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101 Words In A Row Beginning With Alef – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on December 28, 2019

Photo Credit: Jewish Press

I recently acquired an entertaining invitation to the wedding of one of Rabbi Yehudah Yudel Rosenbergs children.

Rabbi Rosenberg (1859-1935) was the author of many sefarim and is most often remembered for reviving the story of the golem of the Maharal of Prague (He also wrote a sefer defending the use of electricity on Shabbat called Maor HaChashmal. At the time, this position wasnt that unusual.)

Leaving a rabbinic position in Tarlow, Poland, in 1913, Rabbi Rosenberg immigrated to the New World where he became rabbi of Torontos Beth Jacob Congregation, which was founded in 1899 by a group of Polish-born Jews. He was involved in many community activities in Toronto, including the founding of the Talmud Torah Eitz Chaim, which is still active today, over 100 years later. From 1919 until his death, Rabbi Rosenberg served as a rabbi in Montreal.

The invitation I acquired is for the wedding of Rabbi Rosenbergs daughter Chanah (Annie, born 1897). The printed invitation, entirely in Hebrew, begins with an acrostic poem that spells out the name of the bride and groom, Moshe and Chanah. This acrostic is followed by the text of the invitation, which contains 101 words, every single one starting with the Hebrew letter aleph!

Interestingly, the chuppah took place late Friday afternoon in R. Rosenbergs synagogue at 3:00 p.m., on a winter day, followed by a meal at the rabbis residence. Though nearly forgotten today, the custom of making the wedding feast on Friday night is ancient and was known already in Talmudic times. (It has economic advantages, of course, in that the Shabbat meal and wedding feast are combined.)

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101 Words In A Row Beginning With Alef - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

‘Little Women’ and 20 other great films directed by American women – NBC News

Posted By on December 28, 2019

When the nominations for the 77th Golden Globe Awards were announced earlier this month, one notable snub astounded critics and film aficionados: Greta Gerwig, the acclaimed writer and director of "Little Women," was left out of the running.

The exclusion seemed to underscore the gender inequities and biases of Hollywood, particularly when it comes to the major awards ceremonies. The voting groups behind the Academy Awards and the Golden Globes have each nominated a woman for the directing honor only five times, and only two have won.

Gerwig, who was nominated for the directing Oscar two years ago for her debut film, the coming-of-age dramedy "Lady Bird," appeared to shrug off the snub. In an interview with "TODAY," Gerwig said "there's no way it's not a bummer," but added that more "worthy films" are being made by women every year.

"Little Women," the eighth feature-length adaptation of the classic novel by Louisa May Alcott, drew rapturous reviews ahead of its release Wednesday, earning praise for its stirring performances and painterly cinematography. Gerwig, in particular, was hailed by many critics as a singular talent.

"Though we can't foretell whether time will be cruel or kind to Gerwig's 'Little Women,' it may just be the best film yet made by an American woman," The New Yorker's Anthony Lane wrote in his review, which will appear in the Jan. 6 issue of the magazine.

The inequalities and prejudices of the American film industry the "boy's club" environment of studio executive suites and the long-standing barriers to female power mean the list of films directed by American women is far too short. But it is filled with vital, historically significant works.

The list that follows, subjective and by no means comprehensive, is presented in chronological order and ranges from Oscar-winning classics to more obscure, little-known projects that richly deserve greater public awareness.

Deren, a Ukrainian-born multihyphenate artist dancer, choreographer, poet and experimental filmmaker, collaborated with her husband, Alexander Hammid, on this mesmerizing and nearly indescribable 14-minute avant-garde short. The dreamlike atmosphere of "Meshes" was a clear influence on cult director David Lynch.

Lupino, a British American actress, was one of the only female filmmakers active in the Hollywood studio system of the 1950s, and this searing drama was one of the few mainstream commercial movies from the period to tackle the issue of rape.

Clarke, a daring experimental filmmaker, trained her lens on gay African American hustler (and aspiring nightclub performer) Jason Holliday, who regales the camera with stories from his tumultuous life. The Library of Congress selected "Portrait" for preservation in the National Film Registry four years ago.

May, half of a beloved comedy duo alongside the late Mike Nichols, helmed this riotous pitch-black comedy about a dim playboy (Walter Matthau) and an awkward botany professor (May). May's promising, distinctive directing career (which also included "The Heartbreak Kid") was unjustly cut short after the failure of the (misunderstood!) musical-comedy "Ishtar."

Kopple, a documentarian and activist, chronicled a 1973 miners' strike in southeastern Kentucky in this urgent, Oscar-winning portrait of the confrontation between labor and business. Kopple followed it with "American Dream" (1990), a documentary about an unsuccessful strike against the Hormel Foods company.

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Weill's quietly influential "Girlfriends" centers on a frustrated Jewish photographer who struggles to stay afloat after her roommate moves out of their New York City apartment. The frank, honest dramedy helped pave the way for Lena Dunham's "Girls" and Phoebe Waller-Bridge's "Fleabag."

