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March 27, 2019

Hillel Executive and Steinhardt Accuser Sheila Katz to Head National Council of Jewish Women

(JTA) — Sheila Katz, a vice president of Hillel International, has been named as the new chief executive officer of the National Council of Jewish Women, succeeding Nancy Kaufman.

Katz, 35, will join NCJW this summer after 12 years with Hillel, where she launched MitzVote, a non-partisan voter engagement campaign; co-founded “Ask Big Questions,” a national initiative focused on building civil dialogue; and served as a steering committee member for the White House Campus Interfaith Challenge during the Obama Administration.

NCJW, with 90,000 members, has a significant Washington presence in promoting reproductive rights, voting rights and children’s issues.

Katz currently serves on the executive team of the Safety Respect Equity Coalition, which is working to address sexual harassment, gender discrimination and the gender pay gap in Jewish workplaces and common spaces, according to NCJW.

Earlier this week Katz was among several women interviewed for a New York Times/Pro Publica investigative article concerning sexual harassment allegations against Jewish philanthropist Michael Steinhardt. Katz said that as a young executive at Hillel, Steinhardt repeatedly asked if she wanted to have sex with him when she was sent to solicit a donation for her organization. In an op-ed Tuesday for the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, she called on Jewish institutions “to implement systems to deal with harassment and abuse when they occur.”

Steinhardt said in a statement that he made such comments “in jest,” and apologized, although his family and foundation say he disputes parts of the article.

Kaufman served as NCJW’s CEO for the past eight years.

“I am honored and proud to take the helm of NCJW and help write the next chapter in its history,” Katz said in a statement. “There is no other organization in the country like NCJW – one that harnesses the power and voices of Jewish feminists, isn’t afraid to challenge the status quo, and creates positive social change that makes a real difference in the lives of millions of people every day.”

Hillel Executive and Steinhardt Accuser Sheila Katz to Head National Council of Jewish Women Read More »

Charlottesville Killer Pleads Guilty to Hate Crimes

WASHINGTON (JTA) — The neo-Nazi who rammed his car into a group of counter-protesters at a far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer, pleaded guilty to federal hate crimes, months after a state court convicted him of murder.

James Fields Jr., who was 20 in August 2017 when he staged the attack, pleaded guilty Wednesday to 29 hate crimes after prosecutors removed a charge — racially motivated violent interference with a federally protected activity — that might have brought a death penalty. This reverses the not guilty plea he entered for the federal charges last year.

Fields will be sentenced this summer. The state jury in December recommended life plus 419 years.

William Barr, the U.S. attorney general, called Fields’ crime “domestic terrorism” and in a statement that referred to the mass murder earlier this month of 50 Muslim worshippers at a New Zealand mosque, allegedly carried out by a white supremacist.

“In the aftermath of the mass murder in New Zealand earlier this month, we are reminded that a diverse and pluralistic community such as ours can have zero tolerance for violence on the basis of race, religion, or association with people of other races and religions,” he said.

President Donald Trump has drawn criticism since the attack for his equivocal responses ascribing violence to both sides in the incident.

Charlottesville Killer Pleads Guilty to Hate Crimes Read More »

Letters: Israel Respects All Faiths, Reality vs. Fiction, A Deserved Tribute

Israel Respects All Faiths
In discussing the value of Israel to the United States, one important point cannot be overlooked: 70 percent of Americans identify themselves as Christian (Pew Research Center, 2018) (“What America Gets From Israel,” March 15). Israel provides stable, secure and unobstructed access to the holiest sites in the Christian world. 

The alternatives would make many a Christian, just like many a Jew, shudder. Moreover, the ongoing pressure, often aided by violence, on Middle Eastern Christians and their resulting drastic decline in numbers have not gone unnoticed by their Christian brethren here and abroad. In the past 100 years, their number fell from 20 percent to 4 percent of the region’s populaton. 

In the midst of this long-term exodus, Israel stands out as a nation respectful of other faiths. Any danger to Israel would thus translate into the danger to the spiritual center of the Christian world.
Lane Igoudin, Los Angeles

Reality vs. Fiction
Leo Rozmaryn, in his column titled “Hard Lessons Before Steps Toward Peace” (March 8), wrote of the Arab-Israeli conflict that it will never end until both sides are willing to relinquish their prejudices. “Each side is taught to regard the other as stereotypical evil, the ultimate ‘other,’ people to fear and loathe,” he said.

