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November 14, 2002

Jewish Survey Missing Data

Much-anticipated parts of the National Jewish Population Survey (NJPS) will not be released as expected next week because some of the data has been lost.

The United Jewish Communities (UJC), which is funding the $6 million study, is canceling all events pertaining to the 2000-01 NJPS at the Philadelphia gathering of its General Assembly, which begins next Wednesday.

And the UJC, the umbrella of the North American federation system, is launching an independent investigation into the lost data, JTA has learned.

“It is true we are delaying the release of the study,” Stephen Hoffman, UJC’s president and chief executive officer, said on Wednesday. “The reason is there have been some questions raised that I don’t believe we have adequate time to get answers to.”

The revelations could cast doubt on the entire NJPS, the most extensive and costliest demographic study ever conducted of the American Jewish community. The lost data apparently concerned methodological details about who was surveyed, rather than their responses to survey questions.

“Some people with serious reputations believe the study is sound and it could have gone forward and will stand up to the test of time,” Hoffman said. “That could be the case — but I didn’t feel comfortable with these questions to go forward [with releasing further NJPS data next week as planned].”

Last month, the UJC released initial findings from the NJPS, showing the American Jewish population declined 5 percent to 5.2 million since the last study in 1990, and that birth rates were dropping and the community was aging.

Hoffman said that had he known of the missing data before the release of that information, he would not have approved the release of those initial conclusions.

“There may be aspects of it [that are inaccurate],” he said, referring to the initial data released. “I don’t know.”

Hoffman said he only learned of the missing data Tuesday, one week before the information from the NJPS about Jewish identity and intermarriage was due to get released at the annual UJC gathering, which brings together much of the organized American Jewish world.

“I feel it would be irresponsible to go ahead and release the study while these questions are still unresolved,” Hoffman said.

“There will be some people who will be disappointed,” Hoffman said of the implications for the General Assembly. “I’m personally disappointed.”

But there “are other things in Jewish life,” he said that delegates will focus on.

At the heart of the mystery was that Hoffman only learned Tuesday that the firm conducting research for the NJPS, Roper Audits & Surveys Worldwide, lost some data for the study two years ago during initial telephone calls.

Meanwhile, “other issues like that have been coming up in recent days,” he added, though he declined to elaborate.

One source familiar with the NJPS said the missing data concerned lists of those people telephoned for the survey, their phone numbers and how often they were called.

Two-thirds of that data was lost, according to the source.

But the source maintained that while this information was important in determining the accuracy of the survey’s methodology, he did not think that it would undermine the ultimate conclusions, specifically those relating to Jews and Jewish identity.

“I don’t know how much has been lost,” Hoffman said. “The issue is 29 hours old. All I’ve had time to do is make the decision to not have the data be released.”

However, Hoffman said that Jim Schwartz, UJC’s director of research for NJPS, “was aware” of the missing data at some earlier point, though Hoffman said he hadn’t spoken directly with Schwartz yet about the matter. There were no plans affecting Schwartz’s position at this point, he added.

“It would be unfair to jump to conclusions about anybody’s particular role,” he said. “I’m not casting any aspersions at the moment.”

Schwartz could not be reached Wednesday for comment, despite several attempts.

After the General Assembly, the UJC will secure “an outsider” who is “totally objective” to launch an investigation into the missing information. The investigative team might include UJC staffers as well, Hoffman said. Such a probe would presumably attempt to learn exactly what information is missing, how it got lost, how significant it is, who knew about the missing information and why they did not inform senior UJC officials.

“I want to know if there are any other issues they haven’t told me about, either from staff or the technical team” or Roper researchers, Hoffman said.

June Wallach, a spokeswoman for Roper, said the company would have no comment at this time.

Hoffman said he had no idea whether the UJC would take action against Roper, which apparently lost the information from its computer system.

Several lead members of the National Technical Advisory Committee of demographers and social scientists that consulted with UJC’s staffers working on the NJPS said they were participating in a conference call Wednesday about the survey, though they declined to comment further.

Hoffman said he did not know if the co-chairs of the advisory panel, Vivian Klaff of the University of Delaware and Frank Mott of Ohio State University, knew about the missing data. Reached Wednesday, Klaff would only say he would be joining the conference call on the NJPS. Mott did not return calls.

Egon Mayer, director of the North American Jewish Data Bank at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, said he had heard about the delay this week though he didn’t know the reasons for it.

“I think some very important conclusions were reached by the UJC management that led them to this decision, which I’m sure they reached very reluctantly,” he said.

Stephen Bayme, national director of contemporary Jewish life for the American Jewish Committee, said he had heard of the delay but preferred waiting until the UJC got to the bottom of the issue.

“I’d rather not have the data than have data that is mistaken,” Bayme said.

Jewish Survey Missing Data Read More »

Reparation Overview

Open Claims

Hardship Fund: Established in 1980, provides a one-time
$2,500 payment to survivors who were previously unable to apply for compensation
under the West German Indemnification Act of 1952/BEG (typically because they
lived behind the Iron Curtain), suffered considerable damage to health, and
currently are in financial need. No proposed deadline.

Article 2: Intended for survivors who have received
minimal or no Holocaust compensation. Monthly pension of $250 paid in quarterly
installments. No proposed deadline. The German government has recently expanded
the eligibility criteria to include newly recognized camps, indexing of
payments, and double income limits.

The Blue Card: The only agency in the United States
that provides cash to Holocaust survivors in extreme financial need and, when
necessary, to their children for mental health needs.

International Commission on Holocaust Era Insurance
Claims (ICHEIC): ICHEIC consists of representatives of U.S. insurance
regulators, five European insurance companies (Allianz, Generali, AXA,
Winterthur and Zurich), the State of Israel, worldwide Jewish and Holocaust
survivor organizations, and European regulators and observers. Holocaust victims
and their heirs can file claims for unpaid insurance policies (life, dowry and
education). Closes March 30, 2003.

Austrian Reconciliation Fund: Payments to former slave
and forced laborers under the National Socialism regime who performed labor in
the territory of present-day Austria. Closes Nov. 27, 2002.

Austrian Victims Assistance Act: Legislation recently
provided an increase in funds for monthly nursing care allowance.

Austrian Social Welfare Benefits: Under Austrian social
insurance law, victims of Nazi persecution can qualify for old age, disability
and survivor pensions, provided they pay retroactive contributions at a reduced
rate into the Austrian social insurance system. No filing deadline.

Austrian General Settlement Fund: On Jan. 31, 2001 the
Austrian government adopted a General Settlement Fund Law for the comprehensive
settlement of open questions of compensation and restitution for victims of
National Socialism. The Fund has an endowment of $210 million. The filing
deadline is May 27, 2003.

Croatia: Former Jewish citizens whose property was
confiscated under the wartime fascist and post-war Communist regimes are
eligible for compensation of up to $500,000. Claims may also be filed by their
children and grandchildren. Filing deadline is Jan. 5, 2003.

Slovakia: Under amended Holocaust-era compensation
laws, more people are now eligible to receive compensation for deportation to
Nazi concentration camps. In October 2002, Slovakia signed an agreement with the
Jewish community to establish a fund that will partially compensate Slovak Jews
who lost their property during the Nazi and Communist eras. No details on the
claims process have yet been announced.

German Social Security Pension: A change in legislation
expands German Social Security pensions to cover work performed in all ghettos
during Nazi occupation: if the ghetto was in an area occupied by, or
incorporated into, the Reich. Claim form is currently not available. However,
survivors are advised to immediately establish a filing date with the German
Social Security Offices by submitting a letter that requests the claim form. The
filing deadline is June 30, 2003.

