937-4722
www.FitnessSeniorStyle.com
fatty liver.
Dr. Gad Asher of the Weizmann Institutes biomolecular sciences department
and his colleagues, including postdoctoral
fellows Yaarit Adamovich and Benjamin
Ladeuix, wondered whether oxygen might
also influence circadian rhythms since
oxygen absorption in animals is linked
with nutrient ingestion and maintenance
of body temperatures.
Indeed, the researchers showed that
changing the concentration of oxygen in
cells by just 3 percent, twice a day, will
reset mouse cells circadian clocks.
They suspected, and ultimately
proved, that a protein called HIF1,
which responds to changes in oxygen
levels and plays a critical role in oxygen
homeostasis in cells, is responsible for
the reset.
sleep-wake cycle did not change their circadian rhythms, but once mice experienced a six-hour jump ahead in daylight
hours, varying oxygen levels helped them
adapt their eating, sleeping and running
habits to the new time faster.
For example, the scientists saw that a
small drop in oxygen levels 12 hours prior
to the six-hour daylight shift, or two hours
afterwards, put the mice back on their
circadian schedules faster. This, too, was
dependent on HIF1 levels.
It was extremely exciting to see that
even small changes in oxygen levels were
sufficient to efficiently reset the circadian
clock, said Asher.
He added that the study raises important
questions. Although we show that clock
reset by oxygen is dependent on HIF1, we
did not yet fully identify how HIF1 integrates within the core clock circuitry.
Understanding how oxygen influences
the body clock goes beyond jetlag. Cardiovascular disease, chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease, shift-work sleep disorder and other common health problems can result in tissues with low oxygen levels.
We show that oxygen works in
MIRIAM APARTMENTS
at
In a beautiful, suburban setting, experience privacy in your one bedroom or studio apartment with supportive
services while remaining independent with dignity. Apartments are available to seniors age 62 and over and/
or persons with mobility impairments. The Miriam Apartments, located on the 13-acre campus of Daughters of
Miriam Center/The Gallen Institute, are just over five miles from Routes 4 and 17 and directly off the Garden
State Parkway. In addition, we are easily accessible from the NJ Turnpike, Routes 80, 46 and 3 and less than
15 miles from New York City. Independent living at the apartments is just one facet of the continuum of care
offered at Daughters of Miriam Center. Whatever your needs might be independent living, rehabilitation,
or skilled nursing care the Center offers it all, in a Jewish environment, in one location.
Apartment Features:
24 Hour Security
Beauty/Barber Shop
Healthcare Counseling
Housekeeping
Kosher Dinner Meal
Rabbi & Synagogue on-site
Recreational Activities
Shabbot Elevators
Social Services
Transportation Assistance
2 Israeli cities
spraying for
mosquitoes after
Zika virus diagnosed
Israeli disaster relief teams have been among the first and
largest to arrive at the scenes of natural disasters, including an
earthquake in Turkey in 1999, an earthquake in Haiti in 2010,
a typhoon in the Philippines in 2013, and an earthquake in
Nepal in 2015.
Some have accused Israel of providing disaster relief in an
effort to repair its international image. But diplomats have
said the motivation is largely humanitarian. Other Israeli
teams may apply to be recognized by the WHO in the future.
Two cities in central Israel are spraying pesticides against mosquitoes after one case of the
Zika virus was diagnosed in each city.
Rishon LeZion and Holon are spraying in the
vicinities of the patients homes in an effort
to prevent the spread of the virus. Both were
infected outside of Israel, according to reports.
At least 17 people carrying the virus
have entered Israel in recent months,
Haaretz reported.
The Aedes aegypti mosquito is the prime
carrier of Zika, but other mosquitoes capable
of carrying the disease exist in Israel. The disease can also be transmitted sexually.
The virus produces flu-like symptoms, but
in pregnant women it can cause microcephaly, in which babies are born with abnormally
small brains and heads, and experience developmental delays.