Streisand has gone behind the camera three times, first with "Yentl" and then with "The Prince of Tides" (1991) and "The Mirror Has Two Faces" (1996). The musical icon stars in "Yentl" as a Polish Jew who dresses like a man so she can study the Talmud. "Yentl" made her the first, and so far only, woman to win the directing Golden Globe.

Deitch, a prolific television director, quietly made history with "Desert Hearts," one of the first mainstream American movies to depict a lesbian love story with sensitivity and sensuality. The underappreciated drama was released on Blu-ray and DVD by the prestigious Criterion Collection in 2017.

Amy Irving and Peter Riegert co-starred in this sweet-natured portrait of a Jewish bookstore clerk torn between two suitors. Micklin Silver, who last released a feature film in 1999, brought tenderness and wit to what otherwise might have seemed like a formulaic romantic comedy.

Dash's visually striking and poetic study of three generations of Gullah women on Saint Helena Island in South Carolina was a milestone. The film, financed independently, was the first directed by an African American woman to be distributed theatrically in the United States. Beyonce's visual album "Lemonade" paid it homage.

Marshall's high-spirited, crowd-pleasing comedy starred Geena Davis, Madonna and Rosie O'Donnell as players for the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League and Tom Hanks as their manager. "League," a generations-spanning family favorite, will be theatrically re-released next year by Fathom Events and Turner Classic Movies.

"Gas Food Lodging" was a small-scale sensation in the heady days of the early 1990s independent film boom. Anders centered the story on a single mother trying to raise her two daughters while holding down a job as a waitress. J. Mascis of the rock band Dinosaur Jr. contributed several songs to the soundtrack.

"As if!" Alicia Silverstone stars as a wealthy, cunning and surprisingly soulful Beverly Hills teenager in this modern classic of high school hijinks, romantic comedy and adolescent sociology, with a plot inspired by Jane Austen's novel "Emma." Heckerling previously directed another teen landmark: "Fast Times at Ridgemont High."

Lemmons, who directed this year's critically adored biopic "Harriet," made her debut with this wise, self-assured meditation on the mysteries of memory. The film revolves around a little girl (Jurnee Smollett-Bell) who discovers that her father (Samuel L. Jackson) is having an affair, a revelation she does not fully understand. The late critic Roger Ebert championed the film.

In a year filled with essential American movies, Peirce's second directorial outing stood out. "Boy's Don't Cry" was a compassionate and devastating portrait of a transgender man, played by Hilary Swank, who searches for love in the heartland but becomes the victim of a horrific hate crime. Swank won an Oscar for the role.

Cardoso's dramedy, starring a young America Ferrera (before she reached national fame on the sitcom "Ugly Betty") as a teenager finding her place in east Los Angeles, invigorated audiences at the Sundance Film Festival and remains one of the most significant Latinx-themed films of the last 20 years.

Scarlett Johansson and Bill Murray made a mesmerizing pair as total strangers who bond over their loneliness and disaffection in a Tokyo hotel in this sophomore film from Coppola, who went on to charm and mystify audiences with the stylish "Marie Antoinette," "Somewhere," "The Bling Ring" and "The Beguiled."

Bigelow, a master of relentlessly entertaining genre films ("Near Dark," "Blue Steel" and "Point Break" among them) become the first, and so far only, woman to win the directing Oscar with this harrowing, stomach-churning, era-defining thriller about the Iraq war. "The Hurt Locker" scored best picture at the Oscars.

DuVernay became the first African American woman to be nominated for a directing Golden Globe with this impassioned, brilliantly realized docudrama about the Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights marches of 1965. (DuVernay's latest project, the Netflix miniseries "When They See Us," is just as essential.)

Zhao brought poise and insight to the real-life story of Brady Jandreau (playing a fictionalized version of himself), a rodeo star who suffers severe brain damage and must learn to forge a new path in life. Zhao's next project: Marvel's "The Eternals," slated for release late next year.

But wait, there's more: It is well worth exploring films made by Lisa Cholodenko ("The Kids Are All Right"); Nora Ephron ("Sleepless in Seattle"); Jodie Foster ("Home for the Holidays"); Debra Granik ("Winter's Bone," "Leave No Trace"); Catherine Hardwicke ("Thirteen"); Mary Harron ("American Psycho"); Marielle Heller ("Can You Ever Forgive Me?"); Nicole Holofcenter ("Walking and Talking," "Enough Said"); Patty Jenkins ("Wonder Woman"); Tamara Jenkins ("The Savages"); Miranda July ("Me and You and Everyone We Know," "The Future"); Karyn Kusama ("Destroyer"); Nancy Meyers ("Something's Gotta Give"); Sarah Polley ("Away from Her," "Stories We Tell"); Gina Prince-Bythewood ("Love & Basketball"); Dee Rees ("Pariah," "Mudbound"); Kelly Reichardt ("Wendy and Lucy," "Meek's Cutoff"); Lorene Scafaria ("Hustlers"); and Susan Seidelman ("Smithereens," "Desperately Seeking Susan").

