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Picture of Julie Gruenbaum Fax

Julie Gruenbaum Fax

Displaced children face renewed trauma

A standout among the many tragedies of the Carmel fires is the severe damage to the Yemin Orde Youth Village in Northern Israel, which has displaced all of its residents — nearly 500 children originally from Ethiopia, the former Soviet Union and other countries, as well as Israeli-born children who moved to the school from dysfunctional homes. The fire destroyed nearly 20 buildings, including the library, children’s homes, some classrooms, staff housing and a special unit for the youngest children, and many other buildings were damaged on the 77-acre campus atop Mount Carmel.

L.A. pizza and carepackages reached fire’s frontlines

Shawn Evenhaim and Shoham Nicolet were both officers in the Israeli army, so they know what it means to be able to sit down during a ten-minute break in action on the field and open a package with some snacks and towelettes and a personal letter from someone overseas thanking you for protecting the Jewish homeland.

Deadly Israeli wildfire draws U.S., Los Angeles support

The Jewish National Fund (JNF) and its partner, the Friends of Israel Firefighters (FIF), are leading efforts to raise funds to supply Israel’s beleaguered and aging firefighting force with the equipment it needs to battle the out-of-control brushfire consuming Israel’s Carmel Mountains near Haifa.

Judge sanctions Eden Memorial owner over evidence tampering

A Los Angeles judge has sanctioned Service Corporation International (SCI), owner of Eden Memorial Park in Mission Hills, after finding that the cemetery intentionally tampered with and destroyed evidence related to a class action lawsuit alleging that Eden mishandled human remains.

$36,000 teen Tikkun Olam Award nominations due

Do-gooder teens can reap some benefit for their hard work through the fifth annual Diller Teen Tikkun Olam Award. The award, established by the San Francisco-based Helen Diller Family Foundation and associated with the Bay Area Jewish Community Federation, recognizes California teens who have demonstrated active commitment to social action. Five winners receive $36,000 each, to be used as the teen sees fit. Last year’s Los Angeles-area winners include Megan Kilroy, founder of Team Marine, a group based at Santa Monica High School that travels the state teaching kids and adults about how careless actions such as littering impact the oceans and the environment. She has traveled to Sacramento dressed in a suit covered with bottle caps to lobby state lawmakers.

L.A. Foundation awards $1.2 million to Israel programs

Nine programs in Israel received $1.2 million in grants from the Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles, primarily supporting educational programs to integrate disadvantaged populations into the economy. The largest grant, $250,000, will fund 35 Ethiopian students to study law, health and business at the Ono Academic College in Kiryat-Ono. Unemployment among Ethiopian men in Israel ranges from 27 to 66 percent, and fewer than 25 percent of Ethiopian women are employed.

A Very SOVA Thanksgiving

On most Wednesdays, about 60 or 70 people line up outside the food pantry at the Pico-Robertson storefront of SOVA Community Food and Resource Program of Jewish Family Service (JFS). But at 8:45 a.m. on the Thursday before Thanksgiving, the line stretched down the block, well beyond Pico Kosher Deli and nearly to the corner of Pico and Robertson – numbering around 200 people, with more still arriving. They were lined up for a special Thanksgiving giveaway — a bag of groceries in addition to their usual monthly grocery order. On Nov. 18, JFS gave away 1,550 bags of groceries at its three sites, a 25 percent increase over last year’s Thanksgiving distribution.

One survivor’s harsh realization that she was a victim of domestic violence.

It was worst on her birthdays. Most of the time, Olga (her name and other identifying details have been changed for her protection) could hold back her emotions, put on the blank face she knew could shut down her husband’s brutal tirades. But on special occasions, Olga couldn’t help but feel that she was entitled to a little bit of happiness.
And that’s when he pounced.

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