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February 10, 2023

Around the World in a Toyota FJ Cruiser

On a Monday morning, a few hours before they were set to leave their house in Sherman Oaks to go to Africa for the next 18 months, Ayala and Eldad (Eddie) Dimand, 57 and 58 respectively, sat down for an interview with the Jewish Journal and reminisced about their long life of travelling. 

They had two carry-ons, a couple of duffle bags … and that was it. They are the definition of traveling light. The Israeli couple, who had moved to the US in 1986, are avid travelers and have been traveling the world with their two sets of twins – now ages 26 and 24 – since they were born. Those were shorter trips though: a week here, a month there. 

“I arranged four car seats in the back of the car and we went everywhere with them,” said Eldad. “We also used to have a motor home which we crisscrossed the states with. We did it every single weekend.”

But the couple was eager to set out on a real trip, like the one they did after their discharge from the IDF, where they had met while serving. After traveling in their early 20s all over the U.S. and South America, they returned to Israel to get married and raise a family there. But they just couldn’t do it.

“We took all the money we got as wedding gifts and traveled back to South America, visited Brazil and Venezuela and then decided to settle in Los Angeles,” said Eldad.

Once their four children moved out of the house, the couple knew exactly what they wanted to do. The plan was to drive all the way to Argentina and then ship the car back home. They took their Toyota FJ Cruiser and transformed it into a hotel on wheels. On the roof, they set up a folded tent which opens up easily. In the back, they arranged for a cooler, a cooking stand, a water tank for showers and all the essentials needed for a long trip.

“We love off-roading, [and] we prefer it to driving on the main road,” said Eldad. “This way we get to see places that tourists don’t usually see while traveling, and we meet people who live in small villages and get to really know them and their lives.”

Their unusual looking car drew attention wherever they went and gained them new friends, even in places considered dangerous by many travelers. 

“When we got to El Salvador, we were pretty scared because they have the biggest murder rate in all of South America,” said Eldad. “As soon as we crossed the border and were on the main road, we noticed another Toyota driver who looked at us suspiciously. He drove in front of us, switched to the back, then next to us and signaled me to stop.”

Needless to say, the Dimands were not too eager to oblige, but the other driver was persistent. Reluctantly, they parked on the side of the road and hoped for the best.

“We rolled down the windows just a bit at first, but the guy seemed harmless,” Eldad said.” He was very excited about our car and told us he is representing the off-road community in El Salvador. He wanted to invite us to an event they were holding in Honduras where other members of the community from all over South America were going to attend. We gladly accepted and arranged to get there.”

However, before they managed to get to the off-road event, they landed another surprising invitation. “We stopped one day to fix something in the car, and this guy comes up to us and introduces himself as an off-road, 4×4 lover. [He] invited us to his hotel that sits on a lake in Honduras.”

At the first event they were invited to, they met with Ibrahim, a Palestinian immigrant. “He was the owner of the restaurant where the meeting of the club was held,” said Eldad. “We met his brothers and children and they were so nice and welcoming.”

Isn’t it difficult to travel with your spouse for months on end and share a small space 24/7?

“My husband is a very easy-going kind of guy,” said Ayala. “I think it’s important to understand each other’s role in the trip, like who is driving, navigating, et cetera and then everything works out.”

To plan the trip, the couple marked on Google Maps all the places they would like to visit. They used an app for off-roaders and mainly drive on dirt roads so they could see nature. 

With limited Spanish – which improved throughout their trip – they managed to communicate with people, many of them poor or with limited resources, who opened up their homes and hearts to them.

“It was pretty incredible to see how generous people were. When we got to Guatemala, we needed to change [our] oil, [and] it was a Sunday and everything was closed,” said Ayala. “We saw a guy who had a ramp in his garage. We stopped and asked if we can use it to lift up the car. Not only did he agree, he insisted to help Eddie to change the oil. When we wanted to pay him, he refused and said he was happy to help. It repeated itself everywhere we went. People were willing to help and didn’t ask anything in return.”

Their next trip, set to start soon, will begin in Spain. Afterwards, they will cross through Gibraltar to Morocco, continuing all the way down to South Africa. 

Their next trip, set to start soon, will begin in Spain. Afterwards, they will cross through Gibraltar to Morocco, continuing all the way down to South Africa. Then they will head back home, where they will stay for a short while until the set out for their next adventure with their home on wheels.

