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April 24, 2019

A Chicago Space for LGBTQ Jews Becomes a ‘Queer Yeshiva for Everybody’

CHICAGO (JTA) — In order to become a rabbi, Benay Lappe had to go back in the closet.

It would be nearly a decade after she was ordained in 1997 that the Conservative movement’s Jewish Theological Seminary would lift its ban on gay rabbis. So she spent six years during her studies hiding her sexuality and relationship status.

“It was extremely, extremely difficult and painful,” recalled Lappe, 59. “I had no idea it was going to be as hard as it was.”

The experience led Lappe in 2003 to found Svara, a yeshiva where she and other members of the LGBTQ community could be themselves and study Jewish texts.

“I was in the closet in school and never really had the chance to learn with my whole self present,” she told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency earlier this month at Svara’s headquarters in this city. “So when I got out of school I was a rabbi, but needed to learn for the first time in an integrated way. On a very personal level I started Svara to be that place.”

In its beginning, the yeshiva was just that. But things have changed as the LGBTQ movement has gained wider acceptance, including in the Jewish community. Today, all non-Orthodox Jewish movements ordain LGBTQ rabbis and allow same-sex weddings.

At an evening beit midrash program earlier this month called a “One-Night-Stand,” about two-thirds of the 42 attendees did not identify as part of the LGBTQ community. That is higher than usual — usually between half to nearly everyone at Svara events is queer depending on the type of program— but not entirely out of line.

Lappe traces the shift back to 2013, when she partnered with the nondenominational Jewish community Mishkan Chicago. Attendance grew, including by those who do not identify as LGBTQ.

“We evolved into becoming a queer yeshiva for everybody,” she said. “Our project is about changing the world through the insights of queer people but for the benefit of everybody, just like the feminist project isn’t ultimately for the benefit of women only.”

While Lappe still wants Svara to be a space for LGBTQ people, that in itself is no longer the singular focus.

“We’re not a ‘gay thing,’” she said. “We’re a Talmud revolution thing.”

Svara now has a budget of $1.4 million, which comes from program fees and donations from individuals and organizations such as the Jim Joseph Foundation, Crown Family Philanthropies, the Walter & Elisa Haas Fund and the Natan giving circle. The yeshiva hosts a range of programs, including weekly Jewish learning programs, fellowships and a five-day Queer Talmud Camp, which attracted applications from some 500 people, mostly millennials.

Lappe also encourages former students to host their own learning events, and there are currently 11 informal study centers around the country created by Svara alumni.

The rabbi believes that the Jewish community needs to revitalize its approach to text study, making it more accessible to people of all backgrounds and abilities, and find new innovative ways to read the canon. Lappe says that many queer people’s experiences of being outsiders and on the margins make them “particularly suited” to do so.

“We’re focused on raising up queer and trans teachers and readers and beit midrash conveners and rosh yeshivas who have the life experience of what we call ‘crash,’” she said. “Crash” is what happens when people realize “‘the way I thought the world was ain’t the way it is, and the fact that I’ve survived means that I know a lot about how to deal with that.’”

Some people still come to Svara because it is the only Jewish learning space where they feel comfortable. That’s the case for 25-year-old Essie Shachar-Hill, who identifies as non-binary.

“I come to this one because it feels really low barrier, and accessible and inclusive, but I wouldn’t necessarily risk my own safety going into a more traditional” Jewish environment, Shachar-Hill said.

But for others, it’s Lappe’s accessible approach to Talmud study that draws them.

At Svara, texts are read only in the original language, and students are expected to look up in dictionaries any Hebrew or Aramaic words they do not understand. For some people that might be every single word, but Lappe is there to help.

At the “One Night Stand” event earlier this month, Lappe and another Svara staffer, identified by the sparkly purple fairy wings they wear on their backs, walked around to answer questions about the passage being studied.

Benna Kessler, 31, has been attending Svara events regularly for 3 1/2 years. She does not identify as queer but appreciates the focus on studying Talmud in its original languages.

“I think it’s a very empowering place to learn [and] also a very inspiring place to learn,” she said. “It has brought me back to my love of being a student.”

t’s not always easy to find the balance between a space where queer people feel comfortable and one that is open to allies, Lappe said, pointing to the fact that at the “One Night Stand” event, LGBTQ participants were in the minority.

“For the trans folk in the room, it probably didn’t feel as much like ‘I can bring out some of my ideas and thoughts’ as much as it does on nights when it’s 70 percent queer and trans folk,” she said.

Ultimately, Lappe sees her yeshiva as appealing to people who feel alienated from the Jewish community, whether due to their sexuality, gender expression or something else.

“That’s what happens in a queer normative space, the folks that bring their full selves are not just the LGBT folks,” she said. “It’s folks who didn’t feel like they could talk about ‘X’ about themselves in another space. Now they can.”

