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October 2, 2008

Opening the Gates

Jacob Artson, 16, gave the following speech last May at a conference in Los Angeles titled “Opening the Gates: Building Inclusive Congregations and Communities for Jews with Special Needs,” where he shared the keynote address with his father, Rabbi Bradley Artson, dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at American Jewish University. The conference was co-sponsored by The Jewish Federation, HaMercaz, The Board of Rabbis, the Bureau of Jewish Education and the Kalsman Institute on Judaism and Health.

Hi. My name is Jacob Artson and I am a person just like you.

I am part of a wonderful Jewish family, I go to our local public high school, where I am in mostly regular classes, I play sports, I love to travel, and I enjoy hanging out with my friends and girlfriend.

The only difference between you and me is that I have lots of labels attached to me, like nonverbal, severely autistic and developmentally disabled.

It is true that I have some challenges, but there are lots of myths and misconceptions about autism out there. Many purported experts claim that individuals with autism are not interested in socializing. This is totally ridiculous. I love people, but my movement disorder constantly interferes with my efforts to interact. I cannot start and stop and switch my thinking or emotions or actions at the right time. This can make being in a big group very lonely and that is the worst thing about autism. So next time you see someone like me at your synagogue or at your event, remember that they probably feel really lonely and you could be the person to make their day by smiling at them and letting them know that they exist.

Another myth is that the majority of kids with autism are mentally retarded. In fact, our bodies are totally disorganized but our cognitive skills are intact and our minds are hungry for knowledge.

Every person alive is encumbered by challenges and blessed with gifts. I used to think that my ratio of challenges to gifts was higher than most, but now I realize that my challenges are just more obvious. I have learned that there are actually many positive aspects of autism. For example, I get a VIP pass at Disneyland and I get to kiss all the beautiful counselors at camp and pretend I don’t know any better. On a serious note, not being able to speak means that you spend lots of time listening.

In fact, much of what I know I’ve learned from listening to conversations that other people didn’t think I could hear, or listening through the wall to what the teacher in the next classroom was saying. People often ask me how I became such a good writer. The answer is that my inability to speak gives me lots of time to contemplate and imagine and also forces me to hear everyone’s perspective and think about it because I cannot interrupt or monopolize the conversation like people who have oral speech.

In the autism world we say that not being able to speak doesn’t mean that you don’t have anything to say. In my experience, the converse is also true —just because you can speak doesn’t mean that you have anything worth saying.

Since this is a conference on including people with disabilities in the Jewish community, I want to share with you the ways in which autism has affected my participation in Jewish life. I have found great support in God, Torah, and the Jewish community. The greatest single day of my life was my bar mitzvah because everyone there accepted and celebrated me for exactly who I am. At the end of the service, everyone came up on the bima for Adon Olam. I will carry in my mind and heart forever the picture of everyone there smiling at me. I had wonderful experiences when I was in a Jewish preschool and later kindergarten, even though my teachers had never had a child with autism in their class. What made those experiences successful was the way the teachers modeled inclusion for the other kids. They treated me as a person made in God’s image and not as different in any way. In kindergarten, I had amazing peers. They were mostly Persian and inclusiveness is engrained in their culture. They tried all year to get me to interact with them even though I was usually too excited to focus. I’ve also had wonderful buddies from The Friendship Circle, attended several Jewish camps, participated in a Jewish musical theater program called The Miracle Project, and prayed at Koleinu, a service at Temple Beth Am for kids with special needs.

But there have been obstacles as well. I have never attended religious school because I was bored in the special ed Hebrew school and the typical classes did not allow a place for me to engage either. When I was younger, I went to synagogue every Shabbat but the other kids ignored me. As a teenager, I have had some wonderful Jewish experiences at camp and elsewhere, but the first reaction is that I am too disabled to attend, or that I don’t participate once I’m there. So whether I’m invited seems to depend on the particular director that year. I have noticed that when I attend Jewish youth group events, the volunteers seem to pay attention primarily to the verbal kids, so I am lonely. I suspect that this stems from lack of exposure, but their youth leaders could do a better job of modeling inclusion too.

