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February 16, 2017

To protect seniors, vote no on Measure S

Los Angeles seniors live on the knife-edge of the worst housing crisis in the United States. Driven by scarcity, property owners and developers conspire to evict tenants and gentrify buildings one apartment at a time.

We are seeing this incremental attack have disastrous effects. Just late last year in Westwood, the Watermark corporation purchased the rent-controlled Vintage Westwood Horizons apartment building and began eviction proceedings against more than 100 residents, all older than 80 and most older than 90, in order to convert the building into a luxury assisted living facility.

[Opposing view: Measure S will fix system and support Jewish values]

These tenants have been desperately searching for comparable housing in the neighborhood and it simply does not exist. Now Bet Tzedek is fighting to keep these units in the system, and the fates of these tenants hang in the balance.

The scenes at this Westwood building are sadly all too common. Every year in Los Angeles, more than 100,000 people turn 65. As they move into retirement, their now-fixed incomes are set on a collision course with rising housing costs. And the single biggest threat to their health and safety is eviction.

For an 85-year-old disabled widow relying on Social Security and the dwindling proceeds of the sale of her home years earlier to pay for rent, prescriptions and meals, eviction from her apartment of 35 years is terrifying. In the best-case scenario, she will find another building in a less expensive neighborhood that will accept her. She’ll suffer the loss of her community, access to her regular doctor and current routine. But she’ll have a home.

Too often, however, even for a senior decades younger than the Westwood residents, this story ends in permanent housing distress, homelessness or worse. The stress of thinking about such a move wears on her health. The reality of the move itself may be more than she can bear. The 2016 Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority survey counted 3,752 homeless men and women older than 62 in Los Angeles County, a 10 percent increase from just one year earlier.

While elected officials and community allies work to prevent the Westwood evictions, one group attempted to insert itself into the story: the backers of Measure S, the initiative on the March 7 ballot in Los Angeles that would ban zoning changes and General Plan Amendments (GPAs) for two years and place severe permanent restrictions on the use of GPAs, sharply curtailing Los Angeles’ ability to build the housing it needs.

Don’t believe the rash of press releases, videos and emails attempting to link the two causes — Measure S wouldn’t stop Watermark from evicting seniors. On the contrary, it would result in many more evictions just like it. Property owners of all sorts will be even more incentivized to take advantage of low vacancies and limited development options, and push tenants out of low-income units in order to maximize profits. We see it already today. We’ll see more of it in a city where Measure S is law.

With new housing slowed or banned, landlords cash out by failing their building inspections and selling their property to developers. As affordable housing covenants expire, once-affordable apartments revert to market rate.

These scenarios are especially typical in gentrifying neighborhoods. In Highland Park, investors raised the rents at the Marmion Royal apartments, hoping to evict current tenants in favor of the neighborhood’s affluent arrivals, who have bid up single-family homes over the $1 million mark. If Measure S hampers new construction, investors will search for more Marmion Royals where they can freely raise the rent.

Boyle Heights, a community with a strong identity that generations of families call home, has seen the dismantling of hundreds of units of public housing, replaced by hundreds fewer dwelling units. This is a failure that should be laid at the steps of City Hall. Protecting existing housing stock is not enough — if the children of Boyle Heights’ current residents also are to have the chance to call it home, the neighborhood needs to build more affordable housing. That housing can be built only  using the zone changes and plan amendments that Measure S takes off the table.

We must envision a city where seniors on fixed incomes at the Vintage Westwood Horizons, tenants of the Marmion Royal, and the children of Boyle Heights can live without threat of displacement. Eviction need not be an inevitable byproduct of neighborhood change. New arrivals need not displace the vulnerable.

But public policy must both allow and encourage a diverse market. Only then will the homeless be able to get off the street. Only then will the quarter-million renters paying half their incomes in rent finally find some breathing room.

The status quo is broken. We must protect and expand our city’s affordable housing. We need to fight to hold slumlords — who would rather fail a building inspection and sell their property than continue to rent to low-income tenants — accountable. We need to keep affordable units available after affordability covenants expire. We need to invest resources into the development of more affordable housing through initiatives such as the successful Proposition HHH.

And the last thing we should do is put a stop to building more.


Jessie Kornberg is the President & CEO of Bet Tzedek, which provides free legal services for low-income individuals. Bet Tzedek is representing the Westwood Horizons residents in their eviction defense.

To protect seniors, vote no on Measure S Read More »

Calendar: February 17-23, 2017

FRI | FEB 17

PETER YARROW & NOEL PAUL STOOKEY

These two icons, part of the famous Peter, Paul & Mary trio, will share the stage and sing many of the group’s classic hits. Peter, Paul & Mary helped transform folk music with their music that spoke to and inspired people during a time of social change. 8 p.m. Tickets starting at $41. The Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza, 2100 E. Thousand Oaks Blvd., Thousand Oaks. (805) 449-2787. civicartsplaza.com.