A Chicago Space for LGBTQ Jews Becomes a ‘Queer Yeshiva for Everybody’ Read More »

NJ Mayor to Twitter User Complaining About Jews: ‘Call the Police’

John Ducey, the mayor of the Brick Township in Ocean County, N.J., is under fire for telling a Twitter user who was complaining about there being Jews at community parks and beaches to “call the police.”

The original tweet, which has been deleted, was from a Twitter user named “@sims10471,” who wrote to Ducey on April 23, “can we please do something about our parks and beaches. They are being invaded by hasidic [sic] and orthodox Jews and being ruined. Our tax paying residents are being forced out while politicians sit and do nothing.”

Ducey subsequently replied, “Our parks security has started already. Call the police and they will send them out.”

https://twitter.com/issacsnyc/status/1120863315377500162

A backlash ensued against Ducey for not calling out the anti-Semitism @sims10471’s tweet. Ducey later tweeted, “I did not want 2 acknowledge the bigotry thereby giving the commenter the power he was seeking. Instead I chose 2 try and diffuse the situation by getting the commenter 2 focus his anger at me. I was successful in that but obviously failed in the big picture.”

https://twitter.com/MayorDucey/status/1121036642427506690

Ducey apologized in an April 24 interview with Advanced NJ Media, stating, “The original tweet from the commenter was a disgusting, bigoted statement. My suggestions was what we would do with anyone if — if — there were any problems. People are misinterpreting it as me telling him to call park security. There was nothing to call about.”

Ducey has been the mayor of Brick Township since 2014.

NJ Mayor to Twitter User Complaining About Jews: ‘Call the Police’ Read More »

Teenage Jewish Brother and Sister from London Among Sri Lanka Bombing Victims

(JTA) — Two Jewish teenage siblings from London were among the more than 320 people murdered in terrorist attacks in Sri Lanka, the British media reported.

Amelie and Daniel Linsey, 15 and 19, who are dual citizens of the United States and the United Kingdom, were eulogized Wednesday in the British Parliament during a tribute to the eight British nationals killed in Islamists’ attacks Sunday on Christians in the south Asian island nation, the Jewish News reported Wednesday.

“While the intended target of this atrocity were clearly meant to be Christian, the terrorists’ bombs did not discriminate,” lawmaker Howard Leigh said in the House of Lords. “The Linsey family were members of my synagogue. They shared the same classes as my children. Amelie celebrated her bat mitzvah last March, reading with poise, maturity and warmth from our Torah scrolls.”

Leigh is president of the Westminster Synagogue in London.

He added: “Daniel was especially interested in Jewish festivals. He came to our synagogue before Purim … to help our staff setting up for the evening festivities. We have pledged as a community to offer our love and support to the Linsey family and do everything we can every step of the way. The Jewish community is used to counseling mourners who have been affected by the terrorists’ bomb, and this is another chapter in this sad and sorry book.”

The siblings’ father, Matthew Linsey, also a dual citizen of the U.S. and UK, also was in Colombo during the attacks.

His children died in a bombing at their hotel.

“When the bomb went off, it’s hard to describe … It’s like a wave coming through of pressure,” he told CNN on Tuesday.

“They actually went down to the buffet for and got the food for me and filled up my plate. And then I said I wanted a bit more. My daughter said I’ll get it, and then the bomb went off and they were both running towards me.”

Saying his instinct was to get out “as soon as possible,” Linsey said, “maybe I should have just stayed and covered them with my body,” adding that after a second blast near the hotel elevator, they “both were unconscious.”

“My daughter seemed to be moving, my son wasn’t. A woman offered to take my daughter downstairs to the ambulance. I needed help moving my son. Someone helped me move him down the stairs and they both ended up in the same hospital. I traveled with my son to the hospital.”

In the hospital, Linsey said he “yelled for help” and lost his voice, adding that “the people were very helpful … They did their best. They were very efficient and very kind.”

Amelie and Daniel’s bodies are still in Sri Lanka as arrangements are being made to bring them back for burial in the United Kingdom.

The Islamic State claimed responsibility, without evidence, for the coordinated bomb blasts at churches and hotels that killed at least 321 people and wounded 500. Investigators are looking for links between the Islamic State and a local Muslim extremist group, National Thowheed Jamath, which Indian intelligence had warned were planning some kind of attack.

Teenage Jewish Brother and Sister from London Among Sri Lanka Bombing Victims Read More »

Israeli Minister Denounces Sanders for Calling Netanyahu Government ‘Racist’

Israeli Minister Tzachi Hanegbi, who is a member of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s cabinet, condemned Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) for calling the Israeli government “racist.”

In a CNN town hall on April 22, Sanders, who announced that he was running for president in February, said that while he is not “anti-Israel,” he thinks Netanyahu “is treating the Palestinian people extremely unfairly.”