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'Little Women' and 20 other great films directed by American women - NBC News

High school senior in critical condition after being hit by a car – The Prince George’s Sentinel

Posted By on December 28, 2019

SILVER SPRING A Walter Johnson High School student remained in the intensive care unit in critical condition after being struck while crossing Montrose Road to board his school bus on Dec. 13.

Eyal Haddad, a 17-year-old senior, was struck while crossing Montrose Road at Bargate Court on his way to the school bus, located on the far right lane. Reine Ngoumou Nee Nganzeu, 61, of Rockville, was driving a 2018 Jeep Renegade that ended up hitting Haddad. The driver was not injured and remained on the scene, according to police.

Haddad, who was born in Israel and has lived in this area for about six years, is an active member of Chabad Israeli Center of Rockville. He was taken to Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, which is the state-designated trauma center in the region.

He is critical but stable, said his Rabbi Shlomo Beitsh on Dec. 24.

Beitsh described Haddad as a friendly, caring boy. He has a lot of friends and was planning on going to college in the fall. Beitsh has visited Haddad frequently and said his family has been at the hospital the whole time.

Doctors are optimistic, Betish said. We pray that very soon he will be out.

The teenager is one of five children. He has an older sister and three younger brothers. The family is very involved at the Chabad Israeli Center, according to their rabbi.

A GoFundMe fundraiser was set up online and began raising money to support Eyals recovery. As of Dec. 27, 853 people had donated a total of $61,154 toward the goal of $118,000.

The latest update on that page stated, Eyal is still in ICU, surrounded with love and so many posters and cards wishing him (a) speedy recovery. Thank you all for the amazing support!

Rabbi Beitsh suggested that besides making a financial contribution, People can dedicate a good deed for his recovery, as Haddad was an active volunteer in the community.

Hes the one who always gets his friends to come and help out on projects, including a regular program in which students clean and do gardening at Chesed Shel Emes Cemetery in Capitol Heights, Md.

Teens at the Chabad Israeli Center of Rockville also take an annual trip to New York where they study and see the sights.

Hes the one who organizes the group, Beitsh said.

Walter Johnson Principal Jennifer Baker sent two letters home following the tragic accident. She expressed concern for all students who were impacted, including those who witnessed the accident.

Our thoughts are with the student, their family and friends, she wrote. We know this is very difficult news for our community, she said, adding that counseling staff and psychologists are available to support students who wish to talk.

Members of BNai Israel Congregation in North Bethesda also received an email from Moshe Ben-Lev, education director at the synagogues Talmud Torah religious school. It stated that its fourth grade Hebrew teacher is Haddads mother.

We have communicated to Osnat our love, support and eagerness to help in any way that we can, Ben-Lev said. We pray for a speedy and complete recovery for Eyal, support for the Haddad family, and wisdom and compassion for all who are entrusted with Eyals care.

According to Montgomery County Police Department, the accident occurred at 7:18 a.m. when Haddad was attempting to cross eastbound Montrose Road to board a Montgomery County Public School bus. All county school buses have cameras, and police still are reviewing the incident.

Charges had not been filed as of Dec. 24, noted police spokesperson Capt. C. Thomas Jordan.

The day before Haddads incident, a nine-year-old girl was killed after being hit by a school bus. She was a student at Bradley Hills Elementary School in Bethesda.

According to Montgomery County Police, a little after 3:45 p.m. on Dec. 12, the young girl was struck at the intersection of Millwood Road and Tanglewood Drive. The preliminary investigation showed that the bus driver had unloaded the students, including the girl who was hit, and began turned right onto northbound Millwood Road when for reasons still under investigation, the 9-year-old female was struck by the bus.

The fourth grader was taken to Childrens National Hospital, where she died.

So far this year, 14 people have been killed, and nearly 600 incidents involving bicyclists and pedestrians have taken place throughout the county, according to Councilman Evan Glass.

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‘Jews of Florida-Centuries of Stories’ brings the past to life – Heritage Florida Jewish News

Posted By on December 28, 2019

"What Macaulay was to the history of the English, Marcia Jo Zerivitz is to the history of Florida Jewry. She has salvaged the records of the past and turned the struggles and successes of the dead into a living, breathing narrative," said Stephen J. Whitfield, professor emeritus of American Studies, Brandeis University.

The first comprehensive history of the Jews of Florida from colonial times to the present is a sweeping tapestry of voices. Despite not being officially allowed to live in Florida until 1763, Jewish immigrants escaping expulsions and exclusions were among the earliest settlers. They have been integral to every facet of Florida's growth, from tilling the land and developing early communities to boosting tourism and ultimately pushing mankind into space.

The Sunshine State's Jews, working for the common good, have been Olympians, Nobel Prize winners, computer pioneers, educators, politicians, leaders in business and the arts and more, while maintaining their heritage to help ensure Jewish continuity for future generations.