These remarks are grossly unfair and inaccurate. While Arabs learn through propaganda and lies to hate Israelis, it is not at all propaganda the other way around. Arabs enjoy the right to live freely among the Israelis, benefiting from all that Israel has to offer. There are even Arabs serving in the Israeli Knesset. 

Israelis are taught to distrust many Arabs not through prejudice but through a long history of experience. Through Israel’s great humanitarianism and generosity, it has so very often given up land for peace. Invariably, Arabs have broken these peace agreements at the cost of Jewish lives, and many Arabs living in Israel have butchered Israelis.

The tremendous difference in attitude on either side can best be summed up by the responses made by Arab vs. Israeli soldiers when asked the question about how they feel when they kill one another, as broadcast in an episode of “60 Minutes” many years ago. The Arab soldier said it gave him great pleasure to kill Israelis. The Israeli soldier — in sharp contrast — said that it’s always sad when you have to take a life, but sometimes you have no choice. Again — in sharp contrast — the Israeli military routinely warns Arab civilians in advance when an attack is pending in their area, voluntarily giving up the element of surprise, often at the cost of Israeli lives.

Rozmaryn simply closes his eyes and his mind to the simple truth when claiming that “both” sides are prejudiced.
Mendi Segal, Los Angeles 

Mosque Shootings’ Aftermath
After 50 people were slaughtered in New Zealand, the Jewish Federation of Pittsburgh set up a New Zealand Islamophobic Attack Emergency Relief Fund. Did I miss it? Or did the L.A. Federation sit idly by and do nothing?
Marilyn W. Alper, via email

A Deserved Tribute
Your coverage of Esther Elfenbaum, “A Pioneer for Early Childhood Jewish Education” (March 15), was outstanding! As one of her protégés, I am profoundly blessed to have had her as my friend and mentor for so many years. She embodied everything that Jewish education should be. Our early childhood education office at the American Jewish University is rich with her books, photos and artifacts from a lifetime of service to our community. Thank you and may her memory be a blessing.
Tamar Andrews, via email

Three Mile Island Facts
This is a response to Cherie S. Lewis’ letter in the Jewish Journal (“Nazi-Looted Art and a Family’s Other Tragedy” (March 15).

Lewis is correct that Ava Cassirer was a co-plaintiff in the infamous Nazi-looted art case. It is also true that she started and sponsored a foundation to help burn victims, because she was one such burn survivor. 

However, Lewis also states that Ava suffered burns on the Pennsylvania Turnpike as a result of the Three Mile Island (TMI) nuclear accident. According to all public sources, there weren’t even radiological health effects from the accident. The Pennsylvania Department of Health for 18 years maintained a registry of more than 30,000 people who lived within 5 miles of Three Mile Island at the time of the accident. The state’s registry was discontinued in mid-1997, without any evidence of unusual health trends in the area. There were more than a dozen major independent health studies of the accident that showed no evidence of any abnormal number of cancers around TMI years after the accident. The only detectable effect was psychological stress during and shortly after the event. 

I happen to agree with Lewis’ essential, damning conclusion about nuclear power as a “clean” energy source. Nevertheless, similarly to concerns regarding climate change (another major issue impacting all of us), we must stick to the facts in our arguments. Ava Cassirer’s generosity and greatness in creating a foundation for burn victims is not lessened by knowing that she was not a victim of TMI. Indeed, may she rest in peace.
Peter Hantos, via email

The Problem With Palestinians
How should Israel respond to the recent rocket attacks on Israel from Gaza? What American Jews do not yet get is that the Palestinians have it in their DNA to keep this going forever. That is exactly why they will never have a state, even though the two-state solution would be best for them.

Most Israelis accept the fact that the price they have to pay for having their own home is to humor the Palestinians in every cycle of violence. That humor also includes, unfortunately, hitting them back when they do this.

Israel cannot afford to commit the complete genocide it would take to wipe out the problem. We know that world opinion would be near lethal! Israel can barely afford afford “slapping them back,” for all the lefties and liberals of the world would again explode about the unfair “disproportionality” of not enough Jews dying in the fracas.

The Germans got slapped and woke up. The Japanese got slapped and woke up. Even the British got slapped and woke up. No big or small slap, unfortunately, will ever wake up the Palestinians, because they act as if they have it deeply in their DNA, religiously, emotionally and probably physically by this time. Their prophet decreed to “take it by the sword” and even achieve the rewards of heaven if you die trying.