“I just believe that the United States should deal with the Middle East on a level playing field basis,” Sanders said. “In other words, the goal must be to try to bring people together and not just support one country, which is now run by a right-wing, you know, dare I say, racist government.”

He added, “Israel has every right in the world to exist and to exist in peace and security and not be subjected the terrorist attacks. But the United States needs to deal not just with Israel, but with the Palestinian people, as well.” 

Hanegbi told Israeli television station Reshet 13 that Sanders’ remarks were “really strange.”

“The Israeli government is not a racist government, nor does it include a single racist minister,” Hanegbi said. “To be right wing is not illegitimate, and it is odd that the Democratic Party allows one of its senior members to not respect the democratic choice of the State of Israel.”

AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) indirectly rebuked Sanders by tweeting, “The U.S.-Israel alliance serves America’s interests. We benefit from the close bonds between the governments and peoples. Name-calling by political leaders against the democratically elected government of Israel is counterproductive to maintaining close ties and advancing peace.”

Sanders also criticized Israel’s handling of the border riots at the Gaza Strip in May and was one of the 23 senators who voted against anti-boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) legislation in February, although Sanders expressed opposition to the BDS movement in January.

Israeli Minister Denounces Sanders for Calling Netanyahu Government ‘Racist’ Read More »

Jewish Couple Robbed and Threatened In Their Paris-Area Home

(JTA) — A French Jewish couple robbed in their Paris-area home may have been targeted because of their mezuzah, a watchdog group on anti-Semitism said.

Four masked men threatened to kill the couple in Monday night’s incident in the crime-stricken northern suburb of Aubervilliers, the National Bureau for Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism, or BNVCA, wrote in a statement Wednesday. The group did not name the couple, who were not injured but are “completely traumatized,” the statement said.

The robbers stole all the valuables they could carry.

“Again, the myth of Jews having money prompted criminals to prefer Jews as targets,” the statement read.

In addition to assaults motivated by anti-Semitism, French Jews in recent years have reported an increase in the number of incidents also featuring robbery.

Some victims were selected because they are Jewish, while others began as random criminal acts before escalating into violent assaults after the perpetrators discovered the Jewish identity of their victims.

One such incident is believed to have ended last year with murder of Mireille Knoll, a Jewish women who had escaped a mass roundup of Jews in Paris during World War II. She was found dead in her apartment in eastern Paris by firefighters called to extinguish a blaze.

Prosecutors indicted two men for her murder, including a neighbor who is accused of planning to rob her. Both defendants have denied the actions attributed to them.

Jewish Couple Robbed and Threatened In Their Paris-Area Home Read More »

Letters: Passover Wishes, The ‘Power of Journalism’, Rabbis and Politics 

Passover Wishes
At this joyous time, I hope you will join me in celebrating the values of Passover, which inspire all of us to be grateful for how far we have come — and to remind us of how much more work we have left to do together.

This May, I have the privilege to be an event co-chair of the official City Hall celebration of Jewish American Heritage Month. This year, we are recognizing a history of Jewish women creating change in Los Angeles. As we prepare for this special celebration, I can’t help but think of all of the trailblazing female heroes of the Passover story — Moses’ mother and sister, Yocheved and Miriam, the midwives Shifra and Puah, and Pharaoh’s daughter Bithiah — whose actions helped make it possible for Moses to lead the Jewish people out of slavery.

In this difficult climate, where we are often seeing angry behavior and hearing painful rhetoric, these heroes help us all remember that each of us can do our part to act positively in the face of seemingly overwhelming circumstances. Recalling this journey of the Jewish people from slavery to redemption offers an opportunity to all of us in Los Angeles to take stock, to be grateful and to step forward to make good change. We have a choice to help strengthen every Angeleno’s life with the same values celebrated each Passover.
David E. Ryu, Los Angeles City Councilman, District 4


The ‘Power of Journalism’
The power of journalism should be kept in mind when we read that Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) has alleged that Attorney General William Barr is acting as a defense lawyer for President Donald Trump instead of as the nation’s chief law enforcement officer (“Bob Woodward and the Power of Journalism,” April 19).
The irony is that in 2013, then-Attorney General Eric Holder said, “I’m still the president’s wing-man, so I’m there with my boy.” This astonishing statement was made in 2012, when Holder was held in criminal and civil contempt of Congress for failing to turn over documents related to the “Fast and Furious” scandal.

We should all be appalled that the thoroughly professional, impartial and honorable Barr is being maliciously misrepresented, while no one sounded an outraged alarm when Holder stated clearly that he saw himself as President Barack Obama’s lawyer.
Julia Lutch, Davis, Calif.


Rabbis and Politics
It seems that the discussion concerning politics on the pulpit, and whether Israel can be a democratic country and still remain a Jewish state, offers no consensus (“Three Rabbis Discuss Politics on the Pulpit,” April 19).