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Signing Off: Why I’ll Miss These Leading Lights of Jewish Journalism

The Jewish theologian David Novak once wrote, “To be a Jew, essentially and not just accidentally, is to regard the Jewish people as one’s sole primal community. Election by the unique God requires total and unconditional loyalty to one people.”

I was reminded of this passage as I learned this week of the passing of Rabbi Mark S. Golub, the trailblazing rabbi and journalist who passed away last week at 77. Rabbi Golub was best known for having created the first national Jewish television network, Shalom TV, which was later renamed the Jewish Broadcasting Service. But in his actions, pursuits and his ideals, Rabbi Golub was someone who devoted his entire life to the service of the Jewish people and to bringing our at times disparate community closer together.

For Rabbi Golub, this meant not only a fervent commitment to the religious side of Judaism, but also a belief in creating a sense of community through open, meaningful dialogue across the religious and political spectrums.

While he spent many years as a pulpit rabbi in Stamford and Greenwich, Connecticut his lifelong passion project was broadcasting, which he recognized early on as a powerful tool to foster dialogue and learning. Beginning as the general manager of the campus radio station at Columbia University, and later as the publisher of “Sh’ma Magazine,” which he created to “foster Jewish wisdom,” Rabbi Golub’s lifelong mission was to enhance Jewish understanding through the power of journalism.

His greatest achievement was the creation of Shalom TV, which he founded in 2003 with a mission to strengthen Jewish identity, inspire Jewish commitment and foster meaningful conversations. The fledgling network grew from modest beginnings into JBS – a 24/7 Jewish cable network serving 75 million households representing every major cable system in the United States. The network has brought incredible Jewish programming and Jewish and Israeli speakers to every corner of the land.

From the outset, Rabbi Golub was more than just a behind-the-scenes producer and CEO. He literally was the face of the network. His signature program “L’Chayim,” featured him in enlightening conversations with world leaders. Through his gifts for storytelling and interviewing, his program gained widespread recognition and plaudits. In 2009, Newsweek named him one of the 50 most influential rabbis in the U.S.

Like many Jewish leaders I had the pleasure of calling Rabbi Golub a friend. I met him shortly after I joined ADL and Rabbi Golub welcomed me with open arms. He was someone whose wisdom I valued and whose humor I enjoyed. His passing is a deep loss for our community. It means that another of the bright lights of Jewish journalism has moved on. Fortunately, he left behind an amazing legacy – hundreds of interviews and videos on YouTube that are still just a few clicks away and will allow his voice to be heard long into the future.

There was another bright light who also closed his reporter’s notebook in December: Tom Tugend. Tom was a lifelong Jewish journalist who spent years chronicling our community and its successes, follies, and foibles from his perch in Los Angeles at the Jewish Journal and for JTA.

Tom, who died at his home in Sherman Oaks, California, was one of the best of his generation. Even as he passed, he was still busy pursuing his next story.

Born in Germany before the Third Reich, he escaped to America with his family in 1939 when he was just a teenager. He was drafted to serve in the U.S. Army at 18 and sworn in during basic training. He served in France fighting SS units alongside the 63rd Infantry Division. He would go on to enlist as a fighter in Israel’s War of Independence and, after attending journalism school at UC Berkeley, served in the Korean War.

But writing was his calling. Tom went on to work for the San Francisco, The AP in Spain and as a night desk reporter at the Los Angeles Times before becoming a science writer at UCLA, where he worked for nearly three decades.

Having reached retirement age at 64, Tom launched himself into the next phase of his career, earning a reputation as the dean of American Jewish journalism. Tom wrote hundreds of articles over the next 30 years exploring every subject imaginable — everything from profiling celebrities to exploring trends in Hollywood filmmaking and covering the latest news on the Academy Awards. As a Los Angeles native who had enjoyed his dispatches over the years, I was profoundly saddened to learn of his passing.

I did not know him well – we only met once back in Los Angeles – but I tip my hat to Tom and the many others whose names you might not know but who are making contributions daily to the important task of covering our own community fairly, critically and without bias. They are not preoccupied with the silliness of social media. They are consulting sources, checking facts, and doing the nuts and bolts of basic journalism that helps our people make sense of this world.