Indemnification Commission for the Belgian Jewish
Community’s Assets: The Belgian banks signed an agreement to pay about $54
million in compensation for property lost during the Nazi occupation. The
standard form for new claims is available at www.premier.fgov.be under the link
“Jewish Community Indemnification Commission.” Claims already submitted to the
former Study Commission or the Federal Public Department Chancellery and General
Services are still valid and will not have to be re-submitted. The deadline is
March 19, 2003.

Czech Republic: Legislature has extended deadline to
2006 to file for return of Nazi-looted art work.

Fund for Victims of Medical Experiments and Other
Injuries: The Fund has received more than 5,000 claims. The German Foundation
has not yet announced when it will accept medical experiment claims for review
and payment.

Closed Claims

German Foundation “Remembrance, Responsibility and the
Future” (Program for Former Slave and Forced Laborers): Established in July
2000. Payments for Jewish slave and forced laborers and other victims of Nazi
persecution. As of May 2002, German Foundation has received a total of 253,546
claims and has approved 98,870 claims. Survivors submitting late claims must
include a letter explaining the hardship that resulted in the untimely claim.

Romania Property Restitution: Restitution of properties
that were confiscated by the Communist regime between 1945-1989. Closed Feb. 14,
2002.

 Swiss Bank Settlement: In 1998, Switzerland’s two
largest commercial banks agreed to pay $1.25 billion for claims of survivors
whose families lost assets. Included in the settlement are claims for slave
labor performed for Swiss companies, companies that deposited assets in
Switzerland, survivors denied entry or expelled from Switzerland or mistreated
after entry to Switzerland.

BEG “Wiedergutmachung”: West German Federal
Indemnification Law enacted in 1952 to provide monthly pensions for survivors
and one-time payment for deprivation of liberty.

International Organization for Migration (IOM): IOM
handles property-loss claims from both Jewish and non-Jewish survivors. It also
processes slave and forced labor claims from non-Jewish victims living anywhere
in the world except for the Czech Republic, Poland and former Soviet republics.
IOM has humanitarian programs for Roma and Sinti. Closed Dec. 31, 2001.

The Swiss Fund for Needy Victims of the Holocaust:
Humanitarian gesture to aid needy Holocaust victims with a small one-time grant
of $502. Closed Nov. 30, 1998.

Austrian National Fund: More than 15,000 survivors
received approximately $7,000 each for loss of property and household contents.
Closed Feb. 23, 2002.

Other Compensation News

Waiver of Bank Wire Transfer Fees: Selected banks have
agreed to waive the electronic wire transfer fees on incoming compensation
payments to Holocaust survivors (Article 2 Fund, BEG and German Foundation slave
and forced labor payments).

National Foundation for the Study of Holocaust Assets
Act: Under a bill introduced by Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Dist. 24), it is proposed
to create a public/private foundation to promote further research and education
in the area of Holocaust-era assets and restitution policy and to support
innovative solutions to contemporary restitution policy issues.

“Invisible Victims”: Disabled rights advocates in
California are filing for a portion of the restitution funds to underwrite
museum exhibits and a monument to the more than 300,000 disabled German citizens
who were slaughtered during the Holocaust, often with the help of their own
physicians. Since few disabled survivors remain to receive reparations, it has
been proposed that money also be used to fund disabled rights programs in
Europe.

Rhodes: Issue reparation and/or pension claims for
Italian citizens from Rhodes. The German Ministry of Finance (oversees
compensation programs and funding of the German Federal Government) agreed to
the creation of a working group on this issue.

Bergier Report: Final assessment of the conduct of the
Swiss government and industry during the war and afterwards. The scathing
indictment on the “egregious moral failures” of Swiss authorities and industry
concluded: 1. The refugee wartime policy that knowingly turned back thousands of
Jews to certain death, contributed to the most atrocious of Nazi objectives —
the Holocaust. 2. Swiss gold purchases from Nazi Germany continued even when it
became obvious that the gold was looted. 3. Excessive cooperation extended to
Nazi Germany — Swiss authorities requested as early as 1938 that passports from
German Jews be stamped in Germany with the letter “J.” 4. Eleven-thousand
laborers were forced to work in Swiss-owned factories in Germany. 5. Swiss
refusal to return deposited assets to owners or their heirs after the war. The
Swiss government noted that it apologized to the Jews in 1995.

Lithuania: The prime minister has established a
commission for the return of Jewish property. Approximately 95 percent of
Lithuania’s 220,000 pre-war Jewish community perished during the Holocaust.

Labor in Freiburg: One-time compensation payment to
former laborers forced to work for the city of Freiburg during Nazi rule.

Poland: Blasted on restitution July 17, 2002, U.S.
lawmakers stated that Poland has not done enough to return Jewish property
seized by the Nazis. At present, there are no legal provisions for submitting
property asset claims against Poland. It has been estimated that the financial
toll in Poland exceeds $10 billion.

France Holocaust-Era Assets: Names of Jewish
asset-holders in France will be submitted to Israel. Survivors will be able to
check whether they appear on the list of names in order to file a claim.
Previously, French privacy laws prohibited public publication of names.

Worst records in Europe on art/property restitution:
Poland, Romania and Czech Republic. Poland — not a single claimant has succeeded
in court. Romania — 188,000 claims unanswered. Czech Republic — when claims are
filed for the return of artwork, the government declares the artwork a national
treasure that cannot be removed from the country.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Upholds Holocaust Statute: The 9th
Circuit recently upheld California’s Holocaust Victim Insurance Relief Act
(HVIRA), which is designed to help Holocaust survivors and their families in
obtaining information from European insurance companies. The ruling marks the
first time a higher federal court has upheld such a state statute. The law
requires any insurer doing business in California to disclose information about
any policy sold in Europe between 1920 and 1945. The U.S. Justice Department
argued on behalf of insurers, fearing that state law would worsen U.S. relations
with other countries.

Tax Measures United States: Compensation payments to
Holocaust survivors will be excluded from inheritance tax.

Reparations-Related Links

Austrian General Settlement Fund: “>www.claimscon.org

Czech Republic “Property Confiscation List: “>www.livingheirs.com

National Archives & Records

Administration: “>www.claims.state.ny.us

Simon Wiesenthal Center: “>www.ushmm.org

Washington State Office of the Insurance Commissioner:
mfreeman@bettzedek.org.

Reparation Overview Read More »

Community Briefs

Valley Beth Shalom Tackles MedicalEthics

Valley Beth Shalom will assemble a group of doctors, therapists, scholars, lawyers and rabbis for a “Medical Ethics Beit Din.” The panel discussions will be held on three consecutive Thursdays — Nov. 14, Nov. 21, and Dec. 5 — and will address beginning of life details; the changing role of the doctor; and end of life issues, respectively. Valley Beth Shalom’s Rabbi Edward Feinstein, who coordinated the panels, observed that as medical science becomes more advanced and accessible, “Torah-relevant issues become part of people’s daily lives.” Topics to be covered include extending medical care; responding to emergencies; life and death issues; and infertility and the manipulation of the process. “These issues of medical ethics were once abstract, but now families deal with them all the time,” Feinstein said. “I wanted to create a program where people in the community can learn how to make such decisions.” For more information, contact Ilana Zimmerman at (818) 788-6000. — Michael Aushenker, Staff Writer

New Consul for Communications TakesOffice

Yariv Ovadia has joined the Consulate General of Israel in Los Angeles here as Consul for Communications and Public Affairs. Ovadia, 30, is a Jerusalem native, whose parents arrived as children in Israel, his father from Iraq and mother from Morocco. Accompanying him are his wife Daphna — to whom he proposed at India’s Taj Mahal — and their 4-month-old daughter, Romi.