The takeaway for the Israelis? It just is what it is, a part of being able to live freely in a home where they can’t kick you out — Israel.
Steve Klein, Encino

College Admissions Cheating
The parents who lied and bribed to get their kids into certain colleges were not engaged in victimless crime (“A Good Name,” March 22). Qualified applicants were pushed aside. 

If the wealthy and privileged are allowed to plead their way out of jail time, we will have reinforced our nation’s practice of two-tiered, discriminatory justice. We should stop thinking of America as a democracy until we adjust the scales by initiating procedures to release those incarcerated for nonviolent, minor infractions.
Hal Rothberg, via email

What CAIR Really Is
Rabbi Sarah Bassin thinks CAIR is a “civil rights organization” (“Muslims, Jews Need to Support Each Other,” March 22). The United Arab Emirates thinks it is a terrorist organization. If it is terrorist enough for any Arab government, it is terrorist enough for me.
Louis Richter, Reseda

Heed the Islamic Watchdogs
M. Zuhdi Jasser has been on the front line of the Muslim reform movement for years (“Islamists in the House,” March 15). And there are others, like former Wall Street Journal reporter Asra Nomani, as well. Ask Pamela Geller. However, like those involved with many non-leftist causes, they have been marginalized in the mainstream media and political circles.

It would have been great foresight had Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey appointed Jasser to John McCain’s vacant Senate seat — Reps. Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib would have had real “resistance.”
Enriqué Gascon, Westside Village


Now it’s your turn. Send in your letters to the editor. Letters should be no more than 200 words and must include a valid name and city. The Journal reserves the right to edit all letters. letters@jewishjournal.com.

Letters: Israel Respects All Faiths, Reality vs. Fiction, A Deserved Tribute Read More »

AIPAC Protest Features Organizer Calling Progressive Zionists ‘Nazis’

The organizer of the March 24 protest against the AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) Policy Conference called progressive Zionists “Nazis” during the Washington, D.C. protest that began in front of the White House and ended in front of the AIPAC conference.

The protest was spearheaded by Al-Awda, an organization that advocates for the Palestinian Right of Return and has reported ties to myriad Palestinian terror groups. Al-Awda’s executive director, Abbas Hamideh, is listed as the “national organizer” on the protests’ GoFundMe page.

Hamideh can be seen on video saying, “We are not here to be lovey-dovey with the progressive Zionists, because a progressive Zionist is like a progressive Nazi! There is no difference between a progressive Zionist and a progressive Nazi member!”

According to the Jerusalem Post, Hamideh also said during the protest, “We are demanding an end to AIPAC’s influence over our American politicians. We demand an end to the Benjamins that go to the politicians.”

Hamideh has a history of voicing support for Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah on social media and has tweeted that “Israel does not have a right to exist,” adding that the Jewish state is a “terrorist entity.” He was also seen in a photograph with Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) in January.

Chants of “Israel is a terror state” can also be seen from the anti-AIPAC protest:

The Progressive Zionists of the California Democratic Party (PZCDP) said in a statement sent to the Journal via email, “We acknowledge activists protesting AIPAC this year believe that Zionist Jews are the real anti-Semites — if this belief seems incredibly paradoxical and inaccurate, that is because it is. Unfortunately, PZCDP sees similar rhetoric every day from other fringe anti-Israel activists on the left, within the California Democratic Party and elsewhere.”

“We would always prefer to see people confront their anti-Semitism and change rather than continue to espouse offensive hateful statements that call for the denial of Jewish self-determination,” the PZCDP continued. “However, we also recognize an apology would be extraordinarily off brand for this strain of vicious anti-Jewish ‘activism’.”

AIPAC Protest Features Organizer Calling Progressive Zionists ‘Nazis’ Read More »

We Were Slaves: Joshua Kaufman, Survivor

Passover is approaching and many of us will sit around the seder table to “remember that [we] were slaves in Egypt” (Deut. 15:5). Some Los Angeles residents will remember this more than others. My friend’s father, Joshua Kaufman, who still works as a plumber in LA, was a teenager in Auschwitz. I sat outside the shul with him last Yom Kippur, taking a short break between services, and he told me stories from his remarkable life.

