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August 19, 2015

Remembering, honoring IDF’s lone soldier Steinberg, comrades

“I just want to say, Max was my best soldier, and I loved him so much, and to be with you is like closure for me. It’s something you can’t explain in words.”

But Israel Defense Forces (IDF) 1st Lt. Ohad Roisblatt did his best. He told an audience of about 90 people at Beth Jacob Congregation on Aug. 15 that he came to know Max Steinberg, the IDF lone soldier from Woodland Hills who was killed during an ambush in Gaza last year, as his commander in the Golani Brigade.

Roisblatt, an early 20-something who was wounded during the same battle that took Steinberg’s life, said he lost seven soldiers during the war in Gaza. He drew applause when he said he recently rejoined the IDF following a year of rehabilitation work.

His appearance at the Orthodox shul in Beverly Hills coincided with that of retired Israeli Maj. Gen. Elyezer Shkedy; Steinberg’s parents, Stuart and Evie; and more than 30 bereaved family members of Israeli soldiers. 

Stuart Steinberg spoke briefly during services while Shkedy provided the keynote. Serving as Beth Jacob’s Shabbat scholar-in-residence, Shkedy spoke on “The State of Israel and the Jewish People: It’s All About Optimism,” drawing upon a 33-year career in Israel’s air force, as well as his stint as CEO of El Al Airlines from 2010 to 2014, in his remarks. 

If people in the pews were hoping to hear the scholar-in-residence speak about the much-discussed Iran deal, they were disappointed; he left the controversial topic for a Q-and-A that occurred later in the day during a reservations-only luncheon. 

“I always take our enemies serious all the time. … We have to do all we can to prevent our enemies from having nuclear capabilities,” Shkedy said at the luncheon, where Israeli flags hung on the walls and blue and white tablecloths and napkins decorated the tables. “How do we do it? I don’t know.”

While discussing how seriously Israel takes its own security, Shkedy said El Al planes will soon be equipped with missile defense systems. 

Shkedy and Roisblatt appeared on behalf of the Zahal Disabled Veterans Organization, which was established one year after Israel’s founding and works to increase public awareness of the plight of wounded soldiers and raises funds to help their rehabilitation. Shkedy is chairman of Friends of the Zahal Disabled Veterans Organization.

The bereaved family members attended as part of a Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF) program, which brought them to Los Angeles for a variety of events. Fred Gluckman, FIDF national board treasurer, delivered brief remarks on the delegation’s behalf during morning services. 

Several of the male members of the FIDF group, wearing military garb, helped carry the Torah around the sanctuary during services. The female members of the group looked on from the other side of a mechitzah. The FIDF group wrapped up its L.A. visit with an evening event in Calabasas on Aug. 17, according to a spokesperson for the group. 

Beth Jacob has been holding a variety of weekday and Shabbat events all summer long. The Saturday luncheon drew philanthropists Naty and Debbie Saidoff; Jacob Segal, executive board member of the Southern California Israel Chamber of Commerce; and Beth Jacob Rabbi Kalman Topp, who introduced Shkedy during the luncheon.

Activities extended into the evening with a meet-and-greet with Shkedy after Shabbat concluded. That event took place at the home of Lydia and Harry Weisman, according to Beth Jacob Associate Rabbi Adir Posy.

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Cutting Edge Grants from the Jewish Community Foundation

The Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles has named nine initiatives the recipients of its annual Cutting Edge Grants program, intended to support creative thinkers, social entrepreneurs and innovative organizations in the local Jewish community. 

This year’s winners will use the funds to assist underserved communities, support Jewish organizations embracing technology and explore new models of synagogue leadership. Each initiative will receive up to $250,000 over three years for a total of $1.85 million — a 23 percent increase from last year. Since 2006, the foundation has awarded more than $13.2 million to 72 initiatives.

The largest grant recipient this year — and the only one awarded the maximum amount — is the Jewish Los Angeles Special Needs Trust, the first pooled special needs trust in the county, according to foundation officials. Under the fiscal sponsorship of Bet Tzedek, the initiative’s founders will launch a new nonprofit that will allow families — many of whom would not otherwise have the financial means to create independent trusts to care for their loved ones with special needs — to buy into a collectively invested fund. That money would then be carefully managed in order to support these children later in life.  