I hope you will join with me in celebrating the contributions Tom, Rabbi Golub and others have made to Jewish journalism by reading one of their stories, watching a broadcast or subscribing to one of their publications.

I hope you will join with me in celebrating the contributions Tom, Rabbi Golub and others have made to Jewish journalism by reading one of their stories, watching a broadcast or subscribing to one of their publications to support this important work in 2023 and beyond.


Jonathan A. Greenblatt is CEO and National Director of ADL (the Anti-Defamation League).  

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LA Jewish Film Fest Screening, Mitzvah Day, IKAR Cantor Concert, Mikvah Campaign

On Jan. 29, the Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival (LAJFF) held a screening of “Schächten.” 

It was 182 seats full at the Laemmle Royal Theater for the Los Angeles premiere sneak preview of the 2022 Austrian drama, starring Israeli-German actor Jeff Wilbusch. The program was held just two days after International Holocaust Remembrance Day and was co-organized by LAJFF, the Austrian Consulate General, Consulate General of the Federal Republic of Germany and American Jewish Committee. Dignitaries were present from the Austrian, German and Israeli consulates. 

A post-screening Q&A featured the film’s Austrian writer and director Thomas Roth and lead actor Wilbusch, known for his role as the intimidating cousin in the Netflix miniseries “Unorthodox.”

Based on true events, the film is set in Vienna in the 1960s and follows Victor Dessauer, a young Jewish businessman. When Victor fails to secure just punishment for the Nazi concentration commandment who tortured his parents, he resolves to take the law into his own hands.


Hundreds of volunteers turn out and help at Shomrei Torah Synagogue and Temple Aliyah’s joint mitzvah day. Courtesy of Temple Aliyah

Hundreds of congregants from West Valley synagogues Temple Aliyah and Shomrei Torah Synagogue (STS) came together and took social action into their own hands, while petting some paws in the process.

From left: Shomrei Torah Synagogue Rabbi Richard Camras and Temple Aliyah Rabbi Stewart Vogel. Courtesy of Temple Aliyah

The two synagogues held a joint mitzvah day on Jan. 29 at STS’s West Hills campus. 

During the daylong event, volunteers took part in a variety of projects, including repairing chumashim, the book-bound forms of the Torah; planting vegetables in the STS community garden; making fleece blankets for children living in domestic violence shelters with JFS Project Hope; and prepping sandwiches for people experiencing homelessness. 

“To all who participated in our Mitzvah Day events this past weekend — Mazal tov!” a message from Temple Aliyah said.


IKAR Hazan and musical artist Hillel Tigay performs at his record release party. Courtesy of IKAR

Music fans, congregants of IKAR and others gathered to celebrate IKAR Hazan and Music Director Hillel Tigay’s record release party. 

Marking the release of two albums, “Judeo Volume II,” which came out during the pandemic, and “Stand Together, Fall Apart,” featuring alternative pop music, the Jan. 29 gathering was held at IKAR’s event space of La Cienega and featured Tigay, an accomplished musical artist, performing music from the two albums. He was joined by his band, Palms Station.

Attendees included IKAR Rabbi Sharon Brous. To her longtime collaborator, Tigay, she said, “You have created the spiritual soundtrack to our lives.”

Others called the gathering “a beautiful celebration,” an “absolute blast” and a “fantastic way to celebrate Hillel and his extraordinary music.”

Tigay – who majored in musicology – is just as comfortable on the bimah as he is in a recording studio. In addition to leading IKAR services, he spends his time writing Jewish music that incorporates pop sensibilities. The Journal has previously described him as the “rock cantor,” noting influences as wide ranging as U2 and the Beatles.


From left: Malka Lesches, Sarah Levin, Jordana Topp, Chana Leah Margolis, Deborah Goldenberg, Liz Steinlauf, Vivian Lurie, Malka and Josh Katzin. Courtesy of Sharon Gomperts

Josh and Malka Katzin recently hosted an inspiring evening in support of the Los Angeles Mikvah Esther building campaign.

A campaign to both preserve and enhance the mitzvah, located on Pico Boulevard, is underway. The goal of those behind the effort is building a facility with three pools and 17 preparation rooms.

According to the mikvah’s website, $2.3 million has been raised toward a goal of $6 million. For additional information, visit BuildingLAMikvah.org.

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