Luxurious
Serving the Jewish community
of Bergen County for 12 years
1.866.7FREEDOM
844.786.1796
WWW.FOUNTAINVIEW.ORG
(1.866.737.3336)
www.freedomhh.com
Jewish Standard NOVEMBER 18, 2016 59
Dvar Torah
Vayera: The easy way out? I think not
ear Reader,
of Mamre. He was sitting at the opening of
I have a confession to make to
his tent during the heat of the day (Genyou. The dvar Torah that you
esis 18:1). Eleventh century commentator
are about to read was not my
Rashi explains that God appeared to Abraoriginal submission to The Jewish Standard.
ham to visit the sick. Quoting a teaching
The night following the presidential election
of Rabbi Chama bar Chanina, Rashi explains
(since the editors ask for our submission a
that it was the third day following Abrahams
week in advance) I was exhausted and found
circumcision.
myself still working at 10:30 at night. So I
Abraham must have been in tremenRabbi Paul
went into my Dropbox, found a dvar Torah
dous pain. He was recovering from a selfJacobson
for Parashat Vayera that I had written four
inflicted surgical wound. He could choose
Temple Avodat
years ago, quickly edited it, and emailed it to
to simply sit down, lie back, and allow
Shalom, River
the editors of The Standard.
Sarah to wait on him left-and-right, but he
Edge, Reform
It wasnt a bad dvar Torah, but then again,
doesnt. Addressing his visitors, Abraham
it wasnt one of my best either. I took the easy
says, Let me get you something to eat, so
way out. There. I said it.
you can be refreshed and then go on your
Only there is one huge problem. Parashat Vayera has
way now that you have come to your servant (18:5).
nothing to do with taking the easy way out just the oppoAfter Sarah and a servant assist in the preparation of
site in fact. When Abraham learns that God is going to
the food, Abraham places a meal before his visitors, his
destroy Sodom and Gomorrah, he challenges God to save
honored guests, and speaks with them. It doesnt matthese cities for the sake of even ten righteous individuals,
ter how he is feeling, the level of his tiredness, his pain
and questions God, Will not the judge of the world act
or suffering. He remains a man of purpose and intent.
justly? When God tests Abraham later in the parashah
Abraham doesnt take the easy way out.
(in perhaps one of the Torahs most awful, inexplicable
Abraham should be a model for us in the current season
scenes), directing Abraham to sacrifice his son, Abraham
and in our current political and social climate. Consider
doesnt back down.
what Abraham does in the span of a few chapters. He is
The beginning of the parashah is no different. We read,
argumentative and he wont back down. He challenges the
And God appeared to him [Abraham] in the terebinths
status quo and he wont take no for an answer. He offers
BRIEFS
JNS.ORG
Like us on Facebook
60 JEWISH STANDARD NOVEMBER 18, 2016
facebook.com/jewishstandard
GREAT
HOLIDAY GIFTS
BOOKS&GREETINGS
As Seen In
AINSLEY
Autographed Books Make
BOOKS&GREETINGS
EARHARDT
GREAT HOLIDAY GIFTS
koshercrosswords@gmail.com
Difficulty Level: Medium
271 Livingston
St, Northvale,
NJ (Next to Applebees)
Cant
Make A Signing?
Call
&
Reserve
Your
Autographed
Copy Today!
SEE OUR NEW LEGO DEPARTMENT!
#1 NY Times Best Selling Author & Celebrity
Fox
&
Friends Co-Host
Autographed
Books Make
AINSLEY
GREAT
HOLIDAY GIFTS
KATHY
EARHARDT
GRIFFIN
SATURDAY,
NOV. 19 2:00 PM
FRIDAY, NOV. 25 11 AM
AINSLEY
EARHARDT
KATHY
RAY
KELLY
SATURDAY, NOV. 19 2:00 PM
4106164 NJMG
Crossword
Say It Again By Yoni Glatt
4106164 NJMG
GRIFFIN
GREG KELLY
FRIDAY, NOV. 25 11 AM
KATHY
RAY KELLY
BOBBY
GRIFFIN
FRIDAY, NOV. 25 11 AM
AND Co-Host of Good Day New York
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1 7 PM
NYPD Commissioner
Rock & Roll SingerMeet
of Former
the 60s
RYDELL
GREG KELLY
AND Co-Host of Good Day New York
THURSDAY,
1 7 PM
TUESDAY, DEC.