No country is purely a democracy, certainly not ours — we have two legislative chambers, each controlled by different parties. It’s a matter of degree. Whether Israel can remain essentially democratic and a Jewish state depends on demographics. If Israel continues to retain an advantage in Jewish birthrate over Arabs, it would ensure that Israel will remain Jewish. But this, of course, is not certain. It’s more important for Israel to remain a Jewish state even at the expense of less democracy. The Arabs have 22 states in the Middle East, none of which is remotely democratic.

One way to guarantee that Israel will remain a Jewish state is for Israel to split into two countries — the so-called two-state solution. But this will lead inevitably to Palestinian terrorists living a stone’s throw from heavily populated Israeli cities. Unless the Palestinians renounce their intent to destroy Israel and its Jews, this plan is suicidal.

In the case of politics on the pulpit, no matter how disturbing and fractured, there should be no attempt to prohibit a discussion involving politics. How would this be enforced? Subjects critical to Judaism and Israel should not be proscribed. It is rather disconcerting that these subjects are continually pondered when a consensus opinion is never achieved.
C.P. Lefkowitz, Rancho Palos Verdes


Failure in Leadership
Kudos to Stephen D. Smith in pointing out that “[our] leaders need to take bold steps to counter the spread of hatred” (“New Zealand Murders: There Are No Words,” April 5).

What if our leaders are the problem?

Recently, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said to CNN’s Christiane Amanpour that “there isn’t a taint of anti-Semitism in the Democratic party.” 

With leadership like this, and with feckless university administrations encouraging and condoning violence and shutting down free speech, how lame is their effort to combat the hatred spreading throughout our country and around the world?

These “leaders” are only part of the problem. The rest of it is in our not holding them accountable by not withdrawing our financial support and by not seeking our political affiliations elsewhere.

We can show with our bodies and our wallets that their partnership with the haters can be opposed and ultimately defeated.

Clucking our tongues cannot be not defined as action. Only action is action.
Steve Klein, via email


Perceived Biases at the Journal
After breezing through a couple of articles by Dan Schnur and Charles Bybelezer in the April 12 Journal, it’s plain to see your contributing staff is dominated by haters of President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The posture of your publication is: Don’t trust Trump and Netanyahu to befriend the Jews or be good for Israel. You pooh-pooh the tirades of Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) against Israel to be totally opposite of the Democratic Party’s support of Israel. No one in that party has denounced them as yet. “Nationalism and xenophobia” notwithstanding, Trump and Netanyahu are patriots trying to save their countries.
Chuck Colton, Los Angeles


Anti-Semitism at Harvard
I attended Harvard from 1946 to 1951. It was generally understood that 30% of the student body was Jewish.  Lawrence Summers, a recent president of Harvard, is Jewish. Lawrence Bacow, the current president, is Jewish.

What more do you want?
Fred Heim, ’51, via email


Mueller Report
I’ve been reading opinion pieces on the Mueller report from the right and left, and anticipating Attorney General William Barr’s redacted version.

But as we won’t get the big picture until we see the full report, President Donald Trump’s tax returns, all of the Christopher Steele dossier (a former British intelligence agent), and learn which way the wind is blowing on the myriad indictments and investigations, all we know for sure is that Trump trumpeters fear our knowing too much, like the whole truth and nothing but the truth. They must have missed school on the days the Constitution and democracy were taught.
Hal Rothberg, via email


Hamas’ Past and Future
This week, certain Democrat politicians of the “progressive” variety had their moral degeneracy exposed by Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar. In celebration of the 18th anniversary of Hamas’ first rocket attack on Israeli population centers near their border with the Gaza Strip, Sinwar threatened that his movement will continue to fire rockets at Israel.

The intended targets are primarily Israeli civilians. Sinwar also denied any ceasefire understandings constitute a peace agreement. Hamas considers the State of Israel to be one big settlement that needs to be annihilated.

U.S. politicians who speak charitably about Hamas, and frankly, any organization that refuses to denounce Hamas, such as CAIR, are no friend of the Jewish nation.

Reps. Ilhan Omar (D.-Minn.), Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) and others use leftist Jews who support their anti-Semitism as political cover. They assert fraudulently that they are merely protecting the civil rights of American Muslims.

My late father used to say, “If you lie down with dogs, you get up with fleas.” I suspect that Democrats who turn a blind eye to this behavior will face the wrath of U.S. voters with common sense in 2020.
Desmond Tuck, via email

Letters: Passover Wishes, The ‘Power of Journalism’, Rabbis and Politics  Read More »

What’s Happening: Yom HaShoah Events, Film Fest, Sephardic Shabbat

FRI APRIL 26

T’Marim Sephardic Shabbat 
Enjoy Mediterranean melodies and sunset breezes when Valley Beth Shalom (VBS) Musician-In-Residence Asher Levy and Cantor Phil Baron lead a T’marim Sephardic Shabbat service at VBS. T’marim means “dates,” signifying the fruity sweetness of the praying and singing. Levy, 23, plays an oud, which resembles a lute, and sings traditional chants of his Syrian ancestors’ Aleppo Halabi community. Congregants typically sway and clap when they hear traditional Jewish music from Yemen, Turkey, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Morocco and Greece. 6 p.m. mezze. 6:30 p.m. Sephardic Shabbat service. Free. Valley Beth Shalom, Sher-Lopaty Chapel, 15739 Ventura Blvd., Encino. (818) 788-6000.

