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February 27, 2019

India, Pakistan Strike Each Other’s Jets

India and Pakistan ramped up their conflict over the last 24 hours when they struck down each other’s jets.

India launched strikes into Pakistan on Feb. 26 in response to a Feb. 14 suicide bombing in Kashmir that killed 40 Indian paramilitary troopers. Indian Foreign Affairs Sushma Swaraj claimed that the Jaish e-Mohammed terror group is responsible for the attack and that they killed “a very large number” of people in the strikes, although the exact number has not been released.

In response, Pakistan shot down two Indian jets and captured one of the pilots. India then responded by shooting down one of Pakistan’s jets.

Also on Feb. 26, Indian and Pakistani troops fired at each other at demarcation line between Indian and Pakistani territory in the former princely state of Jammu and Kashmir. Five Indian soldiers were injured in the skirmish.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan urged both sides to use restraint.

According to The Atlantic’s Uri Friedman and Krishnadev Calamur, the two countries have engaged in “multiple conflicts since the end of British colonial rule in 1947 resulted in the partition of the subcontinent.” In 1998, both states announced that they had nuclear weapons.

“The ongoing hostility elicits questions, not to mention fears, about the point at which the two states are prepared to resort to using nuclear weapons,” Friedman and Calamur wrote. “It brings to the fore the logic of possessing such weapons, whether states are taken seriously as great powers without them, and indeed whether possession of them limits a nation’s military options, especially when its public is baying for war.”

In January 2018, the Trump administration announced it would withhold “hundreds of dollars” from Pakistan until the country cracks down on terrorism within its borders.

“Until the Pakistani government takes decisive action against groups including the Afghan Taliban and Haqqani network, we consider them to be destabilizing the region and also targeting U.S. personnel,” then-State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said. “Despite a sustained high level of engagement by this administration with the government of Pakistan, the Taliban and the Haqqani network continue to find sanctuary in Pakistan.”

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Minnesota GOP Chapter Apologizes for Post Comparing Bernie Sanders to Hitler

A chapter of the Minnesota GOP apologized for a Feb. 26 Facebook post that compared Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) to Adolf Hitler.

The Clay County Republican of Minnesota post featured a now-deleted photo from an Instagram account called @conservatives_of_washington, claiming parallels between Sanders and Hitler, including that the two supported gun control and that they both wanted “a heavily regulated economy.”

The chapter said that a volunteer was responsible for the post.

“Whether it’s the Democrats comparing President Trump to Hitler, or Republicans comparing Bernie Sanders to Hitler, it is wrong, inappropriate, and in poor taste,” the post read. “Our sincerest apologies to all.”

Minnesota GOP Chairwoman Jennifer Carnahan denounced the post in a statement, saying, “We must, Republicans and Democrats alike, do better to dispel hate and come together as Americans.”

The Anti-Defamation League’s Midwest chapter tweeted, “Comparing a candidate’s policies to those of Hitler is inaccurate and offensive. Such actions are hurtful and have no place in our politics. We welcome the apology and removal of the post, and hope that the Clay County GOP uses better judgment.”

During his first presidential bid, Sanders said in March 2016 that his “father’s family was wiped out by Hitler in the Holocaust.”

Sanders announced on Feb. 19 that he is again running for president in 2020.

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Rosner's Domain Podcast

Dr. Yizhar Hess: The future of the Conservative Judaism movement in Israel

Dr. Yizhar Hess and Shmuel Rosner discuss the reasons behind conservative judaism being a relatively small stream in Israeli society and what can be done in order to change that.

Dr. Yizhar Hess is the Executive Director and CEO of the Conservative Judaism movement in Israel, also known as Masorti.

Hess has a Ph.D. from the Department of Philosophy of Education at Sussex University in Brighton, England.

Dr. Yizhar Hess

Follow Shmuel Rosner on Twitter.

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It’s Official: ‘90210’ Returns This Summer on Fox

A revival of “Beverly Hills, 90210” has been buzzed about for months, but it’s now official. Original cast members Tori Spelling, Ian Ziering, Gabrielle Carteris, Brian Austin Green (who are Jewish) plus Jason Priestley and Jennie Garth will reprise their roles in a six-episode “90210” miniseries this summer.

The actors will play heightened versions of themselves in the series, inspired by their real lives and relationships. The very meta plot begins 19 years after the original series ended, and follows the actors’ efforts to mount a reboot.

