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July 17, 2019

Rosner’s Torah Talk: Parshat Balak with Rabbi Eli Herb

Rabbi Eli Herb was ordained at Hebrew College in Boston and began his new life in Salem, Oregon as the full-time spiritual leader of Temple Beth Sholom in July 2016. Born and raised in Carbondale, Colorado, he studied Music Composition at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design and Theological Studies at the Iliff School of Theology. In 2010, Eli received ordination as a Maggid, a Jewish Spiritual Storyteller from Yitzhak Buxbaum. Eli is an Outdoor Educator with certification through the National Outdoor Leadership School and a river guide for the Four Corners School of Outdoor Education in Monticello, Utah.
Parshat Balak tells the story of a prophet who goes out to curse the people of Israel and ends up blessing them.
Previous Torah Talks on Balak

Rosner’s Torah Talk: Parshat Balak with Rabbi Eli Herb Read More »

Orthodox Jew Wears Yarmulke While Winning ‘Million Dollar Mile’

Twenty-six-year-old Michael Neuman of Miami Beach, Fla, became the first and only Orthodox Jew to defeat a pro-athlete on the CBS show, “Million Dollar Mile.”

His yarmulke was on clear display July 13 because as Neuman said in a statement, “I must’ve put eight Bobby pins and two clips to make sure that yarmulke was winning.”

The show, executive produced by L.A. Laker LeBron James, gives contestants a two minute head start to complete as many obstacles as possible before a professional athlete chases and attempts to finish before the contestant.

Neuman, a psychotherapist living on Miami Beach, defeated Veejay Jones in three obstacles while running more than half a mile to win $25,000, making Michael the top winner in the episode.

The episode aired Saturday, July 13 at 9 p.m. following the conclusion of Shabbat. 

Neuman makes note of Shabbat during the episode when he says:

“Growing up as a kid, my passion was always sports but all of the leagues were on Saturday, and as an Orthodox Jew, we’re resting and having our Sabbath. So, I was never able to compete as most kids get to do.”

He continued: “As an adult, I still have that passion for sports and I started to get into obstacle course racing which are on Sundays. Ever since that moment it was like a second chance at being the athlete I always wanted to be. This is my way to prove to the orthodox community that anything is possible and we can be strong and powerful and go for anything we want.”

Veejay Jones, the 20-year-old champion athlete on the show is the youngest obstacle course winner in history, and someone Neuman  looked up to. Neuman told host Tim Tebow how much he admired VeeJay.

Jones said Neuman had “performed better than any other runner against me personally.”

Winning for Michael meant completing some incredible physical feats in near record time, including scaling a 15 story building before racing to the finish.

There was a moment when Michael thought he wasn’t going to win. But then he said, “I remembered a Holocaust survivor who told me to make a Kiddush Hashem by wearing my yarmulke proudly while doing positive things. It gave me an extra burst toward the end.”

Watch the video clip below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRPlZL9Apc0

Orthodox Jew Wears Yarmulke While Winning ‘Million Dollar Mile’ Read More »

Letters: Trump: Cancer or Chemo?, Concentration Camps and Leonard Cohen

Trump: Cancer or Chemo?
Your point-counterpoint story about President Donald Trump (“The Cancer or the Chemo?” July 12) was interesting because “Cancer” brought out the weakest anti-Trump notions possible. Halie Soifer’s side of the story was based on popular negative opinions. It was totally devoid of substantiated examples. On the opposite side (Chemo), Larry Greenfield pointed out the many achievements of the president. 

What in particular did Trump do to unleash anti-Semitism and harm to the Jews of the world? Trump is a rough-and-tumble deal maker who has a lot of admiration for the Jews with whom he’s dealt. Check out his “The Art of the Deal.” It’s full of people with Jewish surnames in various fields of real estate and law. All of the Washington, D.C., Democratic Party-elected officials took an oath to honor the U.S. Constitution. Many of them are ignoring that document on many fronts.
Chuck Colton, Los Angeles

Bravo to the Jewish Journal for publishing side-by-side cover stories about President Trump, which is responsible journalism. Do Democrats in Washington, D.C., not realize the irony of writing so mean-spiritedly while they are complaining about Trump’s tone?

Larry Greenfield wrote a more nuanced and well-informed take, with California cool. This round to the GOP.
Karen Reissman, Monterey

Having read these two volatile sides, I  agree strongly with the “cancer” theory. Not that Trump introduced the cancer but he certainly provided the impetus for this scourge to spread. His behavior, his language, his pronouncements gave free rein to hatred and bigotry to overwhelm our country. 

I fear that if Trump is elected to a second term, my great-grandchildren won’t be living in a democracy. Trump will join the group of dictators whom he so admires and honors by inviting them to the White House. And I fear that I speak with at least some experience and wisdom gathered during my 95 years.
Rabbi Harry A. Roth, via email

One could write a book about why Trump is a cancer on the presidency and our nation. In fact, someone did. It’s called the Mueller Report, Vol II. If Trump really thought anti-Semitism was a problem, he’d spend as much time attacking anti-Semites and white supremacists on Twitter as he does “fake news,” Democrats, the late Sen. John McCain or singer Bette Midler. And what Trump defenders (including Larry Greenfield) ignore is that the criticism of Trump is not limited to Democrats.