SAT | FEB 18

“SHUL WITH A SCHOOL: THE HISTORY OF NON-ORTHODOX DAY SCHOOLS IN LOS ANGELES”

This installment of the Shabbat Morning Speaker Series at Knesset Israel of Beverlywood explores the topic of local day schools with Sara Smith, a doctoral candidate in education and Jewish studies at New York University. 9 a.m. davening; 11 a.m. speech. Free. Knesset Israel of Beverlywood, 2364 S. Robertson Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 839-4962.

SUN | FEB 19

RUNNING CLUSTER

Join Young Adults of Los Angeles’ Running Cluster for a few laps around the one-mile path circling beautiful Echo Park Lake. Brunch at Mohawk Bend (2141 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles) to follow. 9:30 a.m. Free. Echo Park Lake at Park Avenue and Glendale Boulevard, Los Angeles. yala.org.

MUSICAL RECITAL

The Jewish Music Commission of Los Angeles and Valley Beth Shalom present Los Angeles Philharmonic concertmaster Martin Chalifour and internationally acclaimed pianist Steven Vanhauwaert in a recital of classic and modern masterpieces. It will include music by Mozart, Sibelius, Harberg and Franck. 2:30 p.m. $15. Valley Beth Shalom, 15739 Ventura Blvd., Encino. (818) 788-6000. vbs.org.

MON | FEB 20

HAMERCAZ PLAYDAY

The Zimmer Museum will be open exclusively for use by children with special needs. Enjoy playtime, arts and crafts and a kosher lunch. All family members are welcome. 10 a.m. $5; $25 maximum per family. Must RSVP to hamercaz@jfsla.org or (866) 287-8030. The Zimmer Museum, 6505 Wilshire Blvd., No. 100, Los Angeles. (323) 761-8984. zimmermuseum.org.

TUES | FEB 21

POET DINAH BERLAND

cal-berlandWriter-in-Residence Dinah Berland will read from her book of poetry “Fugue for a New Life.” Berland is a widely published poet and book editor with a background in art. 6:30 p.m. Free; RSVP (required) to culture@smgov.net. Annenberg Community Beach House, 415 Pacific Coast Highway, Santa Monica. (310) 458-4904. annenbergbeachhouse.com/beachculture.

IAC REAL ESTATE NETWORK

Frank M. Bush, the general manager and superintendent of building for the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety, will give a presentation to the Israeli American Council Real Estate Network members. He will discuss what it takes to build an American metropolis. 7 p.m. $50. IAC Shepher Community Center, 6530 Winnetka Ave., Woodland Hills. israeliamerican.org/realestate.bush.

THE NEW EUROPEAN JEW

Jewish communities across Europe have experienced a revival in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. The revival has reached across cultural and geographical borders and has brought a new sense of meaning and community. Join special guest Polly Zaharieva, who is visiting from Sofia, Bulgaria, to taste Bulgarian cuisine and learn about the sights and sounds of Bulgarian-Jewish culture through interactive activities. Tickets include special hors d’oeuvres and a liquor tasting. Additional drinks available for purchase. 7 p.m. $15; $20 at the door. B/G/A (Bar & Garden Annex), 6142 Washington Blvd., Culver City. yala.org.

AUTHOR ELLEN UMANSKY

cal-umanskyJoin Ellen Umansky as she discusses and signs “The Fortunate Ones.” This debut novel moves from World War II Vienna to contemporary Los Angeles, connecting two women who are generations apart. A special Chaim Soutine painting binds these two women. In 1939 Vienna, Rose Zimmer’s parents send her to live with strangers in England in a desperate attempt to remove her from a war zone. When the war finally ends, Rose is alone in London, searching for the Chaim Soutine painting her mother had cherished. Many years later, the painting finds its way to the United States. In modern-day Los Angeles, Lizzie Goldstein is at a crossroads in her life. The Soutine painting, which had provided lasting comfort to her after her mother’s death, has been stolen. The painting will bring Lizzie and Rose together and ignite an unexpected friendship. 7 p.m. Free. Book Soup, 8818 Sunset Blvd., West Hollywood. (310) 659-3110. booksoup.com.

BASIC TRAINING: A MILITARY LEADERSHIP WORKSHOP


cal-garth-masseyGarth Massey, the founder of Military Leadership Methods and a Marine Corps veteran currently serving as an infantry battalion commander, will teach strategies to become a better leader and succeed in your career. The workshop, organized by the Jewish young professionals group Atid, will help improve your efficiency and decision-making tactics. Limited to the first 50 people to register. Atid events are intended for Jewish professionals ages 21 to 39. 7:30 p.m. $10; tickets available at eventbrite.com. Sinai Temple, 10400 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 474-1518. atidla.com.