“‘Beverly Hills, 90210’ left an indelible impact on pop culture and an entire generation,” Fox Entertainment President Michael Thorn said in a statement. “Its powerful legacy is an important part of our network’s DNA – bold stories not told anywhere else and bigger-than-life-characters – and we’re honored to bring back the beloved original cast members for ‘90210.’”

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The Power of Community

It had all the makings of a joke. My husband and I—two Jews—participating in an interfaith Thanksgiving dinner in the social hall of Temple Shalom in Louisville. Seated at a table with a Catholic chaplain, a Hindu college professor, an Imam, and the Mayor of Louisville was us. We were talking about our plans for the upcoming holiday, sharing jokes and pictures on our phones, and doing what friends do when they get together to break bread. It was a moment of ordinary dinner and conversation that to an outsider, might have seemed unusual. To the interfaith community of Louisville, it was just participating in an annual event of goodwill.

Matt and I relocated to Louisville from Baltimore for him to take on the position of Director of Jewish Communal Relations Council (JCRC). As a Jewish professional in my own right, I understood what JCRC work was, but it was events such as this where I got to take a front row seat to the extremely important, but often misunderstood and overlooked work that Matt and his counterparts do every day. Much like doctors and clergy, JCRC directors are never “off the clock.” At any time, there could be a crisis in Israel. An act of anti-Semitism. A provocative statement that warrants a timely response. I have stood by and watched as phone calls and texts have gone answered at all hours. It is what JCRC directors do. For better or worse, they are here for their communities. And the relationships being built are incredibly important.

It was shortly after dinner in September 2015 when the phone call came. It was the week between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. I could tell by the look on my husband’s face that the news was bad. And it was. A mosque about ten minutes away from us (for you LA readers, yes, everything in Louisville usually is about ten minutes away—sorry!) had been horribly vandalized. The congregants had arrived for their evening prayers to find their sacred space violated. The man who had called to tell him about it was Dr. Muhammad Babar, a Pakistani-American physician and communal leader who had become a friend to us both. Without a second thought, I said, “Let’s go.” And we did. Taking Rachel, our then nineteen-month-old daughter to the mosque. A small group of people awaited us. The media was on its way. But, we were the first non-Muslim members of the community to show up. When we got there, we were disgusted by what we saw. We offered our hugs and prayers for solidarity. The graffiti had sought to divide Jews and Muslims. It failed miserably.

While I chased our restless daughter around the parking lot, Matt embraced “Babar” and that evening the two stood arm in arm on the local news, a Muslim and a Jew, showing everyone, especially the vandals that their act had failed. A couple of days later, thousands from Louisville’s interfaith community came out to paint over the graffiti, thus further showing those that seek to divide us that they will not win. A letter from Muhammad Ali, Louisville’s most famous son, was read, a compassion bench was dedicated, and I was in tears. It made national news. What started out as something so hateful had turned into an act of love like nothing else.

These interfaith ties have only grown stronger over the years. Dr. Babar has become a true friend to us personally. If our interfaith dinner at a synagogue had the makings of a joke, what do you make of a Muslim physician driving to visit his snowbound Jewish friend with the flu? Just another day in our world.

On Sunday, October 28, 2018, barely 24 hours after the horrible massacre at Tree of Life in Pittsburgh, Temple Shalom was full yet again. This time, with a standing room only vigil to show solidarity with the Jewish community. This site was chosen for two reasons—the rabbi’s husband has family ties to Tree of Life and the synagogue itself sits just a mile from the Kroger where just a few days prior, two African American shoppers had been murdered in broad daylight by a white supremacist.

I had barely seen Matt over the past two days as this vigil was hastily put together and the turnout was massive. Seated across the aisle from me was Dr. Babar and his family. He gave me a hug as I cried. He mentioned that he had just come from another vigil at the Kroger. It is no mistake that Louisville is called “compassionate city.” It truly is. And the work that Matt and all of the interfaith leaders in this community is just one example.

JCRC work is the backbone of any Jewish community, often taken for granted, but very much necessary for survival. Their umbrella organization, Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) is celebrating its 75th anniversary this year. It is an incredible organization that does so much in 125+ communities all over the country. As there remains a lot of uncertainty in the world, one thing is for sure. JCRC is our voice for what matters most in our communities. And they need our support.

A while back, someone jokingly referred to me as the “First Lady” of the JCRC. At the time, I did not fully understand the implication. But, like any spouse of someone whose work is so valuable, I am proud. I am a professional in my own right, but I am immensely proud to be a part of a community where interfaith work is so important.

