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January 29, 2020

Election Handbook: Trump did not change election picture

We call this format a Timesaver Guide to Israel’s Coming Elections. This will be a usual feature on Rosner’s Domain until next Election Day, March 2, 2020. We hope to make it short, factual, devoid of election hype.

 

Bottom Line 

A historic week, yet nothing changed!

 

Main News

Trump Plan No quick annexation is expected. Netanyahu searches for ways to utilize the Trump plan for his benefit. Gantz is willing to have the Knesset vote in support of the plan.

Netanyahu travel ends today. The PM will return from Washington and Moscow, carrying with him the Israeli prisoner whose release was secured by Putin last week.

The polls don’t show any change the way Israeli voters intend to cast their votes.

For more details on the plan, please read:

The Cyrus Parameters: Trump and Netanyahu

Deal of the Century: First Take on Next Week’s Drama

On another matter: I wrote an article about the election to the World Jewish Congress. Read it here.

 

The Blocs and Their Meaning

In this short instalment all we need is the following graph. It shows (based on poll averages) that the basic construct of the Israeli electorate remained basically unchanged. That is to say: If the Trump plan was a political ploy, it failed to achieve its goal.

 

 

Party to Watch

You can see that the Likud party, Netayahu’s party, did gain a little in the last couple of days. But the votes it gains are coming from parties within the right-religious bloc (still, Netanyahu needs a larger Likud to have a claim for the mandate to form a coalition).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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50 U.S. Military Personnel Suffered Brain Injuries from Iran Strike

At least 50 United States military personnel have suffered concussions and other brain injuries from Iran’s Jan. 8 strikes against two U.S. military bases in Iraq.

Pentagon spokesperson Lt. Col. Thomas Campbell announced the latest figure in a Jan. 28 statement, highlighting that 32 of the 50 personnel have been treated for their injuries and are now back to being active in Iraq. The remaining soldiers are currently receiving treatment in Germany, according to National Public Radio (NPR).

“The department is committed to delivering programs and services intended to lead to the best possible outcomes for our service members who suffer any injury,” Campbell said.

Iran struck the U.S. bases in Erbil and Al-Asad in retaliation for the U.S. killing Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani on Jan. 2. President Donald Trump said at the time that no one was injured in Iran’s retaliation strikes.

During a Jan. 22 press conference, Trump said that he didn’t consider the brain injuries to be particularly serious.

“I’ve seen what Iran has done with their roadside bombs to our troops. I’ve seen people with no legs and with no arms,” Trump said. “I’ve seen people that were horribly, horribly injured in that area, that war — in fact, many cases put — those bombs put there by Soleimani, who is no longer with us. I consider them to be really bad injuries.” 

In the week before Campbell’s announcement, there were 34 fatalities. According to the Centers for Disease Control, symptoms of traumatic brain injuries might not present themselves for days or months after the injury occurred. According to CNN, the number of U.S. military personnel who suffered traumatic brain injuries from the strikes will likely increase.

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Ripple Effect: Truth

I spent last week in Atlanta. I am truly in love with that city. Change is all around. Good people, awesome food and a core of social activists that rock my world. I am incredibly excited to partner with these amazing individuals and change the world a little with them.

I ride shared from place to place. One ride pulled up at my hotel. I opened the door. The seat was really dirty. The car stunk from cigarettes and pot.

I’m usually not a picky person. I let things slide, but this, well, this was a lot.

The young woman apologized for not finding me.

She wasn’t from Atlanta.

We started talking. 

I asked her, “Can I tell you something?”

“What?” she responds.

“I really think you need to cover the seat with something, like material or a seat cover.”

It got quiet in the car.

Given that I don’t know the city, she could take me anywhere whether I wanted to go there or not. 

I was thinking, okay she didn’t like what I said. Who knows where she will take me now? I should shut my big mouth and not say anything.

“What else?” she asked. “You got anything else?”

“Well,” I said. “You might not want to smoke pot right before a customer gets in the car. Not everyone likes that.” Again silence.

Okay. She also could kill me. Considering she is high and I have no idea where we are.

“Thank you, Lady,” she says. “I’m happy you said something.”

“Really?” I asked her. “Cause I wasn’t sure,” I tell her.

“Truth can be hard, Ma’am, but it is really is good to hear it. 

You know my mom passed last year. I moved here from Missouri trying to make ends meet. I’m taking care of my 4 siblings.”

“Wow,” I say. “That’s amazing!”

“Amazing?” she says, surprised.

“Ain’t nothing amazing ‘bout that.” 

She looks in the rear-view mirror and says,

“I think I got you high.”

We both laugh.

“I think your mom would be proud of you,” I say. 