This rich narrative-accompanied by 700 images, most rarely seen-is the result of three-plus decades of grassroots research by author Marcia Jo Zerivitz, giving readers an incomparable look at the long and crucial history of Jews in Florida.

Many Central Floridians are familiar with Zerivitz. She was the first woman president of the Jewish Federation of Greater Orlando (from 1978 to 1980). In 2015, Zerivitz volunteered to serve as the guest curator of Orlando's own Jewish history exhibit and its book, "Kehillah: A History of Jewish Life in Greater Orlando."

"When I was approached in May 2015 to curate the Kehillah exhibition to commemorate the centennial of Congregation Ohev Shalom, I was honored and enthusiastic to continue my passion of documenting Florida Jewish History. For me, this is all about roots and memory. Like cut flowers, Jews wither without their roots. Our collective memories are our roots," Zerivitz said in the "Kehillah" introduction.

From 1984 to 1992, Zerivitz traveled 250,000 miles throughout Florida, conducting grassroots research and retrieving the state's hidden, 250-plus year Jewish History, resulting in a major archive and the MOSAIC: Jewish Life in Florida exhibit that traveled to 13 cities from 1990-1994.

Marcia Jo Zerivitz

In 1995, she transitioned that project into the Jewish Museum of Florida on Miami Beach, enveloping the collections and presenting more than 70 exhibits with 500 educational programs in 16 years. Zerivitz has authored historical exhibitions, articles, books, and films, and has been published nationally and internationally.

Zerivitz also initiated the legislation for both Florida Jewish History Month each January and Jewish American Heritage Month each May to increase awareness of the contributions of Jews to the quality of life for all.

"Jews of Florida-Centuries of Stories" is published by Arcadia Publishing & The History Press and will release on Jan. 6, 2020. The book will be available wherever local books are sold and online at arcadiapublishing.com.

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'Jews of Florida-Centuries of Stories' brings the past to life - Heritage Florida Jewish News

The top 10 Jewish stories of 2019 – Heritage Florida Jewish News

Posted By on December 28, 2019

(JTA)For many Jews around the world, theres probably no love lost for 2019.

As the year draws to a close, the Jewish community continues to grapple with the continued rise of global anti-Semitismone major community in Europe is facing the possible election as prime minister of a man who many Jews consider an anti-Semite. And Israel is caught in the grip of political paralysis following two fruitless elections (with a prime minister facing prosecution for corruption).

Meanwhile, with a U.S. presidential election looming next year that is sure to be bitterly contested, theres little reason to think were in for a smoother ride in 2020.

These are the Jewish stories that most captured our attention in 2019 and whose reverberations are likely to be felt well into the next ride around the sun.

The Poway synagogue shooting

In April, on the last day of Passover, a gunman opened fire at a Chabad synagogue in the San Diego suburb of Poway, killing one person and injuring three. The accused gunman told a 911 dispatcher that he did it because Jewish people are destroying the white race.

The Poway attack shook the American Jewish community, which was still reeling from the shooting attack at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh that killed 11 worshippers at Shabbat services. As the one-year anniversary of the shooting approached in October, the community held a number of memorial events that made it clear the aftershocks were still being felt.

I live with Oct. 27 every minute of every hour of every day, and I will for the rest of my life, Rabbi Jeffrey Myers said.

Two killed in Yom Kippur attack on German synagogue

As 51 people gathered for Yom Kippur services in the German city of Halle, Stephan Balliet, clad in combat gear and wearing a head-mounted camera, tried to blast his way inside. When the synagogues fortified doors kept him out, he turned and shot Jana Lange, who had reprimanded him for making too much noise. Then Balliet proceeded to a nearby kebab shop, where he shot and killed a man identified only as Kevin S. Balliet later told police he was motivated by anti-Semitism.

Worshippers remained in the synagogue for hours before they were evacuated by police to a nearby hospital, where they continued their holiday services.

It was intense and emotional, one participant said.

The shooting sent shock waves through the tiny Jewish community of Halle, which numbers about 500 people. It also sparked outrage from leaders of German Jewry, who demanded to know why the synagogue was left unguarded on the holiest day of the Jewish calendar. Josef Schuster, head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, called the failure scandalous, and said if police had been present they could have disarmed the gunman before he harmed anyone.

Israelis vote twice and still dont have a prime minister

Israeli politics are a hot mess right now.

In April, national elections resulted in a tie between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahus Likud party and his principal challenger, the Blue and White party led by former general Benny Gantz. Netanyahu failed to form a government, so Israelis went back to the polls in September and again delivered no clear winner: 33 seats for Blue and White, 32 for Likud. First Netanyahu tried to form a government, then Gantz. Neither succeeded.

Israel has now entered uncharted territory: It appears headed for a third election, likely to take place in early March. The only thing Israelis probably agree on right now is how unpalatable another election will be.

Heres an explainer on how we got here.

Netanyahu faces corruption charges

As if the Israeli political situation wasnt complicated enough, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was indicted in November on multiple charges of corruption, including bribery and breach of public trust.