For more information about the incredible work of the JCPA and the JCRC in your area, please visit the website


Lisa Rothstein Goldberg is a social worker and Jewish educator, currently working at Ivy Tech Community College in Sellersburg, Indiana. She and her husband, Matt, JCRC Director in Louisville, live in Louisville with their two young daughters.

 

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Letters: Rabbi Dorff’s New Book, Misquoting Trump, Oscar Issue

Rabbi Dorff’s New Book
I agree with Rabbi Elliot Dorff about Conservative Judaism and its role in helping Jews (“The Challenge of the Mind,” Feb. 22). I also agree the Orthodox dogma should not be the only way to be recognized as being Jewish in Israel.

However, what concerns me the most is that Conservative Jews have moved much closer to Reform and Reconstruction practices. As younger and impressionable Jews move away from religious practice throughout the year, will there be enough Jews to carry Conservatism to 2050 and beyond?
Warren J. Potash, Moorpark

Take Time to Thank God
Kylie Ora Lobell makes a powerful point about how prayer forces us to slow down (“Prayer Forces a Person to Slow Down — and That’s Good,” Feb. 22). So many of us are workaholics and think about work when we get up, all day while we’re doing other things, and before we go to sleep. She proposes devoting 15 minutes every day to thank HaShem, learn valuable lessons from prayer and be grateful to be alive and free. People who live today are the most fortunate people who ever lived at any time in history. That’s something for which we should to be grateful and it’s worth thanking HaShem for a few minutes every day.

The principle of my yeshiva established a rule that at the beginning of the school year of our bar mitzvah, boys had to start putting on tefillin. I began to do it as part of the school routine of the yeshiva and have not missed a weekday since then. It takes only a little bit of time every weekday morning and it’s well worth it. I recommend Lobell enhance her daily prayer experienced by wrapping tefillin.

Lobell has done meditation and yoga to help her deal with life’s pressures. I recommend she join a weekly Torah study group, which can provide an enhanced Jewish spiritual experience.
Marshall Lerner, Beverly Hills

Misquoting Trump
Rabbi Robin Podolsky repeats the allegation that President Donald Trump said there were “‘fine people on both sides’ of a clash between neo-Nazis and their opponents” (“Angry About Trump’s Speech,” Feb. 15.) This statement is completely false. As many commentators have noted, Trump never said or suggested that some neo-Nazis are “fine people.”

On Aug. 15, 2017, Trump spoke about a clash between neo-Nazis and Antifa that occurred at a protest over the removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee and renaming a park in Charlottesville, Va. When a reporter asked about the neo-Nazis who were present at the protest, Trump said, “You have some very bad people in that group, but you also had people that were fine people on both sides. … You had people in that group that were there to protest the taking down of, to them, a very important statue and the renaming of a park from Robert E. Lee to another name.”

After asking if statues of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson should be removed because they were slave owners, Trump said, “If you look, there were people protesting very quietly the taking down of the statue of Robert E. Lee. I’m sure in that group there were some bad ones. The following day it looked like they had some rough, bad people: neo-Nazis, white nationalists, whatever you want to call them. … But you had a lot of people in that group that were there to innocently protest — and very legally protest, because … they had a permit.”

Concerning the neo-Nazis, Trump said, “I’m not talking about the neo-Nazis and the white nationalists because they should be condemned, totally.”

Thus, Trump made it clear that the “fine people on both sides” were people peacefully exercising their right under the First Amendment to protest for and against taking down of the statue and renaming the park. He said neo-Nazis “should be condemned, totally.” He didn’t say, and has never that there are “fine people” among Nazis or neo-Nazis. Podolsky should identify where Trump has said there are “fine people” among neo-Nazis or issue a public apology.
Daniel J. Friedman, Rancho Palos Verdes 

Oscar Issue
Thank you for publishing “ ‘Spider-Verse’ Director Reveals Peter Parker Is Jewish” (Oscar issue, Feb. 22). The montage where Peter Parker steps on a glass at his wedding, following Jewish tradition, was an unexpected thrill in Rodney Rothman’s outstanding film.