Republicans who criticize Trump are attacked by Trump, including McCain, Rep. Justin Amash and now Rep. Paul Ryan. The speed in which these previous leaders of the GOP are dismissed as heretics is simply Orwellian (see “Animal Farm”). If Trump wins in 2020, his worst narcissistic impulses will be completely unchecked because he won’t be running for re-election.
Mark Treitel, Los Angeles

Here, to present the argument that Donald Trump is “a cancer,” is Halie Soifer, executive director of the Jewish Democratic Council of America. About a month ago, Soifer appeared on ILTV’s “Israel Daily” with a similar message. She supported her position by declaring that Trump had equated the neo-Nazis and white supremacists at Charlottesville, Va., with protestors at that event, stating that there were “very fine people on both sides.” The host of the program, Aaron Poris, challenged her, suggesting that Trump had not meant to include Nazis and other racists among the “very fine people” at Charlottesville. (In fact, when Trump made that comment, he specifically added, “I’m not talking about the neo-Nazis and white nationalists because they should be condemned totally.”) Poris gave Soifer an opportunity to respond. She said nothing. Yet here she is in the Journal, offering the same argument.

Now, tell us again, Halie Soifer, what is the cancer in American society?
Robert Helfing, via email

In his story “He’s the Chemo,” Larry Greenfield makes an admirable attempt to put lipstick on a pig! Depending on which side of the political spectrum they sit, your readers may agree or disagree with what the author lists as Trump’s accomplishments. No one can disagree, however, with the fact that he is guilty of a single-minded determination, from his first day in office, to obstruct any attempt to head off the climate crisis our planet faces.

Had he not been elected in 2016, the United States would still be an active member of the Paris Climate Agreement, providing the encouragement and leadership necessary to aid developing countries achieve their carbon reduction commitments. We would have qualified cabinet members heading up the federal agencies that are responsible for reducing our carbon footprint. The Clean Power Plan would be taking effect and we wouldn’t be arguing over auto emission standards. Most importantly, we would likely have enacted legislation putting a price on fossil fuels that reflects their true economic and environmental cost. 

There is already such a bill in the House of Representatives: The Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act. This legislation has already gained 54 co-sponsors since its introduction in January. But we know our president will never sign this bill even if it passes despite the fact that recent polls tell us a majority of Americans favor a revenue-neutral fee on fossil fuels. 

Worst of all, when Trump finally leaves office, it may be too late to head off the worst effects of the climate crisis that will face our children and grandchildren. By this act alone, he has cancelled out any good that his administration may have accomplished.
Barry Engelmanm, Santa Monica

Concentration Camps?
What is a concentration camp? 

The unbearable cruelty taking place on a daily basis at the southern border of the United States — detained immigrant children separated from their families, the politics of fear inflicted upon immigrant communities and the uproar caused by the use of the term “concentration camp” when referring to the detention centers at the border — takes my mind to 1938 Germany. I am a third generation in a family of Holocaust survivors.

The Japanese American National Museum held a panel discussion at the National Center for the Preservation of Democracy in Los Angeles about the controversy surrounding the term “concentration camp.” Karen Ishizuka, the museum’s chief curator, spoke about an exhibition she organized and held at Ellis Island in 1995 titled “America’s Concentration Camps,” and the backlash it created within the Jewish community in New York City because of its title.

We learned that the controversy surrounding the exhibit proved to be an opportunity for dialogue and a greater understanding of one another’s experiences. A multigenerational and inclusive audience was inspired to hear veteran actor George Takei speak about his family’s time in U.S. internment camps during World War II and how those experiences inspired his fight for justice and human rights through activism. At the end of the program, a young African American man asked what he (and others) can do to prevent the unjust incarceration of people, and how to truly “reach across the aisle” to engage in dialogue with people you disagree with.

In these times, to resist is to come together. Only through unity and cooperation can we overcome the intolerance threatening the core values of our fragile democracy.
Claudia Sobral, via email

Leonard Cohen
The ’60s had so many singer-songwriters-poets-musicians; however, Leonard Cohen stood out.

Karen L. Bloch’s story was a wonderful glimpse into his psyche. Inspiring.
Enriqué Gascon, Westside Village

CORRECTION

In a story about homelessness (“IKAR Safe Parking Program for the Homeless,” July 12), Naomi Goldman’s title was incorrect. She is a new member of IKAR and communications consultant for the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority and the L.A. County Homeless Initiative over the past five years.

Letters: Trump: Cancer or Chemo?, Concentration Camps and Leonard Cohen Read More »

Argentina Takes Step Closer to Naming Hezbollah a Terrorist Group

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (JTA) — Argentina took a step closer to declaring Hezbollah a terrorist group.