The most serious case alleges that Netanyahu traded political favors to the largest shareholder of the telecommunications giant Bezeq in exchange for favorable news coverage. Netanyahu also was accused of accepting gifts totaling $200,000 from Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan in exchange for political assistance, and of seeking positive coverage from the daily newspaper Yediot Acharonot in exchange for advancing a law that would have hurt a competitor.

Netanyahu has decried the indictment as a witch hunt and an attempted coup. He has 30 days to seek immunity from prosecution in the Knesset, his countrys parliament.

Hate crimes against Jews are spiking

Around the world, law enforcement and community organizations found that hate crimes continued to rise, with Jews often the most common targets.

In April, the Anti-Defamation League reported that 1,879 anti-Semitic incidents occurred in 2018, the third-highest tally in the four decades the ADL has been conducting annual audits. In July, the Canadian government reported that Jews were the most targeted minority group for the third straight year, even as hate crimes against other groups fell. And in August, the British Jewish communitys anti-Semitism watchdog reported the highest number of anti-Semitic incidents ever in the first six months of 2019.

In Brooklyn, a series of violent attacks against visibly Jewish victims caused particular alarm. Three were reported in one week in August alone. The situation led the city to create a new Office for the Prevention of Hate Crimes and install Devorah Lauter, a former ADL official, at its helm.

Israel becomes a wedge issue

This year saw serious cracks in what has long been a cherished feature of the U.S.-Israel relationship: bipartisanship.

In February, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., came under fire for a series of controversial tweets, including one chargingfalselythat the American Israel Public Affairs Committee pays politicians to be pro-Israel. Omar drew quick rebukes from leading Democrats and subsequently apologized. The following month, President Donald Trump piled on, calling the Democrats the anti-Jewish party. In August, Trump upped the ante, saying that anyone who voted for a Democrat was guilty of disloyalty, a comment that drew condemnation from critics who said it evoked classic anti-Semitic tropes.

Meanwhile, Democratic politicians were trending leftward on Israel, with several of the leading candidates for the presidential nomination saying they were prepared to use American aid as leverage to pressure Israel. The shifting center of gravity on Israel prompted pushback from the partys so-called moderate wing and prompted the creation of a new organization, the Democratic Majority for Israel, dedicated to cultivating support for the Jewish state in the party.

With a sure-to-be-nasty presidential election looming in 2020, both sides were preparing to spend heavily on the Israel issue. The Republican Jewish Coalition announced a $10 million ad campaign painting the Democrats as a shandaYiddish for disgracein part because of their position on Israel. Democratic groups pushed back with an ad blitz of their own.

British Jews unnerved by Corbyn candidacy

With the United Kingdom facing an enormously consequential election that could well determine the future of its membership in the European Union, British Jews were facing a momentous choice of their own. The Labour Party, long the political home of a majority of Britains Jews, is led by Jeremy Corbyn, who has been long been dogged by accusations of anti-Semitism.

Concern over Corbyn reached a fever pitch in the months prior to the Dec. 12 vote. In early November, Britains oldest Jewish newspaper, the Jewish Chronicle, published a front-page editorial pleading with Britons not to support Corbyn, noting a recent poll suggesting that approximately half of Jews would consider emigrating if he were elected. Weeks later, in an unprecedented intervention, British Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis wrote of British Jewrys justified anxiety at the prospect of a Corbyn premiership in a Times of London op-ed, warning that the very soul of our nation is at stake.

Corbyns record of actions that unnerved British Jews is long and well-documented. He once defended a London mural showing bankers playing monopoly on the backs of dark-skinned people that was widely seen as anti-Semitic, said Zionists have no sense of irony and described the militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah as friends.

He has passionately argued that there is no place for anti-Semitism in his party, but recently apologized for everything thats happened in Labour over the past few years.

Heres more on how the election could affect Jews.

The #MeToo movement hits the Jewish community

Michael Steinhardt, the Jewish megadonor who helped found Birthright Israel and supports a wide range of Jewish institutions, was accused of a pattern of propositioning and sexually inappropriate remarks to women.

According to an investigation by The New York Times and ProPublica, the journalism nonprofit, seven women alleged that Steinhardt made sexual requests of them while they were seeking his financial support. Steinhardt denied the accusations, but acknowledged a pattern of comments that were boorish, disrespectful, and just plain dumb.

In the wake of the accusations, the organized Jewish communitys longtime focus on encouraging endogamy and child rearinglong among Steinhardts favored philanthropic objectivesdrew increasing scrutiny.

A measles outbreak hits the Orthodox community

A measles outbreak that began with a trickle in haredi Orthodox communities in Israel and New York last year exploded into a full-on public health crisis in 2019. Hundreds of cases were reported in New York and thousands in Israel.

New York officials took aggressive measures to contain the outbreak, declaring a public health emergency and ordering that unvaccinated people living in four heavily Orthodox Zip codes in Brooklyn be vaccinated or pay fines up to $1,000. The state also banned religious exemptions for vaccines and at least 10 Jewish schools in New York City were shuttered for admitting unvaccinated students.