Historically, Jews introduced many comic book superheroes, including Spider-Man (by Stan Lee). Most famously, Superman was created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster and was emblematic in myriad respects of the 20th-century Jewish-American experience: His parents were from a far-away land. They floated him across space as a baby to save his life (recalling Moses being floated down the Nile to escape Pharaoh’s decree). He had a Hebrew name (Kal-El), but publicly used his Americanized name (Clark Kent) and disguised identity, mirroring Jewish-American cultural assimilation. His secret vestments (cape, etc.) represented Jewish religious vestments (tallis, etc.). What was implicit about Superman’s Jewish identity is now explicit about Parker.
Stephen A. Silver, San Francisco

It would seem that the major problem that Conservative Judaism needs to address was featured in the story about “BlacKkKlansman” (“The Screenwriters Who Made ‘BlacKkKlansman’ Jewish,” Feb. 22). The screenwriters, who met in Hebrew school and bar mitzvah’ed in temple, have graduated to a two-day-a-year “Jewish” life. If that’s typical, then your future is guarded …
Saul Newman, Los Angeles 

Israel Can Do Better
Toward the end of his column “The Trick of Anti-Semitism” (Feb. 22), Shmuel Rosner asks if there is anything the Jews can do against the current trend of anti-Semitism. The short answer is yes. Anti-Semitism rises and falls with real-world events, sometimes not of our doing. However, the current rise can certainly be associated with the policies of the current Israeli government.

In the name of security and expansion, the government continues to impose antagonistic settlements into Palestinian areas, impose civil restrictions (sometimes in order to maintain these settlements), and pass laws discriminating against non-Jewish citizens. It also maintains an occupation that may be inevitable at this time. Because of this, Israel has gone from being considered a hero nation to being criticized by many otherwise well-meaning people. It is from this group that the true anti-Semites find recruits.

To paraphrase Abraham Lincoln, Democracy is not a suicide pact. At the end of the day, if the existence of Israel were threatened, liberties with democracy would be taken. However, this is not the end of the day. Israel is an economic and military powerhouse, unrivaled in its region. Israel can afford and should maintain the most benign occupation possible, provide exemplary fair treatment to its non-Jewish citizens and start the elimination of the poison pill that the noncontiguous settlements present. Yes, it can be done much better.
Michael Telerant, Los Angeles   

Complicated European History
Robert Geminder’s obituary said he was born in 1935 in Wroclaw, Poland, and then forced east to Stanislawow, still in Poland after the Germans invaded Poland in September 1939 (“Holocaust Survivor Robert Geminder, Feb. 22). The obituary said Geminder and his family returned to Warsaw in 1944.

I believe matters were more complicated. Wroclaw was the city of Breslau in the German province of Silesia. The Wehrmacht didn’t invade Wroclaw in 1939 because it was part of Germany. Stanislawow, to which the Geminder family fled, was in the part of Poland that was taken over by the Soviet Union as the result of the August 1939 Non-Aggression Pact signed by Nazi Germany and the U.S.S.R. At first, Jews who managed to find refuge in Soviet-occupied Poland were relatively safe. However, after the Germans invaded and occupied portions of the Soviet Union. including Stanislawow, Jews there faced all the dangers of the Holocaust.

The Geminder family returned to Warsaw in 1944. Warsaw was on the front line between the advancing Red Army and the Wehrmacht. There was the Warsaw Uprising and, after the defeat of the Polish Home Army, there was the destruction of Warsaw, all in 1944. I find it hard to believe that a Jewish family would have come to Warsaw in 1944 because the situation was hellish. 1945 is another matter, not smooth sailing, but in Warsaw the Germans were gone.

May Robert Geminder rest in peace and may his family find comfort.
Murray Aronson, West Hollywood

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What’s Happening: Jill Abramson, Yemen Blues, ‘Foxtrot’

FRI MAR 1

Beatles Shabbat
During Friday night services, Reform congregation Kol Tikvah sets popular Shabbat tunes to the music of The Beatles. Rabbi Jon Hanish, Rabbi Becky Hoffman, Cantor Noa Shaashua and rabbinic intern Esther Jilovsky lead services with a little help from their friends: the temple band Kolplay. Socializing, coffee and sweet treats follow. 6:30 p.m. Free. No RSVP necessary. Kol Tikvah, 20400 Ventura Blvd., Woodland Hills. (818) 348-0670.

Shabbat with Danny Lobell
Stand-up comedian Danny Lobell headlines “Stand Up Shabbat” at Knesset Israel of Beverlywood. Lobell’s performance follows Friday night services and a d’var Torah by Rabbi Jason Weiner. Jordana Wertheimer, director of student life and leadership at YULA Girls High School, emcees the show. A three-course glatt kosher meat dinner is included. Services 5:30 p.m., comedy show 6:30 p.m. $18 per person, $36 couples, $50 families. Knesset Israel of Beverlywood, 2364 S. Robertson Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 839-4962.

