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February 3, 2014

For Israel’s skaters, Olympic training is a New Jersey state of mind

Evgeni Krasnapolsky and Andrea Davidovich glide around the ice, shadowing one another to the accompaniment of Nino Rota’s “Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet.”

At a rink in this New York City suburb, the figure-skating pair are refining their long program a few weeks before the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, that open Friday.

Krasnapolsky, 25, and Davidovich, 16, are practicing their choreographed hand holding, lifts and throws at the indoor Ice House complex, which has become the epicenter of Israel’s Winter Olympics team, or at least its figure-skating component.

The pair, who began working together less than a year ago, will represent Israel at the Sochi games along with fellow figure skater Alexei Bychenko, 25, who also trains here year-round. The figure skating competition will be held Feb. 11-12.

Rounding out the Israeli contingent are alpine skier Virgile Vandeput, 24, based in Belgium, and short-track speed skater Vladislav Bykanov, 19, based in the Netherlands. All are first-time Olympians.

Krasnapolsky and Davidovich are coached by Galit Chait, a three-time Israeli Olympian in ice dancing. Overseeing the New Jersey operations is Chait’s Moldova-born father, Boris Chait, the president of the Israel Ice Skating Federation despite living in the United States since 1975.

He’s not the only American playing a major role on the Israeli Winter Olympics scene. New York native Stanley Rubinstein, who immigrated to Israel in 1971 and resides in Caesarea, founded the Israel Ski Federation and serves on its board.

Chait, the owner of a computer consultancy, is cultivating a crop of skaters he predicts will represent Israel at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea, and beyond.

The Chaits offer some names to keep an eye on: Artem Tsoglin, Netta Schreiber, Polina Shlepen, Daniel Samohin, Kimberly Berkovich, Ronald Zilberberg, Allison Reed and Vasili Rogov.

“I hope that we continue to grow and produce athletes who … are at the top of the world in international competitions,” says Galit Chait, who is coaching seven 2014 Olympians.

A nonprofit organization founded by Boris Chait, the International Sports Program, houses and trains the 11 skaters here who are Israeli citizens, along with nine others based in California, New York, Russia and Ukraine. The athletes train abroad because of Israel’s paucity of ice rinks and high-quality coaching.

Funding for the program comes from private donations along with the Israel Ice Skating Federation, the Olympic Committee of Israel and the International Skating Union, he says.

Greater funding for training, regardless of locale, would serve Israel’s interests beyond sport because every athlete “is an ambassador” for the country, Chait says from a gallery while observing Bychenko and Tsoglin, a 15-year-old from Kiryat Shemona in northern Israel.

The New Jersey operation has provided some encouraging achievements. At the European Championships last month in Budapest, the Krasnapolsky-Davidovich duo finished seventh and Bychenko was 10th. In December, in Croatia, the pair placed first and Bychenko was fourth at the Golden Spin of Zagreb. Israel has yet to medal in a Winter Olympics.

The achievements come at a cost: The upkeep for each athlete training here runs about $100,000 annually, covering room and board, ice time, coaches, costumes, choreographers, travel to competitions — “including, including, including,” Chait adds, gesturing with a rolling hand.

The arrangement means that “athletes don’t have to worry about their next meal,” Chait says. “All they have to do is train hard on and off the ice and do their schoolwork,” if they are that age. Davidovich and Tsoglin are enrolled in an online high school.

Ten of the 11 Hackensack skaters live in a tidy, refurbished white house less than a mile from the Ice House, overseen by a den mother named Nadia. Davidovich lives with her family a 40-minute drive away.

Absent the New Jersey infrastructure, “we would not be able to get to the Olympics,” Bychenko says in one of the home’s two kitchens while gulping a mid-afternoon yogurt.

“It was a hard decision because my family is there,” adds Bychenko, who arrived from Kiev three years ago. “If I were skating in Ukraine, I would not have gotten to the level I am at now.”

Krasnapolsky, also from Kiev, was raised in Kiryat Shemona — near Metulla, home of the Canada Center ice rink — and has known Chait “since I started skating.” He calls Chait’s wife, Irene, “my second mom.”