At least three fatalities were attributed to the disease in Israel, one of them a 43-year-old El Al flight attendant who contracted the disease on a flight from New York. By September, New York had declared the epidemic over.

Tiffany Haddish has a bat mitzvah

Tiffany Haddishs breakthrough year may have been 2017, when the 40-year-old actress and comedian starred in the successful comedy Girls Trip and released her memoir, The Last Black Unicorn. But 2019 was her Jewish breakout year.

Haddish, who only learned she was Jewish in her 20s when she met her Eritrean Jewish father, released a Netflix special, Black Mitzvah, in December on the same day she celebrated her bat mitzvah, with Sarah Silvermans rabbi sister presiding. She also sang Hava Nagila on The Tonight Show in the same week.

Something that I feel like a lot of African-Americans have been stripped of is their history, Haddish said. A lot of us dont know [our] origin. We dont know what our origin story is because that was taken from us. And it talks about that in the Torah. I think its so powerful.

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The top 10 Jewish stories of 2019 - Heritage Florida Jewish News

Nazi concentration camp artwork, Judaica, propaganda and other items selling in auction – PRNewswire

Posted By on December 27, 2019

WASHINGTON, Dec. 26, 2019 /PRNewswire/ --As co-founder of the U.S. Holocaust Museum, Mark Talisman accumulated a rare collection of artwork over his lifetime, including the 45-piece "I Never Saw Another Butterfly" collection of children's drawings from the Nazi Terezin concentration camp. That collection is among more than 500 pieces of art, history, and culture being sold in an online auction, with Prime Auction Solutions conducting the event.

"The highlight of the auction is the 'Butterfly' collection, a companion exhibit displayed alongside the acclaimed 'Precious Legacy' collection at the Smithsonian Institution and the B'Nai B'rith Museum," said Anne Nouri, president of the auction company.

In 1974, Mr. Talisman, as a congressional staffer, helped pen the Jackson-Vanick amendment to the Trade Act of 1974, enabling Soviet Jews to emigrate from the Soviet Union. Later, Talisman was appointed by President Jimmy Carter as vice chairman of the Holocaust Memorial Council, leading to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington D.C. Talisman was also president of the Project Judaica Foundation and a powerful advocate for Jewish causes until his death in 2019.

Also offered in the auction are rare objects of historical significance, including an autographed 1977 photo of Elie Wiesel, taken by the renowned photographer Roman Vishniac. Another is a photo of David Ben-Gurion, prime minister of Israel, taken by Talisman and used as the book cover for Ben-Gurion's autobiography.

Reflecting Talisman's long work in advocacy, the offerings also include:

"Some of the items I especially found fascinating were the Judaica, such as the intricately painted enamel Russian boxes, which Talisman had commissioned. During my years of designing and traveling in Russia, I had never encountered such artistic detail. I see this entire collection as a celebration of a remarkable life of advocacy and public service," said Nouri.

Bidding is open at http://www.primeauctionsolutions.com and will continue until January 16. Individuals seeking additional information may visit the web site or call 703-889-8949.

For more information:Carl Carter, 205-910-1952

SOURCE Prime Auction Solutions

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Nazi concentration camp artwork, Judaica, propaganda and other items selling in auction - PRNewswire

The Salt: In Miami, Trove Of Recipes Dating Back To Inquisition Reveals A Family’s Secret Jewish Roots – WMFE

Posted By on December 27, 2019

Genie Milgrom, pictured in 2013, stands in the entryway of her Miami home wrapped in a long family tree, filled with the names of 22 generations of grandmothers. Raised Catholic, Milgrom traced her family's hidden Jewish roots with the help of a trove of ancient family recipes written down by the women of her family over generations.Image credit: Miami Herald

With the holidays approaching, its the time of year for families to come together and share their traditions. But which traditions?

In a trove of old family recipes, Genie Milgrom found clues that led her to Inquisition-era Spain and her familys hidden Jewish heritage. Milgrom is a Cuban-American, now 65, who was raised a devout Catholic. Several years ago, when her Mom became ill, Milgrom went through her things and found a collection of recipes that had been recorded and handed down by generations of aunts and grandmothers. Some of the recipes traced all the way back to Inquisition-era Spain and Portugal.

At her home in Miami, Milgrom pulls some of the recipes from a shelf. Many are written on yellowed paper in faded ink. You can see old handwriting and little snippets of paper, she says. So this was just pages and pages and hundreds of these. Some are just crumbling.

As a girl, Milgrom says her maternal grandmother taught her some of the familys food customs. Many years later, she realized they revealed their secret Jewish roots.

In the Jewish dietary laws, were not allowed to consume any blood, she says. So she taught me how to check for blood in the eggs. You never pour them directly into a recipe.