The trust hopes to be in business within nine months under the leadership of founding board Chairman Sandor Samuels, a former CEO of Bet Tzedek, a nonprofit that provides free legal services to low-income individuals and families. Over the last few years, Bet Tzedek used funding from The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles to develop a business plan for the trust and to conduct a community-needs assessment. 

“We know there are potentially thousands of families that could benefit,” said Journal columnist Michelle K. Wolf, the trust’s founder and a special needs parent.

Another Cutting Edge Grant recipient is Custom and Craft (” target=”_blank”>haggadot.com. With a three-year $200,000 grant, Levinson will create a studio and media lab in Los Angeles to teach and assist Jewish organizations and individuals to improve their use of technology, design and social media. 

“A lot of what we are doing is based on the model of these YouTube networks. We want to train organizations to operate almost as online talent. Anybody who has a compelling voice can start their own YouTube channel or Instagram account,” Levinson said. “I want our most interesting Jewish organizations to learn how to do the same.”

In addition to consulting with organizations across the city, Custom and Craft’s studio will offer monthly public worships and drop-in sessions. 

The Shalom Hartman Institute of North America will receive $240,000 over three years to create learning modules to build bridges across Jewish constituencies and institutions, and the residential treatment center Beit T’Shuvah will use a $200,000 grant to develop the Elaine Breslow Institute for Jewish Clergy and Educators, which will train hundreds of Jewish educators to identify and support those suffering from addiction. 

Overall, this year’s winners each reflect a vision of innovation for the future of Jewish Los Angeles, according to Elana Wien, director of the Center for Designed Philanthropy at the Jewish Community Foundation. 

“These grants are designed to meet diverse Jewish participants where they are, using creative and innovative strategies to most effectively address their needs,” she said. “The potential is here to make Jewish life in Los Angeles more vibrant, inclusive and engaging for all Jews.”

The remaining Cutting Edge Grants were awarded to: Chai Lifeline, for an afterschool program for children affected by the illness or death of a parent or sibling; Federation, for a rabbinic fellowship program; Shalom Institute in Malibu, for an expanded internship program on its Shemesh Organic Farm; Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills, Temple Isaiah in Los Angeles and Congregation Kol Ami in West Hollywood, to develop inter-congregational, neighborhood-based villages for elderly congregants who are interested in aging-in-place; and Theatre Dybbuk, to continue its arts education program.

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Palestinian detainee ends 65-day hunger-strike

Palestinian detainee Mohammed Allan ended his 65-day hunger strike against his detention without trial on Wednesday after the Israeli Supreme Court suspended his arrest warrant, his lawyer said.

Allan has sustained brain damage as result of his hunger strike and is hospitalized in Israel in critical condition. The court said that in his current condition he poses no threat and therefore suspended his arrest warrant.

The 31-year-old Islamic Jihad activist's case was being monitored closely by opposing sides in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which had looked likely to boil over into new violence if Allan were to have died as result of his strike.

“The story is over, administrative detention is cancelled and therefore there is no strike,” Allan's lawyer, Jameel Khatib, told Reuters.

The Israeli government saw his hunger strike as a powerful challenge against “administrative detention”, a practice that has drawn criticism from Palestinians and human rights groups but which Israel calls necessary for its national security.

It fears his release would only encourage some 370 other Palestinian detainees held without charge to refuse food.

The court said Allan was to stay at the Israeli hospital where he was being treated.

Before Wednesday's court session got under way, Allan's lawyers said that in return for an end to the strike, Israel had pledged not to renew his six-month detention period, meaning he would go free on Nov. 3.

The hospital said Allan's condition had deteriorated since he was brought out of sedation on Tuesday. His attorneys said he did not respond to the proposal.

In court, a government lawyer said Israel was prepared to free Allan immediately if a scan carried out while court was in session showed that he had suffered irreversible brain damage and subsequently no longer posed a security threat.

But the scan results were not conclusive. Barzilai hospital chief Chezy Levy told reporters it showed some brain damage and it was not yet clear whether it was “completely reversible”. He said it was possible Allan would recover.

On Tuesday Allan instructed medical staff to halt intravenous treatment, but then agreed vitamins could be administered in the run-up to the court hearing.

Allan's case was originally seen as a possible test of Israel's new force-feeding law, which the country's medical association has condemned as a violation of ethics and international conventions. But doctors have said that option is no longer viable due to his grave condition.