As a high school student, Ovadia aimed for a career as computer scientist, but changed his mind after serving three years with an infantry unit in Gaza.

“I wanted to learn more about the roots of the conflict between us and the Arabs and study their language, history and religion,” he said, sitting in his Wilshire Boulevard office with a view of the Hollywood Hills.

He enrolled at Hebrew University, focusing on studies of the Middle East, Islam and sociology, and after graduation, joined the diplomatic corps in 1999.

For the past two years, Ovadia served as second secretary at the Israeli embassy in New Delhi, India. As part of his responsibilities, he headed the embassy’s cultural and scientific affairs department.

Ovadia said that he is eager to meet with the Jewish and general communities in Los Angeles and throughout six Southwestern states. In the meanwhile, he urges people to take five to 10 minutes a day to do something to help Israel, for instance, “call or write an editor or organize a group to hear a speaker from the consulate.” — Tom Tugend, Contributing Editor

Muslim Journalist Calls Islam Founder Source ofAnti-Semitism

Recently in Los Angeles, as the guest of the Council of Iranian American Jewish Organizations, Muslim journalist Dr. Mohammad Amiri spoke to a large audience at Sinai Temple and at the Nessah Synagogue in Beverly Hills and visited the Museum of Tolerance.

Amiri was named by his parents in Iran for the Prophet Muhammad, but today, he considers the founder of Islam as the source of modern anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism in the Middle East.

The Jews of the Arabian Peninsula in the seventh century C.E. “sinned” against Muhammad by rejecting his teachings, according to Amiri, and he retaliated by demanding the Jews’ property and killing many of them. Since then, anti-Semitism in Islam, as in Christianity, has found racial and political expression, but the wellspring remains the original religious bias, Amiri said.

By an unlikely route, Amiri has become an expert on the Holocaust and anti-Semitism. Born in the Kurdish region of Iran 57 years ago, he followed “the dream of all you young Iranian men to go to Europe,” and received his bachelor’s and doctorate degrees in philosophy at the University of Cologne.

For his doctoral thesis, he analyzed the philosophy of the Jewish political theorist Hannah Arendt (“Origins of Totalitarianism”) and from there, embarked on lifelong studies of the tensions between freedom and religion, anti-Semitism and the Holocaust.

He is now a reporter and analyst for German radio, broadcasts for the Farsi-language service of Israel’s Kol Yisrael and is a research fellow at the Institute for Culture and Philosophy in Cologne.

While in Los Angeles, Amiri also participated in three talk show programs on local Farsi radio stations, which serves the Southern California Iranian community.

Looking at conditions in his native land, Amiri said that a certain sympathy for Israel, based mainly on the traditional Iranian dislike of Arabs, has been overridden by the even more pronounced religious hatred of Jews by Muslim fundamentalists. — TT

Community Briefs Read More »

The Battle for Jewish Souls

Tuvya Zaretsky, a bearded, affable man in his 50s, certainly looks Jewish. His workplace could be confused with any Jewish agency in the Southland. Decorated in professional gray tones, the office walls are adorned with paintings of Jerusalem and biblical scenes.

But a sign at the entrance to this two-story building in Westwood Village tells you otherwise: Jews for Jesus.

The L.A. Jews for Jesus headquarters is busy readying itself for the arrival of Behold Your God, a multimillion-dollar, international campaign launched in 2000 to make the messiahship of Jesus an unavoidable issue for Jews, which is expected to tour 66 Diaspora cities by 2005. The Los Angeles/Orange County campaign, set for Dec. 16-Jan. 11, will be a decisive battleground, since the combined Jewish population of both counties is the largest Behold Your God has targeted to date.

Rabbi Bentzion Kravitz, West Coast director of Los Angeles-based Jews for Judaism, is mounting a counter-campaign with Operation: Missionary Impossible, which aims to educate and protect the Jewish community against proselytizing, even employing Jews for Jesus-style tactics to get the world out.

Come December, both organizations’ volunteers will take to the streets to fight for the community’s attention. But with volunteers that may number into the dozens and an estimated budget of $150,000, Behold Your God will likely overpower and outspend Operation: Missionary Impossible’s $20,000 budget — which Kravitz hopes to increase through fundraising — and volunteer base that could reach 12 people.

The battle for Jewish souls is coming to Southern California, just in time for the holiday season.

On this sunny fall afternoon, students pass by the Jews for Jesus offices — located near Chabad’s headquarters and UCLA Hillel — which will serve as the command post for the upcoming campaign. Zaretsky, the branch leader, talks about growing up Reform in the Bay Area, finding Jesus in college and enlisting with the nascent Jews for Jesus movement in the ’70s, after a two-year stint in Israel. For the last 27 years, his job has been asking Jews to sign up, “to come to faith in Jesus.”

“Unequivocally, I’ll fight for the right of the Jewish people to hear [our message], even if most of them don’t want to,” Zaretsky said.

Besides proselytizing to Jews, San Francisco-based Jews for Jesus will also be looking to Los Angeles as a boot camp to train Evangelical Christians in the finer points of converting Jews and as a testing ground for new outreach strategies that the organization can use in future campaigns in cities like San Diego, Phoenix, Philadelphia and Miami, according to Kravitz.

Nearly two years into the campaign, Jews for Jesus reports the conversion of 448 Jews worldwide and collecting contact information of more than 9,000 Jews.

Behold Your God organizers who consented to talk to The Journal were purposefully vague about campaign strategy or the number of staffers and volunteers participating.

“Visibility is obviously going to be the primary way,” said L.A. Behold Your God coordinator Rob Wertheim, referring to the group’s outreach methods. “If you look at what we’ve done in the past, that should be some indication of the kinds of things we’ll do.”

Jews for Jesus, which traditionally relies on street evangelism as its primary method of reaching the Jewish community, is also experimenting with new methods on each Behold Your God stop. One of the additions has been a door-to-door approach — more commonly associated with Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses — that was used in New Haven, Conn., and Boston.

In the past, Jews for Jesus also incorporated the Shoah into its outreach, hoping to attract Holocaust survivors and their families. In Portland, Ore., organizers drew 1,000 people to the Portland Art Museum for a private screening of “Survivor Stories,” a video featuring Holocaust survivors who have accepted Jesus as the Messiah. Locally, the Jews for Jesus office distributes the Wertheim-penned “I Escaped From Hitler Twice,” a pamphlet that describes his Holocaust-survivor father’s journey to accept Jesus.

Additionally, past campaigns have used phone banks, billboards, mass mailing, performances by music groups, outreach to college students on campus and home visits to seniors. Kravitz expects that the Los Angeles campaign will use political-style lawn signs and that the group will be out in force at the Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day.

“They’re going to use every lesson they learn here to better themselves for the next city,” said Kravitz, who has studied the group’s operations in order to prepare his own counter-techniques.

Operation: Missionary Impossible has been gaining momentum since October, when Jews for Judaism held an international summit to discuss the state of worldwide missionary efforts and plan the organization’s response.

From public training programs during the summit, Jews for Judaism selected an elite corps of volunteers that will be trained to shadow Jews for Jesus’ street evangelism with counter-leafleting techniques developed by the Jewish Community Resource Center-Task Force on Missionaries and Cults in New York. “If the Jewish [counter campaign] to Jews for Jesus is good in Los Angeles, we’ll be able to duplicate that model for other cities,” Kravitz said.

In addition to its ongoing communitywide education effort, Jews for Judaism is coordinating a Unity Shabbat, which Kravitz hope will take place in Southland synagogues on Dec. 13-14 so that the “Jewish community can rally together in the face of adversity,” he explained.

“We’ve got Reconstructionist, Reform, Orthodox and Conservative all signed up to take part,” said Kravitz, who believes that this outside threat is one thing that can always bring the different movements together.