Sitting beside Krasnapolsky, Davidovich nods. She and her partner believe they are progressing nicely, tweaking their routines along the way. Earlier in the week they added a more difficult triple-throw to their short program (to Joshua Bell’s “Fantasy for Violin and Orchestra”).

On the ice an hour earlier, Galit Chait had held up her iPad as she consulted with the pair, slowing down a video clip to point out errors she had observed with the naked eye.

“We were a little bit off in the parallel spin,” Davidovich explains.

Before their on-ice session, Davidovich and Krasnapolsky had spent 40 minutes in the Ice House workout room practicing lifts, throws and twists in their stockinged feet, each landing occurring inside a marked white box. They rehearse this way twice daily, plus do cross-training and ballet each twice weekly.

Soon after the pair settled on their long program’s music last June, Davidovich’s mother, Marina, took them to Manhattan to attend the American Ballet Theatre’s performance of “Romeo and Juliet.” The show yielded ideas to incorporate in their performance.

Soon they won’t have many more leisure opportunities. A month after Sochi, they’ll be off to Japan for the World Figure Skating Championships.

That means lots more training at Israel’s home away from home in the Garden State, where the next Olympic yield is being tended.

For Israel’s skaters, Olympic training is a New Jersey state of mind Read More »

A Happy, Healthy Valentine’s Day

Here's how to Indulge in this sweet, romantic holiday — without feeling guilty and sabotaging your weight-loss progress.

Seems like we can't turn our heads without seeing another box of chocolates or other sweet treat this Valentine's day. And let's not talk about that Valentine's Day tradition: the rich, heavy and high calories restaurant meal, complete with 5000 calories and ZERO nutrients. Don't panic — you can still feel the love without feeling the extra calories and guilt. I've put together a list of surviving tips + a dinner menu complete with my famous guilt-free dessert: Strawberry Ganache FudgeCake- Gluten, dairy and sugar free!

Top 5 surviving tips to feeling the love, having your cake and eating it too:

5. Skip the restaurant and prepare your valentine's dinner at home- Save money, poor service, and a meal high in calorie-carb-sugar. (Complete dinner menu below).

4. Stick to red or white wine instead of the high-sugar cocktails and margaritas.

3. Instead of the usual chocolate cake at the end of your meal, try something else instead: Strawberry dipped chocolate, gluten free dark chocolate desserts, or fresh fruit.

2. Drink 8oz of H2O with fresh squeezed lemon juice before your meal.

1. Relax. Breathe. Enjoy. Kiss. Make love and let go of all expectations.

So here's to a fabulous, delicious, guilt free and a happy valentine's – for you and your loved one!

Sima's Guilt-Free , 30 minutes Valentine's dinner

Start with this yummy dish:
Mediterranean Salad with Couscous
Serves: 2
Prep time: 5 mins Cook time: 0 mins

This is a refreshing salad that is simple, delicious, and packed with nutrients. Couscous is small granules of semolina flour with origins in Morocco. The whole wheat version increases the fiber and boosts the nutritional value. When you eat whole grains, you get fiber and micronutrients like folic acid, magnesium and vitamin E.

Ingredients
1 C cooked whole wheat couscous
2-3 C arugula lettuce
2-3 radicchio lettuce
One red bell pepper, chopped
5-10 grape tomatoes, chopped
1 cucumber, chopped (peeled if desired)
4 cans artichokes hearts, chopped
1/3 red onion, chopped
2-3 Tbsp. Fresh mint, chopped roughly
5 Kalamata olives (optional)
1 Tbsp. Olive oil

Directions
1. Mix all ingredients together in a large bowl.
2. Season with salt, pepper, fresh lemon juice and olive oil.
3. Serve in 2 salad bowls.

Continue with this delicious, easy to make main dish:
Seared Ahi Tuna
Serves 2
Prep time: 3 mins, Cook time: 2 mins.

Ingredients:
2 ( 6 oz) ahi tuna steaks
2 Tbsp. Low sodium soy sauce
1 Tbsp. Sesame oil
1 Tbsp. Fresh ginger, grated
1 clover garlic, minced
1 1/2 tsp. lime juice
1 scallion, sliced thin
Non stick coking spray

Directions
1. Place all ingredients in a ziplock bag. Close tightly and refrigerate for 1 hour.
2. Spray a skillet with non-stick cooking spray and hear to medium-high.
3. Sear each side if the steaks for 1 minute ( more if desired)
4. Slice steaks into think slices and top with remaining scallions ( optional: use remaining marinade as a sauce, placing steak on top).