The government announced Tuesday that it was creating “a public registry of persons and entities connected to acts of terrorism and its financing.” While neither Hezbollah nor any other group or person being considered for blacklisting are listed, Security Minister Patricia Bullrich indicated that Hezbollah will be added.

The announcement comes two days before the 25th anniversary of the deadly bombing of the AMIA Jewish center that Argentina and other countries say was carried out by Hezbollah.

President Mauricio Macri said last week that Argentina will consider Hezbollah a terrorist organization.

The Argentine government and judiciary had been using the U.N. Security Council registry, which does not include the Iran-linked Shiite Muslim group. The United States considers Hezbollah a terrorist organization, even though members of its political wing serve in the Lebanese government.

“The decree allows for organizations that attacked in Argentina, like Hezbollah, and are not on the lists of the United Nations to be considered by us as terrorists because they perpetrated an attack on our national territory,” the news site Clarin quotes Bullrich as saying.

Both Iran, which is Hezbollah’s patron, and the Shiite group deny any involvement in the bombing, in which 85 were killed and 300 were injured.

Argentina Takes Step Closer to Naming Hezbollah a Terrorist Group Read More »

Jewish Comedians Aim to Deflate Modern Anti-Semitism with Laughs

MONTREAL (JTA) — As long as there have been Jews, there have been two unwavering constants: anti-Semitism and Jewish jokes about anti-Semitism.

Like the one told about the assassination of Czar Alexander of Russia in 1881, when a government official approaches a rabbi and growls, “I assume you know who was behind it.”

The rabbi replies, “I have no idea, but I’m sure the government will blame the Jews and the chimney sweeps.”

Confused, the official asks, “Why the chimney sweeps?”

“Why the Jews?” the rabbi responds.

While philosophers and historians have long debated the persistence of anti-Jewish stereotypes, Jewish comedians have been trying to undermine their peddlers with laughs.

One hilarious and revealing example comes courtesy of Elon Gold, an in-demand comic with a Netflix special and regular gigs on the late night talk shows.

“We Jews are just like everyone else,” Gold said last year on “The Late Late Show With James Corden.” “We all have the three basic human needs: sex, money and food. We just want them in a different order.”

As the audience laughed knowingly, Gold continued, “For the rest of the world, it’s sex, money and food, in that order. But for us, what’s No. 1?” — at which point the entire crowd yelled “Money!”

Without missing a beat, Gold exclaimed, “How DARE you?!” in mock horror, adding sarcastically, “I like how that was in unison, without any reservation or hesitation.”

“Comedians talk about what bothers them, and this [anti-Semitism] really bothers me,” Gold told me ahead of his four shows at this year’s Just for Laughs festival here, which starts on July 22. “It’s like what Mel Brooks said about his ‘Springtime for Hitler’: Humor is my greatest weapon. Our revenge is with jokes, and not just against the Nazis of old, but sadly current-day neo-Nazis. The only way Modi and I can fight them is by mocking them and exposing the ignorance of their bigotry.”

“Modi” is the Israeli-born comedian and actor Mordechai Rosenfeld, who will be Gold’s first-ever comedy partner in Montreal.

“We’ve never been a team before; we’re not the Jewish Abbott and Costello,” Gold said, “but when we get together, something magical happens.” The show, titled “Elon Gold and Modi: Two for One,” is “the epitome of everything I’ve done in the past in Montreal, but it’s now ‘Jew squared.’ It’s so much fun.”

This will be Gold’s 13th time at the prestigious event. So what can audiences expect from his bar mitzvah appearance?

“A lot of leyning (Torah reading),” he said with a smile.

Gold, a graduate of Modern Orthodox day schools and Yeshiva University high school, has been taking on Jew-hatred for years, most notably in a 2017 set he called “Pro-Semite.” In these days of synagogue massacres and growing global anti-Semitism, he said, “we talk about it even more.”

Modi agrees, noting that in his routine, “I ask, why does the world hate us? We’re the only religion not looking to recruit people. Every other religion’s main goal is that you join. We’re the opposite: Our main goal is, just leave us alone!”

Born in Israel, as were both his parents, Modi was 7 when the family moved to New York’s Long Island. Aside from his native Hebrew, the 49-year-old speaks perfect Yiddish, a consequence of conversing in “mamaloshen” with his Russian-Polish grandparents.

“Also, in yeshiva, I used to love to read the Lubavitcher rebbe’s ‘sichos,’ his teachings in Yiddish, and that helped me learn the language,” Modi said.

Modi, who studied at Yeshiva University’s Belz School of Music, became a cantor at Manhattan’s Community Synagogue, where he still conducts Kol Nidre services and davens on the occasional Shabbat.

“I never thought I could be out-Jewed,” Gold said, “but Modi’s the ultimate Jew! We have so much fun rehearsing; he shpritzes jokes like one of the old Catskills comedians.”

Modi also had a career as a Merrill Lynch investment banker on Wall Street. That is until one open mic experience at a comedy club convinced him to put challah on the table by doing shtick rather than stocks.