Jews for Judaism is also sponsoring three free lectures by Gavriel Sanders, a former Evangelical minister who spent 20 years in Los Angeles and Israel converting Jews, scheduled for Nov. 21 and Nov. 24.

Rabbi Mark Diamond, vice president of the Southern California Board of Rabbis, is currently serving on Jews for Judaism’s rabbinic advisory board and applauds Kravitz’s work.

“On this issue there can and should be broad community support for Kravitz’s efforts,” said Diamond, who once exposed a Jews for Jesus member that infiltrated a Jewish conversion class to gather names and phone numbers. “The tactics used by Jews for Jesus are deceptive, sleazy and reprehensible.”

Jews for Jesus, which scrutinizes Jews for Judaism’s efforts with equal voracity, is already expecting that it will be sharing the street corners with Kravitz’s volunteers. The potential for confrontation is on the minds of both organizations, which are training their volunteers on how best to deal with conflict.

“If you were training for war, you’d do a good job of letting people know what the horrors of war look like,” said Wertheim, whose organization produces a how-to CD-ROM set titled, “Street Evangelism Training.” “As far as special training, we’re going to let people know what the possible risks are.”

Jews for Judaism plans to keep a minimum distance of 25 feet in order to avoid conflicts that might draw a crowd, while Wertheim said he would be willing to exploit a conflict.

“The more heckling, the more hassling that goes on, the more it’s going to raise the image,” Wertheim said. “It’s going to attract people … it’s just going to raise the issue even more.”

But even more crucial for Jews for Judaism than preventing raised hackles is the tedious job of raising money for a war chest. The current economic crisis and the situations in Israel and Argentina have severely impacted Jews for Judaism’s fundraising ability.

So far Kravitz has raised a little more than $20,000 from the Los Angeles Jewish Community Foundation and individual donations, but said he needs at least another $75,000 to take advantage of a $100,000 matching grant from the Baltimore-based Weinberg Foundation. In the meantime, Kravitz is having to tap the Los Angeles office’s annual budget of $350,000.

“Jews for Jesus is a serious threat,” Diamond said. “We need to counter them with all of the resources available to the Jewish community.”

Zaretsky and Wertheim both told The Journal that their Jews for Jesus office has raised $20,000 for the L.A. campaign. But Susan Pearlman, a spokeswoman for Behold Your God, said that the Los Angeles budget will soon blossom to $100,000 or $150,000 following a contribution from the Jews for Jesus international headquarters. She added that she was sure the Los Angeles campaign will be printing “several hundred thousand broadsides [leaflets].”

Behold Your God campaign materials acquired by The Journal put the five-year campaign total at $22 million, a figure that Zaretsky said was an optimistic projection that isn’t panning out. Pearlman said that the actual Behold Your God budget, while still in the millions, is substantially less.

“We haven’t held back on our Behold Your God campaigns,” she said. “I’d be happy if we made it to $10 million for five years.”

But the amount of money being spent on Behold Your God compared to the number of Jews who have actually converted makes the campaign look like a failure. After distributing more than 6 million broadsides and collecting contact information for 9,056 people in 19 cities around the world, only 448 Jews have converted, of which only 31 were from the United States.

The U.S. campaign is hardly the picture of myriad Jews being lured away from their faith, but the strategy behind Behold Your God is really about long-term success, not short-term gains.

“Our goal is to saturate the community so that Jewish people have heard the message,” Pearlman said. “If we’re successful, we will have something in place that’s more long term.”

Statements like Pearlman’s point to what Jews for Judaism thinks is an underlying threat of Behold Your God. According to Kravitz, Jews for Jesus flies in dozens of staffers to each Behold Your God campaign stop. The staffers then meet with and train local volunteers, a substantial portion of which are Evangelical Christians. The Evangelicals tag along with staffers as they proselytize to Jews, getting in-the-field training they can put into practice after Jews for Jesus moves on to its next campaign stop.

“Evangelical Christians are going to be the point people for Jews for Jesus,” Kravitz said. “What we’ve seen in the other cities is they get all these Evangelical Christians who become bold about having a dialogue with their Jewish friends and neighbors about Jesus. Then someone from Jews for Jesus will come in, like a salesman, and close the deal.”

For Zaretsky, who has evangelized across the United States, American Jews are becoming increasingly “closed-minded” and have a “homogenized view” of the Jewish world. He said the older he gets, the harder it is to make contact with the Jewish community. Still, he keeps plugging away, committed to his mission: spreading the word to Jews that Jesus is the Messiah.

“People don’t have to join the conversation, they don’t have to listen to us, they don’t have to agree with us. They can be outraged if they want. They can ignore us. It’s a free country,” he said.

What Jews for Jesus Believes

  • We believe that the Scriptures of the Old and New
    Testaments are divinely inspired, verbally and completely inerrant in the
    original writings and of supreme and final authority in all matters of faith and
    life.

  • We recognize the value of traditional Jewish literature
    but only where it is supported by or conformable to the Word of God. We regard
    it as in no way binding upon life or faith.

  • We believe in one sovereign God, existing in three
    persons: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, perfect in holiness, infinite in wisdom,
    unbounded in power, and measureless in love; that God is the source of all
    creation and that through the immediate exercise of His power, all things came
    into being.

  • We believe that God the Father is the author of eternal
    salvation, having loved the world and given His Son for its redemption.

  • We believe that Jesus the Messiah was eternally
    pre-existent and is co-equal with God the Father; that He took on Himself the
    nature of man through the virgin birth so that He possesses both divine and
    human natures.

  • We believe in His sinless life and perfect obedience to
    the Law; in His atoning death, burial, bodily resurrection, ascension into
    heaven, high-priestly intercession and His personal return in power and glory.

  • We believe that the Holy Spirit is co-equal and
    co-eternal with the Father and the Son; that He was active in the creation of
    all things and continues to be so in providence; that He convicts the world of
    sin, righteousness, and judgment and that He regenerates, sanctifies, baptizes,
    indwells, seals, illumines, guides and bestows His gifts upon all believers.

  • We believe that God created man in His image; that
    because of the disobedience of our first parents at the Garden of Eden, they
    lost their innocence and both they and their descendants, separated from God,
    suffer physical and spiritual death and that all human beings, with the
    exception of Jesus the Messiah, are sinners by nature and practice.

  • We believe that Jesus the Messiah died for our sins,
    according to the Scriptures, as a representative and substitutionary sacrifice;
    that all who believe in Him are justified, not by any works of righteousness
    they have done, but by His perfect righteousness and atoning blood and that
    there is no other name under heaven by which we must be saved.

  • We believe that Israel exists as a covenant people
    through whom God continues to accomplish His purposes and that the Church is an
    elect people in accordance with the New Covenant, comprising both Jews and
    Gentiles who acknowledge Jesus as Messiah and Redeemer.

  • We believe that Jesus the Messiah will return
    personally in order to consummate the prophesied purposes concerning His
    Kingdom.

  • We believe in the bodily resurrection of the just and
    the unjust, the everlasting blessedness of the saved and the everlasting
    conscious punishment of the lost.

Source: Jews for Jesus.

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Your Letters

One People, Two Worlds

As I read with interest Gary Rosenblatt’s review of “One People, Two Worlds” (“Closed Chapter,” Nov. 8), my gut reaction was one of disappointment and frustration to Rabbi Yosef Reinman’s decision to cancel the book tour. But upon reflection, I began to consider what might be behind the decision to discourage his participation and what the dialogue contained in this book represents.

To engage in discussion on an individual basis, in order to stimulate thought, clarify and educate is clearly within the Jewish tradition. But to give credence to a representative of a Jewish theology that denies historical events and questions the divine origins of basic observances is to validate the “man-made” as being genuinely spiritual.