Joshua spoke of how, at 14 years old, he would volunteer to help clean up the gas chambers after Jews had been gassed, and his job was to load bodies onto carts, which often involved breaking the bones of children and babies because their corpses became stuck together during the gassing. His intention of volunteering was to stay busy and understand his surrounding, it usually included extra food which would increase his chances of survival. It clearly worked.

Joshua was given Presidential recognition and honoured at the recent State of the Union address. President Trump spoke of how Joshua recalled being liberated by American soldiers and said: “the American soldiers were proof that God exists, and they came down from the sky, they came down from heaven”.

The 2015 documentary “The Liberators: Why We Fought” begins with him on the Huntingdon beach boardwalk meeting one of the American soldiers who liberated him. Despite towering over 6ft tall, he knelt down on the ground to kiss the shoes of the former soldier, who was supporting himself using a walking frame.

Joshua recently celebrated his 91st birthday. He was born in 1928 in Debrecen, Hungary, to a family of Satmar Hasidim. After being liberated from Dachau concentration camp and rebuilt his life in Israel, fought in the wars of 1956, 1967, and 1973 as a heavy equipment manager stationed in the Negev, Southern Israel, and moved again to America. While on a trip to visit his father in America, he took a road trip to Los Angeles, fell in love with Margaret, a Hungarian baby survivor, got married and started a family. I occasionally see him at Shabbat dinners and every moment with him is an inspiration, as he leads Shabbat blessings, starts singing Hebrew songs, and sits with a commanding presence. 

He has seen things we only read about in the history books, lived through unimaginable horrors, and yet he walks tall and looks as strong as a rock. His daughter Rachel is a talented teacher of Jewish studies at Los Angeles Hebrew High School and teaches popular adult education classes at Pico Shul. She explained how her father had only begun sharing his Holocaust experiences five years ago. His sharing is fortunate for all of us, since we get to learn, appreciate and respect what he has seen and the voices that long ago said to him, “if you survive don’t let them forget us”.

Last Yom Kippur was a personal revelation for me. “How did you continue life after what you saw?”, I asked. He spoke of how it was his mental attitude that helped him survive. How he saw people giving up and committing suicide by running towards the electrified fence and grabbing on to it with both hands. He mentioned to me that he tried convincing people not to give up. In The Liberators he talked of how he would run to the fence every day at 6 a.m. to bring back the bodies of people who had killed themselves by electrocution, and would usually find some food in their pockets which helped him survive.


He survived through sheer will, choice and belief. He recounts how memories of his beautiful family and upbringing gave him strength. And of course, mazal, some good fortune.

The official unit who cleared bodies from the gas chambers were known as Sonderkommando, and fortunately, he was not a part of that group. The Nazis referred to them as Geheimnisträger, the “bearers of secrets” because they saw exactly what was going on, and they were periodically gassed every 3-12 months so that the secrets would not get out. 

Joshua, however, volunteered to clear the chambers. His intention was to stay busy and be helpful, which would increase his chances of survival. It clearly worked.

Here in Los Angeles where the majority of young professionals have spent some time on a therapist’s couch, where many have taken anti-depressant or anxiety medication, Joshua Kaufman stands tall, strong and optimistic. A survivor of Auschwitz, a survivor of Israel’s wars, a father and grandfather, a dedicated and loving husband, he still drives his work truck around LA and carries out his jobs as a licensed plumber. 

I look at him and think, no matter how challenging life might be at times, “what can we possibly complain about?”.

We Were Slaves: Joshua Kaufman, Survivor Read More »

Ilhan Omar Should Start Helping Palestinians

Jews are looking awfully weak these days. The growing hysterics in our community in reaction to anti-Semitic and anti-Israel comments from people like Rep. Ilhan Omar have gone a little too far, if you ask me. I get that we must confront the disease of anti-Semitism, but we shouldn’t look fragile and lame while doing so.

Turning Ilhan Omar into some all-powerful force that threatens Jews and Israel is the wrong way to go. We should condemn when we have to, but the louder and more hysterical we get, the more we elevate people like Omar into a sort of cult status.

Omar’s actions represent a scratch on the skin of Jewish success, and she knows it. You can go on about how she is a “rising threat” to the Jews, but Omar knows better. She knows that Jews have made it big time in this country, that a century of incredibly hard work and resourcefulness has made them one of the biggest success stories in American history.