Jill Abramson

An Evening with Jill Abramson
Former New York Times Executive Editor Jill Abramson discusses her controversial new book, “Merchants of Truth: The Business of News and the Fight for Facts,” which follows four major news organizations — the Times, The Washington Post, BuzzFeed and Vice Media — over a decade of radical changes and disruption in the news business. Abramson, in dialogue with Spectrum News political anchor Alex Cohen, explores the future of the free press. 7:30 p.m. $40 general admission plus book, $34 members plus book, without book, $25 general admission, $21.25 members. Skirball Cultural Center, 2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 440-4500.

Peter Yarrow and Noel Paul Stookey

Peter & Paul
Peter Yarrow and Noel Paul Stookey, the surviving members of the legendary folk music trio Peter, Paul & Mary, sing many of their hits in concert at the Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza. After the death of Mary Travers in 2009, Yarrow and Stookey continue to perform regularly. 8 p.m. $41–$66. Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza, 2100 E. Thousand Oaks Blvd., Thousand Oaks. (805) 449-2787.

IKAR’S First Friday
Young professionals and Jew-adjacent adults come together for IKAR’s TRIBE First Friday Feast, featuring a musical Shabbat service (plus scotch), followed by schmoozing, grooving, food and (more) booze. 6:30 p.m. services, 8 p.m. dinner. $8, free for first-timers. IKAR event space, 1729 S. La Cienega Blvd., Los Angeles. (323) 634-1870.

Tint Tot Shabbat
Shabbat-themed storytelling, music and singing highlight PJ Library and Temple Akiba’s Shabbat for tots up to 2 years old. Open to the community. 9 a.m. Free. Temple Akiba, 5249 S. Sepulveda Blvd., Culver City. RSVP to Carly Rosenstein at nurseryschool@templeakiba.net or (310) 398-5783.

SAT MAR 2 

Jews and Disabilities 
ETTA Founder and Executive Director Michael Held discusses “A Vision for Including Jews With Disabilities,” following Shabbat morning services at the Beverly Hills Jewish Community. Established in 1993, ETTA serves adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Services 9:30 a.m., lecture 11:30 a.m. Beverly Hills Hotel, 9641 Sunset Blvd., Beverly Hills. (310) 276-4246.

Lev Eisha Services 
Rabbi Toba August and cantorial soloist Cindy Paley lead a musical and joyous Shabbat celebration at Beth Shir Shalom. The Lev Eisha Shabbat begins at 9:30 a.m. followed by a Kiddush luncheon. Free. Beth Shir Shalom, 1827 California Ave., Santa Monica. (310) 575-0985.

SUN MAR 3 

Einat Wilf
Former Israeli Knesset Member Einat Wilf, who previously represented the Labor and Independence parties from 2010–11 and 2011–13, respectively, speaks at Congregation Kol Ami. A leading intellectual and thinker on foreign policy, economics, education and Zionism, Einat is the author of six books. A Jerusalem native, she earned a BA in Government from Harvar, and a Ph.D in Political Science at the University of Cambridge. 5 p.m. Free. Congregation Kol Ami, 1200 N. La Brea Blvd., West Hollywood. (323) 606-0996.

Sam Glaser 
Los Angeles musician Sam Glaser performs at Ner Simcha as part of the congregation’s “Simcha Series: A Celebration of Jewish Arts.” A resident of the Pico-Robertson neighborhood, Glaser tours the world and serves as Ner Simcha’s cantor during the congregation’s High Holy Days services. 7–8:30 p.m. Free. Temple Ner Simcha, 880 Hampshire Road, Westlake Village. (818) 851-0030.

Are Jewish Values Unique?
Rabbi Stanley Davids explores “Is There Anything Unique About Jewish Values?” during Wilshire Boulevard Temple’s monthly “In Pursuit of Truth” series. Davids shows how the embrace of Jewish values enriches and brings meaning to people’s lives. Start your Sunday with coffee, discussion and enlightenment. 9:15 a.m. Free. Wilshire Boulevard Temple, 3663 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. (213) 388-2401.