13 6DECEMBER
PM
Across
1. Blue foe of Magneto
6. Israeli gun
11. Yom Kippur, e.g.
14. Shalom, to 24-Down
15. First name in terrorism
16. Glass of note
17. Car for a Hebrew month?
19. Shmaltz, e.g.
20. Biblical suffix
21. Half of Morks Shalom
22. Good ___ (mitzvot)
24. Goodman or Dawson
25. Fit for David
28. Gehrigs fond of palm leaves?
34. The hora, e.g.
35. Lenins What ___ Be Done?
36. Where the Jews involved with the
Golden Calf ran?
37. Play for a yutz
38. Initials of the Goosebumps author
40. Letters of importance to Magen
David Adom
42. Ken, to Pierre
43. Those, in the country of
the Inquisition
45. Get rid of, like Jehu of Jezebel
47. Singer Cohn and others
49. Be moved by a prayer?
52. Eichlers.com buy, e.g.
53. Initials on Kirks ship
54. Rocker born Saul Hudson
57. Bic items that cant be used for
a Torah
59. Many FL Jews
62. Ein ___
63. Take a bar mitzvah giveaway?
67. ___ Maamin
68. Shreks mishpachah
69. Motivate like Judah Maccabee
70. Title for Schumer or Booker: Abbr.
71. Royals singer with a divine sounding name
72. Many a Jew for forty years
Down
1. Joseph Gordon Levitt: Robin :: Tom
Hardy: ___
2. Do work on this paper
3. Organization with a building overlooking the Kotel
4. Red or Black
5. Possible terrorist trying to get
into Israel
6. Enter (a synagogue)
7. Gives confidence (like G-d to Joshua)
8. Part of Western city in an Elvis hit
9. ___ Believer (Monkees hit written
by Neil Diamond)
10. Oscar winner Martin
11. Judith to Esau
12. Southern Israeli city
13. An American Tail creature
18. Small device for the Siddur app
23. Ari follower
24. Longley who played for
Reinsdorfs Bulls
26. Graceland or Monticello
27. Unit of goo
28. Gadots Wonder Woman uses one
29. ___ a kind (Noahs flood, e.g.)
30. Effects in many Spielberg films
31. Early rabbi
32. Speak up (for)
33. They can be used on Hermon
34. Many a Simon & Garfunkel song
39. Copacabana girl
41. G-ds name from Esther
44. Gets, like a hard piece of Talmud
46. ___ over (like Adonijah felt)
48. Jolson and Capp
50. Notable Levi
51. Ronsons Uptown hit
54. Israeli party
55. Adam, at first
56. Rabbi Steinsaltz
58. ___ On Down the Road (song in
Lumets The Wiz)
59. Traif email?
60. ___-tat (Max Weinberg output)
61. Sukkah storage locale
64. Freudian topic
65. Make like Moses hitting the rock
66. One playing for Wilfs Vikings, e.g.
RAY
KELLY
www.booksandgreetings.com
BOBBY
GREG KELLY
RYDELL
TUESDAY, DEC. 13 6 PM
201-784-2665
BOBBY
www.booksandgreetings.com
RYDELL
AND Co-Host of Good Day New York
www.booksandgreetings.com
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1 7 PM
TUESDAY, DEC. 13 6 PM
201-784-2665
www.booksandgreetings.com
BOOK PURCHASE NECESSARY FROM
BOOKS & GREETINGS TO ATTEND EVENTS!