The public schools and secular programs I have attended have been much more welcoming. The public schools are overwhelmingly black and Hispanic, and they, too, seem to have a culture of inclusion. The kids at school treat me like family and pull me into everything they do. I go to a secular camp for autistic kids in Aspen every summer and everyone is welcome there. We do cool things like go tubing and white water rafting and I am able to participate in everything because I know they will work with me where I’m at.

In my secular inclusive sports program, Team Prime Time, the director has taken the time to allow for sharing on several levels, so the kids all respect me for my intelligence and understand how hard I’m working to make a basket or kick the ball. I have also been part of their new volunteer training and have spoken about autism at school, but I have never been invited to participate in volunteer training for any Jewish program I have attended.

So here is a final thought I would like to leave you with:

The best peers and aides I have had didn’t have any special background. It doesn’t actually take any training to be a leader who models inclusion. It just takes an attitude that all people are made in God’s image and it is our job to find the part of God hidden in each person.

I used to get very upset and offended at the idea of being someone’s mitzvah project or community service project. But now I see that I also have a role to play in helping create the messianic future. It is easy in our affluent society to become too dazzled by the material opportunities and the privileges that we have been born with. But I have had to struggle from the day I was born to do many things that other people take for granted. Because of that, I have experienced God’s love in a way most children have not. So maybe we are each other’s mitzvah project because I can help them see the glories of the world that they have never noticed, and they can teach me how to look like other kids. All in all, who is getting a greater benefit? In the end, together we bring God’s glory to all of humanity.

Opening the Gates Read More »

Calendar Girls Picks and Clicks Oct. 4 – 10: Yom Kippur observances, fashion frenzy, Naomi Wolf

SAT | OCT 4

(ART)
If you miss the art of Andy Warhol or Roy Lichtenstein, then Burton Morris’ exhibition “Fashion Frenzy” should surprise and delight. The artist aspires to continue the Pop Art tradition of the ’60s and ’70s by presenting everyday objects and ideas in bold ways. His artwork has been featured on the set of “Friends,” the 76th Annual Academy Awards and the 2004 Summer Olympic Games. Morris says his work projects a sense of optimism. It’s no wonder ” target=”_blank”>http://www.hamiltonselway.com and ” target=”_blank”>http://lairishfilm.com.

SUN | OCT 5

(AUTHOR TALK)
From romance writer Ami Silber comes her first work of fiction, “Early Bright.” The novel portrays the life of Louis Greenberg, a con man living in the 1940s who preys off of war widows by ensnaring cash for stories of the dead. After a family feud, he moves to Los Angeles and spends his nights in the all-black jazz clubs of Los Angeles, where he nurses his passion for bebop and tries to seduce a woman despite their segregated surroundings. Sun. 4 p.m. Free. Book Soup, 8818 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood. (310) 659-3110. ” border = 0 vspace = ‘8’ hspace = ‘8’ align = ‘left’>feminism, “The Beauty Myth,” before moving into a progressive political discourse. Her most recent work “The End of America: A Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot” details how she believes fascism is creeping its way into America. She’s in conversation at ALOUD LA tonight with Jewish Journal columnist Marty Kaplan for “Give Me Liberty: A Handbook for American Revolutionaries.” Mon. 7 p.m. Free with reservation. ALOUD at Central Library, 630 W. Fifth St., Los Angeles. (213) 228-7025. ” target=”_blank”>http://www.lmu.edu.

(MUSIC)
The George Kahn West Coast Jazz Quartet will entertain audiences with their fresh, contemporary sound in an effort to get out the vote. Performing music from the likes of Paul McCartney and Pink Floyd, this ain’t Miles Davis melancholy. “Jazz the Vote” encourages political action and celebrates the release of Kahn’s latest CD, “Cover Up.” Ever the activist, Kahn has told fans he will donate $1 to the political party of their choice when they download his version of John Mayer’s “Waiting for the World to Change” on iTunes. Mon. 8 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. $15-$25. Jazz Bakery, 3233 Helms Ave., Culver City. (310) 271-9039. ” target=”_blank”>http://www.georgebillis.com.