Yehuda Frischman , Los Angeles

Invest in Your Community

In the article “Invest in Your Community,” (Nov. 1) Michael Kaminsky states, “After Westside JCC is rebuilt, other JCCs in Los Angeles must renovate their facilities.” As a member of the board of the Jewish Community Centers of Greater Los Angeles (JCCGLA), Kaminsky must be aware that the Silver Lake-Los Feliz center building is still slated to be sold out from under its current membership, and will thus be unavailable for renovation. The building was built by local Jewish families and deeded to JCCGLA in the 1950s so that it be used for the benefit of the local Jewish community.

The current members of the Silver Lake-Los Feliz Independent JCC have managed, against all odds, to incorporate as a new 501(c)(3) entity, formulate a solid business plan and enroll enough children to cover the costs of operating a preschool. Families have flocked to the center, even though they were told that there could be no commitment for them to remain in the building beyond one year. Their efforts have demonstrated that there is still a viable Jewish community east of La Brea that deserves the opportunity to grow and flourish in its own building. I urge The Jewish Federation and JCCGLA to find a way for this to happen.

Michael R. Goldberg , Los Angeles

Irv Rubin

I felt great sadness when I read about Irv Rubin’s attempted suicide (“JDL’s Questionable Future,” Nov. 8). I feel that our community let this man down. He had never been convicted of a crime, yet he sat in jail almost a year waiting for a trial and was denied bail. Not a word from the Jewish community. He was not allowed to speak in front of us — at our synagogues or at our organized protests. Yet he was always there, fighting for his love for Israel and the Jewish people. Yes, maybe he was a little crazy and maybe he did things in a way that was not correct, however, dialogue means hearing all sides of the spectrum, not just the dialogue that stretches from the far left to center right.

Scott Howard, Woodland Hills

It is ironic that Jews moan the loss of Sen. PaulWellstone and supported Jesse Jackson, yet very few of us will even say a prayeror a good word for Irv Rubin, who exposed Jackson’s anti-Semitism.

I only wish that I could have done more to help Irv, and I am dreadfully sorry that I couldn’t after all of the good things he did for all of us. The Jewish community should bow its collective head in shame and start asking burning questions. For now, what I can say, is I am proud that he is a friend of mine.

Alan Rockman, Upland

Feiler Phenomenon

David Klinghoffer reviewed a book that presents Abraham as an imaginary or composite character (“The Feiler Phenomenon,” Nov. 8). There is no archaeological evidence that Jesus ever lived, and that supposedly took place only 2,000 years ago. Yet, Christians don’t seem to find this to be a problem or a delegitimization of their religion. But, the lack of archaeological evidence for certain people or events in the Bible appears to be used in some quarters as a reason to delegitimize Judaism.

Beverly Adler, Newbury Park

David Klinghoffer has done a full-page hatchet job on both the author, Bruce Feiler, and his book, “Abraham: A Journey to the Heart of Three Faiths.”

As author of the recently published biblical novel, “Abraham the Dreamer/An Erotic and Sacred Love Story,” I, unlike Klinghoffer, applaud rather than begrudge Feiler’s success. He has written a fine and valuable book.

I hope The Jewish Journal will now devote the same amount of space to a more measured, balanced review of Feiler’s book.

Rolf Gompertz , North Hollywood

One Blessing

Rabbi Ed Feinstein writes eloquently (“Have You But One Blessing,” Nov. 8) that “the Messiah will not arrive … until Esau’s tears are exhausted,” until we find “a place for the other brother.”

Could this become the basis for a new theology of partition? Is it possible that a secure, reciprocally respectful two-state settlement with Esau’s children might be a necessary precondition for our redemption? Perhaps the Messiah will come when all of Abraham’s descendants live side by side in peace.

Shawn Landres, Los Angeles

Censoring Mr. Spock

Miriam Farber’s letter speaks to Miriam Farber’s problem (Letters, Nov. 8). That anyone should “protest” art, especially Jews themselves, is an outrage. If people are so offended by nudity, in whatever context, they should stay away from any art forum. Religion is an art form and to combine the human body with what is near and dear and meaningful to some, is sensually beautiful. Religion is sensual in sounds, tastes and sight and for anyone to so fear what is exquisite and speaks to life is unfortunate. Perhaps the exhibit should only be open to those who are emotionally and culturally mature.

Betty Seidmon, Los Angeles

Jewish War Vets

Regarding your article of Nov. 8 (“Jewish War Vets Remember,” Nov. 8). Cpl. Paul Cohen’s statement that there are not many Jewish veterans in front-line combat is untrue.

I had five close Jewish friends killed in action in Germany, Italy, France, Attu and Okinawa. I was a platoon leader in the 76th Infantry Division, which crossed the Saar River in Germany under heavy fire. You can see the many Stars of David in the military cemeteries in Normandy and Italy.

My father was in the infantry in France in World War I and was gassed.

Jews carried their share of combat in all of America’s wars. Please do not pass on the old canard that Jews did not do their share. At the end of World War II, the Jewish Welfare Board published a large volume with the names of the Jewish servicemen and women who were killed or wounded in the service of the United States.

Irving Elliott Cohen, Sherman Oaks

When Shepherds Desert

One of the most important and praiseworthy contributions that The Jewish Journal makes to our community is the open forum it has maintained in both news and letter columns. We are a diverse and opinionated people. Truth and wisdom more often result from vigorous debate than from ignoring, suppressing, or stigmatizing views with which some of us may disagree.

I mention this because I do not want my comments about Joel Kotkin’s silly article “When Shepherds Desert Their Flocks” (Nov. 1) to suggest I think it should not have been printed. My only editorial suggestion is that it should not have been labeled “analysis.” Perhaps “propaganda.” Or at the very least “opinion.”

As the definitive poll, the actual election demonstrated the shepherds and the flock pretty much agreed.

And, since Kotkin cannot accept the fact that our Jewish heritage of social consciousness and social responsibility remains strong and vibrant, that Jews of many national backgrounds and from varying economic levels, continue to support liberal candidates and progressive causes, he forlornly hopes that “flocks learn how to bite a shepherd who has lost his way.”

Like a rejected lover, who has failed his suit, he now hurls insults.

Marvin Schachter, Pasadena

Pay Attention

Amy Klein patronizingly lectures us to “pay attention” to the upcoming Israeli elections, in case we are “too confused” or disinterested to find them relevant (“Pay Attention,” Nov. 8).

Klein needs to understand that Palestinian terror attacks like the one this week at Kibbutz Metzer, which left five Israelis including a mother and her two young sons dead, are not caused by Israeli governments whether of the left or of the right.

Klein bewails the fact that without Labor, a Likud-led government would not be “restrained.” She quotes Israeli journalist Tom Segev who claims “there has been no democracy in Israel.” The left believes that unless Labor governs Israel, there can be no “democracy”; the wishes of the electorate who might vote for a Likud government are autocratically dismissed.

Left-wingers like Klein need to remember that Labor-led governments under Yitzhak Rabin and then Ehud Barak made a “land for peace” agreement with the PLO, withdrew the army from substantial areas of the West Bank and Gaza and offered a full peace in summer 2000. The Palestinians, claiming to be “frustrated” have returned to full-scale terror against Israeli civilians. That is the problem and no Israeli “peace offer” will change that. The necessary change must be made by the Palestinians, who need a leadership that opposes and fights all Palestinian terror groups and fully accepts Israel’s right to exist.