Calendar
Night out in Jersey
City: Join Temple Beth-
Friday
november 18
El for an evening of
mystery boxes, wine
and chocolate tasting,
silent auction, and 50/50
raffle, 7 p.m. 2419 JFK
Boulevard. (201) 3334229.
Shabbat in Fort
Lee: The JCC of Fort
Chanani Sandler
Lee/Congregation
Gesher Shalom offers
pre-Thanksgiving
congregational
dinner and musical
service, 6 p.m. Dinner
reservations required.
1449 Anderson Ave. (201)
947-1735.
Kumsitz in Teaneck:
Shabbat in Wyckoff:
Temple Beth Rishon
offers a music-filled
Carlebach Shabbat
in commemoration
of his 22nd yahrzeit,
7:30 p.m. Led by TBRs
Cantors Ilan Mamber
and Summer GreenwaldGonella, Cantor Emeritus
Mark Biddelman of
Temple Emanuel of
Pascack Valley, and TBR
Rabbis Ken Emert and
Lois Ruderman, with
percussionist Jimmy
Cohen. 585 Russell Ave.
Refreshments. (201) 8914466 or bethrishon.org.
Shabbat in Teaneck:
Shaare Tefillah presents a
poetry slam, Novembers
in November A Night
of Poetry, with brothers
Yehoshua and Baruch
November, during the
oneg Shabbat, 7:30 p.m.
510 Cumberland Ave.
(201) 357-0613 or www.
shaaretefillah.org.
nov.
20
595-6565 or www.
templebethtikvahnj.org.
Saturday
November 19
Shabbat in Bayonne:
Rabbi Cathy Felix is
installed as the new rabbi
at Temple Beth Am,
10:30 a.m. 111 Avenue B.
(201) 858-2020.
Congregation Beth
Aaron holds a kumsitz on
motzei Shabbat Vayera,
8 p.m. Chanani Sandler
and Benjy Rosenbluth
will sing and offer words
of inspiration. Light
refreshments. 950 Queen
Anne Road. (201) 8366210.
Sunday
Andrew Gross
Shabbat in Wayne:
Andrew Gross discusses
U.S./Israeli Relations:
Partnering for Peace for
the 45th annual Rabbi
Shai Shacknai Memorial
lecture at Temple Beth
Tikvah, 7:30 p.m. Mr.
Gross is the director
of political affairs and
adviser to the deputy
consul general of Israel in
New York. Shai Shacknai
was Beth Tikvahs first
full-time rabbi. 950
Preakness Ave. (973)
Oded Revivi
Shabbat in Englewood:
November 20
Israels affordable
housing crisis: Esther
Sandrof discusses the
Affordable Housing
Crisis in Israel and How
It Is Impacted by ArabJewish Relations and
Pluralism at Temple
Emeth in Teanecks
Byachad breakfast,
10:30 a.m. Ms. Sandrof is
a co-founder and partner
at Forsyth Street. 1666
Windsor Road. Breakfast
reservations, (201) 8331322 or www.emeth.org.
Concert in Clifton:
Rabbi Shammai
Engelmayer
Eric Goldman
Thanksgiving and
Judaism: Rabbi
Shammai Engelmayer
8th Day
Rabbi Gerald Zelizer
Kristallnacht: A Family
Story at Congregation
Adas Emuno, 4 p.m. 254
Broad Ave. (201) 592-1712
or www.adasemuno.org.
Kristallnacht program
in Leonia: Dr. Eugene
Marlow of the Heritage
Ensemble will show his
new video, Zikkaron/
Monday
November 21
Hollywood blacklist
talk in Tenafly: Dumont
historian Dick Burnon
talks about Dalton
Trumbo: An Early
Victim of the Hollywood
Blacklist, at a meeting
of the Senior Activity
Center at the Kaplen
JCC on the Palisades,
11:15 a.m. Will include
excerpts from the 2007
Calendar
film Trumbo. 411 East
Clinton Ave. (201) 5697900, ext. 235, or www.
jccotp.org.