Both men skillfully deal with the challenge of being funny in an often unfunny time.

“We see the Jew-hatred because we’re Jewish,” Modi said, “but there’s growing hatred and racism against blacks and immigrants; everyone’s feeling it. We focus on ours because it’s against us. I talk about how the whole world has always wanted to kill us. I reference the Holocaust, and survivors often come up to me afterwards and say, ‘it’s so good that you talk about it.’”

Can addressing anti-Semitism with humor, this age-old Hebraic coping mechanism, actually change attitudes? Gold is skeptical that finding the funny in Jew-hatred will alter anyone’s beliefs.

“But I think it can change awareness and perspectives,” he said, hopefully.

In his appearance on the Corden show, Gold cleverly followed up the audience’s clichéd response about Jews and money by both confirming and dispelling the stereotype.

“You’re wrong, it’s not money, it’s food,” he insisted. “You ask any Jew if they would rather have a hot brisket sandwich or the cash value of a hot brisket sandwich” — a pause; the audience laughs — “and they would take the cash. And then buy a hot brisket sandwich at a cheaper place and keep the profits!”

That kind of humor, Modi points out, consists of “having fun with Jews, not making fun of them. When you leave my shows, you feel proud to be Jewish. Other comedians will talk about how Jews don’t play sports or whatever. That’s not my type of humor.”

As for getting laughs in an era when American Jews have been shot in shul, Modi concludes, “I know I’m doing the right thing. I have to keep making audiences happy and raise money for Jewish organizations that help.”

He said that Pittsburgh’s synagogue complex, where 11 worshippers were fatally shot in Ocotober, wants to do a gala fundraiser.

“They’re already asking for comedy,” Modi said. “You have to be able to get back on your feet and laugh.”

Jewish Comedians Aim to Deflate Modern Anti-Semitism with Laughs Read More »

Anti-Semitic Fliers in Massachusetts Declare Holocaust ‘Fake News’

BOSTON (JTA) — Two anti-Semitic fliers that deny the Holocaust were posted at a Massachusetts synagogue, with reports of similar incidents at synagogues in two other states.

Police are investigating what the Anti-Defamation League described as a coordinated campaign by a national online white supremacist group.

The fliers at Temple Emanu-El in Marblehead, a town of nearly 20,000 with a sizable Jewish population on the state’s North Shore, were discovered Monday morning by a teacher at its religious school, according to the Jewish Journal.

The printed posters, attributed to the Daily Stormer Book Club, refer to the Holocaust as “Fake News. The people that lied about soap and lampshades are lying about gas chambers and ovens.”

They were affixed to a “no parking” sign and the synagogue’s main entrance sign, the Jewish Journal reported.

Marblehead Police Chief Robert Picariello told the local media that his department is examining surveillance video and trying to determine exactly when the fliers were placed at the synagogue.

The ADL’s Center on Extremism is aware of similar incidents at synagogues in Washington state and outside of Houston, Texas, according to Robert Trestan, ADL New England’s regional director.

A similar coordinated flier distribution was directed against churches in June and earlier this month, Trestan told JTA.

“What we are seeing is another campaign” by the white supremacist group,” he said. “They put out word to their local chapters to carry out the actions to inject hatred and racism into communities.

Temple Emanu-El’s rabbi, David Meyer, told the Jewish Journal: “Sadly, this is not an isolated or unique incident here in Marblehead or for the Jewish community – to be targeted for anti-Semitic hate literature messaging and Holocaust denial.”

Over the last several years, North Shore communities and schools have experienced anti-Semitic incidents, most recently when two Chabad rabbis were harassed with anti-Semitic slurs while walking on a main street on a Shabbat.

In 2018, Massachusetts had a total of 144 anti-Semitic incidents, the ADL reported. While down from the prior year, it was the second highest year on record.

Anti-Semitic Fliers in Massachusetts Declare Holocaust ‘Fake News’ Read More »

What’s Happening: Outdoor Shabbats, ‘Lives in Limbo,’ Daniel Silva

FRI JULY 19

Campfire Shabbat
Calling all families to Kol Tikvah’s friendly, summertime service, which includes roasting s’mores over the flames. After services, everyone adjourns to the campfire-like setting in the parking lot. In addition to the fresh s’mores, dessert and coffee are served. 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Kol Tikvah, 20400 Ventura Blvd., Woodland Hills. (818) 348-0670.

A Malibu Shabbat
Join the Malibu Jewish Center and Synagogue for Shabbat services on the beach in Malibu, led by Rabbi Michael Schwartz and Cantor Marcelo Gindlin. Gather at Westward Beach, Lifeguard Station No. 2 for a service of prayer, music and beautiful scenery. Bring a picnic, your families and friends. Every Friday at this location through Sept. 6. 7 p.m. Free. $3 parking in the lot after 6 p.m. No RSVP necessary. Westward Beach, 6800 Westward Beach Road, Malibu. (310) 456-2178.