Over in the Middle East, the advances of Israel compared to its Arab and Muslim neighbors are almost embarrassing. Omar must know that, too. She can tweet all she wants about Israel “hypnotizing the world,” but she knows deep down that the real hypnotizing has been done by Arab dictators teaching Jew-hatred to divert attention from their criminal failures to help their people.

And this is where self-righteous critics like Omar really lose me: What have they ever done to help their people? They’re really good at bashing the Jewish state, but when will they start helping the oppressed Arab and Muslim victims of the Middle East?

The millions of hours and dollars devoted to the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel over the past decade have done zilch to help the Palestinians. If anything, it has hurt them by perpetuating a state of chronic victimhood.

It’s the general view across the ideological spectrum that neither the Palestinians nor the Israelis are ready and able right now to “end the occupation,” regardless of who’s in power on either side. This should not be used as an excuse not to help Palestinians and promote real, concrete programs that will help the Palestinian economy and improve living conditions.

But by focusing so single-mindedly on Israel and the Jews—whether it’s the “lobby power” in the U.S. or the “Israel power” in the Middle East—people like Omar do nothing to help Palestinians. Shame on them.

It’s time we call them out. Anti-Semitic attacks have failed the Arab world. The BDS movement has failed the Palestinians.

There’s nothing wrong, of course, with vigorous criticism of Israeli policies, but, as history has shown, when it’s all you do, you do nothing to advance the welfare of your people.

If Ilhan Omar is serious about helping the oppressed Arab and Muslim victims of the Middle East, including in her country of Somalia, she’s got plenty of non-Jewish targets to go after. If she’s serious about helping Palestinians, in addition to criticizing Israel, she can go after the corrupt regimes in Ramallah and Gaza who keep failing their people.

By neglecting to do that, Jew-obsessed critics like Omar are the ones who are weak and lame.

Ilhan Omar Should Start Helping Palestinians Read More »

Bernard-Henri Lévy on Anti-Semitism, the Diaspora and the ‘Miracle’ That Is Israel

War correspondent, philosopher, activist, TV star: Bernard-Henri Lévy is among the world’s most prominent — and controversial — public intellectuals. He’s searched for Daniel Pearl’s killers, followed in the footsteps of diplomat and historian Alexis de Tocqueville, staunchly defended Israel. His latest, “The Empire and the Five Kings: America’s Abdication and the Fate of the World,” takes on the implications of 21st-century American Isolationism. David Suissa, the Journal’s publisher and editor-in-chief, spoke with Lévy for his “Suissa” podcast, from which this interview was condensed. 

Jewish Journal: I’ve been fascinated by your journey. You studied philosophy and you end up going for the adventure. You’ve been in so many places in the world where they had conflicts and wars. At which point did you realize that you were not just going to be a person of the mind?

Bernard-Henri Lévy: Immediately. I decided since the very start that the best thought is the thought which can be proved by experience; and the best way, the most honest way to speak and to make philosophy is to go and check with your own eyes. 

JJ: It nourishes the philosophy, the more experience you have on the ground?

BHL: Of course it does. You have to live as you think and you have to think as you live. There cannot be separation between the two. You have to act. That’s why each time in my lifetime Israel was under attack and the war, I was on the ground. I was with my Israeli sisters and brothers during the Lebanon War. In Gaza, I was the only foreigner to be authorized to go with an Israeli special unit inside Gaza to be a witness of what was happening. I wrote about this war. I wrote about the question if Israel was turning its back to the true creed of Zionism. And my opinion was no, it does not turn its back. Israel was keeping faithfulness to the ideal of Zionism. But I wanted to see first. I’m not a philosopher of propaganda. I’m not a philosopher of just ideas. I like to see first, and then my words are more outspoken and, I think, just more true. 

JJ: I think one of the reasons we’ve seen such a schism between the Jews of Israel and Jews of America is there’s a lack of appreciation here for the facts on the ground and the reality that Israelis go through. 

BHL: This is one of the reasons for this schism. But the main point for me, this schism has to be overcome. If the jury in Israel and the jury in the West, and especially in America, divorce, really, it is the start of a war — a moral, intellectual war — between Jews that will be dramatic for all of us. Israel without a Diaspora would be another Israel. The Diaspora without Israel would be another Diaspora. They feed each other. 

“The very creation of Israel was a secular miracle, that it was, and it is, an everlasting exception to all the political rules.”