Strawberry Ganache Fudge Cake~ gluten free, sugar free and dairy free!
Makes about 6 servings
This cake is seriously to die for! Guilt and gluten free… And best part? It's ready in 10 minutes!

Fudge cake
3 C walnuts ( or any other nuts you like)
2/3 C unsweetened cacao powder
1 C pitted dates
Pinch of sea salt

Chocolate Frosting
1/3 C pitted dates
1/4 C raw agave ( or grade B maple syrup if you like)
1 avocado, ripe
1/3 C unsweetened cacao powder ( I use Navita's brand)

Fruit
Fresh Strawberries, about 1/2-1 cup ( or any other fruit of your choice: raspberries, mangoes, Peaches, or bananas).

1. Add walnuts, cacao powder, and salt in a high speed blender or food processor. Pulse until coarsely mixed. Add dates and pulse until mixed well.
2. Divide into 2 equal pieces and put aside.
3. To make the Frosting: combine dates and raw agave in your high speed blender and process until smooth (1-2 mins). Then add the avocado and blend.  Add the unsweetened cacao and process till smooth.
4. To assemble the cake, press the first half of the cake into a cake pan, and frost with half of the chocolate frosting. Top with strawberries ( or any other fruit), add the second cake on top and frost with the rest of the chocolate frosting.
5. Serve.
FYI: will stay fresh in the fridge for up to 8 days!

Bon Appetite!

A Happy, Healthy Valentine’s Day Read More »

L.A. Jews charged in $33 million bank fraud flee to Israel

Two Los Angeles Jews charged with participating in a $33 million bank fraud have fled to Israel.

Aviv Mizrahi, who also goes by Aviv Shoham Schwartz, and Aryeh Greenes, both in their 50s, were charged Jan. 30 in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles with bank fraud and making false statements in loan applications, CBSLA.com reported.

The FBI said the two fled to Israel.

According to the indictment, Mizrahi operated several wholesale electronics companies, including New Electronic Inc. and Tech Club Inc., as well as a retail store known as Star Club.

The two allegedly used fake financial records to obtain credit from multiple banks.

L.A. Jews charged in $33 million bank fraud flee to Israel Read More »

Woody Allen’s many confessions haven’t prepared us for the worst accusation yet

“What’s your favorite Woody Allen movie?”

This usually innocuous question provoked a frisson of uneasiness as the opening line of Dylan Farrow’s open letter to the Hollywood community and the world at large about her alleged molestation by Woody Allen at the age of 7.

The allegations, originally leveled in the early ‘90s during a vicious custody battle between Woody Allen and Mia Farrow, resurfaced recently after Allen won a Golden Globes lifetime achievement award. Now the 28-year-old Farrow has opened up for the first time – and unleashed an avalanche of commentary and argument. There are those who argue for Allen’s innocence; others have reached out to Farrow in support; even the Onion commented on the outpouring of emotion provoked by the letter, pointing out that devotees of Allen’s films “are really in a tight spot.”

Allen, now 78, is not the first powerful man to face an unusually unwelcome spotlight in light of molestation charges; he is not even the first beloved film director to do so. Comparisons have inevitably arisen between Allen and Roman Polanski, whose accuser, Samantha Geiner, wrote a book subtitled “My Life in the Shadow of Roman Polanski” about her experiences in the aftermath of accusing a celebrity of rape.

But what is it about Allen that really strikes a nerve – nerves, of course, being Allen’s topic of choice throughout his film career – and kicks up such a storm of emotion?

Woody Allen is one of those cultural creators who has spawned, through his work, a cultural archetype that goes far beyond him. The culture writer Chuck Klosterman said it best in his 2004 essay “This Is Emo”:

“Woody Allen made it acceptable for beautiful women to sleep with nerdy, bespectacled goofballs; all we need to do is fabricate the illusion of intellectual humor, and we somehow have a chance… By now, the ‘Woody Allen Personality Type’ has far greater cultural importance than the man himself.”