“An Evening in Tuscany”
Beth Jacob Young Professionals gathers peers in their 20s and 30s for an outdoor Shabbat called “An Evening in Tuscany.” The Italian-themed outing opens with Mincha and Kabbalat Shabbat at 7 p.m. 7:45 p.m. cocktails. 8:30 p.m. dinner. $35 members, $45 general. Beth Jacob Congregation, Jacob’s Garden, 9030 W. Olympic Blvd., Beverly Hills. (310) 278-1911.

Rooftop Shabbat Dinner
Celebrate Shabbat on the West Hollywood rooftop of Congregation Kol Ami’s Gan Shalom, or Garden of Peace. During the Bring Your Own Dinner occasion, Kol Ami provides the Shabbat essentials, including challah, wine and soft drinks. 6:30 p.m. dinner. 8 p.m. services. Free. Congregation Kol Ami, 1200 N. La Brea Blvd., West Hollywood. (323) 606-0996.

Kids, Kibbitz, Cocktailz
Mishkon Tephilo holds a Shabbat evening parents dream about, with children romping across the playground while adults socialize nearby with music and drinks before services and mealtime. The first hour is for relaxing. Then comes a short, kid-friendly service followed by a community potluck dinner in the chapel, closing with Kabbalat Shabbat services. All potluck meals at Mishkon are strictly vegetarian and peanut-free. Do not bring foods containing fish or meat. Bring disposable utensils and serving dishes. 4-5 p.m. kibbitzing. 5-5:30 p.m. kid-friendly service. 5:30-6:30 p.m. community dinner. 6:30 p.m. Kabbalat Shabbat. No RSVP needed. Free. Mishkon Tephilo, 201 Hampton Drive, Venice. (310) 392-3029.

N’ranena Shabbat
N’ranena means “joyful singing,” and Adat Ari El’s Kabbalat Shabbat experience is joyful all the way. The event includes upbeat music and an on-site Shabbat meal. Bring your own vegetarian/non-dairy food and a dessert to share, or purchase a barbecue dinner — with hamburgers, hot dogs and vegetarian options — in advance. Challah is provided. 6-8:30 p.m. $18 meal purchase. Adat Ari El, 12020 Burbank Blvd., Valley Village. (818) 766-9426.

SAT JULY 20

Nessah Israel Teens Shabbat
Teenagers from across Los Angeles are invited to a unique Shabbat luncheon and afternoon where visiting French teenagers are the guests. The annual celebration at Nessah is held as part of the Parisian teens’ weeklong visit to L.A., during which they connect with Los Angeles teens and learn about L.A.’s Jewish communities. Noon-4 p.m. Free. RSVP required on Facebook. Nessah Synagogue, 142 S. Rexford Drive, Beverly Hills. (310) 273-2400.

Ann Durbin

“Lives in Limbo”
Two years ago this summer, the Burmese military drove 750,000 of the country’s stateless 1 million Rohingya into squalid camps across the border in Bangladesh. They are the subject of a “Lunch and Learn” Shabbat program at IKAR. In her “Lives in Limbo” talk, Ann Durbin, director of advocacy and grant-making at Jewish World Watch, discusses her recent field mission to the camps and asks how the international community can identify a sustainable solution. 12:30-2 p.m. after 9:30 a.m. Shabbat services. Free. Shalhevet School, 910 S. Fairfax Ave., Los Angeles. (323) 634-1870.

Opioids Discussion
In response to the widening use of opioids and corresponding increase in suicide rates over subsequent depression, Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky turns to Jewish sources, and author Harry Nelson provides the most recent data. In their late Shabbat afternoon “Nosh ’n Drosh,” Kanefsky addresses the question of alleviating suffering. Nelson shares ideas from his book, “The United States of Opioids: A Prescription for Liberating a Nation in Pain.” 5-6:30 p.m. Free. B’nai David-Judea, 8906 W. Pico Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 276-9269.

Community Havdalah
Leo Baeck Temple holds an oceanfront community Havdalah service and invites members and friends to the special summertime experience. Attendees gather on Santa Monica Beach at the end of the boardwalk that extends toward the ocean off of Ocean Front Walk, just south of Lifeguard Tower No. 26. Bring a nosh and a beverage of choice. The evening includes wine, spice, guitar, sunset and waves. 5-7 p.m. Free. (310) 476-2861.

SUN JULY 21

Bagels on the Boardwalk
Marking the 114th anniversary of the opening of Venice Beach by founder Abbot Kinney, a step-by-step walking tour explores the famous beachside community, once known as “Coney Island of the West.” Organized by the Jewish Historical Society of Southern California (JHS) and the American Jewish University, JHS President Steve Sass leads the tour, which focuses on Jewish Venice’s past, present and future. The day begins with bagels and schmoozing before a screening of the Academy Award-winning documentary short “Number Our Days” (1976) at the Israel Levin Senior Center. 10 a.m. $60. Israel Levin Senior Center, 201 Ocean Front Walk, Venice. (310) 440-1572.