She was quiet and she said,

“I am proud of me. That’s what counts. Just me.

I am proud of me.”

She repeated it a few times.

“Well,” I said. 

“I don’t know you and I am proud of you, too.

It’s cool to have a stranger be proud of you,” I add. 

“That same stranger also told me my car is dirty and I shouldn’t smoke in my car.”

“That’s not fair,” I tell her. “I wanted to tell you what most folks are thinking and not saying. I really want you to be able to make more money. So, I told you the truth.”

“Yeah,” she says. “Some of the snooty people don’t like me and my car. I see it on their face when they get in or cancel when they see me.”

“I don’t think they don’t like you,” I say. 

“They don’t like the smell and they don’t like that the car is not clean.”

“I got you,” she said.

“Can I tell you the truth?” she asks me. 

Oh no! Now she is going to say something bad about me, I think. 

“Of course,” I say.

She tells me she was incarcerated and that it was taken off her record. That’s how she can drive.

She tells me that life is hard, and she feels that everyone is judging her. 

She is 21 and she feels like she is 50. 

“Nothing bad about the 50s,” I say quietly.

She tells me how scary it is to let strangers into her car.

She tells me she is lonely cause most people don’t talk to her.

The truth: I think she was happy just to have someone listen.

Aren’t we all happy when someone listens??

“Honestly,” she says to me. “This is the first time I am happy there is traffic.”

I laugh again.

“I am happy you came in my car,” she says. “And you know what? I am happy you were honest and told me what you thought.

It actually opened my heart.”

“The truth can do that,” I say. 

“Yeah,” she says. 

We arrive at the destination.

They say that the truth will set you free. 

I say freedom comes from the truth.

She stops the car and gets out to open my door. 

She looks at me. 

“You know what’s cool? You told me the truth about the little things and I could tell you the truth about the big things.

The little things are what mattered to you, the car and the pot. But the big things you didn’t care about. You didn’t even look away when I told you my story.”

She leaned in and gave me a hug.

“You have a good story,” I told her.

“Yeah,” she said.  “Honestly, I do.”

I walked into my appointment, knowing that this is where I was meant to be today.

Be bold. Tell the truth, even when you don’t have to. It’s important and will open so much more than you can imagine.


Naomi Ackerman is a Mom, activist, writer, performer, and the founder and Executive Director of The Advot (ripple) Project a registered 501(c)3 that uses theatre and the arts to empower youth at risk to live their best life.

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ADL Poll: 61% of Americans Believe an Anti-Semitic Stereotype

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) released a poll on Jan. 29 on anti-Semitic attitudes, which found that 61% of Americans believe at least one anti-Semitic stereotype.

The poll, conducted from Oct. 12-16, 2019 among 800 American 18 and older, asked respondents if they agreed with 11 statements containing anti-Semitic stereotypes, such as “Jews are more loyal to Israel than America” and “Jews have too much power in the business world.” Sixty-one percent said they agreed with at least one of the 11 statements; 39% said they agreed with at least two statements and 11% agreed with six or more.

The highest ranked stereotype was “Jews stick together more than most Americans” (44%), followed by, “Jews like to be at the head of things” (25%) and “Jews are more loyal to Israel than to America” (24%).

The statements have been used as benchmarks for the ADL’s survey since 1964. At that time, 29% believed in six or more of the 11 statements. In 2015, that number was 14.

“While the decline [in anti-Semitic beliefs] over the past 55 years should be celebrated, the current share still translates to more than 28 million Americans,” the ADL wrote in its analysis. “In recent years there has been a surge of anti-Semitic incidents, including violent crimes, even as overall anti-Semitic attitudes remain low. It is a stark reminder that it only takes a small number committing violence to create an epidemic.”

Outside of the 11 statements, the ADL also found that 27% of American adults believe that Jews killed Jesus Christ, 19% believe that Jews discuss the Holocaust too much and 17% believe that Jews mainly control Hollywood.

“Anti-Semitism as a problem in society tends to be a precursor to bigger societal decline, so it’s something to constantly be aware of and monitoring.”  — Amanda Susskind

ADL Los Angeles Regional Director Amanda Susskind told the Journal that the 19% of respondents who Jews discuss the Holocaust too much is an issue because “as time passes from the Holocaust, more and more people are disconnected with the lessons from the Holocaust.”

The ADL also asked if respondents believed in criticisms of Israel that fall into the category under the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of anti-Semitism.

The ADL stated, “We found that roughly one-in-six polled (16%) agreed with the statement that Israel’s record on human rights ‘is worse than most other countries’ and around one-in-seven (14%) agreed with the statement that the Israeli government ‘sometimes behaves as badly as the Nazis.’ Seven percent of Americans said that American Jews are responsible for Israel’s actions, and 8% expressed support for boycotting Israeli products and companies.”