Intellectual humor is certainly part of Allen’s appeal, and that of his characters. But the basis of that humor is often confessional and self-deprecating. Allen’s characters are compulsively self-critical; in his early film works, in which Allen doppelgangers made frequent appearances, these central characters confess fears, flaws and misbehaviors with abandon. “I’m spiritually bankrupt. I’m empty,” the titular, Allenesque (and Allen—played) character says in 1997’s “Deconstructing Harry.” Another character describes him as “all nihilism, cynicism, sarcasm and orgasm.”

Allen’s very persona, his public face, is about confession. The word “neurotic” – often accompanied by the adjective “lovably” – follows every description of his humor (and the man himself). Allen makes us love him in his films by confessing so relentlessly, creating an instantaneous intimacy that keeps us focused, arrested. Even in more recent films, where Allen has largely retreated behind the camera, characters like Cate Blanchett’s Jasmine show uncanny insight into their own depredations. The final shot of “Blue Jasmine” shows Blanchett’s descent into madness: but in talking to herself, she’s really talking to us, inviting us into the chaos of her consciousness. This is in the underpinning of Allen’s broad cultural appeal: he shows us the fragile, fractured man behind the curtain.

Or so it seemed. Farrow’s allegations make Allen’s relentless confessions seem inadequate. What if all that openness, that willing confession to sin and weakness that’s Allen’s trademark style, is really just a mask of another kind? If the faults Allen has acknowledged in himself —a nd they are myriad, and draw us closer — are just a front for deeper and more monstrous ones, from which we would, inevitably, flinch?

That’s the question Farrow’s letter provokes. In the swirling murk of commentary from every angle, amid accusations of implanted memories or paid-off judicial experts from 1993, it’s hard to draw out any kind of truth. But what’s certain is that this possible betrayal echoes back through the decades of Allen’s work, to the foundations of his public persona and the archetypes he’s spawned.

Woody Allen’s many confessions haven’t prepared us for the worst accusation yet Read More »

Hillary Clinton opposes new Iran sanctions

Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said she was opposed to new Iran sanctions and urged Congress to give negotiations space to succeed.

“As President Obama has said, we must give diplomacy a chance to succeed, while keeping all options on the table,” Clinton said in a letter solicited by Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), the chairman of the Senate Armed Forces Committee and a preeminent opponent of new sanctions under consideration in Congress.

“The U.S. intelligence community has assessed that imposing new unilateral sanctions now ‘would undermine the prospects for a comprehensive nuclear agreement with Iran’,” she said in the Jan. 26 letter released Sunday by Levin’s office. “I share that view.”

The statement by Clinton, until a year ago the secretary of state and before that a senator from New York and also first lady, is significant because she is potentially a presidential candidate in the 2016 elections and – like Levin – is seen as among the Democrats closest to the pro-Israel community.

The American Jewish Congress, led by Jack Rosen, a major donor to past presidential campaigns, is hosting a dinner in Clinton’s honor next month in New York.

Sens. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) and Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) proposed the new sanctions, which have received vigorous support from much of the pro-Israel community, notably the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

Introduced in December, the bill at first drew substantial Democratic support, but it has waned in recent weeks.

Proponents of the sanctions say they would strengthen the West’s hands in the talks with Iran.

New congressional sanctions, Clinton said, would collapse the international alliance that brought Iran to talks underway with the major powers aimed at stopping Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Obama opposes the new sanctions and has said he would veto them.

Levin thanked Clinton for her letter in a statement on his website.

“It makes clear Secretary Clinton’s belief that tough sanctions helped bring Iran to the negotiating table, and that Congress and the administration are poised to act if Iran violates its commitments or fails to negotiate in good faith toward a final agreement,” he said. “Her letter is another strong signal to Congress that we should not take any legislative action at this time that would damage international unity or play into the hands of hard-liners in Iran who oppose negotiations.”

Hillary Clinton opposes new Iran sanctions Read More »

Abbas says NATO force can patrol Palestinian state

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said he would be willing to allow a U.S.-led NATO force to patrol a Palestinian state for an indefinite amount of time.

Israeli soldiers and Israeli settlements could remain for five years from the state’s establishment, Abbas also said in an interview with The New York Times published on Monday, adding two years to a previous offer.