Bob Kirk , Los Angeles

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Caring Across the Miles

Fifty-eight-year-old Ruth recently took early retirement from her bookkeeping job so that she and her retired husband, Harry, could see more of their children and grandchildren, who are scattered around the country. The two have also been looking forward to doing some traveling overseas.

In the past year, though, Ruth’s mother, who lives alone and is a two-and-a-half-hour drive away, has become increasingly frail and is starting to show signs of forgetfulness. Ruth finds herself worrying about her mother daily and making an increasing number of phone calls and car trips to check on her. Often she ends up staying for the weekend when she visits.

She and Harry have put their travel plans on hold.

Ruth is just one of approximately 7 million Americans involved in the care of an older adult — usually a parent — who lives in a different area, be it an hour’s drive or a plane trip away. The average travel time to reach their relative is four hours.

At the best of times, caregiving involves a certain amount of stress, but often, the anxiety is compounded when there are many miles between the caregiver and care recipient.

Long-distance caregiving can be emotionally and financially draining. Worries about a parent’s physical, mental and emotional health and safety can be overwhelming at times. You may wonder if plans you’ve set up are being implemented properly, or if you’re going to get a call that there’s a crisis.

You may also feel guilty that you can’t be there on a daily basis to see how your parent is doing — which may be quite different from what he or she reports — and provide assistance as needed. You might wonder if you should be making more sacrifices — either moving closer or inviting mom or dad to live with you.

Then there are the financial costs: the many long-distance telephone calls, travel expenses, wear on your car and perhaps the cost of hiring a companion or personal support worker because you can’t be there yourself. If you’re employed, you may have to take time off work to deal with crises; some employers are less sympathetic than others.

Despite these challenges, there are many ways to maintain peace of mind while providing long-distance care:

  • Make it easy for people to get in touch with you. Get an answering machine if you don’t already have one and perhaps a cell phone or pager as well. E-mail may also be advantageous.

  • Set up a regular time to call your parent (many people choose Sunday evenings).

  • Find someone local who can check with your parent daily, either by phone or in person. This could be a reliable neighbor or relative or even a volunteer from a telephone reassurance service.

  • Keep important phone numbers handy: your parent’s neighbors, close friends, family physician, local pharmacy and any home health-care providers. Ensure all of these people also have your name and contact information and encourage them to call you with any concerns. Stay in touch to get their ongoing perspectives on how your parent is doing and don’t forget to express appreciation for their assistance.

  • Shop around for a good long-distance savings plan so you don’t have to be too concerned about the frequency and duration of caregiving-related telephone calls. You might consider getting a private, toll-free number so that friends, neighbors and health-care providers have no reservations about regularly calling you.

  • Maintain a file of key information, such as your parent’s medical conditions and surgical history, medications, medical specialists, banking institutions and other financial contacts, lawyer, clergy and daily or weekly schedule, plus any upcoming appointments. Obtain a local phone directory if possible.

  • If your parent has a chronic illness, obtain information from the appropriate organization (for example, the Parkinson Foundation) to help you understand the disease and get an idea of what to expect in the future.

  • Investigate other available resources in your parent’s community, which might include: personal emergency response systems; letter carrier or utility company alert services; accessible transportation; adult day programs and other leisure programming; outreach services, such as foot care and seniors’ dental clinics; home health services involving nursing, homemaking, therapy and companion services and alternative housing. Such information can be obtained from the local area agency on aging. (To find the appropriate office, call the Administration on Aging’s toll-free Eldercare Locator Service at (800) 677-1116 or search online at www.eldercare.gov.)

When you do have an opportunity to visit, pay close attention to your parent’s physical condition, mental functioning and mood. Consult his or her family doctor if you have any concerns.

Perform a safety assessment of the home environment to identify potential hazards — for example, throw rugs that don’t stay in place — and do what you can to remove them. Visit a medical supply store and check out the many products that might make daily activities easier and safer for your parent. Better yet, locate an occupational therapist who performs home assessments and can make recommendations in this regard.

If you have siblings in the area, arrange a family meeting to discuss your parent’s needs and determine who can provide help.

Ideally, plan to stay with your parent long enough so you’re not rushed. That way, you’ll have ample time not only to attend meetings (try to set these up in advance of your arrival) and run errands but also to enjoy your parent’s company.

Even if he or she appears to be managing well right now, it’s a good idea to begin learning about resources in the community should your parent require help in the future.

Keeping one step ahead will help make your role as long-distance caregiver a little easier.


Lisa M. Petsche is a geriatric social worker and freelance writer.

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A Dose of Wisdom to Combat Illness

"Illness and Health in the Jewish Tradition," edited by David L. Freeman and Judith Z. Abrams (Jewish Publication Society, 1999, $24.95).

What is your definition of a new book? Mine is a book that I have not yet read, regardless of when it was published. And so, let me call your attention to a book that was published a couple of years ago, but that did not receive the attention that it deserved and that you may have missed.

This is a book for those who are or who some day may be ill, which is another way of saying for everyone. It contains wisdom culled out of ancient, medieval, modern and contemporary Jewish literature that is intended for the patient, the caregiver and the physician. Like every anthology, it has some passages in it that will be your favorites and some that you will not like as much, but there are more than enough of the former to make this a precious and valuable collection.

The writings are of different kinds. There are, first of all, selections from the Psalms, because this is the great treasure house of the human spirit. The Psalms are poems and prayers written by and for those who are ill, and because they are so excruciatingly personal, their power does not diminish with the passing of the centuries.

Then there are selections from rabbinic literature, from both the legal sections and from the midrashim. And then there are selections from the law codes, in which all the bewildering questions that confront patients, caregivers and physicians today are struggled with: When should you visit a sick person and what should you say? When can you let go of life and how long should you fight? How much must you tell a patient when he/she wants to know the truth and how much should you tell when he/she does not want to know the truth?

There are also essays by modern Jewish thinkers–Harold Schulweis, William Cutter, Hirshel Jaffe and others — each reflecting on what they have learned as a result of their illnesses and what they now understand as a result of their recoveries.

These essays do not deal, for the most part, with the theoretical theological questions but with the real concerns of people who are in the hospital. They do not deal with such questions as who has priority for a transplant or whether euthanasia or abortion or stem cell research are right or wrong.

Instead, they deal with such questions as what can we do to make a patient feel that he/she has some control, how can we make the consulting room look less forbidding to the caregivers, and how can a person who has to wear a silly looking gown and a bracelet with his name on it, and who has to sleep in a bed that has sides like a crib, and who has to stare up at the nostrils of those who treat him, feel dignity?

Above all, they deal with the question of where shall a patient find a measure of hope and meaning in the time of illness?

There are a 127 selections in this book. They range from the Chumash and the Book of Job through Maimonides and Glueckel of Hameln in the Middle Ages, to Sholem Asch and Sholom Aleichem in modern times, to Victor Frankl, Max Lerner, Abraham Joshua Heschel and Adin Steinsaltz in our own time.

The prayers and the customs of the tradition are here, such as the "Misheberach," the changing of the person’s name, the amulets, the vidui. New customs and new ways of giving hope and will to live are to be found here, too.

Not only will each person have his or her own favorite in this anthology, but I suspect that different pages will be each person’s favorite at different times in his life. Rachel Cowan’s memoir of what it was like to stay in her husband’s hospital room and to celebrate Shabbat with him there near the end of his life is a gem that those who need be caretakers will appreciate.

The physician’s oath and Isaac Israeli’s portrait of the good physician will speak to doctors about the spiritual challenges they face. (I wish that Nancy Flam’s exquisite prayer for doctors to recite when they lose a patient had been included; perhaps it can be added in the next edition.)

The principles of administration for a hospital that were written for Kiryat Sanz Hospital in Netanya, Israel, is an extraordinary document that should be must reading for anyone who administers a hospital. Many other selections in this collection will speak to those who are, or who some day will be, ill and will show them what those who have walked the lonely path that they must tread have learned.