Last week supporters of Allan clashed with Israeli right-wingers near the hospital. Israel has long been concerned that hunger strikes by Palestinians in its jails could end in deaths and trigger waves of protests in the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

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Home: Five ways to trick out your backpack for school

For me, one of the perks of going back to school every fall was getting to start the year with a brand spanking new backpack. The thing about backpacks, though, is that most are not too exciting to look at. They’re usually plain or utilitarian or they have cartoon characters emblazoned on them.

This year, instead of sending the kids off with another boring backpack, try customizing the bags to reflect their interests. A backpack is a blank canvas (literally, backpacks are made of canvas). And there are so many fun and easy ways to decorate them, as you can see here. All the embellishments can be purchased at crafts stores and party stores. 

THE ROCKER

” target=”_blank”>jonathanfongstyle.com.

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In Jerusalem, Huckabee says West Bank not occupied, two-state solution unworkable

Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee said Israel has as much right to the West Bank as the United States has to Manhattan.

Speaking at a press conference at Jerusalem’s Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on Wednesday, the former Arkansas governor, who gave a speech in the West Bank settlement Shiloh on Tuesday said, according to The Guardian: “I don’t see it as occupied, that makes it appear as if someone is illegally taking land. I don’t see it that way.”

He added: “In America, we have about a 400-year relationship to Manhattan. It would be as if I came and said we need to end our occupation of Manhattan. I’m pretty sure most Americans would find that laughable.”

Huckabee, an evangelical Christian who has visited Israel “dozens of times,” said his connection to Israel “is not so much political as it is visceral, personal.”

Asked Wednesday about his Shiloh appearance, which was sponsored by Simon Falic, an American Jewish supporter of Republican candidates and right-wing Israeli politicians, Huckabee said he “wasn’t in the least hesitant” to go there, describing it as “a place of great connection to the history of the Jewish people,” Bloomberg reported.

According to Bloomberg, the Falic family was the largest contributor to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s latest election campaign.

Huckabee also said he is opposed to a two-state solution, saying “the notion of two governments working the same piece of land is unrealistic and unworkable.”

During his Israel visit, Huckabee has met with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other government officials. Huckabee declined to say what was discussed other than their shared opposition to the Iran nuclear agreement. He also emphasized that “there was no implicit or explicit endorsement” from Netanyahu.

The prime minister “made it very clear he has no intention of getting in the middle of American politics,” Huckabee said.

Huckabee, who on Tuesday said he stands by his comment last month comparing the Iran deal to the Holocaust, said at the Jerusalem press conference that numerous Israelis during his visit had approached him about the “ovens” comment, saying they appreciated “the candor and the clarity.”

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Hollywood Heart: Where kids with HIV spend their summers

In 2006, when David Gale was running MTV Films, I wrote to him asking for a job. 

I had just graduated from college and was contemplating The Big Move to Los Angeles, blindly sending out resumes to anyone whose email I could wrest from family and friends in Miami who knew someone, who knew someone, who knew someone … who was big time in Hollywood. 

Gale was one of maybe two Hollywood executives who wrote me back.

I should have realized then that he was one of the good guys. But I didn’t learn how good until two years later, when as a staff writer for the Jewish Journal, I made a trip to Wilshire Boulevard’s Gindling Hilltop Camp in Malibu, where Gale was putting on the production of his life. 

The same verve, creativity and doggedness that helped him get movies such as “Election,” “Jackass” and “Varsity Blues” into theaters he was applying to the operation of Camp Hollywood Heart, a free, weeklong arts camp for HIV/AIDS-impacted youth. 

“It’s almost like Mickey Rooney going, ‘Come on, guys! Let’s put on a camp!’ ” Kate Solow, Hollywood Heart’s executive director, said of Gale. 

The glorious Malibu setting offered a touch of paradise, but the realities that breezed through camp were somewhat darker.

I will never forget how it felt to talk to Stephon Cooperawls, then 17, who sat quietly with me in the Rabbi Alfred Wolf Amphitheatre sharing what it felt like to be born with HIV. At a time when my biggest concern was declaring independence from my parents, Cooperawls had faced the mortality of his: His father had died of AIDS, and his mother was living with the disease.

For one week, I wrote in that 2008 story, Gale offered 80 teenagers reprieve from their tangled lives, which often included not only illness, but in many cases abuse, abandonment and poverty as well. Camp was a place where they could live among peers, judgment-free, where they didn’t have to deal with the stigma of HIV or public fears surrounding ordinary activities such as using the school bathrooms or public swimming pools. At camp, Cooperawls and others didn’t have to hide. Instead of shame, they found support. 