Rabbi Zoe Klein Miles

Green New Deal
After Jazz Shabbat services at Temple Isaiah, three veteran climate activists sit down with Rabbi Zoe Klein Miles and examine the Green New Deal, a proposed stimulus program that theorizes humans must take drastic measures in the next dozen years to reduce carbon emissions to counteract the effects of global warming. The speakers are Joe Galliani, organizer of the South Bay Los Angeles Climate Action Group; Russell Greene, who serves on the advisory board of Climate Mobilization; and Kathy Seal, chair of the West L.A. chapter of Citizens Climate Lobby. 6:15 p.m. Jazz Shabbat services. 8-9:30 p.m. program. Free. Temple Isaiah, 10345 Pico Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 277-2772.

SUN APRIL 28

Holocaust Survivors
In observance of Yom HaShoah, a family community service at Valley Beth Shalom, co-organized by the Mati Center, commemorates the last living survivors of the Treblinka death camp. 3:30 p.m. doors. 4 p.m. family community service. Valley Beth Shalom, 15739 Ventura Blvd., Encino. (818) 788-6000.

Yom Hashoah Commemoration
Six decades after the inaugural Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Memorial Day) took place in Israel, the Los Angeles community gathers in Pan Pacific Park to honor the victims and survivors of the Holocaust. Organized by the Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles in partnership with more than 50 organizations and synagogues, the public event features survivor testimonies, music and fellowship. 2-3:30 p.m. Free. Pan Pacific Park, 7600 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles. Street parking available on Beverly Boulevard near the park and at CBS Studios, located at Fairfax and La Brea Ave. (323) 761-8000. For information, contact rzaiden@jewishla.org or visit the website. 

5K Walk For Families
The San Fernando Valley branch of Na’amat USA, which serves poor and vulnerable women and children in Israel, holds a five-kilometer walk. Adults are encouraged to attend along with their children and pets. 9 a.m. $25 per walker. Lake Balboa Park, 6300 Balboa Blvd., Encino. (818) 995-4035.

“Forgotten Communities”
“Forgotten Communities: The Holocaust of the Greek Jews,” Sinai Temple’s Holocaust community memorial program for families with children ages 9 and older, recalls the lost and the rescued. The program is co-organized by the Mati Center. After the memorial ceremony, guests are invited to the “Legacy Café” to meet with survivors and hear their stories. 11-11:45 a.m., memorial ceremony. 11:45 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Holocaust survivors. Free. Sinai Temple, 10400 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. (323) 351-7021. For more information, email maticenter@gmail.com. sinaitemple.org.

“Homeward LA”
“Homeward LA,” a 10-day, citywide event continuing through May 5, features monologues based on stories of homeless people. At Temple Adat Elohim, 18 community members share stories, with Leasa Shukiar directing the readers, who are backed by a six-person musical ensemble. Denise Cortes, executive director of Harbor House, opens the evening with an introduction about Conejo Valley homelessness. 6:45 p.m. $20. Temple Adat Elohim, 2420 E. Hillcrest Drive, Thousand Oaks. (805) 497-7101.

“The Wall”
To commemorate Yom HaShoah, a staged reading of “The Wall” will take place at the Pasadena Playhouse. The play recalls the heroic resistance and fighting by desperate Jews in the 1943 Warsaw Ghetto uprising. Nazis entered the ghetto on April 19 to deport surviving Jews, and for 25 days Jews fought back until being overcome and sent to death camps. The play is read by the JFed Players of the Jewish Federation of the Greater San Gabriel and Pomona Valleys. 8-10 p.m. $22. Pasadena Playhouse, 39 S. El Molino Ave., Pasadena.  (626) 356-7529.  

TUE APRIL 30

“The Dig”

“The Dig”
Written and performed by Stacie Chaiken and featuring original music written and performed by Yuval Ron, the one-woman play, “The Dig: Death, Genesis and the Double Helix,” follows an American archeologist seeking to discover the truth about an artifact in Israel, one that could have transforming effects not only on Israel and the Middle East but on the entire world. 7 p.m. Free. UCLA Glorya Kaufman Dance Theater, 10367 Bunche Hall, Los Angeles. (310) 825-9646.  