JJ: I wonder if one of the problems here is that we elevate certain values and character traits above others; curiosity is way, way down at the bottom of the list. When you don’t have that — Israel is just an idea, an abstract idea. 

BHL: There is a lack of curiosity, but there is a lack also of Jewish thinking and Jewish intelligence. The certainty that you are right and that the other one is wrong, this is not a Jewish attitude. The Jewish attitude taught by the Talmud teaches that truth is always uncertain. To be a Jew means to have the conversation indefinitely open. You know how the Talmud works. It is an endless chain of paradoxes, of replies: Who creates a new question, which creates a new reply, and so on and so on. 

JJ: I wonder if here in America, when you hear so much criticism of Israel, as a philosopher, do you think there’s some merit to that?

BHL: As a philosopher, I can tell you that the very creation of Israel was a secular miracle, that it was, and it is, an everlasting exception to all the political rules. It never happened in the history of mankind that people decide overnight to make a state and to make it democratic, and that it works.

JJ: After the darkest moment in our history, when we had every excuse to wallow in victimhood for decades.

BHL: After the darkest moment of our history, with people coming from all over the countries with people that never knew what democracy meant. There was this miracle of a democracy built overnight. It was not even dreamt by the philosophers of the political thing. It is renewing itself every day. 

JJ: And still vibrant. 

BHL: You can agree or not agree with the policy of a government. I’m not very comfortable myself with the current policy of the current government, but what I must say is that I know very few democracies in the world as strong as the Israeli democracy. Israel should be considered as an example for every democracy in the world, including the French one or the American one. I said that recently to a group of young partisans of the [boycott, divestment and sanctions] BDS movement. I told them, from the point of view of your liberal values, Israel, far from being despised, should be praised: the multi-ethnicity, the tolerance to the other, the transparency, the fight. Israel is one of the most shining examples of what liberal democracy can mean, and I try to say each time I can when I go on a campus of an American university.

JJ: I wonder sometimes whether a certain amount of anti-Semitism is just the price we have to pay for not becoming pathetic victims who just fail in life, you know.

BHL: Some anti-Semitism is probably inevitable. Alas, I don’t believe in a world without anti-Semitism. The question is, shall we contain it or let it expand? We have to contain it by our force of intelligence, force of the spirit, force of the study, and force of the organization. 

My theory in my book — and not only in my book — is that there is a battle going on. There is a struggle going on. It’s very harsh, very fierce. It may be lost, it may be won, and I am well decided to win. 

JJ: That’s the Jewish way.

BHL: That’s the Jewish way.


You can listen to the full interview here. Listen to more episodes of the David Suissa podcast here.

Bernard-Henri Lévy on Anti-Semitism, the Diaspora and the ‘Miracle’ That Is Israel Read More »

Mint Tin Miniature Art Dioramas

Mint tins are such a fun canvas for crafting. When the mint tin is closed, it looks like an ordinary tin container. But then you open it and reveal a miniature wonderland of creativity. You can decorate both sides with decorative paper, artificial flowers, magazine ads — or things you have just hanging out in your junk drawers. It’s also fun to customize it with photographs and quotations. I made the one in this example for a friend’s dog named Speck. As you can see, these mint tin dioramas make great keepsakes and gifts. 

Keep in mind that Altoid mints are not kosher, but you can find kosher brands like Meltzer’s, or better yet, order new, empty tins in bulk from Amazon. 


What you’ll need:
Mint tin
Decorative papers
Miniature decorative elements
Photographs
Glue

 

1. Cut decorative paper to fit the two sides of the tin and glue it in place. I used scrapbooking paper, but you can let your imagination go crazy here and line the tin with old maps, book pages, magazine ads, tickets, packaging, comics pages, etc.

 

2. Pick a quotation that’s meaningful to you, print it out and glue it on one of the sides of the tin. 

 

3. The fun part is gluing some small decorative elements around the tin. I featured some paper flowers that I use for card-making, and I even added some plastic leaves and artificial turf. As I said, whatever’s in your junk drawer. 

 

4. Customize with a photo. I made the photo dimensional by gluing a small piece of foam behind it and gluing that onto the tin. You can also print out a name and add it to the diorama.


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.