(ELECTION)
American Jewish World Service knows how to spice up a presidential debate. They’re gathering a group of politically interested and mobile Jews at Mama’s Hot Tamales Cafe, an L.A. institution — and not just because the food’s good. The poignant context of the venue, a nonprofit community development project that promotes the neighborhood’s revitalization, will serve as the backdrop for the Presidential Debate Watch Party 2008. Tue. 6-9 p.m. Free. Mama’s Hot Tamales, 2122 W. Seventh St., Los Angeles. (323) 761-8350. ” target=”_blank”>http://www.danielpearlmusicdays.org.

(PLAY)
A heartbroken Jewish playwright stands before his audience and tells a story he vowed never to repeat — about genocide and murder. Through the eyes of a prison guard, the audience is introduced to the elderly inmate accused of committing these crimes. But at his trial, his daughter insists he has Alzheimer’s disease. Billed by playwright Michael Redhill as a part-mystery, part-ethical dilemma play, “Goodness,” performed by the Pepperdine University Fine Arts Division Theatre Department, uses Eastern European folk music to reinvent the past through flashback. Tue. 7:30 p.m. Through Oct. 11. $10-$15. Helen E. Lindhurst Theatre, Pepperdine University, 24255 Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu. (310) 506-4522. ” target=”_blank”>http://www.laemmle.com.

HIGH HOLY DAYS

(DVD)
Unable to attend High Holy Days services in person? The Creative Arts Temple of Beverly Hills is offering a free, one-hour Celebrity-Laced Yom Kippur Service DVD. For more information, call (323) 965-1818 or e-mail info@creativeartstemple.org.

SAT | OCT 4

(TASHLICH)
Temple Ahavat Shalom will hold its Tashlich ceremony at Lake Balboa/Anthony C. Beilenson Park. Participants are encouraged to bring a picnic lunch, blanket and chairs to enjoy the afternoon. Sat. 11 a.m. Free. 6300 Balboa Boulevard, Van Nuys. (818) 360-2258. ” target=”_blank”>http://www.ikar-la.org.

WED | OCT 8

(YOM KIPPUR)
Celebrate Yom Kippur seaside by joining Beach Hillel for services held at the Seaport Marina Hotel, where participants can choose to stay overnight. Wed., 6 p.m.; Thu., 9:30 a.m. Free services. The Seaport Marina Hotel, 6400 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Long Beach. (562) 426-7601, ext. 1424. ” target=”_blank”>http://www.jewishtvnetwork.com or in person at Brentwood Presbyterian Church, 12000 San Vicente Blvd., Los Angeles. Calendar Girls Picks and Clicks Oct. 4 – 10: Yom Kippur observances, fashion frenzy, Naomi Wolf Read More »

Oscar-winner Sandel gets Cine-Peace Award; Poker tourney a winner for JBBBS

Cinema of Peace

Oscar-winning director Ari Sandel (“West Bank Story”) racked up yet another prize when Americans for Peace Now presented him the 2008 Cine-Peace Award.
“I never in my wildest dreams expected the film to go as far as it did,” Sandel said during his acceptance speech.

Sandel spoke at length about traveling the world and being surprised by the number of people who had seen his musical comedy — a film about two competing falafel stands in the West Bank.

In Beirut, he said, a girl overheard him talking about his film at a restaurant. She approached him to say she managed to get a bootlegged version.
He was even well received in Chechnya, a country both the U.S government and his mother told him to avoid.

Sandel says he still receives e-mails from people the world over about how his film has affected them. Some, he says, have only seen the Jewish community as it is portrayed on screen.