Trump Aide At Sinai
Jason Greenblatt, assistant to President Donald Trump and special representative for international negotiations, sits down for a discussion with Sinai Temple Senior Rabbi David Wolpe. Although there is plenty about Trump to analyze, including the recent release of the Mueller report, the two likely will discuss Greenblatt’s work crafting the highly anticipated Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement. The son of Hungarian-Jewish refugees, Greenblatt, the father of six children, worked as Trump’s real estate lawyer before Trump’s presidential victory in 2016 resulted in him joining the president’s administration. 7:30-9:30 p.m. $18 general. Free, Sinai members. Sinai Temple, 10400 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 481-3228.

WED MAY 1

Past Meets Present 
On an evening when the worst tragedy in Jewish history is remembered, Matthew Friedman, senior associate regional director at the Anti-Defamation League, discusses how anti-Semitism has become ubiquitous again. The program is a joint effort of Shomrei Torah Synagogue and Temple Aliyah. 7:15 p.m. minyan. 7:30 p.m. Friedman speaks. 8:30 p.m. memorial service. Free. Temple Aliyah, 6025 Valley Circle Blvd., Woodland Hills. (818) 346-3545.

“The Strength to Tell”
The Yom HaShoah community-wide program at Beth Jacob Congregation features the screening of a film about the trial in Israel of Nazi commander Adolf Eichmann, a major organizer of the Holocaust, who was hanged in 1962. “The Strength to Tell” is about at-risk Jerusalem teenagers who interview the final surviving witnesses of the Eichmann trial. The teens create a play built around the stories they were told. 7:30-9 p.m. 
Beth Jacob Congregation, 9030 W. Olympic Blvd., Beverly Hills. (310) 278-1911.

THU MAY 2

“Love, Life and Paint!”
The latest “With Daniella” event, featuring psychotherapist and relationship coach Daniella Bloom and leading networker Avital Khazanov, is an adult paint night — without brushes and without fingers. Curious? Join single-and-ready-to-mingle Jewish professionals from ages 30 to 50 for “Love, Life and Paint!” Bloom talks about the heart of creativity with the goal of helping guests visualize the kind of life and love they desire. Wine, cheese and painting aprons provided. Kosher options available. 8 p.m. $39-$59. San Fernando Valley Art Center, 18312 Oxnard St., Tarzana. (818) 697-5525., daniellabloom.com.

“Menashe”

“Menashe”
A screening of “Menashe” — a 2017 drama that tells the story of a recently widowed Chasidic grocer in Brooklyn who struggles against tradition to gain custody of his son — concludes Kehillat Ma’arav’s Jewish Film Series. The Yiddish-language film was shot in secret within the Chasidic community. 7 p.m. doors open. 7:30 p.m. film. $10. Kehillat Ma’arav, 1715 21st St., Santa Monica. (310) 829-0566.

“The Passengers”

L.A. Jewish Film Festival
The 14th annual Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival, a weeklong celebration of Jewish film, features 27 screenings at 11 theaters and venues from Beverly Hills to Santa Clarita. The opening night celebrates the pioneering Hollywood filmmaker Carl Laemmle, who, affectionately known as “Uncle Carl,” founded Universal Studios and helped rescue 300 families from his native Germany. The 2018 documentary “Carl Laemmle” screens tonight and Hollywood director Peter Bogdanovich receives the Marvin Paige Hollywood Legacy Award. Additional films playing through May 9 include “Shepherd: The Story of a Jewish Dog,” the personal story springing from when Nazis barred Jewish ownership of pets; culinary comedy “Chewdaism: A Taste of Jewish Montreal,” and “The Passengers,” about the history of Ethiopia’s Jewish community. The Jewish Journal co-sponsors the festival. Opening night: 7:15 p.m. doors, 8 p.m. program begins. $40 opening night. For other films: $15 general admission, $13 students and seniors. For more information, call (800) 838-3006 or visit the website.


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.

What’s Happening: Yom HaShoah Events, Film Fest, Sephardic Shabbat Read More »

AMIT Event, Friends of Sheba Honors, SSI Visitors

The recipients of the American Israel Gap Year Association’s (AIGYA) inaugural Rosina Korda Gap Year Scholarship were revealed in surprise ceremonies for each of the three winners this month.

The winners are Leora Lalezari, a student at YULA Girls High School, Calev Knopf of Valley Torah High School and Rory Meyerson of Yeshiva High School of Arizona.

“The joy, fellowship and surprise among the teachers and classmates was apparent during the announcements when AIGYA and Korda family representatives announced the winners,” an AIGYA press release said.

“This scholarship reflects Mrs. Korda’s deep love of Judaism and connection to Israel,” AIGYA founder and Executive Director Phyllis Folb said in the release.

AIGYA, a Los Angeles-based organization that produces the largest Israel gap year fair on the West Coast and the only cross-denominational fair in the country, made the scholarship available to all 2018 fair attendees.

Two winners will take part in in-depth Torah learning and the third will pursue a career and a language-focused Israel gap year program, AIGYA said.