MON MAR 4

Ravid Kahalani

Yemen Blues
Blending Yemenite melodies and contemporary funk, Yemen Blues perform at The Pico-Union Project. Founded in Israel, Yemen Blues is led by Ravid Kahalani, a former cook and dancer. The group’s album “Insaniya” fuses jazz, blues, Latino and African beats. 7:30–10:30 p.m.  $20 advance, $30 door. The Pico-Union Project, 1153 Valencia St., Los Angeles. (213) 915-0084.

TUE MAR 5

Anti-Semitism and Hate
With much of the national discourse focused on the rise of anti-Semitism, Anti-Defamation League (ADL) CEO Jonathan Greenblatt, ADL Regional Director Amanda Susskind and Valley Beth Shalom (VBS) Senior Rabbi Ed Feinstein attempt to provide clarity on the subject. They discuss “The State of Anti-Semitism and Hate,” a pertinent topic after October’s massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh and the more recent desecration of dozens of Jewish gravestones in France. 7:30 p.m. Free. Advance registration required. Valley Beth Shalom, 15739 Ventura Blvd., Encino. (828) 788-0567.

THU MAR 7

“Foxtrot”

“Foxtrot”
The award-winning, controversial 2017 Israeli film “Foxtrot,” following a troubled family that must face the facts when something goes terribly wrong at their son’s desolate military post,
screens as part of Kehillat Ma’arav’s Jewish Film Series. Popcorn, candy and sodas served. Doors open 7 p.m., screening 7:30 p.m. $10. Kehillat Ma’arav, 1715 21st St., Santa Monica. (310) 829-0566.

Dan Schnur
USC adjunct faculty member and Jewish Journal columnist Dan Schnur moderates the ongoing Wilshire Boulevard Temple series, “What Does it All Mean? Conversations With Smart People About Navigating Life in the 21st Century.” The topic is “Gender in the Workplace: What Comes After #MeToo?” 7:30 p.m. Free. Wilshire Boulevard Temple Irmas Campus, 11661 W. Olympic Blvd. (213) 388-2401.


Have an event coming up? Send your information two weeks prior to the event to ryant@jewishjournal.com for consideration. For groups staging an event that requires an RSVP, please submit details about the event the week before the RSVP deadline.

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‘Heart,’ Bet Tzedek Galas; Rabbi Hudson a ‘Hero’

The annual gala for the Israeli humanitarian organization Save a Child’s Heart was held Feb. 9 at UCLA’s Royce Hall and honored Jeff Frost, president of Sony Pictures Television Studios, and Dr. Hillel Laks, a UCLA professor of surgery known for his pioneering surgical approaches to complex heart disease.

The program, which had the theme “Mystery of the Heart,” was hosted by actress Lisa Edelstein, known for her role as Dr. Lisa Cuddy on the TV show “House.” It featured children and their parents who benefited from the humanitarian organization’s assistance with pediatric cardiac care.

One of the parents, Melissa Baldwin, talked about how she and her husband, Larry, adopted their now 9-year-old son, Benjamin, from China. Benjamin had multiple heart problems and was flown to Israel, where he had several heart operations that saved his life.

Save a Child’s Heart is an Israeli humanitarian organization that specializes in charitable pediatric cardiac care and provides urgent pediatric heart surgery and follow-up care for children from developing countries. Close to 5,000 children from more than 50 countries have been saved by the organization’s assistance. 

Among the event’s performers was Lior Suchard, an Israeli mentalist who wowed the audience by guessing the name of a middle-aged woman’s first love and seemingly transforming a $1 bill into $200.

Other performers and presenters included Jim Belushi with The Sacred Hearts band, the Voices of Hope Children’s Choir and actor Freddie Highmore (“The Good Doctor”).

— Ayala Or-El, Contributing Writer


Temple Israel of Hollywood Associate Rabbi Jocee Hudson is to receive the Rabbinic Human Rights Hero Award. Photo courtesy of Temple Israel of Hollywood

Clergy-led organization T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights will present Temple Israel of Hollywood (TIOH) Associate Rabbi Jocee Hudson with its Rabbinic Human Rights Hero Award. Hudson is one of four people who will be honored with the award during a ceremony in New York in May.

According to a statement from TIOH, the award recognizes Hudson’s “accomplishments in leading TIOH’s social justice and human rights efforts over the past four years.” At TIOH, Hudson has engaged the community in statewide campaigns on criminal justice reform, affordable housing and climate change, among other efforts.

