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July 21, 2005

The Circuit

Special Prayers

Approximately 80 people attended a memorial service July 13 at Beth Jacob Congregation to remember the two Israeli Bnei Akiva counselors murdered in Hebron, in the Gaza Strip, by Fatah terrorists on June 24. Avihai Levy, 17, and Aviad Mansour, 16, were walking in the southern Hebron Hills area of Beit Hagai when they were shot to death.

“Open your own wallets and look at your kids and grandchildren,” said Roz Rothstein, national director of the Israel advocacy and education group, StandWithUs, which co-sponsored the memorial with Beth Jacob Congregation and Bnei Akiva of Los Angeles.

Rothstein, joined at the bimah by StandWithUs National President Esther Renzer, noted that “as a child, I belonged to Bnei Akiva, too. As a teen, I was a madricha, a counselor, and then I became a local chapter leader. Good Zionist youth movements like Bnei Akiva teach responsibility for Israel and give real meaning to the phrase, ‘If I forget Thee, O Jerusalem.’ I credit Bnei Akiva for making this connection in my own life. A little bit of each of us has been lost when these two teens were murdered.”

A large, color photo of each young man framed the Orthodox synagogue’s bimah. Seated in the audience was Yaron Gamburg, the new deputy consul general at the Consulate General of Israel. Eulogizing the slain teenagers were Beth Jacob Rabbi Steven Weil and Bnei Akiva’s West Coast representative Dani Yemini.

“Violence is not our way, violence will not help, not in London, not in Netanya, not in New York,” said Yemini, who was followed by short speeches by teenagers Amanda Lazar and Ben Greenfield, then music and prayers by Cantor Avshalom Katz.

Eat for a Cause

If you feed them they will come … and if you add charitable endeavor to the list they will come in droves. This was the case Saturday night when the Concern Foundation held its annual tasting fundraising event on Paramount studios backlot. Hordes of happy people wandered about selecting from the delicious array of foods, pastries and beverages. The event for the Concern Foundation, which benefits cancer research — and the donations — keep growing every year.

Appointment Time

The North Hollywood – Valley Community Clinic (VCC), a longtime local provider of free and low-cost health care, has named Paula Wilson its new top executive, succeeding veteran CEO Ann Britt.

Wilson, VCC’s current vice president of planning and development, has served in various fundraising capacities for the clinic since 1992. Earlier this year, she served as CEO pro-tem during Britt’s California Wellness Foundation-awarded five-month sabbatical.

Wilson will spearhead the growth of youth and pediatric services at VCC and oversee its new standing as a community clinic designated to receive federal dollars.

A resident of the San Fernando Valley for more than two decades and a wife and the mother of a school-age son, she is a member of the Community Clinic Association of Los Angeles County and the California Primary Care Association, as well as local chambers of commerce.

 

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Spectator – Spielberg Keeps ‘Munich’ a Secret

In an honor-laden career, Steven Spielberg has never played for higher emotional and political stakes than in his upcoming film on the aftermath of the 1972 massacre of 11 Israeli Olympic athletes by Palestinian Black September terrorists.

The customary secrecy surrounding Spielberg’s projects in progress has been tightened to the point that even the film’s title is listed only as “Untitled Historical Thriller.”

Although some footage of the massacre itself will introduce the film, the focus will be on the subsequent charge to the Mossad by then Prime Minister Golda Meir to hunt down and kill the responsible terrorists.

In the only statement released by his spokesman Marvin Levy, Spielberg said, that “The attack at Munich by Black September and the Israeli response to it was a defining moment in the modern history of the Middle East.”

“It is easy to look back at historic events with the benefit of hindsight,” he continued. “What’s not so easy is to try to see things as they must have looked to people at the time. Viewing Israel’s response to Munich through the eyes of the men who were sent to avenge that tragedy adds a human dimension to a horrific episode that we usually think about only in political or military terms.”

“By experiencing how the implacable resolve of these men to succeed in their mission slowly gave way to troubling doubts about what they were doing, I think we can learn something important about the tragic stand-off we find ourselves in today,” Spielberg said.

A few basic facts are available about the film now shooting in Malta, with other locations in Budapest and New York. The screenplay is by renowned playwright Tony Kushner (“Angels in America”) in his feature film debut.

The international cast is headed by Eric Bana as the lead Mossad agent, and includes David Craig, Geoffrey Rush, Mathieu Kassovitz, Hanns Zischler, Ciaran Hinds and Israeli actress Gila Almagor. Universal Pictures will release the film this Dec. 23.

A major concern is that in “Spielberg’s Biggest Gamble,” as one headline had it, too much emphasis will be given to the doubts of the Mossad agents in their mission.

As historian Michael Oren told the New York Times, “It’s become a stereotype, the guilt-ridden Mossad hit man. I don’t see Dirty Harry feeling guilt-ridden. Somehow, it’s only the Jews.”

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