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December 31, 2013

UCLA alum dies, hit-and-run driver still at large

David Pregerson, the 23-year-old struck by a hit-and-run driver in Pacific Palisades in the early hours of Dec. 27, died Tuesday morning, Dec. 31.

After being found at around 3:20 a.m. on Friday, Dec. 27, Pregerson was transported to the UCLA medical center for surgery, where he remained in critical condition for several days.

A recent graduate of UCLA, Pregerson’s Facebook page says that he was a film producer and studied film directing in college.

Tuesday morning, someone named Ramtin UCLA alum dies, hit-and-run driver still at large Read More »

A Kippah in a Kippahless Land

I have worn a hat every day of my life since I was five or six years old. I wore a hat to school, I wore a hat when I came home from work, and I wore a hat on lazy Sundays. I have had all the classics; the first year Marlins cap, the Los Angeles Raiders hip hop hats, and basically any White Sox symbol ever made. I even wore a hat to Homecoming in High School (classy). At first this became my thing that made me different, even though my grandmother warned that it would make me go bald (luckily that was a bubba meisa). As I evolved Jewishly, the hat was much easier to explain to people than a kippah. So it stuck with me.


Recently, I was back in New York for a conference and realized that I left my kippah on the entire time in NYC and not once put my (currently Blackhawks) hat on my head. I had readopted the religious “norm” of New York City of Jews wearing kippot. In Minnesota I wear a kippah every day as well, but place a hat on my head when I am out or going into restaurants. In Minnesota I do not, yet, have the luxury of having kosher restaurants and therefore in order to respect my Orthodox colleagues and some Conservative colleagues, I choose not to make others assume that the establishment I am eating in is kosher. In NYC I only ate at kosher restaurants so I did not have this problem.


In Minnesota with the kippah comes questions and notoriety because I am different. My favorite story was on my way into Starbucks, the typical Minnesotian decked out in purple on gameday chewing on his morning cigar, looks at my “Da Bears” kippah and says “That is the best yalmulka I have ever seen. Da Bears!” This has happened more than once, including times while not wearing that specific kippah. The fact is being a rabbi in town is more noticeable and the occasional anonymity I would desire, especially while meeting with congregants, flies out the window because of my head covering.


Each year I teach Modern Jewish Law to my 9th grade class. While most, if not all, do not regularly wear a kippah we study the topic from a social level. They struggle to keep it on their heads, even in class, but when shown stories and sources of being forced to take head covering off, they get upset and passionate about the topic. It is because of them that I know that I need to keep my kippah on and that the hat, which I have always worn, needs to take a back seat. Wearing a kippah in a kippahless land has the potential to have an incredible impact on others. To see the rabbi at a bar or sporting event wearing religion and not hiding it, sets an example for Jews and non-Jews of the seriousness we, as rabbis, take our jobs. And makes me question why I would ever step foot in a place in which I was not comfortable wearing it in the first place. The fact is that the kippah, in today’s world, functions differently in each community. When one decides to wear it, we need to remember that it not only means something to the individual and his/her connection with God but also to the public and to our fellow Jews.

A Kippah in a Kippahless Land Read More »

Community as Creative Cohort

When I arrived, the room at “>PresenTenseLA’s second cohort. As a fellow in this latest group of social entrepreneurs, dreamers and visionaries working toward various passion projects, I was looking forward to refining my project’s concept—a providers’ list for the special needs community—and working with the other fellows in a focused way, building and launching our ideas toward the greatest possible impact.

Meeting the other 2013-2014 fellows was inspiring; each of them has such passion. From Jonathan Bubis’s enthusiasm for inspiring others through his Tefillah Transformed Initiative to Leah Weiner’s interest in decreasing the pay gap of women in leadership positions and other conversations through the Emma Project, the fellows have diverse backgrounds, but we are united by our commitment to tikkun olam. Each of us comes to PresenTenseLA with the goal of making the world a better place.

That first day of training we started at the beginning, creating a group “agreement of values.” In a display of commitment to the process as well to our fellow participants, we promised to provide support and feedback, and to communicate openly and honestly with one another. Under the guidance of Naomi Korb Weiss, the CEO of PresenTense Group, and Julia Moss, the coordinator of PresenTenseLA, the program also highlighted Jewish metaphors that corresponded with business concepts and ideas, as part of PresenTenseLA’s commitment to integrating Jewish learning into the curriculum. Connecting Jewish values with our work makes it that much more meaningful.

PresenTenseLA—supported in part by The “>Jewish Venture Philanthropy Fund and through a Cutting Edge Grant from the “>Launch Night, a large community-wide event where Fellows do “fast pitches” about their ventures, and explore community responses and potential partnerships with individuals and organizations.

At 10:30 that first morning, I had nervously walked into a room, just one of 12 individuals who all wanted to succeed. But by 5:30 PM that evening, we had become a cohort, and together, we walked into another room—a kick-off cocktail reception where we met the members of the PresenTenseLA community: over 50 mentors, coaches, donors and steering committee members, all of whom are rooting for us to go out and achieve the things we are most passionate about.

In every venture, there is always the risk of failure. But the support of the PresenTenseLA and Federation communities makes this project a challenge that I’m excited to take on.

Sarah Gershfeld is the founder of Community as Creative Cohort Read More »

Finer Things: Rocky Patel 1961 Corona

Welcome to Finer Things, the section of Most Things Considered that will be dedicated to bourgeois and aristocratic hobbies; namely, cigars and fountain pens, with some scotch, bourbon, and gin mixed in. As a moderately experienced novice in both cigars and pens, this author will keep the jargon to a minimum. If you love a good cigar, want to know more, but don't know where to start, this is the place for you. Join the author as he, and you, learn about the art of smoking, and writing.

Before I get into what will be Finer Things' first official cigar review, I encourage the cigar beginner to purchase ” target=”_blank”>Rocky Patel Sun Grown, which looked fantastic, and had a beautiful red band.

Vitola

Brand: ” target=”_blank”>Speyside Single Malt Scotch, 1993, oak cask. From Trader Joes (thanks to ES for that one). According to Finer Things: Rocky Patel 1961 Corona Read More »