The Cine-Peace event, held Sept. 22 at the Harmony Gold Preview House in Hollywood, also presented a number of other films that offered a perspective on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Some members of the audience cried as they watched “Holy Land — Common Ground: Unbroken Circle,” a heartbreaking documentary that focuses on Israelis and Palestinians who have lost loved ones in the conflict.

In the Israeli film “Roads,” a 13-year-old boy escapes the drug-infested city of Lod. At one point in the film, Ismayil is heard saying that two dead Arabs are nothing but that one dead Jew makes for a headline.

After the films, people shared dessert and each other’s company.

“It was very emotional,” Debbie Tehrani said. But “it turned out to be a good night and a very interesting event.”

— Lilly Fowler, Contributing Writer

Big Gamble for JBBBS Poker Tourney

I liked my chances when I sat down last week at a poker table at Hollywood Park.
The Inglewood casino is my regular haunt, and I was playing in the Jewish Big Brothers Big Sisters (JBBBS) charity poker tournament, hoping to outplay, outbluff and outluck 201 others to take home $7,500 in cash or, against my wife’s wishes, grab a $10,000 seat at next summer’s World Series of Poker in Las Vegas.

Like any poker game, the tournament, in its fifth year, was filled with big hands and bad beats.

Victor Snider, a former JBBBS board member with 20 years of service, caught a royal flush — there’s about a one in 649,740 chance of that — during the first 10 minutes. Seated behind me, Greg Shane, whose father is president of JBBBS’ Camp Max Straus, called for more chips with a “rebuy” after the first hand as he tried to best his second-place finish in 2006.

“This organization is amazing. Jewish Big Brothers, Camp Max Straus — I have seen it change kids lives,” Shane said, adding that he was happy to contribute.

ALTTEXTStacks were small to begin — only 500 chips and with the blinds starting at 25-25 — so the prudent players in the room sat back and waited for big hands, chatting, drinking from the open bar and hearing the constant call of “Rebuy!”

When I busted out three hours into the tournament with a starting pair of sevens, the rebuy period was over — 288 stacks had been re-filled or added onto — so I schlepped downstairs to play the cash tables and redeem myself.

In the end the title of champion and the $7,500 cash prize, sponsored by Joyce Lederer, went to the big Libowsky — Cary Libowsky (photo). He won his final hand just after 1 a.m. with a pocket pair of kings.

The big winner, though, was JBBBS, which brought in $103,000 from the night of gambling and drinking and a little bit of dreaming at Hollywood Park.

— Brad Greenberg, Senior Writer

The Ultimate Playground for Adat Ari El

Adat Ari El’s Labowe Family Day School unveiled its new state-of-the-art sports pavilion on Sept. 21 during a ceremony honoring its benefactor, Manny Kaplan and dedicated in honor of his late wife, Sybil. The new 7,500-square-foot pavilion features 10 separate play areas and is equipped with a “smart ceiling,” which blocks the sun, increases air circulation and lowers the temperature by 25 degrees. Rain or shine, it’s play time for the schoolchildren of Adat Ari El.

Oscar-winner Sandel gets Cine-Peace Award; Poker tourney a winner for JBBBS Read More »

VideoJew’s VideoGuide to L.A. #1 — How to look like an Angeleno

VideoJew’s VideoGuide to L.A. #1 — How to look like an Angeleno Read More »

Kabbalah Centre sues alternative community

When Shaul Youdkevitch and his wife left the Kabbalah Centre in February, after nearly three decades living and working at the now-celebrity-rich religious center, they didn’t want to give up the esoteric teachings of Jewish mysticism too. So they started their own kabbalah community, and because Youdkevitch had been a higher-up at the Kabbalah Centre, his organization quickly got the attention of his former employer.

Now he’s being sued for allegedly stealing trade secrets and leading people astray.

Details of the lawsuit, which I wrote about for this week’s Jewish Journal, are after the jump:

Kabbalah Centre sues alternative community Read More »

Jews blamed for economic crisis

From the No-Duh Department: The Anti-Defamation League is reporting a massive rise in anti-Semitic chatter online since the financial markets crashed.