Last week, Hollywood Heart celebrated its 20th year of camp. And for the second time in seven years, I ventured up the hill to visit, where a gala performance called “Dreams,” showcased camp creations in music, fashion, creative writing, culinary arts, visual arts, acting and filmmaking. In true Hollywood style, there was a red carpet, a culinary feast and vogue-ing to Madonna.

More than once I was overcome as I watched and listened to the campers demonstrate their newfound confidence — some wrote and told their own stories, others sang from the depths of their souls, and quite a few made the strut down the runway as if life were all fun and games, with nothing to worry about except what to wear. 

In some cases, the products of these arts workshops were truly impressive. There may have been a future Maya Angelou in the mix, the next Sonia Sanchez, an up-and-coming Paris couturier. For two hours, 150 guests experienced endeavors ranging from spoken-word poetry to cookie-crumble bruschetta with blueberries.

And that is the biggest difference between the camp created two decades ago and camp today: What was once envisioned as a weeklong escape has turned into a more serious investment in the campers’ professional futures.

“On Saturday, we had a career fair,” Gale told me when we spoke by phone after the gala. “We’ve given them meaningful tools that they can walk away with, and we want them to take whatever they’ve learned, in the process of feeling capable, and apply that toward getting a job, getting a scholarship, getting into college. These are really transferable skills.”

Two decades ago, Gale didn’t know whether the campers would live long enough to have a future. Some died between one summer and the next. But a nurturing environment and advances in medicine have changed the equation: Today, campers dream of being big film directors, Oscar-winning writers or the next Top Chef.

Gale recently hired Solow as the new executive director, with the assignment of transferring the magic of camp to at-risk public schools in Los Angeles. “We’re taking what we’ve learned from watching these kids thrive and change, and applying that to our local community,” Gale said.

Beginning this fall, Hollywood Heart will roll out a pilot program at Los Angeles High School that will integrate arts learning into core academic classes, including language arts, history and leadership training. It will also conduct after-school arts workshops at charter schools, including Animo Watts College Preparatory Academy and Bright Star Schools. In line with its mission to serve truly vulnerable populations, Hollywood Heart hopes to equip the youth of Los Angeles with marketable arts skills that will help them get jobs.

“A lot of these kids haven’t had the greatest educational opportunities in math and science,” Gale said. “The arts [are something in which] you can immerse yourself quickly and find another path.”

Gale, too, has recently found another path. After becoming one of the first executives in the industry to have the words “new media” in his title (he founded MTV’s new media division), he abandoned what he calls “traditional” Hollywood and started a website and media company for the approximately 125 million members of the U.S. military community called We Are the Mighty. “It’s like Buzzfeed for the military,” Gale said. 

Launched on Veterans Day 2014, Gale said wearethemighty.com already has become the second-most-trafficked military website, with more than 3 million unique visitors per month.

“I made this remarkable change in my life,” he said of giving up Hollywood.

Perhaps some of his campers will soon say the same. Except that they will add: “Thanks to a Hollywood guy with a big heart.”

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Matisyahu calls festival cancellation ‘Appalling and offensive’

Jewish-American reggae singer and rapper Matisyahu spoke out against the organizers of a Spanish festival that canceled his performance because he refused to endorse Palestinian statehood.

On his Facebook page on Aug. 17, a day after festival organizers announced that he was no longer invited to perform there, Matisyahu said the festival organizers had asked him “to write a letter, or make a video, stating my positions on Zionism and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to pacify the BDS people.” However, he wrote, “My music speaks for itself, and I do not insert politics into my music.”

Matisyahu, who for many years was a Chasidic Jew, added that he felt “pressure to agree with the BDS political agenda.”

“Honestly, it was appalling and offensive, that as the one publicly Jewish-American artist scheduled for the festival they were trying to coerce me into political statements,” he added. “Were any of the other artists scheduled to perform asked to make political statements in order to perform? No artist deserves to be put in such a situation simply to perform his or her art. Regardless of race, creed, country, cultural background, etc., my goal is to play music for all people.”

Matisyahu was scheduled to perform Aug. 22 at the Rototom Sunsplash festival in Benicassim, near Barcelona.

The Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain called the cancellation a case of “anti-Semitic cowardice.” The organizers had been pressured to disinvite Matisyahu by activists promoting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions, or BDS, movement against Israel, the federation said.

“As Spaniards, we are ashamed of the organizers,” the Spanish federation’s statement said. “In this case, the BDS Movement employed all its anti-Semitic arsenal against the participation on Matthew Paul Miller,” using Matisyahu’s full name.

According to the El Pais newspaper, other musicians threatened to cancel their performances in the festival unless Matisyahu made a declaration.

In a Facebook post Aug. 15 about the decision, Rototom mentioned its “sensitivity to Palestine, its people and the occupation of its territory by Israel.”

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AP: Iran has side agreement with UN allowing it to do its own nuke inspections

Iran has a secret agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency enabling it to choose its own experts to inspect its Parchin nuclear site.

In a finding that could have implications for the nuclear deal negotiated between Iran and six world powers, including the United States, The Associated Press reported Wednesday that it had obtained a document outlining an agreement, which it described as a “separate side agreement worked out between [the United Nations agency] and Iran.”

While the United States and the five other world powers that negotiated the Iran nuclear deal were “not party to this agreement,” they “were briefed on it by the IAEA and endorsed it as part of the larger package,” the AP reported.

Under the agreement, the IAEA allows Iran “to employ its own experts and equipment in the search for evidence or activities that it has consistently denied — trying to develop nuclear weapons,” the article said.

While the document obtained by the AP is a draft, and not the final version of the agreement, one official familiar with its contents told the news service it “doesn’t differ substantially from the final version.”

Opponents of the Iran nuclear deal in Israel and the United States quickly responded to the report.

While the White House declined to comment on the reported document, according to the Times of Israel, Israel’s Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz said, “One must welcome this global innovation and outside-the-box thinking,’ he said sarcastically. “One can only wonder if the Iranian inspectors will also have to wait 24 days before being able to visit the site and look for incriminating evidence?”

He was referring to a section in the nuclear deal that gives Iran 24-days notice prior to inspections of its nuclear sites.

“This side agreement shows that true verification is a sham, and it begs the question of what else the administration is keeping from Congress,” Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the House majority leader, said, according to the Times of Israel.

 

John Cornyn of Texas, the second-ranking Republican senator, said, “Trusting Iran to inspect its own nuclear site and report to the U.N. in an open and transparent way is remarkably naive and incredibly reckless. This revelation only reinforces the deep-seated concerns the American people have about the agreement.”

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Poem: Dante Lucked Out

T. S. Eliot held that Dante was lucky

to live in the Middle Ages

because life then was more logically organized

and society more coherent. The rest of us however

can’t be as sure that if we’d had the fortune

to walk along the Arno and look at the pretty girls

walking with their mothers in the fourteenth century,

then we, too, would have composed “La Vita Nuova”

and the “Divine Comedy.” It is on the contrary

far more likely that we, transported

to medieval Florence, would have died miserably

in a skirmish between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines

without the benefit of anesthesia

or would have been beaten, taunted,

cheated, and cursed as usurers

two centuries before the charging of interest

became an accepted part of Calvinist creed

and other reasons needed to be produced

to justify the persecution of the Jews.

David Lehman’s “New and Selected Poems” was published by Scribner in November 2013. He is the editor of “The Oxford Book of American Poetry” and author of “A Fine Romance: Jewish Songwriters, American Songs,” which won ASCAP’s Deems Taylor Award in 2010. 

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Israeli lawmaker’s email leaked from Ashley Madison cheating site

The government email address of Knesset Member Taleb Abu Arrar was one of millions leaked from AshleyMadison.com, a website for people seeking extramarital affairs.

Abu Arrar, of the Arab Joint List party, already has two wives, according to the Jerusalem Post. Because polygamy is illegal in Israel, he has a common-law marriage with his second wife. He has 10 children.

“Someone signed up with my email address in order to sully my good name,” he said, according to the Post. He plans to file a complaint with police.

Knesset members’ aides can also access the members’ official email addresses.

The address was revealed among some 36 million others Tuesday night by hackers who stole the information last month. They had threatened to release the email addresses unless the website shut down, which it has not. The site claims to have 38 million users.

Avid Life Media, which owns the website, said in a statement that “These are illegitimate acts that have real consequences for innocent citizens who are simply going about their daily lives,” according to Reuters.

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