On the matter of violence, 57% of Americans said they were either somewhat or very concerned about violence leveled against Jews.

“We’ve been horrified by an uptick in anti-Semitic violence,” ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt tweeted. “Our research finds that this uptick is being caused not by a change in attitudes among most Americans. Rather, more of the millions of Americans holding these views are feeling emboldened to act on their hate.”

Susskind said the ADL’s yearly audits have shown increases in anti-Semitic assaults, and that one factor was anti-Semitic hate circulating on the internet. She pointed to white nationalists live-streaming shootings as a means of inspiring copycats as an example.“We didn’t see that three years ago or six years ago,” she said.

Susskind also argued that the current divisive political discourse and politicization of anti-Semitism has exacerbated anti-Semitic violence. “The few that are infected with this hate are feeling there will be fewer consequences to acting out on it,” she said.

The ADL recommended a series of policy prescriptions for Congress to crack down on anti-Semitic violence, including the Never Again Education Act that provides funding to schools for Holocaust education (which passed the House of Representatives on Jan. 27) and to allocate funding toward security for religious institutions and nonprofits.

“Anti-Semitism as a problem in society tends to be a precursor to bigger societal decline, so it’s something to constantly be aware of and monitoring,” Susskind said.

ADL Poll: 61% of Americans Believe an Anti-Semitic Stereotype Read More »

What’s Happening: Hip-Hop Shabbat, ‘Sacred Sounds,’ Dani Shapiro

FRI JAN 31

“Shabbat Against Gung Violence”
Fourteen months after 12 of his fellow patrons were massacred by a lone gunman  at a country and western bar in Thousand Oaks, survivor Ben Ginsberg, 24, brings his story to Beth Shir Shalom. It occurred just days after 11 Jews were gunned down at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh. “None of us could have imagined it could happen again in a much more personal way,” said Ginsberg, who escaped through a rear exit. In observance of the Reform synagogue’s “Shabbat Against Gun Violence,” he shares steps the community can take. 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Beth Shir Shalom, 1827 California Ave., Santa Monica.

Hip-Hop Shabbat
Come to Shabbat services at Wilshire Boulevard Temple, and dance to the sounds of Dr. Dre, P. Diddy and Usher. The high-energy Hip-Hop Shabbat stars Rabbi Joel Nickerson, songleader Jason Mesches and community members seeking a new kind of Shabbat experience. 7 p.m. Free. Wilshire Boulevard Temple, 3663 Wilshire Blvd.

Dani Shapiro

Family Secrets
When best-selling author Dani Shapiro casually took a DNA test, she was shocked to learn that her father was not really her biological father. In a Writers Bloc Presents event at the Fine Arts Theater, Shapiro, in conversation with singer-songwriter Liz Phair, talks about family and who she is as opposed to who she thought she was. Her book, “Inheritance, A Memoir of Genealogy, Paternity, and Love,” is included in the ticket price. 7:30 p.m. $33. Fine Arts Theater, 8556 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills.

Journalist at Beth Jacob
Israeli investigative journalist and author Ronen Bergman, senior correspondent for military and intelligence affairs for Yedioth Ahronoth, the country’s largest daily, is the Shabbat scholar-in-residence at Beth Jacob Congregation. Bergman speaks three times, at 6:15 tonight at a community dinner at Pat’s Restaurant and Catering, Shabbat morning, when services start at 9 a.m., and after Shabbat at a private home at 7:30 p.m. Tonight’s services, 5:05 p.m. Shabbat dinner: $90 members, $55 children, $100 general, $65 nonmember children. Registration is recommended. Pat’s, 9233 W. Pico Blvd., Los Angeles. (310) 205-8705. Beth Jacob, 9030 W. Olympic Blvd., Beverly Hills.

SAT FEB 1

Consul General Speaks Out
Join the Sephardic Temple community for Shabbat morning services when Consul General of Israel in Los Angeles Hillel Newman discusses “Israel, Iran and the United States Today.” He will take questions after Kiddush. Arriving in Los Angeles last year, Newman, who holds a doctorate in Jewish history, previously was ambassador to the Republic of Uzbekistan and deputy consul general to Israel’s consulate in New England. 9:30-11:30 a.m. Sephardic Temple, 10500 Wilshire Blvd.

Jews, Genetics and Cancer
On behalf of Sharsheret, which helps Jewish women and their families face breast cancer, three speakers address the subject “Genetics, the Jewish Community and Cancer” at B’nai David-Judea Congregation following Shabbat services. Dr. Noam Drazin, Dr. Rena Selya and social worker Shira Landau, provide their expertise. B’nai David-Judea Congregation, 8906 W. Pico Blvd.