Barbara Minkus

“18 Minutes of Fame”
Fresh off her latest off-Broadway run, singer and actress Barbara Minkus sings and talks her way into yesterday when she recalls luminous old friends in her one-woman show, “18 Minutes of Fame.” In an intimate evening of personal moments, Minkus reflects on working with Danny Kaye, Jerry Lewis, Merv Griffin and Charlotte Rae. 5 p.m. $36. The Braid, 2912 Colorado Ave., Suite 102, Santa Monica. (310) 315-1400.

TUE JULY 23

Reading a Radio Script
Ada Ari El seeks aspiring voice actors and all others who have a face made for radio. Resuming where they left off last year, the congregation’s Rabbi Jessica Yarkin leads an amateur cast in reading the radio script of Douglas Adams’ 1978 science fiction comedy, “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” about a visit to the legendary planet of Magrathea. Janx Spirit and other intergalactic light refreshments are to be served. 7:30-9:30 p.m. July 23, July 30. Free. Adat Ari El, Wynn Meeting Room, 12020 Burbank Blvd., Valley Village. (818) 766-9426.

WED JULY 24

“Kibitz and Giggle”
Your search for laughs is over. A roster of Jewish comedians — familiar to viewers of Netflix, HBO and Comedy Central — take the stage for “Kibitz and Giggle,” an equal parts mixer and comedy show. The historic El Cid, not far from downtown Los Angeles, hosts the evening for those 21 and older. 7 p.m. mixer. 8 p.m. show. $18 early bird. $30 at the door. El Cid, 4212 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles. (818) 858-3670. For tickets, click on the link above.

Daniel Silva

Daniel Silva
New York Times best-selling spy novelist Daniel Silva introduces his next thriller, “The New Girl,” on the Gindi Stage at American Jewish University. Appearing with the award-winning writer is his award-winning wife, CNN correspondent Jamie Gangel. The afternoon and evening conversations both include a book signing. Admissions includes Silva’s book. 3:30 p.m., 7:30 p.m.  $35-$65. American Jewish University, 15600 Mulholland Drive, Bel Air. (310) 440-1572.

THU JULY 25

Poker and Casino Night
The Chai Center’s annual Texas Hold ’Em Tournament poker and casino night is for everyone in the community, player or not. If poker isn’t your game, you can receive $100 in Chai chips to play craps, roulette or blackjack. Prizes for the top five poker winners include a 21 1/2-inch iMac, two nights at the Wynn Hotel in Las Vegas, with airfare for two plus cash; a trip to Hawaii or a South Beach, Fla., getaway; a 55-inch HD smart TV; and 20 movie passes. 6:30 p.m. registration, buffet dinner. 7:30-10:30 p.m. poker tournament. $100 poker tournament, $125 at the door. $30 buffet dinner, dessert and bar by July 20. $40 after July 20. Private residence at 1719 S. Holt St., Los Angeles. (310) 391-7995.


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: Outdoor Shabbats, ‘Lives in Limbo,’ Daniel Silva Read More »

Anti-Semitism ‘Call to Action,’ IAC Networking Event

The Israeli American Council (IAC) Arts and Entertainment Network, a new group of Israeli and Jewish Americans who work in the film industry, held a July 2 event at Sam Gonen’s Hollywood home, allowing industry professionals to mingle, get to know one another and discuss possible collaborations.

The three speakers at “From Israel to La La Land” were Israeli producer Lati Grobman, Israeli actor Alon Aboutboul and Israeli writer-director Dani Menkin. They shared their Hollywood stories with a group of some 40 eager listeners.

Aboutboul was a successful actor in Israel before moving to Los Angeles 10 years ago. Since then, he has appeared in a few big-budget films, including “The Dark Knight Rises” and “Body of Lies.”

The 54-year-old noted how the industry had changed since he started his career as a young actor.

“I went to this party last night and there was an 18-year-old producer with some impressive credits to his name. The world is evolving and changing,” he said. “Today, kids with smartphones are making movies — and good ones, too.”

Grobman told the new filmmakers in town, “Be humble. One of the mistakes some actors make is that they feel they deserve it all, that the world revolves around their dreams to become a star, and it deters people from wanting to help them. I’m always happy to help people and open doors to those I feel connected with. What they do with it, it’s their own decision and journey.”

Menkin, who also has directed documentaries in Israel, said that “moving to Hollywood made me grow as a writer and director. It’s moving to see the success of my fellow Israeli filmmakers here. We all want to succeed for ourselves, but I also feel like we are ambassadors to the place we came from.”
— Ayala Or-El


Rabbi Joel Nickerson

Rabbi Joel Nickerson has joined the clergy team of Wilshire Boulevard Temple (WBT), according to a July 5 announcement by the congregation.

Nickerson previously served as an associate rabbi at Temple Isaiah, where, through creative, contemporary approaches to Judaism such as hip-hop-inspired Shabbat services, “he developed an enthusiastic and devoted congregation over the past eight years,” the WBT announcement said. 