WED | FEB 22

“THE JEWISH CARDINAL”

Join the Jewish Studies and Catholic Studies programs at Loyola Marymount University for a film screening of “The Jewish Cardinal” and an interfaith discussion with John Connelly (UC Berkeley) and Rabbi Mark Diamond (Loyola Marymount University).  The movie tells of how a priest named Jean-Marie Lustiger — born Aaron Lustiger to Polish-Jewish immigrants in France in 1926 — survives the Holocaust in hiding with a Christian woman and fervently converts to Catholicism at age 14, even as his mother dies in Auschwitz. Lustiger goes on to be ordained a priest in 1954, rising swiftly through the ranks of the Roman Catholic Church, to be named a cardinal in 1983.  Kosher reception offered. 6:30 p.m. Free. Ahmanson Auditorium, University Hall 1000, Loyola Marymount University. (310) 338-7664. bellarmine.lmu.edu/interfaith.

THURS | FEB 23

WORTHY OF LOVE PURIM PARTY

In honor of Purim, the Jewish holiday of topsy-turvy fun and games, Worthy of Love, which hosts monthly birthday parties for homeless children, is throwing a carnival for children living at Skid Row’s Union Rescue Mission. A full 100 percent of registration fees will go to buying presents for the children at the mission. 7 p.m. Tickets are $30 and available at eventbrite.com. Union Rescue Mission, 545 S. San Pedro St., Los Angeles.

EMERGING TECH AND LIABILITY

Join Emet, Young Adults of Los Angeles’ network for legal professionals, and the Tech Network for a discussion about the laws and debates surrounding self-driving cars, video games, artificial intelligence and more. 7 p.m. $10 through Feb. 21; $15. The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles, 6505 Wilshire Blvd., No. 100, Los Angeles. yala.org.

Calendar: February 17-23, 2017 Read More »

Beware of ‘great friends’

Yesterday’s press conference with President Trump and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu demonstrated, as if one needed more evidence, that political leaders—no matter the nation they lead—have agendas that force them to bend logic and good sense. They have no compunction about opining on issues on which they have limited expertise.

At the press conference Trump was asked by an Israeli journalist about the rise in anti-Semitic incidents since the inception of his campaign. In now typical Trump fashion, he answered with a non-sequitur that had nothing to do with the question or the underlying issues. He meandered through a citation of his Electoral College victory, clichés about “you’re going to see a lot of love” and “we are going to stop crime,” and then the coup de grace (his universal antidote for charges of insensitivity or ignorance about Jewish issues) that his daughter, son-in-law and three grandkids are Jewish.

Neither his Electoral College margin nor the religion of his daughter and grand kids have any relation to the question of whether he is “playing with xenophobia and maybe racist overtones.” His failure for the umpteenth time to respond to the question of anti-Semitism in an appropriate way elicited a brave response from the Anti-Defamation League’s CEO, Jonathan Greenblatt (one of the few Jewish leaders to demonstrate leadership in challenging times),

[Trump] missed an opportunity to decry the rhetoric of hate that seems to be surging online and in the real world…..Intentional or not, this emboldens anti-Semites.

We have come to expect this tone deafness from the Trump Administration—from their use of the fraught “America First” theme as their motto, to omitting any mention of Jews from their Holocaust Remembrance Day statement, to their even more egregious denunciation of the leaders who dared to question that omission as “pathetic.”

But for the prime minister of Israel to reflect the same tone deafness on the issue of anti-Semitism is deeply troubling. His gratuitous and inappropriate endorsement of the president as “a great friend of the Jewish people and the State of Israel, there is no doubt about this,” reveals that he doesn’t get the dynamics of prejudice and hate in the Diaspora.

To suggest, as Netanyahu did, that “Trump and his team” were “friends of the Jewish people” is absurd on its face.

Trump’s chief strategist and senior counselor, Steve Bannon, trafficked in conspiracy theories about international “elites” just a few months ago when he was the head of Breitbart News. He fostered links between far right movements in Europe and the US. He attacked “globalists, international bankers” (often code words for Jews), described Pope Francis as a “socialist/communist;” he expressed admiration for one of the intellectual forebears of Italian fascism and proponent of anti-Semitism Julius Evola. That is to not even mention his proclaimed admiration for Lenin: “Lenin wanted to destroy the state, and that’s my goal too. I want to bring everything crashing down and destroy all of today’s establishment.”

Netanyahu needed to do a bit of homework about whom he gave his hechsher (a kosher seal of approval) to. His vigorous endorsement of “Trump and his team” was gratuitous and troubling. There has never been a chief advisor to the president whose priorities are so alien to how our system operates.

Trump has made his bed with Bannon and his baggage, but Netanyahu might want to take a lesson from history before he jumps in any further. Whether Bannon likes Jews or not is not the dispositive issue—it’s his distorted dangerous Manichean view of the world.

Those who consort with extremists like Bannon who have a single vision (for him that vision is “America First” and an arcane notion of “Traditionalism” that decries the influence of modernity and even the notion of compromise) will find they have a bedmate who will come back and haunt them. They don’t value allies, they value only clones because they know the right and the ONLY way.