Abbas also said the Palestinian state would be demilitarized — it would not have an army, only a peace force.

The third party force would remain “to reassure the Israelis, and to protect us,” Abbas told New York Times reporter Jodi Rudoren and columnist Tom Friedman at his Ramallah headquarters.

The NATO proposal had the support of former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and President George W. Bush.

“We will be demilitarized,” Abbas told the newspaper. “Do you think we have any illusion that we can have any security if the Israelis do not feel they have security?”

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry reportedly will present the two sides with a framework agreement to guide the rest of the talks in the coming weeks.

Abbas asserted, as did Netanyahu before him, that the framework is not binding, saying of Kerry’s trial agreement,  “He has the right to do whatever he wants, and at the end we have the right to say whatever we want.”

The Palestinian leader called recognizing Israel as a Jewish state “out of the question,” and pointed out that Jordan and Egypt did not sign anything to that effect when they signed peace treaties with Israel.

Abbas said that at the end of the nine months set aside for the peace talks, in April, he would be willing to extend the negotiations if progress is being made.

Abbas says NATO force can patrol Palestinian state Read More »

Jewish Disability Awareness Month and The Bottom Line

All of the annoying flower and candy ads remind us that Valentine’s Day is “just around the corner”, but there’s another holiday of the heart this month. February is also Jewish Disability Awareness Month and there’s lots happening, locally in Los Angeles and across the nation. Now in its sixth year, this is a month, as the Reform Action Center says, “to break down physical, communication, and attitudinal barriers, educate our communities on what accessibility and inclusion really mean, and reach out to Jews with disabilities.”

As important as all these events are for promoting awareness and inclusion, we won’t see any major changes without more funding. Saying the right thing and lining up volunteers are really great, but the bottom line is the bottom line. The best way to truly measure the values of a synagogue, Jewish agency or Jewish school isn't in the mission statement—it’s in the budget. As I learned too many years ago as a HUC/USC student, a budget is a statement of priorities. How much money is allocated for expenses to include kids and adults with special needs and disabilities? Is your institution willing to pay for a 1:1 aide so that kids with more severe physical or behavioral disabilities can be part of the nursery school or religious school?

You can say that your agency has its doors open to everyone, but if there’s no budget for an elevator or ramps, you literally aren’t. Ditto for large-print/Braille prayer books, sign-language interpreters or closed captioning. Part of the problem is that some of these items can run into a lot of money, and quite often, only one or two participants at any one time may require those particular accommodations. However, the biggest hurdle, in my humble opinion, is that including congregants and participants with special needs just doesn’t rank high enough on the list to get a chunk of the always limited available funds.

The solution is clear—the collective “we” needs to raise a ruckus.  Joining forces across ages and diagnoses, every one with a disability and their loved ones can together be a formidable force that advocates loudly and frequently for a bigger slice of the proverbial pie. If you need any inspiration, look no further than the film, “The Dallas Buyer’s Club,” about how one AIDS patient advocate in the late 1980s bucked the system to keep himself and other patients alive when the only legal medical treatment allowed by the FDA (aligned with the pharmaceutical industry) was dangerously high levels of AZT that killed the patient even faster than the virus.

In Washington DC, The Jewish Disability Network co-chaired by The Jewish Federations of North America and the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism is hearing from two high-regarded experts in the field, Allison Wohl from the Collaboration to Promote Self-Determination and David Morrissey, of the U.S. International Council on Disabilities, followed by individual meetings with congressional representatives. Yachad, the National Jewish Council on Disabilities affiliated with the Orthodox Union (OU), has created a zippy multi-media PowerPoint presentation of Megillat Esther to ensure that congregants with hearing loss, visually challenges or learning differences can participate fully in Purim this year. Discs can be ordered here.

Closer to home, check out the array of programs coordinated by the Los Angeles Jewish Federation for Jewish Disability Awareness and Inclusion Month. On Feb. 18, the community is invited to hear Rabbi Lynne Landsberg, Senior Advisor on Disability Issues from Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism in DC, at a breakfast, 9 am at Leo Baeck Congregation, with RSVPs by Feb. 13 mandatory for security purposes. Sign up here.

PS Enjoy all these wonderful educational and motivating programs during the month but don’t forget that the 2nd best line of the film Jerry Maguire is: “Show me the money!”