Prior to his stint with Temple Isaiah, he served as rabbi and senior Jewish educator at the University of Pennsylvania, a rabbinic intern at Valley Beth Shalom and as Jewish Campus Service Corps Fellow at the Hillel at Stanford University.

Nickerson, who with his wife, Julia, has three daughters, holds a degree in neuroscience and behavioral biology at Emory University and was ordained at the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, a Reform seminary.

His first Shabbat with WBT was on July 5, where he joined Cantor Lisa Peicott for the community’s open-air Shabbat service. The two have announced “Rooftop Ruach,” a “casual, open-air Shabbat and dinner,” which will held at WBT’s Glazer campus in Koreatown on July 26 and Aug. 16., according to the WBT website. 

“Joel is a caring and experienced rabbi, an engaging and personable leader whose innovative approach to prayer, programming and small-group organizing will be powerful additions to the temple’s offering,” the WBT announcement said. “He will establish programs and build relationships throughout the temple’s many communities with an initial focus on the Glazer Campus schools, adult learners and worship.”

The fifth annual Tomchei Golf Classic and Dinner was held on July 1 at Trump National Golf Club in Rancho Palos Verdes.

The event featured a golf tournament, giveaways, contests, raffles and a gourmet barbecue lunch, along with a wine tasting, entertainment and an open bar.

The gathering benefited Tomchei LA, which helps the Jewish needy of Los Angeles “by providing a variety of
family services with the utmost level of dignity and discretion,” the organization’s website says.

Attendees included Tomchei President Yona Landau, Tomchei Chief Financial Officer Yosef Manela and Tomchei Executive Director Schneur Braunstein. Manela, who runs the professional accounting corporation Manela & Company, sponsored the event.

“Thank you, Yossi Manela, for being our title sponsor,” a Tomchei statement said. “None of this could happen without you and we are truly so grateful for all that you do! Thanks for being such a huge part of Tomchei LA!”

Tomchei, which was founded in 1978, provides food assistance to families every week the day before Shabbat.


CPA Yosef Manela (center) was the main sponsor of the fifth annual Tomchei
Golf Classic and Dinner.
Photo from Facebook

The Sinai Temple Israel Center and American Friends of Tel Aviv University, in partnership with Sinai Temple’s Men’s Club, held a discussion on July 2 at the synagogue titled “Fighting Anti-Semitism and Racism: A Call To Action.”

The speaker was Dina Porat, professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University (TAU), head of the TAU Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry and the chief historian of Yad Vashem.

Addressing more than 150 attendees, Porat spoke about the importance of Holocaust remembrance at a time of increased anti-Semitism.

“With anti-Semitism on the rise, it’s crucial we keep the haunting memories and lessons of the Holocaust alive to ensure what our people endured is never forgotten,” she said.

Sinai Temple Men’s Club acting President Farshad Rafii delivered the welcoming remarks.
Rayna Zborovsky


Tel Aviv University Professor Emeritus Dina Porat (center) spoke about anti-Semitism at Sinai Temple. Photo by Star Sargenti

The Sinai Temple Israel Center and American Friends of Tel Aviv University, in partnership with Sinai Temple’s Men’s Club, held a discussion on July 2 at the synagogue titled “Fighting Anti-Semitism and Racism: A Call To Action.”

The speaker was Dina Porat, professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University (TAU), head of the TAU Kantor Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry and the chief historian of Yad Vashem.

Addressing more than 150 attendees, Porat spoke about the importance of Holocaust remembrance at a time of increased anti-Semitism.

“With anti-Semitism on the rise, it’s crucial we keep the haunting memories and lessons of the Holocaust alive to ensure what our people endured is never forgotten,” she said.

Sinai Temple Men’s Club acting President Farshad Rafii delivered the welcoming remarks.
Rayna Zborovsky


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

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Rabbi Eric Weiss: Healing the Sick

Since 1991, the nonprofit Bay Area Jewish Healing Center has been providing spiritual care to a diverse Jewish community. Rabbi Eric Weiss, who in a former professional life was a paralegal, is the center’s president and CEO. 

The center supports people struggling with some of life’s most difficult challenges, including illness, grief and death, by providing bereavement support groups, mental illness outreach, officiating at Jewish funerals and memorial services, inmate support, and providing Shabbat services and High Holy Days programs at senior residential facilities. The Journal spoke with Weiss about how the center in San Francisco fills a vital need in the community.

Jewish Journal: What drew you to the center?

Eric Weiss: I am endlessly fascinated by people’s spiritual experience of the world and what they do with it. I really believe that there are certain universal human experiences. Everyone comes to their last breath. Everyone gets sick. And everyone comes to fold grief into their lives. I think these naturally stimulate spiritual reflection and they yearn for a communal response. For me, being able to be with people in their human experience and to be part of their spiritual focus creates intrinsic nourishment. 

JJ: Who seeks out your services?