A $5,000 tuition voucher, donated collectively by the extended Korda family, will go toward each of the respective programs the winning students chose to attend.

“As we say at the Passover seder, if AIGYA had only helped us to select a program for my son, it would have been enough for us,” said Charles Meyerson, who traveled with his son, Rory, to the Los Angeles fair from Arizona. “As it turns out, God repaid our efforts in traveling from Arizona many times over with Rory’s win.”

The 2019 AIGYA Israel Gap Year Fair will be held on Nov. 21.


From left: Michael Roklen, Jessica Abo, Dafna Landau, Briana Benaron and Leslie Schapira attended a young professionals event organized by AMIT L.A. NewGen. Photo courtesy of AMIT L.A.NewGen

Young professionals came together on March 5 to support the Israel education network AMIT L.A. NewGen and to spend an evening with journalist and social entrepreneur Jessica Abo.

Nearly 50 people turned out at the Beverly Hills home of Phyllis and Jay Schapira and discussed ways to navigate social media while staying true to one’s self and finding happiness.

 Abo’s new book, “Unfiltered: How To Be as Happy as You Look on Social Media,” highlights the importance of reaching one’s fullest potential through self-empowerment, a key goal of AMIT Children’s work in ensuring the success
of its students across Israel, the organization said.


From left: Thando Mlauzi, Isaac Dayan, Mmamalema Molepo, Jessica Khalili, Justin Feldman and Klaas Mokgomole participated in a pro-Israel speaking tour at UCLA and Santa Monica College.
Photo courtesy StandWithUs

Students Supporting Israel (SSI) at UCLA and Santa Monica College hosted two South African student leaders on April 16 and 18.

Klaas Mokgomole from the University of Witswatersrand in Johannesburg and Mmamalema Molepo from the University of Cape Town believed that Israel was an apartheid state until they traveled to Israel and the West Bank and saw the reality, according to pro-Israel education organization StandWithUs. Both activists now contend that the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement is lying about Israel.

They appeared in Los Angeles as part of the “Reclaim Your Story” tour, a partnership between Africans for Peace, a collective of independent students, scholars and activists who bring an African lens to the global debate on peace and stability in Africa and beyond, and StandWithUs, an international Israel education organization that believes education is the road to peace. Mokgomole and Molepo interacted with students interested in learning more about their change in attitude to Israel and later spoke to the campus communities.

According to StandWithUs, Justin Feldman, president of SSI at UCLA, and Yitz Shafa, president of SSI at Santa Monica College, agree that Mokgomole and Molepo enlightened the students on what apartheid truly was in South Africa and how Israel is the antithesis of it. They also said the activists’ views, formed through their own personal experiences, are much needed to dispel the misinformation about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict being circulated on campuses, especially during April’s “Israeli Apartheid Week.”

From left: Friends of Sheba Medical Center’s 2019 Women of Achievement Luncheon Committee members Melody Pakravan, Carrie Sherman, Sorelle Cohen,
Jennifer Cohen, Marianne Berman, Parvin Djavaheri, Aviva Harari, Ruth Steinberger, Lynn Ziman and DeeDee Sussman. Photo courtesy of Friends of Sheba Medical Center

Friends of Sheba Medical Center held its annual Women of Achievement Luncheon at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills on April 4. 

The luncheon brought together members of the community in support of Israel’s Sheba Medical Center, Tel HaShomer and benefited the medical center’s new pediatric laser treatment center.

More than 360 guests attended the sold-out event, which opened with a reception and silent auction. CBS 2 and KCAL 9 reporter Brittney Hopper emceed.

The luncheon featured a keynote presentation by professor Josef Haik, director of the National Burn Center at Sheba Medical Center. He spoke about Sheba’s vision for the pediatric laser treatment center — a state-of-the-art facility that will use advanced laser technology to treat severe burn scars that cause physical and emotional pain in children. Advanced research and pediatric laser application also will be taught to all dermatologists and plastic surgeons throughout Sheba Medical Center. The unique combination of

research, treatment and teaching makes the pediatric laser treatment center at Israel’s National Burn Center the first of its kind in the world. 

The luncheon honored two community leaders, Rosalie Zalis and Yafa Hakim. Zalis was presented with the 2019 Women of Achievement Award for leadership in her remarkable career and philanthropic endeavors. Hakim was honored with the 2019 Marjorie Pressman Legacy Award for her longstanding service and dedication to Israel’s hospitals, including Sheba Medical Center.

“It was an honor to hear from professor Haik, who flew in from Israel to speak about Sheba’s incredibly innovative pediatric laser burn treatment center, which has the power to save the lives of children suffering from severe, painful and disfiguring burn scars,” luncheon co-chair Lynn Ziman said. “Thanks to our hardworking luncheon committee and the support of our community, Friends of Sheba is making a significant impact in the lives of thousands of children, not only from Israel but around the world.”