Interfaith Thanksgiving
in Pearl River: Beth Am
Temple holds its annual
interfaith Thanksgiving
service with other Pearl
River houses of worship,
7:30 p.m. 60 East
Madison Ave. Call for free
tickets. (845) 735-5858
or www.bethamtemple.
org.
Monday
November 28
Monday
Senior program in
Wayne: The Chabad
November 21
In New York
Saturday
November 19
Tuesday
November 25
Interfaith Thanksgiving
in Jersey City:
The annual Journal
Square area interfaith
Thanksgiving service is
Singles
Sunday
November 20
Singles 65+ of the JCC
Rockland meets for lunch
at Sutters Mill, noon. 214
Route 59, Suffern, N.Y.
Individual checks. Gene,
(845) 356-5525.
Friday
November 22
Lehrer begins Whats
My Jewish Line, a
six-week course, at
the JCC of Paramus/
Congregation Beth
Tikvah, 8:15 p.m. East 304
Midland Ave. (201) 2627691.
at 6 p.m.; discussion
at 7. To benefit the
Academies@GBDS.
435 W. 116th St. Amy
Soukas, (201) 207-3685,
GBDSTorchTalks2gmail.
com, or www.ssnj.org.
Bob Costas
Lessons from the
Munich Olympics: The
Academies at Gerrard
Berman Day School in
Oakland offers Torch
Talks at Columbia Law
Schools Center for
Israeli Legal Studies.
Sportscaster Bob Costas
will moderate a panel
discussion, Lessons
From the Munich
Olympics. VIP reception
Needlepoint a mezuzah
The Women of Chai invites the community to crafts
night on December 1 at 7 p.m. at Temple Beth Tikvah in Wayne. Participants will create their own
needlepoint mezuzah. All are welcome. It costs $25
and includes colorful materials and instructions.
No previous needlepoint experience is needed. A
dessert buffet will follow.
Bringing a nonperishable food donation for the
WIN-Wayne Interfaith Network. For information,
call Joan Gottleib at (973) 633-5187 or email her at
gotsky5@optonline.net.
Dinner and
entertainment in
Clifton: North Jersey
Jewish Singles 40s-60s,
a group sponsored
by the Clifton Jewish
Center, hosts the Baby
Boomers dance with
music by DJ Allan
Boles, 4:30-7:30 p.m.
Light buffet dinner. 18
Delaware St. (973) 7723131 or www.meetup.
com.
Courtesy BergenPAc
Jewish World
Iran deal
from page 25
Condemn
from page 31
Let Congress do it
If Congress fails to reauthorize Iran sanctions before it concludes its business, there
are any number of Republican senators
ready to write new ones. That way, Trump
doesnt get blamed for walking away from
the deal.
Drawbacks: Democrats likely will filibuster any new legislation. An array of groups
that backed the deal, including J Street,
the liberal Middle East policy group, has
pledged to hold the partys feet to the fire.
There will be fights, and these will be
fights J Street and other supporters of the
deal will engage in with everything weve
got, said Dylan Williams, J Streets vice
president of government affairs.
And perhaps, from Trumps perspective, thats not a drawback: He satisfies
hard-liners by encouraging them to come
up with the toughest anti-deal legislation
possible and then watches it wither on
the vine.
JTA Wire Service
Strategist
from page 26
Briefs
Obituaries
Martin Blumenthal
Eleanore Eisler
Warren Kirschner
Henry Liebman
Arnold Schindel
Established 1902
Headstones, Duplicate Markers and Cemetery Lettering
With Personalized and Top Quality Service
Please call 1-800-675-5624
www.kochmonument.com
76 Johnson Ave., Hackensack, NJ 07601
201.843.9090
1.800.426.5869
201-947-3336 888-700-EDEN
GuttermanMusicantWien.com
www.edenmemorial.com
Classified
Florida Condo For Rent
. Magnificent Vacation Condo
Del Ray Beach 55+ Community
Beautifully furnished 1 Bedroom
Utilities & MEALS incld.