Yosef Goldman and Chava Mirel

“Sacred Sounds Unbound”
Singer-guitarist Chava Mirel of Seattle and Yosef Goldman, a Philadelphia rabbi, musician and ritual artist, perform “Sacred Sounds Unbound.” The concert series is a product of the partnership between Temple Emanuel of Beverly Hills and Temple Beth Am, this evening’s host. 7 p.m. $18 or $32 for two concerts. Temple Beth Am, 1039
S. La Cienega Blvd.

Singing in the Dark
Called one of the most powerful musical experiences of your life, Kol Tefilah’s Conference/three-day Shabbaton about new prayer experiences at Temple Beth Am begins with being blindfolded. You will then be guided to your seat while a band plays in the background. Sing. Breathe. Meditate. Share stories. 9-10:30 p.m. $18 general admission. Teenagers free. Temple Beth Am, 1039 S. La Cienega Blvd.

SUN FEB 2

Humanistic Judaism
Rabbi Adam Chalom, dean of the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism, discusses “Living Jewish: Intersection of Being & Doing.” 9:30 a.m.-noon. $15. Adat Chaverim Congregation for Humanistic Judaism at the Tarzana Community & Cultural Center, 19130 Ventura Blvd.

How to Combat Hatred
As anti-Semitism engulfs widening sections of the Jewish world, Saba Soomekh of the American Jewish Committee (AJC) in conversation with Joshua Holo, dean of Hebrew Union College-Los Angeles (HUC), addresses “Anti-Semitism Today and the Tools to Fight It.” Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust, HUC and AJC co-sponsor the program. 4-5:30 p.m. Free. USC’s Doheny Memorial Library, University Park Campus. RSVP at the link above.

TUE FEB 4

“The Pope’s Rabbit”
For 23 years, Pope Francis and Argentine Rabbi Abraham Skorka have been friends — like brothers — which is how the pontiff still addresses him via e-mail or phone. They even wrote a book together: “On Heaven and Earth” in 2010. The “pope’s rabbi” speaks with Rabbi Erez Sherman and Father Ed Benioff. 6:30-9 p.m. Free but non-temple members must register online to access the parking lot. Sinai Temple, 10400 Wilshire Blvd. (310) 474-1518.

Ayalon at JNF Luncheon
Danny Ayalon, former Israeli ambassador to the United States and adviser to three Israeli prime ministers speaks at the Jewish National Fund’s (JNF) annual Planned Giving Luncheon at Sinai Temple. Matt Bernstein, JNF’s chief Planned Giving Officer, and Cynthia Hizami, director of Planned Giving, West Coast, also speak. 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Free. American Jewish University, 15600 Mulholland Drive, Los Angeles. Contact Dan at rsvpla@jnf.org. RSVP required. Click on the link above for more info.

WED FEB 5

Jews of Mexico
Kehillat Israel explores the history and current state of Jews in Mexico in “A Taste of Mexico.” Speakers and a Q&A session follow. RSVP. 6:30 p.m. “A Taste of Mexico.” 7 p.m. speakers. $12. Kehillat Israel, 16019 W. Sunset Blvd., Pacific Palisades.

Isaac Herzog

State of Our Relations
Are the issues that unite  and divide American Jews and Israel the same from seven decades ago or have they changed with time? Isaac Herzog, chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel, who ran for prime minister in 2015, examines the state of relations in a lecture at UCLA. He speaks afterward with professor Dov Waxman, director of the Nazarian Center for Israel Studies, with Q&A to follow. 5:30-6:45 p.m. Korn Convocation Hall, UCLA Anderson School, 110 Westwood Plaza, Room C314, Los Angeles. (310) 825-9646. international.ucla.edu/israel.

Fabian Lijtmaer
Welcome to a pop-up art show featuring dozens of mystical pieces by artist Fabian Lijtmaer, who creates Jewish-inspired works that can transport the viewer into a separate realm. Lijtmaer will be in attendance. Sponsored by AMIT LA NewGen (for young professionals, 20s-40s). Proceeds from art sales and entry fees go toward AMIT’s work in Israel. Hors d’oeuvres and kosher wine. 7:30-9:30 p.m. $24 (or $40 for two). Exhibit A Gallery, 1056 S. Fairfax Ave.


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

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Rabbi Sacks, Pope Greets Hier, Nazarians Feted

Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) Dean and Founder Rabbi Marvin Hier participated in a delegation of international leaders that met with Pope Francis at the Vatican.