Additional organizers were luncheon co-chair Judy Shapiro, décor chair Beverly Cohen and honorary chair Carrie Sherman. 

“The 2019 Women of Achievement Luncheon highlighted the need for our community’s next generation of leaders to support Israel and Israel’s flagship institutions, such as Sheba Medical Center,” Friends of Sheba Medical Center Executive Director Molly Soboroff said. “As Rosalie Zalis declared, now is the time for future leaders to show up, support Israel and invest in the future of global medicine with Sheba Medical Center.”


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Email ryant@jewishjournal.com.

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The Non-Jewish Spanish Artist Who Makes Challah Covers

Originally from Spain, creative artist Almudena Solana has called Los Angeles home for the past several years. In Spain, she was a journalist and an author of several novels. She is also the creator of “Fabric Poetry”, one-of-a-kind scarves sold at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). Solana considers her portable, wearable art to be a natural extension of her writing background — an artistic form of expression that tells a story. She has expanded her appreciation of beauty and storytelling to the creation of one-a-kind challah covers, even though she isn’t Jewish. 

Jewish Journal: What brought you to Los Angeles?

Almudena Solana: We moved to L.A. as a family about three years ago. We made the decision to move here because I wanted to push my work further, translate more of my novels, and work on adapting one of my novels into a screenplay. 

JJ: What led you to start making challah covers?

AS: I love to tell stories. I’m a curious person, which is why I first went into journalism and then crossed over to fiction. After writing several novels, I started doing one-of-a-kind scarves. Then a friend saw my scarves and suggested I do challah covers. At first I didn’t know what a challah cover was. But I learned, and when I saw a Shabbat table set about a year ago, I thought it was so beautiful. I loved the beauty of the bread in the middle of the table with the cover — a perfect little cover. So I stated creating challah covers, and I’m passionate about doing them. 

JJ: It sounds like you feel a connection to the Shabbat experience.

AS: Very much so. I feel almost like I do Shabbat at my house, because I love the concepts of quiet and calm and peacefulness. I want those concepts to be a part of my family and part of our values. I love to be surrounded by beauty, and I think the Shabbat experience is beautiful. 

JJ: Did you learn about Shabbat from the same friend who encouraged you to make the challah covers?

AS: Yes. I met my friend Anne Goldin at the public library. I speak English, but it’s not my first language. So when we moved to Los Angeles I decided to get tutoring at the library to improve my English skills. Anne was one of the volunteers and we became good friends. She knew about my scarves. She introduced me to the idea [of challah covers] and taught me about them.

JJ: Do you feel a connection to the Jewish community?

AS: I feel very close to Jewish traditions and Judaism connects with me. From my friend Anne, to other Jewish people I’ve met, I’ve found the face of Judaism to be generous. I’m a very spiritual person and not against anyone or anything. I appreciate learning about diversity and other people. With all the world’s religions, we are all human. There is only one sky above us. It’s important to me to be a good person, and someone who practices the art of living. To me, a challah cover is part of the art of living. They are part of the peace that I want in my work and my life. 

JJ: Where can people find your unique challah covers?

AS: They’re sold at the Sinai Temple Sisterhood Judaica Shop, the Mezuzah Gallery and, most recently, at the Skirball Center. 

JJ: Are you going to be designing custom mezuzah covers as you do with your scarves?

AS: Yes. I see that as a natural progression and something I’d love to do. I would love to create challah covers that convey special meaning to people, that represent a part of their lives. One of the reasons I love creating these pieces of art that are one of a kind is because each human being is one of a kind. So to be able to customize them would be a way to recognize what is special and unique to someone. There are mass produced challah covers all over but, as I have been told, nobody is doing these one-of-a-kind covers. The people who buy them appreciate the artistry that goes into it. 

JJ: What materials do you use? 

AS: I love to put together textiles from all over the world. I tell a story with each challah cover and each has a title. It could be “Calm,” “After the Rain,” or “Sweet Home.” I’m inspired by those ideas. I travel and bring back fabric and different textures from everywhere. The fabric itself is an important piece of the cover and the story. I use silk, linen, organza, cotton and more. One challah cover can have up to seven types of fabric and textures. I believe in sustainability, not following what is trendy and stylish right at the moment. I want to create pieces that last, where the beauty is timeless. I pay attention to the small things, because they matter. This is very true with portable art.

JJ: Do you find that buyers have different design preferences?

AS: I see difference between the places I sell them. Mezuzah Gallery is more traditional and they ask me to do some more masculine designs. The ones they sell at the Sinai Temple are brighter. Joyful colors such as red and orange. And at the Skirball, there’s a variety. 

JJ: Where can people find out more about your challah covers?

AS: The best place is on Instagram. I’m @rebeccabyfabricpoetry.


Allison Futterman is a writer based in North Carolina.

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