Daily activities. Great location.
Seasonal or Annual Rentals.
Jan./Feb. or March/April
215-740-1165
Paramus, N. J.
Gravesites Available
$1150 each
Excellent Location
Call Mrs. G 201-429-2585
914-589-4673
(201) 837-8818
Help Wanted
SINAI SCHOOLS
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DIRECTOR
SINAI Schools seeks an experienced and highly
qualified individual with strong supervisory experience
and administrative skills to lead our new inclusive
special education elementary school at SAR Academy
in Riverdale, New York.
Successful candidates will have an advanced degree;
experience in the field of special education; the skill
to develop, motivate, and supervise the faculty; and
excellent communication and organization skills.
New school to open in September, 2018.
Position to begin September, 2017.
Salary commensurate with
qualifications and experience.
Qualified minorities and/or women
are encouraged to apply; EEO.
SINAI Schools invites candidates to submit
letters of interest and resumes to:
Rabbi Dr. Yisrael Rothwachs,
Deanyrothwachs@sinaischools.org
www.sinaischools.org
Help Wanted
. Bookkeeper: Inventory
Control & Account Keeping
Newark, N.J.
Must have a car
Must have at least 4 yrs of
experience in bookkeeping and
account keeping
email resume to:
rivka@kosherdairy.net
Help Wanted
CDL Sales Driver:
Route available in an established Food & Dairy business
*Great Pay
*Delivers to assigned route,
increase sales in current stores
*Must have CDL Class B
license
*Positive, friendly attitude
*Experience is a must
Email resume to:
rivka@kosherdairy.net
Looking for young person to
care for me and my apartment a
few hours a day, 3 or 4 days a
week.Speaks English well. Drives.
Call 201-886-1266
MAINTENANCE/
MECHANIC WORKER
Dairy Factory
Paterson, N.J.
Full time Job
Must have experience
Email resume to:
rivka@kosherdairy.net
Help Wanted
NOW HIRING FOR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH DEPT
Social Worker, Psychiatrist, Intervention Specialist
and Play Therapist.
The successful candidate will provide key Behavioral Health
Services by conducting assessments & diagnosis of children,
adolescents and adults.
Great benefit package offered.
Full and Part Time positions available.
Submit resume to:
recruitment@echcki.org
or call 845-774-1654
Antiques
Antiques Wanted
WE BUY
Oil Paintings
Silver
Bronzes
Porcelain
Oriental Rugs
Furniture
Marble Sculpture
Jewelry
Tiffany Items
Chandeliers
Chinese Art
Bric-A-Brac
Tyler Antiques
Established by Bubbe in 1940!
tylerantiquesny@aol.com
201-894-4770
Shomer Shabbos
66 Jewish Standard OCTOBER 18, 2016
ANS A
Call Us!
Shommer
Shabbas
201-861-7770 201-951-6224
www.aadsa726@yahoo.com
Situations Wanted
Situations Wanted
29 years experience as a
Certified Nurses Aide. Excellent
references. Live out/in. I have a
valid drivers license. 201-8708372
DAUGHTER
FOR A DAY, LLC
FOR YOUR
PROTECTION
Handpicked
Certified Home
Health Aides
Hourly - Daily - Live In
NURSE SUPERVISED
Creative
companionship
interactive,
intelligent
conversation &
social outings
Downsize
Coordinator
Assist w/shopping,
errands, Drs, etc.
Organize/process
paperwork,
bal. checkbook,
bookkeeping
Resolve medical
insurance claims
Free Consultation
RITA FINE
201-214-1777
www.daughterforaday.com
Established 2001
veteran/college graduate
seeks employment in telephone
sales. 25 years experience in purchasing and marketing of diverse
products. Proven success in generating new business through
building strong relationships, senior
buyer of toys, hobbies, hard goods
and bulk toys. Honest, hard worker. email:yendisid@optImum.net
Antiques
NICHOL AS
ANTIQUES
ESTATES
BOUGHT & SOLD
201-920-8875
info@antiquenj.com
e
h
r
s
Classified
situations Wanted
ExPERIENCED Aide looking for
live-out position as Caregiver/Companion, 2/3 days a week. Will help
with housekeeping. References.