Jewish Disability Awareness Month and The Bottom Line Read More »

Lessons for Israel-on-campus from Scarlett Johansson

Scarlet Johansson has demonstrated tremendous courage in facing down the anti-Israel, double standards of Oxfam and other organizations that trade in condemnation of the Jewish state.  SodaStream, for which Johansson now serves as global brand ambassador, employs 500 Palestinians and 400 Arabs from Eastern Jerusalem. SodaStream's Maale Adumim factory in the West Bank offers both a mosque and a synagogue, and Jewish and Arab employees share the company cafeteria together. 

Last January, SodaStream CEO, Daniel Birnbaum, stated in an interview with Arab publication Al Monitor that “We practice equality and full cooperation both on the job and off it.”  And upon receiving an invitation to the meet the Israeli President and receive an award, Birnbaum brought guests that included some of the Palestinian employees from the Maale Adumim factory and subjected himself to the same security checks. 

Still, Johansson was condemned by Oxfam for associating with a company they claim contributes to the “denial of rights of the Palestinian communities that we work to support.”  One would have expected her to buckle.  After all, she is, while Jewish, not a professional pro-Israel spokesperson. Many have no idea that she’s even Jewish. Yet she responded by resigning as Oxfam's global ambassador due to a “fundamental difference of opinion” and stood up for the Jewish state against ferocious international assault.

Bravo!

It’s a lesson that should be taken to heart by those who are concerned that Israel cannot win arguments in the marketplace of ideas.

Executives at Hillel and other Jewish campus leaders have expressed consternation at my organization’s announced plan to stage large-scale debates on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in order to demonstrate the fearless conviction that Israel can win arguments in the marketplace of ideas.

Many have written to me pleading that dialogue is better than debate. They believe our debate series across the country will undermine harmony on campus and create friction and tension.

If only.

It’s time American Jewry faced up to facts. There is no harmony at the nation’s most troublesome campuses. There is, rather, an active, militant, and growing attempt to delegitimize Israel with Jewish students and other Zionists steadily losing significant ground. It's happening on prominent American campuses, with leading academics from Yale, NYU and Northwestern, among others, supporting the American Studies Association boycott of Israel. It's happening in Hollywood, whether it's Emma Thompson's protest of an Israeli theater group’s participation in a 2012 Shakespeare festival in England, or Elvis Costello cancelling two performances in Israel out of “a matter of instinct and conscience,” or Stevie Wonder not performing in Los Angeles at the gala benefit for Friends of the Israel Defense because he has “… always been against war, any war, anywhere,” or Roger Waters, former front man of Pink Floyd, branding Israel a “racist apartheid” regime.

But the lack of response to such anti-Israel sentiment is not because of cowardice or impotence but because American Jewry – especially those working on campus – has yet to accept that we have a battle on our hands.

There is noone to talk to at the BDS movement. These are people who hate Israel and employ garish double standards, wanting to punish one of the most humane democracies on earth while they overlook the glaring human rights abuses of nations like China and large swaths of the Arab world. They want to punish Israel even more than they want to stop the slaughter in Syria.

It’s time that we accept that for many campuses, organized, rules-based debate is exactly what is required.

Trying to secure pro-Israel speakers on campuses like UC Irvine or McGill can result in the kind of dangerous riots and chaos that prevented former Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren, Natan Sharansky, and Benjamin Netanyahu, from even being heard. Such hooliganism has been common in Britain for years where, for example, Deputy Ambassador to Britain Alon Roth-Snir was prevented from speaking at the University of Essex, Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon was shouted down at Oxford by shouts of “Itbah Al-Yahud” [Slaughter the Jews] and “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,” and at Edinburgh where Ambassador Daniel Taub, despite bring protected by a small army of British police and Israeli agents, still had his lecture disrupted.

Debates are different, inviting as they do from the outset the other side to present its case.  The idea is not to bring anti-Israel speakers to Hillel, but to organize the debates in neutral, leading University venues where Israel’s case can finally be made.

I am traveling back to Oxford University, where I served as Rabbi for 11 years, for a debate on Iran, and the threat it poses, at the Oxford Union on 6 March. There will be many detractors of Israel, to be sure. But as I learned with the tens of debates I personally organized at Oxford, there is no better way to communicate one’s message than to demonstrate fearlessness and a belief in the courage of one’s convictions.