In 1852 Nathaniel Hawthorne sounded the alarm about those, like Bannon, who have surrendered themselves to a single overruling purpose and who are convinced that they alone know the course of history,

They have no heart, no sympathy, no reason, no conscience. They will keep no friend, unless he make himself the mirror of their purpose; they will smite and slay you, and trample your dead corpse under foot, all the more readily, if you take the first step with them and cannot take the second, and the third, and every other step of their terribly straight path.

As long as Bannon and crew are in power, Bibi, and boatloads of others, better beware of whom they ally with and “their terribly straight [and uncompromising] path.”

Beware of ‘great friends’ Read More »

Jewish groups, lawmakers berate Trump for blasting reporter who asked about anti-Semitism

The American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation League decried President Donald Trump’s brusque treatment of a reporter who asked about a spike in anti-Semitic incidents and challenged him to offer an explicit condemnation of anti-Semitism.

“It is honestly mind-boggling why President Trump prefers to shout down a reporter or brush this off as a political distraction,” Jonathan Greenblatt, the ADL’s national director, said in a statement posted on Twitter.

The American Jewish Committee’s CEO, David Harris, also posted a statement on Twitter.

“Instead of answering a timely and legitimate question, the president chose instead to besmirch the journalist,” Harris wrote.

Jake Turx of Ami Magazine had asked Trump at a news conference Thursday about a recent spike in anti-Semitic incidents, particularly a wave of bomb threats called in to Jewish community centers.

Trump interrupted Turx, called him a liar and treated the question as if Turx had asked Trump if he was an anti-Semite, although Turx had prefaced his question by emphatically saying he did not believe Trump was an anti-Semite.

Both statements noted that Trump within the space of 24 hours had evaded other questions about spikes in anti-Semitism, sometimes manifest in expressions by purported Trump supporters: one at the same news conference on Thursday, and one a day earlier at a joint news conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The ADL and the AJC implored Trump to address the spike.

“Respectfully, Mr. President, please use your bully pulpit not to bully reporters asking questions potentially affecting millions of fellow Americans, but rather, to help solve a problem that for many is real and menacing,” Harris said.

Rep. Ted Deutch, D-Fla., chided Trump on Twitter for saying Turx’s question was not “fair.”

“60 bomb threats against Jewish Centers in 27 states,” Deutch wrote. “Oh, it’s fair.”

Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., also picked up on Trump’s claim that the question was “unfair.”

“What is truly unfair and deeply disturbing is the Trump Administration’s deafening silence at the continued rise of anti-Semitic incidents across the country, leaving Jewish families fearful for their safety,” she said in a statement. “The Jewish community deserves nothing less than a swift, comprehensive response from President Trump and his Administration on their plans to investigate these dangerous threats.”

Both Deutch and Lowey are Jewish.

Rabbi Jack Moline, president of the Interfaith Alliance, also released a statement noting that Trump has twice refused to directly address reporters’ questions about an uptick in anti-Semitism.

“President Trump, you are President of the United States. It’s not enough to just not be an anti-Semite, we expect you to do something about it,” Moline said. “Get past being offended and take action to protect the Jewish community. And while you are at it, the Muslim community and all other minority faiths in this great nation.”

The Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect separately berated Trump for telling Turx that he was “the least anti-Semitic person you have ever seen.”

“Mr. President, that’s an alternative fact on a psychedelic acid trip,” said its director, Steven Goldstein. “Have you been adding magic mushrooms to your chopped liver on matzo?”

Bend the Arc, a liberal Jewish activist group, re-released its statement from a day earlier after Trump had avoided the question at his joint news conference with Netanyahu.

“Donald Trump’s inability to simply condemn antisemitism boggles the mind,” the statement said.

Human Rights First, a watchdog, said Trump’s reply was a lesson in how not to respond.

“In our investigation into hate crime in Germany, particularly hate crime associated with xenophobia, we found that the rhetoric of leaders matters a great deal,” the group said in a statement. “Insufficiently denunciatory language like Trump’s normalizes hatred and effectively gives license to hate groups.”

Jewish groups, lawmakers berate Trump for blasting reporter who asked about anti-Semitism Read More »

Outsized ceramics — and energy to match

Anna Silver’s two-story home in Westwood Village is filled with teapots of all shapes and sizes. But you would never use them to serve tea.

One is white and gold, the size of a volleyball that’s covered with little round balls; another is massive and bright blue with an oversized handle.

Her former gallerist, Garth Clark, once referred to her comically large “Alice in Wonderland” teapots. A 1989 New York Times reviewer found that her teapots are “rendered hilarious by the conventionality of their shape being stretched to a giant size.”

A series of her oversized painted plates are now on display at the Scripps College Ceramic Annual, billed as the longest continuous exhibition of contemporary ceramics in the United States. She previously had work in the show in 1985.

Her fascination with the teapot dates back to her days as an art student in the 1950s.