T’ruah, which aims to protect human rights in North America, Israel and the Palestinian territories, said Hudson was chosen for the award “for mobilizing her community to work with partners from diverse backgrounds around issues of race and criminal justice, housing and food insecurity, climate change and gun violence.”

TIOH Senior Rabbi John Rosove congratulated Hudson on being named for this award, saying it “establishes Hudson as one of our Reform movement’s national leaders in human rights work. She does so with her characteristic focus, vision, audacity, modesty, humility, compassion and passion for coalition-building, justice and human rights.”

Hudson said many people have helped make TIOH the social justice-oriented Reform congregation that it is today.

“My service at Temple Israel in the area of social justice is made possible by the large and amazing team of skilled, fearless and tireless volunteers who I work with,” she said. “I humbly accept this award on behalf of each and every one of them.”


From left: Bet Tzedek President and CEO Jessie Kornberg; Bet Tzedek Co-Founders Rabbi Stanley Levy and Luis Lainer; board chair Meryl Chae; Sandy Samuels; Retired L.A. County Superior Court Judge Terry Friedman; attorney David Lash; and L.A. City Attorney Mike Feuer celebrate Bet Tzedek’s 45th anniversary. Photo courtesy of Bet Tzedek

More than 1,000 lawyers, community leaders and philanthropists gathered at the JW Marriott at LA Live on Feb. 19 to celebrate Bet Tzedek’s 45th anniversary.

The annual gala dinner raised more than $2 million to support Bet Tzedek’s work to provide free legal services to those in need. The event also honored Edward Elsner, a senior outreach attorney at Bet Tzedek, with the Jack H. Skirball Community Justice Award; Richard B. Jones, a Bet Tzedek board member and wealth manager at Merrill Lynch, with the Luis Lainer Founder’s Award; and Bank of America with the Rose L. Schiff Commitment to Justice Award.

Delivering welcoming remarks, U.S. Congresswoman Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) applauded Bet Tzedek’s “45-year commitment to removing the barriers to justice so many face in our community.” 

In presenting the Rose L. Schiff Commitment to Justice Award, Los Angeles City Attorney and former Bet Tzedek Executive Director Mike Feuer said, “there can never be a thing as too much justice in our city.”

Bet Tzedek, which is Hebrew for “House of Justice,” was founded in 1974 as an all-volunteer agency fighting for Holocaust victims. Today, the organization provides free legal services for low-income individuals and families in Los Angeles.


YULA Boys High School and Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon Chabad students got
together for a monthly Torah-learning session. Photo courtesy of Josh Resin

For the fifth time in the past year, boys from Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon Chabad (YOEC) in Los Angeles joined students at YULA Boys High School on Feb. 7 to learn the talks and teachings of the rebbe on the weekly Torah portion. 

When the students from the two schools came together, Rabbi Joseph Schreiber, principal of Judaic Studies at YULA, spoke about the importance of unity among Jewish students in Los Angeles and the opportunity to strengthen the L.A. Jewish community. 

Chabad emissary Josh Resin, who helped create the program, said in an email that the initiative was necessary at a time when there is so much dividing the Jewish community. 

“The coming together of students from different backgrounds who all share a love for the study of Torah is of the utmost importance, especially in a time where there are many things that may serve to divide us,” Resin said. “To focus on what we have in common rather than what sets us apart.”

The joint learning sessions are held about once a month, Resin said.

Those involved in the program include Rabbi Ezra Binyomin Schochet, dean of YOEC, and Rabbi Arye Sufrin, head of school at YULA Boys High School.


Want to be in Movers & Shakers? Send us your highlights, events, honors and simchas. Email ryant@jewishjournal.com.

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Duvid Swirsky: Art Imitating Life Imitating Art

The son of Americans who moved to Israel, Duvid Swirsky grew up without a television, phone or refrigerator. But, there was a record player, and his parents’ albums of Bob Dylan, Van Morrison and Neil Young were the soundtrack of his youth. So was the music of Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach, who founded Moshav Mevo Modi’im, where Swirsky grew up from age 10. It wasn’t long before he was playing music with Carlebach, and a neighbor’s child, Yehuda Solomon. Eventually, the boys co-founded their own band, Moshav.

Together, they play world music festivals, clubs and the gamut of Jewish events. Moshav is just one of Swirsky’s outlets for jamming with his “soul family.” Now based in Pico-Robertson, Swirsky, 42, also works with singer/songwriters, Dov Rosenblatt and Ami Kozak. Their trio, Distant Cousins, has licensed original tunes to TV, film and commercials. Their song “Are You Ready” can be heard in the current DreamWorks animated featured film, “How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World.” 