On Jan. 20, one week before the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp during World War II, and on the 78th anniversary of the infamous Wannsee Conference of Nazi officials that sealed the fate of European Jewry with discussion of a “Final Solution,” the pope addressed a private audience of 54 SWC leaders.

“If we lose our memory, we destroy our future.” Francis said, according to a Jan. 20 statement by SWC. “May the anniversary of the unspeakable cruelty that humanity learned of 75 years ago serve as a summons to pause, be still, and to remember. We need to do this lest we become indifferent.”

According to SWC, Francis also denounced the current spike in Jew-hatred, saying the world is experiencing “a barbaric resurgence of cases of anti-Semitism. I will never tire of firmly condemning every form of anti-Semitism.”

Hier spoke of the importance of recognizing the anniversary of the Wannsee Conference at a time when anti-Semitism is on the rise in countries like Iran, and Christians are being attacked in Kenya and Nigeria, among other countries.

“It was on this very day, January 20th, some 78 years ago where 14 people sat around the table in Wannsee to plot the ‘Final Solution,’ a code word that would lead to the extermination of six million Jews,” Hier said. “Who could have imagined that a mere eight decades later we would again witness another worldwide epidemic of anti-Semitism and hate?”

Hier concluded his remarks thanking Francis for the upcoming release of the Vatican Secret Archives on March 2, which reportedly will shed light on Pope Pius XII’s silence and inaction during the Holocaust.

Additional participants included Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the SWC.


University of Haifa students Dorin Theodora Asis (left) and Omri Hen visit the Los Angeles Museum of the Holocaust on Jan. 13. Photo courtesy of University of Haifa.

Two University of Haifa students visited Los Angeles on Jan. 13 as part of their nationwide tour of the United States to build support for the Israeli academic institution and its mission.

Dorin Theodora Asis and Omri Hen — master’s and doctoral students, respectively, in University of Haifa’s Human Biology and Medical Sciences Department — accompanied former university Board of Governors Chairman Alfred Tauber from Jan. 11-23 on visits to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Cleveland, Boston and New York.

University of Haifa describes itself as a “multiversity” (a multicampus institution), which eases access for students and adds vitality to its city and region while allowing a wide range of ideas and activities to flourish in a diverse community.

Theodora Asis, 30, is completing studies of the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis and cancer in the laboratory of professor Sarit Larisch. She serves as the elected student union representative of the Human Biology and Medical Sciences Department. Prior to her time at the university, Asis worked as a TV news anchorwoman.

Hen, a 30-year-old doctoral candidate, who graduated from Tel Aviv University then spent a year as the assistant to the Israeli Minister for Social Equality. He studied national security at the University of Haifa’s International Master’s program and later pursued a degree in cancer dormancy and metastasis.

“We noticed that many American Jews are not necessarily highly familiar with what we have in Israel,” Asis said. “For instance, they may have last visited Israel six, eight or 10 years ago, and each year Israel makes tremendous progress in technology and other areas. Therefore, it was very important to share our educational experience in Israel with the Los Angeles community.”

“The networking, relationships and education acquired at the university form the basis of any future, especially in regard to regional development,” Hen said. “The north is probably the most heterogeneous and complex region in Israel, with critical infrastructure and a diverse mosaic of populations. Its development is crucial to Israel’s future.” 


From left: Sephardic Temple Rabbi Tal Sessler and Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks. Photo courtesy of Sephardic Temple

Celebrated Rabbi LORD Jonathan Sacks appeared at Sephardic Temple Tifereth Israel before a sold-out crowd of approximately 600 people on Jan. 21 and discussed challenges facing Jews in the 21st century.

The event marked Sephardic Temple’s 100th anniversary.

When Sacks entered the sanctuary hall flanked by Sephardic Temple Rabbi Tal Sessler and Sephardic Temple Cantor Haim Mizrahi, attendees broke into song, chanting “Hevenu Shalom Aleichem.” Throughout the evening, the audience continued to show love for the former chief rabbi of Britain as he spoke of the importance of people showcasing their religion with pride.

“Wear your identity with pride,” Sacks, the former chief rabbi of Britain, said. “That’s probably the best thing you can do to let anti-Semites know they cannot win.”

Sessler told the Journal he was pleased Sacks turned out to commemorate the 100-year anniversary of Sephardic Temple, which was established in 1920.

Speakers included Sephardic Temple President Kamran Nickfardjam and Neda Mehdizadeh, vice president of social and cultural at Sephardic Temple.

Attendees included Israeli-American philanthropist Adam Milstein; former Milken Schools President Metuka Benjamin; Nefesh Rabbi Susan Goldberg; Jewish Journal Publisher and Editor-in-Chief David Suissa;  and Sephardic Temple board member Rae Cohen.