“The teapot, when you start to take a ceramics class, is the first thing that they ask you to make. It embodies, it encapsulates, all the problems that you have of making something that works, that’s functional, and you can make it a work of art,” Silver said.

Examples of her work, spanning several decades, fill the corners of her home: plates, vases, abstract sculptures, and chunky painted ceramic necklaces. Some have bright splashes of paint that resemble work by Matisse; others have Picasso-like abstract figures painted on them.

50-color-plateHer home also contains some of her reliquary boxes: tall rectangular boxes each topped with a pyramidal lid. Some have been used as cremation urns. Her pieces often blur the line between classical and modern, and between functional and decorative.

“The striking part of her work was the way she integrated modern and contemporary painting into her vessels,” said gallerist Frank Lloyd. He exhibited Silver’s ceramics at his former gallery in Santa Monica’s Bergamot Station.

Hundreds more of her pieces are in private collections and in the permanent collections of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and other museums.

Art historian and curator Jo Lauria, who wrote an essay in the catalog for this year’s Scripps ceramics show, said in a phone interview that Silver’s work stands out for its “very ambitious reinvention of Greek classical forms, but with an inimitable color pattern. … No surface of hers is less than bold and really dramatic.”

“I was also very impressed by her scale, which is hard to achieve in any media, especially ceramics,” she added. “Making something big doesn’t necessarily make it better. But when you go big, you have to justify occupying that much physical and visual space. And she does that.”

Silver’s large, colorful ceramic vases are featured prominently in Wolfgang Puck and Barbara Lazaroff’s restaurants, including Spago, Granita and Chinois. Silver recalls the day the couple walked into a Venice gallery and picked out several of her vases to purchase.

“I closed the door and I said to my husband, ‘I’ll bet we’ll never hear from them,’ ” Silver said. “The next morning they came with a big truck and they bought them all.”

Silver has made menorahs, and her work has been displayed in Jewish museums, but she doesn’t see a direct connection between her Jewish faith and her art.

Silver’s parents were Polish Jews who settled in Toronto before World War II. Their last name was Davis, an adaptation of Davidovich. They weren’t observant, but did occasionally attend Holy Blossom Temple, a Reform synagogue and the oldest Jewish congregation in Toronto. Her family moved to Los Angeles shortly after the war and joined Wilshire Boulevard Temple.

“My father came here one winter to see a relative, and he saw the oranges and he just said, ‘That’s it,’ packed up, we got in a big old Packard and came here,” she said.

In the years that followed, she studied at UC Berkeley, UCLA and the Otis College of Design in Los Angeles. For a time, she studied in Paris with the world-renowned Cubist artist Fernand Léger.

Silver’s first marriage was to businessman Marvin Kalin, co-owner of the celebrity-beloved Santa Palm Car Wash. They had three children (Lisa, Matthew and David) within five years. She had some artistic success, but her focus at that time was on her family.

“I didn’t push myself in any way. I didn’t. I was really just more interested in raising my kids. But I always worked at my art and I always went to school,” Silver said.

After her marriage to Kalin ended, she married Alfred Silver, a doctor and psychoanalyst, in 1975 and turned her art focus to working with clay.

50-bwplateToday she works in a converted back house that sits behind red brick stairs that cut through a flower garden bursting with life from recent rains. The studio is sunlit and bright. Inside are three electric kilns, racks of plaster molds, drawers filled with tiny bottles of glazes, and vases and plates in various stages of completion. There are bookcases bulging with art books from every conceivable era and geographic region, and artwork collected from trips around the world. There are also stacks of compact disks, mostly world music and classical, which she listens to as she works.

Silver is in her 80s, an age that belies her bright red hair, boundless energy and impressive productivity. She takes walks and exercises, but her secret to health, she says, is to keep working.

“I do everything. I think I’m 40, but I’m not,” Silver said. “I really do believe that you can be old if you put your mindset to it. I’m not old. Most of my friends are young, and there’s really no difference between us.”

Anna Silver’s work is on display at “Scripps 73rd Ceramic Annual: A Sense of Place” at Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery at Scripps College in Claremont until April 9. Gallery hours: noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. Admission is free. For more information, visit rcwg.scrippscollege.edu or call (909) 607-4690.