This source book is the work of two remarkable people: Dr. David Freeman, who teaches internal medicine and rheumatology at Harvard Medical School, and Rabbi Judith Abrams, who teaches Talmud via the internet from Houston.

The book came out of a healing service called Refuat Hanefesh that has been held since l990 at Temple Israel in Boston, where patients, caregivers and physicians meet once a month to share prayers, poems and readings — many of them set to music — and study selections from classic Jewish sources and contemporary Jewish thinkers that grapple with how to achieve both strength of body and strength of spirit.

Now that I have discovered this anthology, I am going to make it the textbook for a study group on health, illness and recovery that I want to teach in my community, because there is no one who does not now or will not some day have to confront the issues that this book deals with. So it is a wonderful resource to study now, as well as when we will need it.

A Dose of Wisdom to Combat Illness Read More »

An Eye for Modernism

On March 5, 1936, Julius Shulman was awestruck when he saw the Hollywood Hills home designed by legendary California Modernist architect Richard Neutra.

A free-spirited 26-year-old photographer, who was unsettled on a career, Shulman casually snapped six shots of the mansion with his Vestpocket Kodak camera. “I had never seen a house like this before,” he marveled.

Neither had the public. What Shulman could not foresee at the time is that those six shots would usher in the beginning of a new genre in the fine arts: architectural photography.

“Julius Shulman in the 1930s was the first person to document the stuff,” said Eric Chavkin, who with his wife, Alison Pinsler, runs the architectural bookstore Form Zero in downtown Los Angeles. “His images were the images that defined Modernism in Southern California. Julius captured the love of California and nature, even though its a manmade nature, nature is part of the shot.”

On a recent November day, a downpour drenched Shulman’s glass-walled studio, nestled on a lush two acres in the Hollywood Hills off Mulholland Drive. Wearing a bright red shirt and tan slacks secured by matching tan suspenders, Shulman, a 92-year-old who could pass for 65, talked by phone to a San Diego public television executive, who wanted 186 of Shulman’s photos for an upcoming book project.

Just days before, Shulman had contributed prints — including a shot of Wilshire Boulevard Temple and the rarely seen backside of Notre Dame in Paris — to an architecture book on places of worship.

“This is the secret of my life,” Shulman told The Journal. “I’ve become more and more involved.”

He recalled an item he once read about a German prime minister who was still active at 91. “And here I am 92. I look at my desk, and it’s cluttered with projects.”

Shulman, whose photography has been featured in LIFE and in dozens of architecture magazines and who recently finished a series of photos for the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, can be found amid the clutter of a busy life: stacks of oversized prints, vertical sculptures, cameras, golf clubs, funky ’70s-style lounge chairs and shelves filled with architecture books. A poster of the cover of his Taschen-published 1998 autobiography, “Julius Shulman: Architecture and its Photography,” hangs behind one of two messy desks in the studio.

Born in Brooklyn to Russian immigrant parents, Shulman grew up in Connecticut, where his father moved the family in order to pursue farming. In 1920, the Shulmans again relocated to Boyle Heights, where Shulman’s father started a store, New York Dry Goods, on Brooklyn Avenue and Chicago Street.

Shulman had his bar mitzvah on Oct. 13, 1923, at the Breed Street Shul in Boyle Heights. After Shulman’s father died in 1923 at age 39, New York Dry Goods was run by his mother, two brothers and two sisters. Shulman’s brothers later ran Shulman Brothers Appliances. Shulman said, “They died too young,” like his father, in their pursuit to make money.

But that was never Shulman’s interest. He entered UCLA in 1929 to study electrical engineering. That lasted only two weeks. He spent the next seven years auditing courses at UCLA and UC Berkeley, where he shared a $25-a-month pad with pal Milton Goldberg (who founded Camp Max Strauss).

All that changed when he returned to Los Angles in 1936 and met Neutra, an architect famous for his sleek, modern style in which plate-glass walls and ceilings turned into deep overhangs that seemingly connected the indoors with the surrounding outdoors.

Their meeting came about through the six shots that Shulman snapped of the Neutra home. Shulman sent them to one of the architect’s apprentices, whom he had befriended. Neutra saw the photos and immediately hired Shulman.

“He would analyze each composition,” Shulman said. “He was the only architect looking over my shoulders 24 hours a day.”

Unlike others who had worked with Neutra, Shulman wasn’t fazed by the demanding designer, who, Shulman said, was a lousy photographer. Neutra’s wife, Dione, once told Shulman, “Julius, you would die if you saw his pictures. He was lucky if he had five or six pictures to show,” Shulman said.

But Shulman’s photographic eye combined with Neutra’s architectural vision sparked a new form of photography. Shots of Neutra’s Kauffman home in Palm Springs for a 1949 edition of LIFE helped place Shulman’s work in dozens of architecture magazines, where they had an impact on the field.

Once, Shulman explained, he was driving Arts & Architecture editor John Entenza to his home when New York-based Entenza looked out the window and told him to stop.

“He inquired about a coffee shop, next door to Schwab’s drug store,” he said. “It was very extreme, even for Modernism.”

Shulman wound up snapping shots of Googies coffee shop, the 1950 John Lautner creation that once stood on the corner of Sunset and Crescent Heights boulevards, now the site of the Laemmle Sunset 5 gateway. His photos of Googies ran in Arts & Architecture, and helped popularize the funky West Coast retro-futuristic look of diners and bowling alleys throughout California and Nevada, which is called “the Googie style.”

However, things did not always run smoothly for the photographer, according to Chavkin. During the 1950s, he said, Shulman was ensnared in a backlash against Modernism.

“Most of the proponents of Modernism — Neutra, Schindler, Gregory Ain — were Jewish,” Chavkin said. “I don’t think that sat well with the country club set back East. A lot of the East Coast magazines stayed away from publishing L.A. architecture. They weren’t allowed to be exhibited. And now, of course, L.A. is where the world’s architecture starts from.”

Today, Shulman’s Modernist home is a rhapsody of rectangular geometry in steel and glass. Shulman has often photographed his home, which he acquired in 1947 from Raphael Soriano, a pupil of Neutra. Through Shulman, Soriano wound up designing the Jewish Community Center of Boyle Heights. Through his photography, Shulman also befriended Neutra’s peer, Rudolf Schindler (“very bohemian”), who, like Neutra, was a Viennese Jew who cemented his reputation in California via Modernism.

As a Jew, Shulman is proud of his contributions to photography.

“We as a people, whether it’s God blessing us or overseeing us or nurturing us, we are blessed,” said Shulman. “My religion is nature. I’m truly a pagan.

“The Jewish people have produced some of the most elegant moments of humanity. We contribute to the humanities, the sciences, film and entertainment, cartoons, you name it. We’re not disintegrating, we’re becoming stronger because we continue to inscribe into the history of mankind certain elements which make for better lives for all people.”

For the last three years, 57-year-old Judy McKee, Shulman’s only child from his first marriage to his late wife, Emma, has been his business partner, in charge of dealing with the day-to-day minutiae of Shulman’s book deals and appearances. Shulman remarried in 1976. His second wife, Olga, died in 1999. He has a 25-year-old grandson from McKee.

Like the Jewish people, the tenacious Shulman does not intend to quit anytime soon.

“My life is full,” Shulman continued. “I’m blessed with the fact that after 66 years, I can go another 20 or 30 years. And I will.”

Julius Shulman will sign copies of Wolfgang Wagener’s book, “Raphael Soriano,” at Form Zero, 811 Traction Ave., in downtown Los Angeles on Nov. 26 from 7-9 p.m. For information, call (213) 620-1820.