An invite-only reception with Sephardic Temple congregants, among others, kicked off the evening.


From left: Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles Chair Albert Praw; Sharon Nazarian and her mother and evening honoree, Soraya Nazarian; L.A. Federation General Campaign Chair Orna Wolens; and L.A. Federation President and CEO Jay Sanderson. Photo by Howard Pasamanick Photography

The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles honored Younes and Soraya Nazarian with its Lifetime Achievement Award on Jan. 23. Younes was under the weather and unable to attend.

The L.A. Federation honored the Nazarian family for its decades of leadership and generosity to the local Jewish community, Israel and the Los Angeles community at large, the Federation said in a statement. Younes Nazarian, an Iranian Jewish American businessman, and Soraya, a sculptor, have contributed to numerous causes through their Younes and Soraya Nazarian Family Foundation.

The glitzy evening at the Beverly Wilshire hotel brought together diverse segments of the Los Angeles Jewish community. Attendees included the honorees’ four children, Sharon, David, Shulamit and Sam Nazarian. Sam Nazarian, an L.A. businessman, partook in a conversation with philanthropist Michael Milken about the future of Los Angeles, with Jessica Naziri, founder and CEO of TechSesh, moderating the discussion.

More than 700 people turned out to help raise over $1.1 million for the L.A. Federation’s Next Generation Leadership Training Programs, which focus on ensuring that young adult leaders have the skills to help the Los Angeles Jewish community address shared challenges.

Major event sponsors included Robin and Elliott Broidy, Lili and Jon Bosse, and Lynn and Les Bider. Los Angeles City Councilman Paul Koretz, who presented the Nazarians with an award from the city of L.A., and Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles CEO and President Jay Sanderson also attended.


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

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On Kobe and Laying Tefillin

After a night of tossing and turning, I finally gave up on sleeping at 11 a.m. Sunday morning. I rolled over, checked my phone and logged into social media. 

Everyone will have his or her “where were you on the bleakest morning in recent Los Angeles memory?” moment. Mine began the way many of my mornings do: with the grim expectancy that something awful awaited me. 

Still, when I received a text message from my good friend — a fellow Clippers fan — that read: “Holy [expletive] Kobe,” it didn’t occur to me that he might be dead. Kobe Bryant had long ago ceased being mortal; ceased being a celebrity basketball player or even a washed-up dad. The concept of his death was as easy to grasp as outer space. And yet it was out there.

I’m a breaking news reporter for The New York Times, so before I could process any of these thoughts, I threw together some things — my laptop, a granola bar, a banana, an orange, leftover pasta, a loaf of bread — and raced to the helicopter crash site in Calabasas. I had sports talk radio on to catch any updates, and the host was audibly fighting back tears. Oh, and my tefillin. I brought my tefillin, too. 

Kobe and Shaquille O’Neal were why I fell in love with basketball, but it was Kobe’s moves — his fadeaways, his reverse layups — that I rehearsed in the backyard. His work ethic was the stuff of legend. There are countless stories about players eager to impress Kobe showing up to practice at 6 in the morning, only to find Kobe in a full sweat. He only had one speed: full tilt, and didn’t have much energy for Sunday drivers. His exacting, unforgiving nature often alienated his teammates. His selfishness on the court made him eminently hateable to fans. He didn’t mind.

There was something about his devotion to the game that resembled the kind of fervent commitment we aspire to in our own faith — a constant, relentless, undeniable devotion to the values and commandments we hold close.

I was still rooting for the Lakers, still very much idolizing Kobe, when I came home from a babysitting gig in 2003 and saw my mom with a stoic look on her face. She told me that Kobe had been accused of rape. I broke down crying. How was it possible that someone larger than life, an iconic perfectionist, my hero, could do something like that?

He was never truly held accountable for what happened in Colorado. Not in the courts, the press or among NBA fans, who adored him to the day he died. But I eventually came to recognize his behavior as a slow redemption of mistakes he made when he was younger. He was a full-throated supporter of women’s basketball: as a WNBA fan who frequently promoted its stars as his peers, as a dad teaching the game to his daughter, and as a coach of her youth team. He applied his Mamba mentality to making good on the giant mistake of his public life.

Is Kobe’s death a loss to the Los Angeles Jewish community? Absolutely. He was the only subject Jews in this town agreed on. I will add, that people who have voiced their dismay with Bryant’s past have often been brutally harassed by his fans. That includes members of our community, and it is up to our leaders to condemn those actions. Even the basketball fans who hated Kobe at least respected that he was only ever being Kobe, and never anyone else. There was something about his devotion to the game that resembled the kind of fervent commitment we aspire to in our own faith — a constant, relentless, undeniable devotion to the values and commandments we hold close.