While Distant Cousins makes its on-screen debut this month as a shul band backing a rabbi portrayed by Billy Crystal in the new dramedy, “Untogether,” Swirksy performs twice monthly at Friday night services with Nefesh at Wilshire Boulevard Temple in Koreatown.

Jewish Journal: You are a rocker who lends your voice to a rocker on TV in ABC’s “A Million Little Things.” How did that happen?

Duvid Swirsky: The Distant Cousins’ manager, Dave Morris, is to thank for that. He saw an opening and suggested I record — just me and the guitar.

JJ:  What is it like being part of prime-time television?

DS: It’s amazing. I’ve worked with the composer and it’s been great. It’s what we call planting seeds. You watch them grow. When these things happen, I’m very grateful.

JJ: How did you also get cast in a fictitious shul band in “Untogether,” and how is it performing at an actual shul with Rabbi Susan Goldberg’s community, Nefesh?

DS: “Untogether” came through a music supervisor. Once they were using some of our music in the movie, they let us know they needed a band. I don’t think of myself as an actor. I was just playing guitar and singing. They just happened to put that in a movie. In the film, it’s Distant Cousins.

Dov and Ami are Orthodox and don’t play instruments on Shabbat. But if they would play on Shabbat, I would have them play at Nefesh. I feel really close to Rabbi Susan Goldberg and the community.  In order to be an artist these days, you have to do a lot of things.

JJ: What was it like working with Billy Crystal?

DS: Billy Crystal was so sweet. It was really a nice experience, We were hanging out and playing [songs] between takes. If he were a real rabbi, I would join his shul.

JJ: What do you love about working with Moshav co-founder, Yehuda Solomon?

DS: We grew up in it and it just kind of keeps going. We play lots of weddings, concerts, everything. We are a real working band. We were in the mood recently to record songs we grew up singing. And then we started writing some new music and that’s [our latest album], “Shabbat I & II.”

“Untogether” came through a music supervisor. Once they were using some of our music in the movie, they let us know they needed a band. I don’t think of myself as an actor. I was just playing guitar and singing. They just happened to put that in a movie.”

JJ: You’re also slated to tour this spring with Distant Cousins. What do you love about about the band?

DS: The Cousins really feel like family as well. Our kids play together.

JJ: What’s the greatest difference between your two bands?

DS: Moshav is the Middle East. It’s very rhythmic, very much about live shows. It’s about dancing and music from our roots, music from Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Yehuda is my brother from another mother. He’s incredibly talented. With Yehuda, it feels like a musical, gypsy caravan. We’ve been together over 20 years. So it’s like a marriage. We’ve gone through every phase. And Distant Cousins is three writers and producers — a working partnership. Each has a recording studio. It’s a lot about getting assignments and turning them over quickly.

JJ: What is your most personal song?

DS: They are all kind of personal. A song can’t be good unless it’s personal. The Distant Cousins song “Your Story” is close to my heart.

JJ: How does your work express who you are?

DS: I love playing and creating music. The more I am doing it, I’m happy, Distant Cousins has a brand new album, “Next of Kin.” Moshav’s latest recording is “Shabbat I & II.” And Nefesh — those are the three things I love and want to share with the world as much as possible.


Lisa Klug is a freelance journalist and the author of “Cool Jew” and “Hot Mamalah: The Ultimate Guide for Every Woman of the Tribe.” 

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Make Your Own Eco-Friendly Confetti

Everyone loves throwing confetti, but no one likes cleaning it up, which is why so many event venues ban it. Well, here’s a different kind of confetti. It’s made of leaves, so it’s eco-friendly and biodegradable. When you use it outdoors, it just blows away and disintegrates like other foliage. Now that’s worth celebrating.

What you’ll need:
Leaves
Hole punch

 

1. Gather your leaves. Some leaves work better than others. Select hearty leaves that will not tear easily. Also, collect leaves with different shades of green so the confetti will be more colorful.

 

2. Use a hole punch on the leaves to make the confetti. 

 

3. If you have access to leaves from lemon trees, be sure to include them in your confetti mix. The citrus scent from the leaves is heavenly.


Jonathan Fong is the author of “Flowers That Wow” and “Parties That Wow,” and host of “Style With a Smile” on YouTube. You can see more of his do-it-yourself projects at jonathanfongstyle.com.

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