EW: We serve people who are sick in some form — living with mental, chronic or terminal illness. We work with folks in grief. Or someone who may be nearing the end of life, even though they’re not terminally ill. It’s important that we pay attention to people at the end of life, even if there’s no disease process. We typically think of dying as only being terminally ill, but when someone is 95 and otherwise healthy, they don’t know if they’re going to wake up the next day. People start thinking about some bigger issues, such as what might be beyond this life, their legacy, their place in this world and their relationships. We provide that support and spiritual care that’s needed at that time. We visit people wherever we’re needed, whether it’s a jail, a psychiatric facility, a hospital or someone’s home. 

JJ: Are the center’s services free?

EW: Our business model is a philanthropic model and there is no fee for service. People donate what they want and we also write grants and receive other donations. We do charge a fee for consulting, our formal programs or workshops, but nobody is turned away for lack of funds. 

JJ: Do you think there’s an inherent connection between Judaism and helping others?

EW: I think what’s unique is how Judaism talks about caring. Jewish life shows a way in which you have a relationship with something transcendent — beyond who you are as an individual, whether it’s religious or secular, God or not. If you’re mitzvah-oriented, caring for the sick is the most basic form of a mitzvah. There are time-bound mitzvahs, like lighting Hanukkah candles or Shabbat candles, but there are others that aren’t time-bound. There is no end to them. Ever. The wisdom of a rabbi saying that visiting the sick is not time-bound can feel overwhelming, but I think that the real wisdom is that it’s actually a way to be empathetic. It’s a way to stretch the empathy of a well person to understand the desire to be better. 

JJ: You deal with issues surrounding life and death. Is the gravity of that always with you? 

EW: It is. It sticks with me and it should. It’s part of the grandness of humanity. We grow in response to the ways we’re touched by others. Sometimes it’s painful, but it’s extraordinarily rewarding. I think of it as an honor to be let in — and I’m willing and wanting to be touched by those experiences. That’s why we’re all in this world together. I’ve grown immeasurably by the relationship of caring. 

JJ: What is your Jewish background? 

EW: I grew up in Los Angeles in a large mainstream Jewish family with lots of aunts, uncles and cousins. My parents were elementary school teachers and my father taught religious school. Synagogue life was a given. Being part of an extended Jewish family was a wonderful thing. 

JJ: When did you develop an interest in learning more about Judaism?

EW: When I was in college at UC Santa Cruz, I was a biology and Judaic studies major. I was fascinated by science. But I was also interested in what was spiritual, what was beyond a proton or an electron and what went beyond any one person. I have always felt attached to the spiritual narrative of life. 

JJ: How did you wind up becoming a paralegal? 

EW: I applied to and was accepted at seminary, but I was right out of college and didn’t feel I had enough life experience. I moved to San Francisco and took a job as a paralegal and I loved it. At around the same time, I also became part of the first cadre of LGBT hospice volunteers in San Francisco. When I did that, I started to gravitate to a more spiritual drive. I decided to reapply to seminary, this time as openly gay, and I got in again.

JJ: Do you think Judaism is accepting of all types of diversity?

EW: If we believe and assert that everyone is created in God’s image, then it’s easy to say that our diversity is a testament to God’s unfathomable creativity. We are diverse in our levels of observance, sexual orientation, gender, identity, race and class. We are better served by diversity if we live by divine intent. And the Jewish world is served by its diversity of rabbis and cantors and educators. We Jews are all over the place and we are every type of human being.


Allison Futterman is a writer living in North Carolina.

Rabbi Eric Weiss: Healing the Sick Read More »

Sherman Condemns Vandalism of Woodland Hills Synagogue

Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) condemned the recent vandalism of a synagogue in Woodland Hills.

The Hebrew Discovery Center was smeared with white paint on July 14; it is not yet known who the vandals were. Rabbi Nathan Louie told the Journal that he believed the damages will cost around $10,000.

Sherman called the vandalism “a hate crime” in a statement.

We have seen an increase around the country in anti-Semitic incidents, and those responsible should be brought to justice and be fully prosecuted,” Sherman said. “I am urging local law enforcement and the FBI to increase their efforts to combat the targeting of places of worship, schools, and community centers in the San Fernando Valley.”

American Jewish Committee Los Angeles wrote in a July 16 Facebook post that the incident was “yet another act of anti-Semitic vandalism in our own backyard.”

Louie also told the Journal that the vandalism has caused the community to feel “violated” and the synagogue will be hiring an extra security guard in response to the vandalism.

UPDATE: AJC Los Angeles Acting Chief of Staff Dganit Abramoff said in a statement, “We condemn this vile act targeting a Jewish house of worship and school. In the wake of Pittsburgh and Poway, and in light of other recent acts of anti-Semitic vandalism in the Valley, we urge law enforcement authorities to prioritize their investigation into this incident. The trend of anti-Semitic vandalism, violence, and rhetoric continues to grow, threatening the values that we as a country hold dear. We must unite together with community partners, elected officials, and law enforcement to combat this scourge.”

Sherman Condemns Vandalism of Woodland Hills Synagogue Read More »