I brought my tefillin to Calabasas because several months ago, I decided to start laying tefillin every day. Because I work from home and more or less make my own schedule, it was a practical goal. 

I brought my tefillin to Calabasas because several months ago, I decided to start laying tefillin every day. Because I work from home and more or less make my own schedule, it was a practical goal. I didn’t tell anyone I was doing it, and I didn’t know the various schedule flukes and breaking news stories that would make it hard from time to time. 

Below the scene of the helicopter crash, where hundreds of people had gathered to pay their respects, one person told me that Kobe was “an example of what every single person is capable of if you don’t let fear get in the way.” I remembered my tefillin. When the day’s reporting was done, there was about an hour until sunset. Not wanting to pull over on the freeway, I weaved through traffic all the way home. I got there with enough time to wrap tefillin and say Ashrei, too. I certainly needed it.

Louis Keene is a writer who lives and hoops in Los Angeles. He tweets at @thislouis.

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DIY Hot Air Balloon Planters

I spent this New Year’s in Paris, where I was inspired by everything — architecture, fashion, cuisine, flowers. Even a stop at the local convenience store revved up my creative juices. 

One French motif that has always captured my imagination is the hot air balloon. The first manned hot air balloon, created by the Montgolfier brothers, took flight in Paris in 1783, and this whimsical aircraft has been a symbol of Paris ever since.

A few years ago, I created extravagant hot air balloon centerpieces for a Parisian-themed wedding, but I’ve always wanted to devise a simplified version that anyone could make. Voilà! Here is a hot air balloon that requires few supplies and steps. You can use it as a planter, pop a battery-operated tea light inside the pot, or display candies in it for parties. I’ve used an actual balloon, but if you want something permanent that won’t deflate, just replace it with a small paper lantern. Either way, this project is magnifique.

What you’ll need:
Clay pot
2 pairs of wooden chopsticks
Glue
Balloon
String
Colored paper

 

1. Start with a clay pot. I used a small one that was 2 inches tall. 

 

2. Glue four chopsticks to the inside of the pot, spacing them evenly. 

 

3. Tie a string encircling the top of the four chopsticks.

 

4. Cut triangles of different colors and glue them to the string to create bunting.

 

5. Inflate a balloon and rest it on the chopstick platform.

 

6. Make one or two strings of bunting and drape them to the balloon.


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

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Obituaries: Jan 31, 2020

Marilyn Chalfin died Dec. 7 at 84. Survived by husband Phillip; son Steve (Diana); 6 grandchildren; brothers Harvey (Rhonda) Hartenstein, Philip (Nedda) Hartenstein, Arthur Hartenstein. Mount Sinai

Ruth Lenore Cordish died Dec. 9 at 99. Survived by nephew Steve Kruver; cousin Julianne Nameth. Mount Sinai

Marilyn B. Ehrman died Dec. 11 at 92. Survived by daughter Debbie (Phil) Koerner; son Michael; 1 grandchild. Mount Sinai

Robert Frank died Dec. 4 at 92. Survived by wife Marjorie; daughter Cindy (Steve); sons Mark (Debbie), Darren; 4 grandchildren. Hillside

Randi Fried died Nov. 29 at 74. Survived by daughters Jennifer (Noah), April; 1 grandchild. Hillside

Evelyn Feintech died Dec. 4 at 95. Survived by daughters Lynn (Tony), Vivian (Allen); 1 grandchild. Hillside

Irving M. Ginsburg died Dec. 3, at 91. Survived by daughter Shani (David Gazek); stepdaughter Karen Nusbaum; son David; 2 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Kay L. Gintel died Dec. 6 at 100. Survived by daughter Joyce Bergson; sons Robert, Paul; 3 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Doris K. Goodman died Dec. 12 at 88. Survived by husband Ernest; daughters Sari (Ron), Judy (Michael); son Jerry; 6 grandchildren. Eden Memorial 

Susan A. Harmon died Dec. 3 at 80. Survived by daughters Marci (Armie) Carabet, Leslie (David) Sinai; 4 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Lisa Harris died Nov. 28 at 87. Survived by daughter Marcia (John) Barchus; 1 grandchild. Mount Sinai 

David Heller died Dec. 4 at 64. Survived by brother Thomas. Hillside

Richard Heller died Dec. 5 at 67. Survived by wife Sharon; daughters Alexis, Melissa; son Gregory. Hillside

Gary Jacobs died Dec. 4 at 84. Survived by wife Sylvia; daughter Hillary (Steven); son Dana (Jennie); sisters Lynne, Brenda. Hillside