Milgrom says her grandmother also insisted she learn another family custom that involved burning a small bit of bread dough in the oven. She says, Jewish women, when they make the bread for Friday nights, they take a little bit of the dough and they burn it like an offering and say a blessing in the oven. And you always have to have five pounds of flour to do this. Her grandmother, she says, didnt teach her to say a blessing. But she taught me to always bake with five pounds and to always take a little bit and burn it in the back of the oven.

Milgrom has a big personality, short black hair, a permanent smile, and shes constantly in motion. On this day, she has prepared one of the most unusual recipes she uncovered, a sugary dessert called chuletas, the Spanish word for pork chops.

Its designed to look like a pork chop, Milgrom explains, but its really made from bread and milk. Basically, its French toast thats fried in the shape of a pork chop and dressed up with tomato jam and pimentos.

Jewish dietary laws forbid the consumption of pork, so these chuletas were eaten as a sort of cover, she explains. It was the kind of thing that the crypto-Jews had to be eating to disguise to their neighbors and to the people who worked for them that they were [not, in fact,] eating pork. In 15th century Portugal and Spain and later, Milgrom says Jews would burn a pork chop in the fire so that their homes smelled like pork while they ate these chuletas.

Those recipes helped confirm something shed long suspected that she was descended from Jews who were forced to convert to Catholicism more than 500 years ago during the Inquisition. Some of these converts, called crypto-Jews, secretly continued to adhere to Judaism.

From the time she was very young, Milgrom says she never felt like she fit in. She attended Catholic schools and a Catholic university and married young. But throughout her life, she always felt drawn to the Jewish faith. When her marriage ended after 20 years, she decided to convert to Judaism. I have always felt Jewish, she says. Whether its epigenetics, its in my head, its in my brain, its in my soul not getting religious about this, whatever it is, I am where I belong right now.

Milgrom says her mother and others in her family werent happy when she decided to convert. But a turning point came when her grandmother died. Her mother insisted on burying her the very next day. It was a family custom she said, consistent with Jewish tradition but unusual for Catholics.

After the burial, Milgrom says her mother gave her a box that her grandmother had wanted her to have. I opened the box and it was an earring with a Star of David in it and a hamsa, which is an artifact that we wear that is like the Hand of God, Milgrom says, That is what started me deep into searching my genealogy because in death, she sent me the message, we were Jews.

Milgrom has written several books about her journey. Her latest is a cookbook, Recipes of My 15 Grandmothers. Her research took her to her familys ancestral village, Fermoselle, on the border between Spain and Portugal. Working with local historians there, she found evidence that until the Inquisition, the town had been Jewish.

But it was in the Inquisition records housed in Lisbon that she found what she was looking for. In the 16th and 17th generations on her mothers side, the records showed her grandmothers were Jewish. I finally succeeded in going back 22 generations, Milgrom says. Through her research, shes traced her Jewish roots back to 1405 on her maternal lineage and back even further, to 1110, on her fathers side.

She says the records show 45 of her relatives were actually burned at the stake for being Jews. Its a reminder of why her family hid their Jewish customs and centuries later, were still reluctant to talk about them. Milgrom, however, does talk about her heritage and travels around the world speaking about what it means to be a crypto-Jew.

At the launch of her new cookbook at the Jewish Museum of Florida in Miami Beach, she was introduced by Tudor Parfitt, a professor of Jewish studies at Florida International University. Parfitt says especially in Latin America, theres a growing number of people who believe they have Jewish ancestry.

Genies a very good example of the phenomenon, he says. But the phenomenon is very widespread and involves perhaps hundreds of thousands or millions of people.

There are communities with crypto-Judaic roots throughout Latin America. Milgrom, whos active on social media, says she receives between 200 and 400 emails every month from people around the world who are investigating their Jewish roots. Not everyone wants to convert to Judaism, she says; many just want to know their familys history.

To me, this is not really too much about changing the religion. She says its more about righting a historical wrong and being able to say, OK, my ancestors were Jewish. And a lot of people are proud of that.

Finding your Jewish roots is difficult, Milgrom says, because so much of crypto-Jewish history was deliberately erased, often by the families themselves. Thats why the recipes are so special, she says. When I saw them, I said, If these grandmothers carried these around for centuries, then its my duty to honor the fact that they found that it was a treasure to save.

In addition to her new cookbook, Genie Milgrom is part of a group working to digitize the records of Inquisition tribunals in Spain, Portugal, Mexico, Peru and other countries. She hopes making those records available on the Internet will help others trace their family roots and uncover five centuries of suppressed Jewish history.

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The Salt: In Miami, Trove Of Recipes Dating Back To Inquisition Reveals A Family's Secret Jewish Roots - WMFE

Best Denver Food and Drink Things to Do This Weekend – Westword

Posted By on December 27, 2019

If you haven't finished your holiday shopping yet, hop to it but don't forget to take a moment in between paying for expedited shipping to enjoy some of the weekend's best food and drink events, including a south-of-the-equator celebration and the beginning of Hanukkah.

For her latest TV special, Lidia traveled around the country including a stop in Denver.