Mint Tin Miniature Art Dioramas Read More »

JJ Kids Calendar

MARCH

March 31: BJE/JKIDLA Day of Service Learning
Gather at the Jewish Home for the Aging in Reseda for challah making, painting and planting potted plants, arts and crafts and singing with the residents. Volunteers of all ages are welcome. 9:45-11:45 a.m. 7150 Tampa Ave., Reseda. (323) 761-8631.

APRIL

April 6: MAYUMANA
A little like the percussion-driven, wordless off-Broadway hit “Stomp,” a little like mime ensemble Blue Man Group, this Israeli-based troupe will energize teens and preteens with “Currents,” inspired by the historic competition between Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla to discover new energy sources. The show takes audiences on a journey between two troupes, each using inventive choreography, music and visual effects to convey different views of light and electricity. 7:30 p.m. $39-$99. Segerstrom Center for the Arts, 600 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. (714) 556-2787.

April 7: Sunday in the Park
 PJ Library and American Jewish University partner for this an afternoon of family fun. Enjoy horseback riding, art activities, live animals, games and kosher barbecue. Open to everyone. Noon-4 p.m. $5 (food extra). American Jewish University, Brandeis-Bardin Campus, 1101 Peppertree Lane, Simi Valley.

April 13: Festival of Books 
Celebrate a love of reading and explore all things literary at this year’s festival, which features children’s book authors and publishing houses, a children’s stage, entertainers, and storytime. USC, University Park Campus, Los Angeles. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Also, April 14, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Free.

April 14: “Fiddler on the Roof”
The beloved Broadway classic about Tevye the Milkman, his wife, Golde, and their five daughters — along with the people of Anatevka — returns to the stage in Los Angeles. What better way to introduce the kids to “To Life,” “If I Were a Rich Man,” “Sunrise, Sunset,” “Matchmaker, Matchmaker” and “Tradition.” Runs through May 5. Tickets start at $35. Ages 5 and older only. Pantages Theatre, 6233 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles. (323) 468-1770.

April 14: Grandparent & Me
Sing songs with Doda Mollie, enjoy an interactive story, make crafts and share Passover snacks. Kids ages 3 to 6 years old and their grandparents or other special friends are welcome. 10-11:30 a.m.  $25 per family (in advance), $30 (at the door). AJU-Whizin Center, 15600 Mulholland Drive, Los Angeles.  

April 25: Passover Playdate in the Park
Listen to a story and play with friends while enjoying Passover snacks. Sponsored by University Synagogue. 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Douglas Park, 2439 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica. RSVP to alevitt@unisyn.org or (310) 472-0603.

April 27: Super Kidz Expo
At this Only for Kids by Kids Event, the Convention Center becomes the ultimate place for babies through preteens — complete with reptile adventure, ninja campout, bounce houses, princess tea parties, petting zoo, toddler zone, science station, face painting, magic shows, photo ops and special guests (plus rest areas and shopping for the parents). 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Also April 28. $15 (general), free (younger than 12). L.A. Convention Center, South Hall K, 1201 S. Figueroa St., Los Angeles.

April 28: Skirball Puppet Festival: “Fantastic Creatures”
Celebrate the art of puppetry and the magic of storytelling at the Skirball Cultural Center’s eighth annual Puppet Festival. This campus-wide, daylong festival features new and classic tales told with a variety of puppets, live music and art-making with talented puppeteers and artists from across the country, working in a range of cultural and artistic styles. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Advance tickets to Noah’s Ark will not be available. Limited one-hour tickets will be available to Skirball Puppet Festival attendees only on a first-come, first-served basis. $10-$15 (Members and children 2 and younger, free). Skirball Cultural Center, 2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 440-4500.

MAY

May 19: Celebrate Israel Festival 2019
Bring the family to celebrate Israel’s 71st Independence Day. Enjoy a day filled with activities, live entertainment, glatt kosher food, kids area, challah bake, shopping, jewelry workshop, amusement rides, petting zoo and more. Tickets start at $10. Noon-7 p.m. Cheviot Hills Recreation Center, 2551 Motor Ave., Los Angeles. (310) 837-5186.

JUNE

June 1: Kidz Bop World Tour
The brand-new show is an interactive experience for children of all ages. The Kidz Bop Kids will perform some of today’s biggest hits “sung by kids for kids,” with new sets, choreography and the songs kids know and love. 6 p.m. Tickets start at $27. Hollywood Bowl, 2301 N. Highland Ave., Los Angeles. (323) 850-2000.

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