Drives own car. 845-821-0599.
Bergen County.
Handyman
Car serViCe
Adam 201-675-0816
ExPERIENCED
BABySITTER
for Teaneck area.
Please call Jenna
201-660-2085
plumBinG
A PLUS
PARTY
PLANNER
Tolls, parking, wlt, stops & tps are not included Extra $7 Airport Pickup
Fuel surcharge may add up to 10% Additional charge may be applied to credit card payment
CleaninG serViCe
A POLISH CLEANING WOMAN
- Homes, Apartments, Offices15 years experience, excellent
references.
Affordable rates!
Izabela 973-572-7031
CleaninG serViCe
OuTSIDE OFFICE
CLEANING
SERVING THE AREA
FOR 25 yEARS
POlISH FAMIlY BUSINeSS
201-679-5081
personals
ROOFING SIDING
BH
Carpentry
Painting
Decks
Kitchens
Electrical
Locks/Doors
Paving/Masonry
Basements
Drains/Pumps
Bathrooms
Maintenence
Plumbing
Hardwood Floors
Tiles/Grout
General Repairs
1-201-530-1873
rooFinG
Free
Estimates
HACKENSACK
ROO
FING
OOFING
CO.
201-487-5050
INC.
Roof
Repairs
83 FIRST STREET
HACKENSACK, NJ 07601
Get results!
Advertise on
this page.
201-837-8818
JOIN uS!
Chapter 3 Offers retirement age
women the opportunity to stay
connected and engaged with
peers to share information,
skills and knowledge relevant
and enriching for this stage of
our lives. Whether formally retired or still active in the workplace, this is a chance to make
new friends, hear speakers on
a variety of topics and enjoy
dinner.
Meetings are the last Wednesday of the month at 5:30 pm,
Rudys Restaurant,
Hackensack, N.J. Cost is $27.
For further information and to
be put on our email list, please
call Susan
201-343-8374
Natalie
201-265-2087
We clean up:
Attics Basements Yards
Garages Apartments
Construction Debris
Residential Dumpster Specials
10 yds 15 yds 20 yds
201-342-9333
www.rickscleanout.com
MICHAELS CAR
SERVICE
LOWEST RATES
Call us.
We are waiting
for your
classified ad!
201-837-8818
201-836-8148
201-314-9592
ED
LIST
ED
LIST
&
TEANECK PREMIER
PROPERTIES
200 EDGEMONT PL ACE, TEANECK
D
L
SO
L
& SO
ED
LIST
ED
LIST
L
& SO
L
& SO
BROKER/SALES ASSOCIATE
201.851.1035 debbie@vera-nechama.com
vera-nechama.com 201.692.3700
68 Jewish Standard NOVEMBER 18, 2016
TM
201-310-2255 201-569-7888
CLOSTER
INVITING
$618,000
Wonderful & welcoming 3 bedroom, 2 bath S/L in move-in condition, living room
w/fireplace opens to formal dining room & huge family room w/skylight & doors
to patio, sunny eat-in kitchen, finished lower level, oversized
property w/deck & pool, convenient location.
ALPINE/CLOSTER
TENAFLY
RIVER VALE ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS TENAFLY
894-1234
768-6868
CRESSKILL
Orna Jackson, Sales Associate 201-376-1389
666-0777
568-1818
894-1234 871-0800
wendydess@aol.com
OPEN HOUSES
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20
t TEANECK t
88 Cranford Pl.
$430,000
$629,000
Broker/Associate
201-461-6764 Eve
201-970-4118 Cell
201-585-8080 Office
Realtorallan@yahoo.com
Like us on Facebook.
facebook.com/jewishstandard
11 AM - 2 PM
Lov Expanded Col. Prime Loc. Many Updates. Liv Rm/Fplc, Din Rm,
Fam Rm off of Updated Kit. 3 BRs, 2 Updated Baths, Fin Bsmt. Gar,
Deck, H/W Flrs, C/A/C, Fenced Yard. Rm to Exp.