The Union is famous for its debates, something at which Oxford leads the world. It was at Oxford that I started the first modern debates on science and religion, featuring the world’s leading atheists like Richard Dawkins.  Later I would debate the world’s other most famous atheist, Christopher Hitchens, at the 92nd St Y, a debate that has garnered nearly a million views online.  In each of those cases there also was the assumption that religion could never hold its own against a modern science. But the many religious people who engaged Dawkins and Hitchens helped to demonstrate the intelligent side of religion and win over adherents.

I am astonished that our community is afraid of Israel debates. Does it stem from fear that Israel can’t defend itself? That students are not fair and will immediately support the Palestianian side?

Sometimes you have to accept that you have a battle on your hands and the only way to move forward is to embrace the fight.

The only bright spot in the failed campaign of Mitt Romney was the night he stunned the world in Denver with the power of his ideas and presentation in debate. Adlai Stevenson began turning the tide of Soviet propaganda when he engaged the Soviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin in debate at the United Nations, challenging him directly on his assertion that there were no offensive missiles in Cuba. Until then the communists were able to assert their bullying views in international forums almost with impunity. And that’s why Stevenson’s retort to the Soviets is today regarded as a classic moment.

The same applies to Israel’s need to fight on campus with its most eloquent spokespeople.

In my last column on this subject I argued that while falafel parties and Israeli dancing are important, there is no substitute for the kind of intellectual inspiration that can be offered in intelligent, rules-based debate. We are not the people of the matzo ball but the people of the book. It’s time to win the world over to our ideas by overcoming our reluctance to share and defend those ideas.

It is the purpose of our organization, This World: The Values Network, to offer the world’s foremost defenders of Israel, at our expense, along with an advertising budget and PR support, to pro-Israel campus organizations, both Jewish and non-Jewish, who are prepared to help organize these debates.

If your organization qualifies and if you’re at a campus where Israel is under siege then please reach out to us.


Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, America’s Rabbi, is founder of This World: The Values Network, which seeks to promote universal Jewish values in the media and culture. He is the international best-selling author of 30 books including, most recently, “The Fed-Up Man of Faith: Challenging God in the Face of Tragedy and Suffering.” Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

Lessons for Israel-on-campus from Scarlett Johansson Read More »

Anne Heyman, in memoriam

Anne Heyman, 52, the pioneering founder of Agahozo-Shalom Youth Village, a community for children orphaned during the 1994 Rwandan genocide, died in an equestrian accident on Friday, Feb.1 in Palm Beach, Florida.  The South African-born Heyman modeled Agohozo on Israeli youth villages.   It is now home to 500 children.

We live in times of deep turmoil, where hope is a rare commodity.  Even among the most optimistic, creating meaning out of profound loss is hard fought.  After genocide it takes vision to see the possibility of life again, it takes soul to build a home and give an education – a foundation for future – to children robbed of parents.  It also takes a woman to know how to create a family of orphans. One with family units, homes and mothers at the heart of its community.

Agohozo Shalom is a haven in Rwanda – it is village, school, and kibbutz, all rolled into one. When you stand in the middle of the village, hills and lakes stretch as far as the eye can see, silence, blue skies and a farmer across the valley.  Then the lunch time bell rings and four hundred beautifully dressed hungry high schoolers stream down the hill and into the cavernous dining room – everyone of them is an orphan, every one of them is also literate and on track to University or vocational training.

The dinner hall buzzes and clatters as all four hundred students eat in one sitting on long benches.  I am perched next to my travel companion, Holocaust survivor Renee Firestone, sandwiched between bright eyed, ravenous kids, keen to practice their English. Renee turned to me and said “Do you know what it takes to nurture these orphans into the human beings they are today? The woman that did this truly deserves the Nobel Prize!”

Anne Heyman had the the stillness of a mill pond, the zeal of a prophet, the soul of a mother.  When first you met her, her understated attire, the simple language she chose, the sincerity of her tone, all belied the woman of steel behind her fair facade.  She talked about 'The Village', as she called the project she founded in Rwanda, as if it really were the neighborhood, of the same name, just a few blocks away from us in lower Manhattan.  She traveled to Rwanda like it was no further than Tribeca. She had to be there, among the people she loved. She was drawn there and they filled her soul.