Florence Jacoby died Nov. 29 at 95. Survived by daughters Sandra (Jerry), Susan; son Steven (Julie); 8 grandchildren; 7 great-grandchildren. Hillside

Sandra Lipsky died Nov. 27 at 81. Survived by husband Max; daughter Dawn Lipsky Buch; son Douglas; 2 grandchildren; brother  Barry (Harriet) Zaslov. Mount Sinai

Andrew Kallman died Nov. 28 at 61. Survived by wife Frances; daughter Cayla; sons Sammy, Nicky; sisters Amy (Christine), Beth (Joe). Hillside

Myrna Kamon died Dec. 2 at 97. Survived by daughters Ellen (Michael) Kamon-Wolf, Jill (Chistopher Evans); 3 grandchildren. Mount Sinai 

Bernard Kessler died Dec. 2 at 96. Survived by daughters Robin (Stephen) Einstein, Honey Amado; son Gary (Gayle Belin); 9 grandchildren; 9 great-grandchildren; sister Zelda Lassoff. Malinow and Silverman 

Irene Krainess died Dec. 3 at 97. Survived by daughter Sandra; son-in-law Steve; 2 grandchildren; 2 great-grandchildren. Eden Memorial

Gloria Magat died Dec. 10 at 95. Survived by daughter Gloria Lynn (David) Bennett; 1 grandchild; sister-in-law Elena (Arthur). Mount Sinai

Alvin Matzer died Dec. 2 at 90. Survived by daughters Simone (Lloyd) Wagner, Lisa (Nick), Stefanie (Howard) Glazer; 6 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Edith Soloway Newman died April 17 at 94. Survived by daughter Deena (Charles) Stewart; sons Jason (Karyn), Gary (Jeanne); 7 grandchildren; sister Jeanette Lautman.

Geraldine Norman died Dec. 6 at 94. Survived by daughters Michele, Jill; 5 grandchildren, 11 great-grandchildren. Hillside

Stephanie Reitzenstein died Dec. 2 at 68. Survived by daughter Shana (Mike) Race; son Daniel (Tina); sister Lisa Matzat. Mount Sinai

Gerald Robinson died Dec. 6 at 76. Survived by wife Myrna; sons Scott, Matthew (Michele); 2 grandchildren; sister Sandra. Hillside

Minnie Robinson died Nov. 28 at 100. Survived by sons Donald, Robert (Lesvia); 4 grandchildren; 1 great-grandchild. Mount Sinai

Elaine Ruben died Dec. 7 at 79. Survived by husband Philip; daughter Jill (Michael); son Jason (Bria); 4 grandchildren; sister Alice (Stephen). Hillside

Jean Sadur Shaw died Dec. 7 at 99. Survived by daughter Erica (Alexander) Lowry; son Craig (Ellin); 5 grandchildren; 6 great-grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Jean Shulman died Nov. 28 at 94. Survived by son Marc; 1 grandchild; 1 great-grandchild. Hillside

Joseph Smith died Dec. 2 at 91. Survived by wife Dione; daughter Julie (Jamie); son Jeff (Amy Jo); 2 grandchildren. Hillside

Martin L. Sokolik died Dec. 11 at 89. Survived by wife Barbara; daughter Joni (Jon) Duim; 4 grandchildren. Mount Sinai

Mildred Soroko died Dec. 8 at 100. Survived by son Steven (Beri); 2 grandchildren. Hillside

Marion Stein died Dec. 6 at 91. Survived by daughter Lorraine (Kenneth); son Matt (Tara); 4 grandchildren. Hillside

Else Stern died Dec. 1 at 104. Survived by daughter Helen (Ian); son Ralph (Suzanne); 7 grandchildren; 16 great-grandchildren. Hillside

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Episode 179: Young Israeli Climate Change Activist

The cover of Time. Many monumental figures of history have graced this much-coveted magazine cover: Albert Einstein, JFK, MLK, Pope John Paul II. This year, joining these ranks is Greta Thunberg, this year’s Time Magazine Person of the Year. So much has been said and written about Greta, the 16-year-old Swedish girl who took the world by storm with her furious speeches and international Friday demonstrations. Here in Israel, Greta didn’t receive much coverage. However, many young people felt connected to Greta’s movement and joined the environmental zeitgeist that was taking over the world.
Today we’re finally going to talk about climate change, one of the most controversial topics of our time.
Michael Buckland was born in Finland and made Aliyah 2 years ago. He quickly became aware of issues like the use of plastic and air pollution in Israel and started getting involved. Soon enough he began organizing protests and today he’s one of the leaders of a new Israeli green movement.
We’re happy to have Michael Buckland on the podcast today to talk about climate change!

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