“Hundreds of anti-Semitic posts regarding Lehman Brothers and other institutions affected by the subprime mortgage crisis have been submitted to discussion boards dealing with finance, with many more arriving by the minute,” the ADL wrote in a statement. “The messages rail against Jews in general, with some charging that Jews control the government and finance as part of a “Jew world order” and therefore are to blame for the economic turmoil.”

National Director Abe Foxman added: “We know from modern history that whenever there is a downturn in the global economy, there will be an upturn in the level of anti-Semitism and bigotry, and that is what we are seeing now. The age-old canards about Jews and money are always just beneath the surface.  As we witnessed after 9/11, whenever there is trouble or uncertainty in the economy or world events, Jews become the scapegoats, and ugly anti-Semitic canards are given new life.”

Let’s see: The global financial markets tank. Jews control global finances. Therefore, Jews did it. It’s the easiest explanation. It’s also completely fallacious. But nevermind the facts. Those haven’t bothered these guys in the past.

A few choice examples from the ADL are after the jump:

Jews blamed for economic crisis Read More »

VideoGuide to L.A. – Volume 1 – looking the part

” title=”Click here for a full schedule.”>Click here for a full schedule.

VideoGuide to L.A. – Volume 1 – looking the part Read More »

Younger evangelicals less tied to McCain

It’s sometimes frustrating as a reporter when you are interviewing political experts and strategists and they hedge on their election predictions. It’s also refreshing, because it seems like every day there is a new crumbling constituency whose potential for some of its members to vote for the party not traditionally their own could have dire consequences for Barack Obama or John McCain or Elisha Shapiro.

I’ve written plenty about Obama’s Jewish problem—too much really—and a little about McCain’s Jesus problem. On the latter, Religion News Service brings us up to speed:

While Sen. John McCain maintains a winning margin among white evangelical Christians of all ages, young white evangelical voters are less supportive of McCain than evangelical voters over the age of 30, according to the poll conducted for the PBS program “Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly” by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research Inc.

McCain has the support of 71 percent of white evangelicals, but only 62 percent of white evangelicals between the ages of 18 and 29.

“Evangelical voters have been so solidly Republican in the last 20 years, so if this signals a shift, it could have wide-ranging political implications,” said Kim Lawton, the managing editor of “Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly.”

Some differences on social issues also were highlighted in the survey. A majority of younger white evangelicals support some form of legal recognition for civil unions or marriage for same-sex couples. Older evangelicals are strongly opposed.

Both age groups remain solidly opposed to abortion.

This really wouldn’t be that surprising. The evangelical voting bloc is still struggling with losing Mike Huckabee in a Republican primary that featured a Mormon, a pro-life Catholic, McCain and no George Bush.

But there has been talk for over a year that evangelicals might vote Democrat, and still it seems like Obama couldn’t break the Republican hold on evangelical voters.

Not sure if anything has changed, or if this is the latest flavor-of-the-week survey.

Younger evangelicals less tied to McCain Read More »

VIDEO: Alistair Cohen — Shofar Blowing 101

From the 23-year-old Brit’s YouTube page:
My name is Alistair Cohen and I am an aspiring television presenter. This video was created for showreel material and to spread some Jewish knowledge around a bit.

Please don’t hesitate to leave any feedback or comments, and if you are watching this and may know of any presenting work available, please contact me at alistaircohen@hotmail.com. Thanks for watching.

VIDEO: Alistair Cohen — Shofar Blowing 101 Read More »

Joe Biden’s poor grasp of history

A few readers haven’t appreciated the recent slew of anti-Palin posts, and one sent me this video, in which Joe Biden, who’s also been known for his gaffes, shows that if you’re a vice presidential candidate, you should, under no circumstances, agree to an interview with Katie Couric.

The vice presidential debate should be really interesting this evening.

Joe Biden’s poor grasp of history Read More »