Outsized ceramics — and energy to match Read More »

Obituaries: Week of Feb. 17, 2017

Joseph Auerbach died Jan. 22 at 89.  Survived by daughter Mary (Bob) White; sons Stuart (Shauna), Michael. Mount Sinai

Harold Blaisch died Jan. 20 at 84. Survived by wife Jane Ellen; daughters Denise, Andrea, Shay (Ty) Bonnar; son Brian (Brenda); stepson Wes (Lindsay) Faria; 5 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild. Mount Sinai

Deborah Ettinger Cardot died Jan. 12 at 69. Survived by sister Susan (Willim) Barcowiscz; brother Jeffrey (Debora). Hillside

Nancy Coleman died Jan. 18 at 65. Survived by brother Ira. Mount Sinai 

Charlotte Faye Cornfeld died Jan.  21 at 88. Survived by daughters Ellen Deal, Lois Cornfeld Price; son Stuart (Johanna Went); 4 grandchildren; 3 great-grandchildren; brother, Stanley (Shirley) Kadesh. Mount Sinai

Kurt Drechsler died Jan. 22 at 96. Survived by sons Murray (Jacki) Drechsler, Larry (Jill) Drechsler; 5 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Abraham Feinberg died Jan. 20 at 77. Survived by wife Victoria; daughters Deborah (Andy) Yanuck, Shary (Arlie) Smith, Lorrie (Ken); son Allan Saks; 4 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild; sisters Susan Emerman, Linda (Joe). Mount Sinai

Jason Fenton died Jan.  21 at 85. Survived by daughters Mina (Jordan) Rush, Tamar (David Pink), Suzanne (Dan Lieberman); 11  grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild; brothers Ivor (Myra), David (Margaret) Martin. Hodroff-Epstein (Minneapolis)

Joyce Green died Jan. 22 at 89. Survived by son Neal (Pamela); 2 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Thomas B. Green died Jan. 21 at 78. Survived by wife Tracy; daughter Elizabeth Green-David; son Matthew (Heather); 3 grandchildren; brother Mitch Smith. Mount Sinai

Alan Greenstadt died Jan. 22 at 69. Survived by daughter Alexa; brother Mark (Ann). Mount Sinai

Marguerite Esther Guez died Jan. 18 at 92. Survived by daughters Michelle (Charles) Ruimy, Viviane Guez, Monique (Phillipe) Gurriet, Iline Baer; sons Paul (Elizabeth), Hubert (Roxanne), Gerald (Jackie), Yves; 22 grandchildren; 16 great-grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Robert Hurwitz died Jan. 21 at 71. Survived by daughter Deborah (Bill) Davis-Bonk; son Scott Davis; 3 grandchildren; mother Sylvia. Hillside

Ruth Ingber died Jan. 18 at 88. Survived by husband David; daughter Judy (Dan Adelstein) Leon; son David Leon; 6 grandsons; 2 great-grandchildren. Mount Sinai 

Martin Javitz died Jan.  20 at age 88. Survived by wife Naomi; daughter Barbara Norof; son Bruce; step-daughters Julie Anne Rosenfeld, Leslee Lipstone; 5 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Amiram Karney died Jan. 18 at 80. Survived by wife Perla; daughter Anessa (Stuart); son Benjamin (Ali); 5 grandchildren. Hillside

Melvin Karp died Jan. 17 at 90. Survived by wife Beverly; stepson Keith Corwin; 1 grandchild; sisters Ann Elbaum, Dorothy Coenig, Beatrice Gordon; brother Harvey (Patty). Hillside

Olivia Malka died Jan. 20 at 14. Survived by mother Kristin; father Haim; brothers Ethan Ryder, Isidor Solomon; grandparents Solomon and Lea Malka, Betty and Dale Sanders. Mount Sinai

Melvin Nadell died Jan. 17 at 97. Survived by wife Florence; daughter Patty (Jim) Tatone; son Evan; 1 grandchild. Mount Sinai 

Ronald Reisner died Jan. 13 at 87. Survived by wife Ellen; sons David (Frankie), Andrew (Jessica); 1 grandchild. Hillside

Oscar Ross died Jan. 13 at 79. Survived by wife Veronika; daughter Diana (Dani) Ross-Geiger; sons Robert (Kathi), David (Starlyn); 7 grandchildren. Hillside

Regina Lena Ross (aka Regina Lena Markheim) died Jan. 14 at 92. Survived by son Jack (Helen); 2 grandchildren. Chevra Kadisha

Saul Salka died Jan. 13 at 99. Survived by daughter Sandra; son Donald (Berta); 8 grandchildren; 4 great-grandchildren. Hillside

Esther Zielinski Stern died Jan. 20 at 97. Survived by daughters Helen Stern (Jack) Ross, Sandra Stern (Steve) Shapiro; 2 grandchildren. Chevra Kadisha

Maurice Tubin died Jan. 21 at 89. Survived by wife Sandra; daughter Teri Weiss; son Brad; 3 grandchildren. Mount Sinai 

Viola “Ibi” Vari died Jan.  18 at 94. Survived by son Alexander “Alex” (Julie) Vari; 4 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Paul Wasserman died Jan. 22 at 103. Survived by daughters Deborah, Lisa (Steven) Casino; son Stephen (Linda); 4 grandchildren; 6 great-grandchildren. Hillside

Herbert E. Wexler died Jan. 18 at 99. Survived by sons Hal (Joan), Gary (Dana); 7 grandchildren; 4 great-grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Robert Wiviott died Jan. 14 at 80. Survived by wife Sharon; daughter Fran (Ernie) Wish; sons Greg, Jay (Teresa); sister Gail (Jerry) Spitzer; brother Howard; 11 grandchildren. Hillside

Obituaries: Week of Feb. 17, 2017 Read More »

Anti-Semitic incidents probed in Ventura County

The Ventura County Sheriff’s Department (VCSD) is investigating two separate anti-Semitic incidents, including one in which the Chabad of Oak Park received a note Feb. 11 with a swastika drawn on it and the words “Hail Hitler.”