An Eye for Modernism Read More »

‘Boy’ Puts a New Twist on an Old Rite

Most bar mitzvah boys expect presents — jewelry, vacations or money. So it’s no surprise that Herb Citrin, a recent bar mitzvah, asked for money — and lots of it — but he asked that it be contributed to the Guardians of the Jewish Home for the Aging.

Citrin isn’t your typical bar mitzvah boy. He celebrated his rite of passage at the age of 80. But the ceremony was unusual for other reasons, too. The rabbi who called him up to the bimah at Stephen S. Wise Temple was his son, Rabbi Paul Citrin, who is the rabbi at Temple Sinai in Palm Desert. His bar mitzvah tutor? Citrin’s grandson, Micah, who sang and accompanied him on the guitar.

Why did Citrin wait so long for his bar mitzvah? He grew up in Boyle Heights and also in Glassel Park, where it was “99 percent gentile,” Citrin said, and had no synagogue. As a youngster, it was difficult for him to get a formal Jewish education. The school was miles from his house, and his mother, who kept a traditional Jewish home, didn’t drive; his father worked nights and slept during the day. So his 13th birthday passed without a bar mitzvah.

But to see that his children could have the Jewish education Citrin never had, his first wife, Harriett Jane Rosenmeyer, “was the guiding light” in ensuring that the family joined a temple. In 1963, Citrin and his family left Temple Emanuel with Rabbi Isaiah Zeldin to found Stephen S. Wise Temple.

Citrin’s son, Paul, was bar mitzvahed there, and his daughter, Laurie, was confirmed there. Paul became a rabbi and one of his two grandsons, Micah, is now a third-year student at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. “I couldn’t be more proud of my son and grandson,” Herb told The Journal.

Like most bar mitzvah boys, the octogenarian delivered a speech, thanking God for all his blessings: a loving family, close friends and colleagues, health and, most importantly, his second wife, Ione, a professional artist. Citrin also gave thanks for being “blessed to be able to give time and money to The Jewish Federation, the Jewish Home for the Aging and Gateways Hospital.”

After the bar mitzvah, everyone shuffled next door to enjoy a salmon-and-salad reception and a live band playing Jewish songs. Flower arrangements in vibrant fall colors adorned the tables, and in the front of the room was a full-sized laminated photo of Citrin in a bikini bathing suit — showing off his body and toned muscles.

Guest also watched a slide show of scenes from Citrin’s life, from boyhood up until his bar mitzvah. The scenes showed a slender, handsome man playing tennis and dancing. Guests laughed when the slides showed Citrin and Ione in costumes, like the couple in Grand Wood’s “American Gothic.”

Unlike most young bar mitzvah boys, Citrin has led a full life. After his discharge from the Navy in 1945, when he was “a radio and sonar man on submarines,” Citrin parked cars at Lawry’s restaurant, he said, “when prime rib dinners cost $1.25.”

The budding entrepreneur decided to make the parking concession his own. “I was making more money parking cars than many doctors and lawyers.”

He began running the parking concessions at other dining establishments on La Cienega Boulevard’s Restaurant Row and soon established Valet Parking Services (VPS) — the first of its kind in the city. Today, VPS contracts with hotels, airports and the entertainment industry. Citrin is still chairman and “chief nudzh” of his company. When not working, Citrin plays tennis, lifts weights and walks daily.

During the bar mitzvah, each guest received a large chocolate key saying, “Herb’s Key to Youth: Growing Old is Not for Sissies.”


Carla Zeitlin is a personal fitness trainer, who specializes in training seniors, and a health and fitness writer.

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Safe in the Senate?

A Republican Senate means Republican committee chairs, and for many Jewish organizational leaders, a step backward toward more defensive lobbying tactics.

Jewish lobbyists say that when the Republicans take control of the full Congress in January, they will need to respond more to legislation they oppose rather than help craft laws that fit with their priorities. They say they will need to work hard to remove elements of some measures that are seen as too conservative, such as those related to charitable choice, which allows federal funds to religious organizations to provide social services. And they will work with lawmakers to construct measures that address their agenda, such as hate crimes legislation.

Still, many are holding out hope that there will be wiggle room to get some items on their agenda through the 108th Congress.

Among the people expected to head key committees are: Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.). who will chair the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee; Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), who takes over the Senate Judiciary Committee and Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), who will head the Senate Appropriations Committee.

On foreign issues, where Jewish leaders say the debates are often more bipartisan, the Senate Armed Services Committee will now be chaired by Sen. John Warner (R-Va.) and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will be manned once again by Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.), who first chaired it in 1985 and 1986.

Jewish groups say their relationship with Gregg will be important in the next Congress. His committee is expected to take up school voucher issues, which most Jewish organizations oppose, and will likely shape the debate on prescription drugs and Social Security privatization.

Jewish activists say they have worked with Gregg on several issues, and have had a running dialogue with his staffers over the Workplace Religious Freedom Act. The legislation would strengthen federal civil rights laws by requiring employers to grant employees greater accommodation for religious observances, such as taking time off for religious holidays and wearing religious garb.

However, the community is more divided on the contentious issue of vouchers, which provides federal funds for students to attend private or parochial schools. Many said they believe Gregg will push for some type of voucher program. Gregg’s position was strengthened by a Supreme Court decision earlier this year that deemed school vouchers constitutional.

Leaders of many Jewish groups that oppose vouchers say they understand their position is at odds with Gregg’s and they will need to work to try and prevent the legislation from being passed in the full committee.

But Orthodox officials support

Gregg’s stance.

David Zweibel, executive vice president for government and public affairs at Agudath Israel of America, said the Orthodox community would work with Gregg to expand the federal special education law to broaden the use of vouchers for special education children. Gregg supports the use of vouchers for private schools if the public school is not suitable for them.

On judiciary issues, Jewish leaders are gearing up for a flood of new judicial appointments that are expected now that Hatch is chair. He is expected to lead the charge toward swift approval of new conservative judges.

The major judiciary policy debate is expected to revolve around the Local Law Enforcement Enhancement Act, which stalled in the Senate last year and would provide hate crime protections that Jewish groups have been seeking.

Hatch, a Mormon senator wears a mezuzah around his neck for good luck, has "made impassioned speeches" about the need for hate crimes laws and does not join other conservative Republicans in opposing provisions against discrimination based on sexual orientation, said Michael Lieberman, Washington counsel for the Anti-Defamation League.

But Hatch is a vocal opponent of the bill on the grounds that it takes away states rights and because he fears that rapes and other attacks against women would all be classified as hate crimes, Lieberman said.

Hatch is also a vocal opponent of abortion, and there may be movement to restrict a woman’s access to abortion, through bills targeting late-term abortions or seeking parental notification.

Jewish activists are less concerned with Stevens, who will be the Senate’s chief appropriator. He is considered a strong supporter of foreign aid to Israel, which falls within the purview of his committee.

Jewish activists say they are further encouraged that the new chairman of the committee’s foreign operations subcommittee is expected to be Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), the chief Senate sponsor of a bill that would punish Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat and other Palestinian leaders for violating signed agreements with Israel and the United States.

Foreign affairs issues are seen as less dependent on the right chairman, since aid for Israel and support for the pro-Israel agenda is considered bipartisan in the current climate.

Malcolm Hoenlein, executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, said Jewish groups have worked with both Lugar and Warner on foreign affairs issues in the past.

Hoenlein said Lugar has not been a strong advocate for the Israeli agenda, but has been supportive and is viewed as a friend.

Warner has recently joined Democratic lawmakers in supporting tougher action on Egypt for its airing of a miniseries deemed to have anti-Semitic elements.

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