Tzedakah is a well practiced tradition within the Jewish world, which has become increasingly equated with the word charity, though its real sense is based on its root word 'righteous' – working to create a just, or fairer world. In recent years Anne Heyman brought us back to its meaning in quite remarkable ways. She took the words 'social action' ever so seriously, taking action and personally creating change in a society.

[Related: Rob Eshman on Agahozo Shalom Youth Village]

Her philanthropy was true to the definition of the term itself – she really had a 'love of people' which far transcended the transactional nature of giving charity.  Her philanthropy began with seeing the true potential in everyone.  That is why she was not simply supporting orphans in Rwanda because there was a need, but because she believed in them as people.

Anne Heyman used the financial resources she had at her disposal with generosity that far exceeded the call of duty.  But the real contribution she made was the complete giving of herself to others, always in the field (often literally), creating life from dirt, value from waste.  No amount of money buys values.  She not only bought a hill and then built a community on it. She needed electricity, so she built the largest solar plant in Sub-saharan Africa – so that the rest of Rwanda would get power too. She changed the meter on philanthropy from cash to commitment, and proved it can go further than you could ever imagine.

At times I worried for Anne.  She was so far ahead, she seemed alone.  Many knew about her work, she was lauded for her courage and thanked for her leadership, but few really understand what she was doing on their behalf.  How brave and lonely it could be.  I saw her tearful at times.  I also saw pure determination as she knew social values happen when change takes place – and create change she did.  I also saw the joy she expressed that can only come with one hundred graduates, all of whom had no hope, leaving Agohozo Shalom with the knowledge that are just as valuable as everyone else in this world, equipped and self reliant.

The great Jewish thinker Maimonides identified eight levels of Tzedakah, the highest being to enable others to be self reliant.  Agohozo Shalom Youth Village exemplified the highest form of philanthropy, borne out of justice, fairness, love of your fellow human beings, whoever they are, wherever they are.  It is a beacon of Jewish values in what was the heart of darkness.

Anne Heyman gave a gift to the world that will always be with us.


Stephen D. Smith PhD is Executive Director of the USC Shoah Foundation, UNESCO Chair on Genocide Education and USC Adjunct Professor of Religion.

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Carmageddon is soooo 2012. It’s Jamzilla time!

What happens when you decide to move the 405 freeway 20 feet to the west?

You get Jamzilla! The not-quite-as-terrible little brother to Carmageddon and Carmageddon II.

Beginning February 14th all the way through February 18th, multiple lanes of the northbound 405 will be closed between Getty Center Drive and Ventura Boulevard in the Sepulveda Pass. That's a 5.5 mile stretch that will be mostly blocked-off for 80 hours

At night, all northbound 405 lanes will be closed according to the following schedule:

-Friday, Feb.14: 1 a.m. to 6 a.m.

-Saturday, Feb. 15: 2 a.m. to 7 a.m.

-Sunday,  Feb. 16: 12 a.m. to 5 a.m.

-Monday, Feb 17: 12 a.m. to 5 a.m.

The interstate 10 connectors to the 405 N. will also be closed.  During the day, two lanes of the 405 N. will be closed.

During the construction, the 405 S. will remain open, but there will be lane reduction during the paving part of the project in the evenings.

According to a statement delivered by metro officials, “The designated alternative route for night-time full closures will be for motorists to take the Wilshire northbound to westbound off-ramp to northbound Sepulveda Boulevard, returning to northbound I-405 at the Greenleaf northbound on-ramp.”

However, the shutdown is dependent on the weather. Should we have another freak rainstorm during that weekend, something even more horrendous will happen: the alternate plan calls for crews to do the work on three consecutive weekends starting Feb. 21. That means Jamzilla would continue through mid-March.

So despite this horrible drought and SoCal's desparate need for rain, let's hope it doesn't decide to drip on us during President's Day weekend.

For a full list of ramp-closures, times, and anything else you'd need to know for 405 travel that weekend, visit the Metro website.

Carmageddon is soooo 2012. It’s Jamzilla time! Read More »