The incident occurred a week after three swastikas were discovered spray painted at Dos Vientos Community Park in the Conejo Valley.

VCSD is investigating the Oak Park situation — in which two suspects were captured on surveillance video by the synagogue — as a “hate incident,” according to VCSD Detective Marta Bugarin. She said the suspects, in the event they are identified, would not be arrested, as there was no defacement done to the building, which is a house on a residential block.

“They [the suspects] didn’t deface anything, they didn’t vandalize anything, they taped it on the front door,” Bugarin said. The police report describes the suspects as “dark figures,” she said.

In a phone interview, Chabad of Oak Park Rabbi Yisroel Levine said he received word from two neighboring families — non-Jewish families — who told him they received similar notes on the same night. That, coupled with the fact that there is no outward indication that the Chabad building is a Jewish center, has led him to believe his synagogue was not specifically targeted.

“When I first heard of our temple [being left with the note], I thought we were targeted. Now I’m not so sure,” Levine said.

This occurred as VCSD authorities continue to investigate the incident at Dos Vientos Community Park in which two swastikas were painted on the wooden boards on the perimeter of a baseball field, and another one defacing the concrete next to it.

Residents of the area discovered the graffiti at the park and notified authorities on Feb. 4, according to Steve Gold, a congregant of Congregation Am Hayam in Ventura County. It has since been removed.

“We called it into the police department to have them investigate it, which they did, and it wasn’t registered as a hate crime because it was not addressed to anyone in particular,” Gold told the Journal.

Gold said he was surprised to find the swastikas in his neighborhood in the first place.

“I really think this is just an independent person who probably has anger issues. I don’t feel in my neighborhood polarizations occurring,” he said.

Bugarin said the department has not identified any suspects in connection with the incident and that an investigation is ongoing.

“Right now, we don’t have any suspects,” Bugarin, who works in the VCSD Thousand Oaks division, told the Journal in a phone interview last week.

“It looks like it was a juvenile who may have done this,” VCSD media relations officer Capt. Garo Kuredjian told the Journal of the park incident.

According to Bugarin, VCSD is investigating the swastika painted onto the concrete but not the two that had been painted onto the baseball field’s wooden boards. She speculated this is because the two on the wooden boards had already been painted over by the time police officials arrived on the scene, on Feb. 6.

Cyndi Silverman, regional director of the Santa Barbara/Tri-Counties Anti-Defamation League (ADL), said the three swastikas discovered at the park were only the latest incidents she has seen in the area. She declined to draw a correlation between the uptick and the election of President Donald Trump.

It’s “definitely a concern, seeing an uptick in hate symbols, especially in public parks,” she said.

Bugarin, however, denied there has been an increase in anti-Semitic activity in her area, Thousand Oaks.

It’s “definitely not something we see or hear about very often,” she said.

Ed Jones, a member of the Conejo Recreation and Park District board of directors, wrote on his Facebook page after the swastikas were discovered, “Such a shame that this symbol of hate would appear in one of our parks.”

The Ventura County incidents followed a mid-December instance of an anti-Semitic scrawl discovered in West Los Angeles, near Temple Isaiah. The phrase, “Why is Jackie O being played by an Israeli Jew?” — a reference to Israeli-American actress Natalie Portman’s portrayal of Jackie Kennedy in the recent film, “Jackie” — was discovered at a bus stop on a poster of the film “Assassin’s Creed.” A slashed-through Jewish star appears next to the scrawl.

ADL Pacific Southwest Associate Regional Director Ariella Schusterman said the West L.A. incident was “taken care of pretty quickly.”

Both the Dos Vientos and West L.A. incidents were documented via the neighborhood-centric social network app Nextdoor, which provides a platform for residents to describe positive and negative activity in their respective neighborhoods. In separate interviews, Schusterman and Silverman said they appreciated people using Nextdoor to document instances of hate but also reminded people it is important to inform local law enforcement agencies and report them to the ADL, which compiles a record of reported hate incidents and crimes.

“Obviously we want people to call us when we have anti-Semitic incidents or crimes,” Schusterman said, “or to call the police.”

Anti-Semitic incidents probed in Ventura County Read More »

Why Trump shook up the two-state solution

At his press conference with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Donald Trump uttered words that will live in Mideast infamy— “I’m looking at two-state and one-state. I like the one that both parties like.”