12 PM 2 PM
Prime W Englwd Area. Custom Exp Ranch. 63' x 120' Prop. 4 BRs
2.5 Bths. LR/Fplc, DR, Great Rm/Sldrs/Lg Patio/Fenced Yard. Recrm
Bsmt. Whole House Generator. Gar. C/A/C.
BY APPOINTMENT
t TEANECK t
(201) 837-8800
Jewish standard nOVeMBer 18, 2016 69
Cell: 201-615-5353
2016 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.
An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned and Operated by NRT LLC.
NVE-3253 Warmth Mortgage Ad 5x6.5_NVE-3253 Warmth Mortgage Ad 5x6.5 10/3/16 3:52 PM Page 1
MORTGAGE
Rates as low as
2.500
2.576
Rate
APR*
%
NMLS #733094
*APR = Annual Percentage Rate. APR is accurate as of 10/7/16 and may vary based on loan amounts. Loans are
for 1-4 family New Jersey owner-occupied properties only. Rates and terms are subject to change without
notice. As an example, the 7-year loan at the stated APR would have 84 monthly payments of $12.99 per
thousand borrowed based on a 20% down payment or equity for loan amounts up to $500,000. Payments
do not include amounts for taxes and insurance premiums, if applicable. The actual payment obligation will
be greater. Property insurance is required. Other rates and terms are available. Subject to credit approval.
Bergenfield I Closter I Cresskill I Englewood I Hillsdale I Leonia I New Milford I Teaneck I Tenafly
Founded in 2013, Fundbox is the newest Israeli startup with star backing.
Offering a cash-flow optimization system for small businesses, the company
has raised $112.5 million from investors
including Amazons Jeff Bezos and actor
Ashton Kutcher. Fundbox has offices in
Tel Aviv and San Francisco.
Interactive piano-teaching app
Tonara, crowd-styling app Wishi and
mobile applications, artificial intelligence and online services company
Shellanoo Group each got an investment from Black Eyed Peas musician,
producer and serial tech entrepreneur
Will.i.am (William Adams).
Will.i.am also tapped Israeli talent a
couple of years ago to develop Puls, a
beta prototype for his smart cuff wearable, Dial, introduced in early 2016.
Powermat got a jolt of juice from
Ruth Miron-Schleider
Broker/Owner
MIRON PROPERTIES
FORT LEE
CO
SO MIN
ON G
!
TENAFLY
LE JUS
AS T
ED
!
FORT LEE
FORT LEE
SO
FORT LEE
SO
LD
LD
J
SO UST
LD
!
THE COLONY. Gorgeous 3 BR unit w/views. THE PLAZA. Spacious 2 BR/2.5 BTH corner unit.ATRIUM PALACE. Spectacular 3 BR/3 BTH w/views.
TENAFLY
J
SO UST
LD
!
TENAFLY
TENAFLY
PI
J
SO UST
LD
!
CT
U
AC RES
RE QU
! E
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
TEANECK
TEANECK
TEANECK
TEANECK
CO
SO MIN
ON G
!
J
SO UST
LD
!
R
PU O ENT
RC R
HA
SE
!
SO
CO UN
NT DE
RA R
CT
!
LD
SO
LD
J
SO UST
LD
!
BE
AU
NS NE TIF
TR W UL
UC
TIO
N!
CO
CLOSTER
CLOSTER
DEMAREST
ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS
SO
LD
SO
LD
SO
LD
CO EX
NS QU
TR ISI
UC TE
TIO
N!
Fabulous new construction. Prime E.H. area. Contemp. 5 BR/4.5 BTH. North Cliffs. $2,233,000