On the surface, those words appear innocuous—let the parties decide their future. But in truth, they represent a diplomatic earthquake. No Western leader has ever had the guts to challenge the conventional wisdom that the two-state solution is the only desirable outcome to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Ever since the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, this two-state idea, which really means the establishment of a Palestinian state, has been the shiny object worshipped by diplomats around the world and repeated like a mindless mantra at one failed peace conference after another.

By disrespecting this shiny object, Trump introduced the idea that the object may, in fact, not be worth all the worship. His ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, tried to soften Trump’s stance when she expressed U.S. support for the two-state solution, but she pointedly added, “we are thinking out of the box as well.”

Thinking out of the box is what Trump did when he refused to bow down to the two-state idol. What may have looked so beautiful twenty years ago—two states for two peoples living next to each other in perfect harmony—has become, in reality, a potential disaster for all sides. For one thing, the high likelihood that Hamas and ISIS would swoop in and turn the West Bank into another terror state is disastrous not just for Israel, but for the Palestinians and the United States. This is the kind of mud on the idol of a Palestinian state we rarely hear about.

One reason we rarely hear about it is that the notion of a Palestinian state is still as shiny as ever. On the Israeli side, it would mean separating from two million Palestinians and securing its future as a Jewish democracy. And on the Palestinian side, it would mean securing their national aspirations. Those ideals are still in play, but only in the abstract. In reality, even moderate commentators like Aaron David Miller have called the two-state solution “dead.”

It doesn’t matter who you blame for this death. The fact is, the more the world has pursued the two-state solution, the more distant it has become. No conflict in modern history has generated more frequent miles, fancy hotel rooms and media coverage than the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Former Secretary of State John Kerry made over twenty trips to the region to try to jumpstart talks. He could barely manage to arrange “talks about talks.”

A fresh observer like Donald Trump, with his business background, probably looked at this dead corpse and figured he had little to lose by shaking things up. Since the obsession with the two-state solution seems to have killed the two-state solution itself, maybe he figured: Let’s see what happens if we lose that obsession. A good dealmaker, after all, never shows desperation and keeps his options open.

Ironically, putting an alternative on the table may well improve the odds of a two-state solution, if the parties end up seeing that the alternative is even worse. We’ve never had a serious debate about this, partly because, up until now, that alternative has come from the fringes. Trump has now put it front and center. The New York Times published a remarkable op-ed the other day by Jewish settler leader Yishai Fleisher, who calmly laid out five alternatives to the two-state solution. That sounds to me like a new chapter in a long debate.

A wild card that is sure to influence this debate is Trump’s desire to involve in the peace process Arab states that have grown closer to Israel. Maybe this is Trump’s way of shaking up the Palestinians and telling them they’re no longer the only game in town.

Let’s face it. A huge reason for the death of the two-state solution has been the chronic refusal of the Palestinian leadership to make any concessions or even to make any counter-offers to Israeli proposals– which is consistent with their continuous promotion of Jew-hatred and glorifying of terrorism. They’ve never paid a price for this. If anything, the world has rewarded them. My guess is, they’re now looking at Trump and saying, The party’s over. This guy’s not going to coddle us. He’s going to demand some real concessions, or else.

Will this Trumpian disruption lead to anything good? Will it empower the moderates on all sides and create a perfect storm of circumstances that can bring the two-state corpse back to life?

Who knows. The only thing we know for sure is that when you’re looking at certain death, any alternative is welcome.


David Suissa is president of TRIBE Media Corp./Jewish Journal and can be reached at davids@jewishjournal.com.

Why Trump shook up the two-state solution Read More »

At home with Washington and Lincoln

As the country celebrates Presidents Day this weekend, let’s take a look at a decorating trend that will have you declaring independence from boredom. Yes, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln-themed home accessories are the latest in designer chic. From bedding to lighting, they’ll turn any home into a presidential suite.

Lincoln Shower Curtain

showercurtain

The 16th U.S. President makes a splash in this functional art piece for the bathroom.

sparkartwork.com

$74.99

Lincoln Cookie Cutter

61zqmtupzfl-_sl1500_

Because nothing shows your patriotism like Lincoln-shaped sugar cookies.

amazon.com

$14.79

Lincoln Duvet Cover

duvet_cover

With this duvet cover, you can now sleep in the Lincoln Bedroom.

kessinhouse.com

From $189

Top Hat Pendant Lamp

top-hat-pendant-lamp

A lamp this cool only comes along once every four score and seven years.

modernistlighting.com

$168

Washington Hook Pillow

pillow

One hundred percent wool makes this Commander in Chief absolutely huggable.

Designerpillowshop.com

$58

Washington Double Old-Fashioned Glass

glass

Raise a glass to our first president in style.

fishseddy.com

$8

Washington Bust Linocut

framed_art

You don’t need to cross the Delaware for this framed limited edition.

jonathanadler.com

$895

Washington Scented Candle

candle

I’m not sure what Washington smelled like. Perhaps cherry?

etsy.com (JDandKateIndustries)

$18.50

At home with Washington and Lincoln Read More »