Courtesy Lidia Celebrates America: Return of the Artisans

Friday, December 20Before Giada was a twinkle in anyone's eye, there was Lidia Bastianich, who ruled public television cooking shows by cooking Italian and Italian-American specialties, confounding viewers with her definition of "a little" olive oil and bossing around her grown children (all restaurateurs in their own right) and her own mother whenever they appeared on her show. She's also authored over fifteen cookbooks, and recently visited Comal Heritage Food Incubator for the latest installment of her television special, Lidia Celebrates America: Return of the Artisans.The episode, airing on Friday, December 20, at 8 p.m. on PBS, features Erika Rojas, who graduated from the food incubator and training program and has since started her own business, Prieto's Catering; see a preview of Lidia and Erika on the PBS website. Tune in, then contact Prieto's for your next party, and visit Comal, 3455 Ringsby Court, for your next weekday lunch.

It's summer all winter at Dos Luces.

Fermentable Sugar

Saturday, December 21Tis the season to treat yo' self to brunch at theCorner Office, 1401 Curtis Street. From Saturday, December 21, through Wednesday, January 1, the restaurant is serving up Twelve Days of Brunch. No matter what days you have off from now until the end of the month, you'll be able to show up any time between 6 a.m. (7 a.m. on the weekends) and 3 p.m. for the full brunch menu, including treats like a croque madame, beignets with chocolate ganache, and red velvet waffles topped with cream cheese frosting. And no brunch is complete without bottomless mimosas; the Office serves theirs with the usual suspects (orange and grapefruit) as well as cherry vanilla, pomegranate, passion fruit and more. Find the entire menu and book your table on the eatery's website.

Celebrate the longest day of the year on Saturday, December 21. You heard us: While Denver's shrouded in darkness for upwards of fourteen hours, folks south of the equator are basking in the sunshine so Dos Lucesis throwing asummer solstice fiesta. Starting at noon, the heat will be cranked up in the taproom at 1236 South Broadway, the kiddie pools will be inflated, and the new brew ponche pulque (fermented agave juice brewed with eight different fruits and nuts) will be flowing. Also on site: grub from food trucks, live music and a toy drive for CASA in Colorado, which recruits and trains court-appointed advocates for children in the state's court system. Visit the brewery's Facebook page for details about the free party and prepare to beat the heat over the weekend.

Saturday, December 21, will be a sad day for everyone who fondly recalls the Denver of a decade ago. Colt & Gray had just opened its doors at 1553 Platte Street and was the talk of the town and as bizarre as it seems to mourn the passing of a spot that's been around for just over ten years as a sign of the death of Old Denver, that's what Colt & Gray's closing feels like. But keep your chin up, kids, because the restaurant (and its downstairs bar, Ste. Ellie) isn't going down without a party. Starting at 7 p.m., show up for what's sure to be an epic Drink the Bar Dry bash, with food and drink specials designed to empty the larders and drain the bottles. Visit the spot's Facebook page for the details and show up ready to give the staff an epic sendoff and heartfelt "thank you" for ten great years.

Ash'Kara boasts a rotating roster of Hanukkah specials from December 22 through December 30.

Danielle Lirette

Sunday, December 22Hanukkah begins Sunday, December 22, and with its arrival comes celebratory food at our two favorite Israeli restaurants in town. Ash'Kara, 2005 West 33rd Avenue, is serving a menu of rotating Hanukkah specials through Monday, December 30. Show up more than once! to see what the kitchen is turning out; preliminary reports call for pastrami short ribs, root-vegetable latkes and sufganiyot, a jelly doughnut traditionally devoured by the dozen for the holiday, and more. Reservations are available on Ash'Kara's website. Meanwhile, Safta'sholiday menu includes a latke board with all the accompaniments (tsimmes, a dish of sweetened veggies; matbucha, a red pepper dip; zhoug, a spicy cilantro sauce; and labneh, strained yogurt) and rose sufganiyot with quince filling. You'll be able to get the goods at 3330 Brighton Boulevard through Sunday, December 29; make your reservation on the eatery's website.

And if you're planning ahead...

Expect the flavors of a Jewish deli to pop up in unexpected combinations at Rosenberg's Bagels & Delicatessen's Jewish Christmas pop-up.

Danielle Lirette

Tuesday, December 24Last Christmas Eve saw disappointed diners (Jewish and otherwise) heaving sighs of dismay as Rosenberg's Bagels & Delicatessentook a hiatus from hosting its annual Jewish Christmas meal. But on Tuesday, December 24, the Chinese-Jewish deli mashup pop-up inspired by the tradition of Jewish families heading out for a feast of Chinese food on the eve of a Christian holiday is back at the eatery's Stanley Marketplace location, 2501 Dallas Street in Aurora. From 6 to 9 p.m., people of all faiths are invited to gather for Reuben egg rolls, smoked salmon rangoon, teriyaki kippered salmon and kung pao pastrami, along with beer, wine and spiked cider and cocoa. Proceeds from ticket sales ($70 for early-bird orders placed by Monday, December 8, on Eventbrite, $80 thereafter) will benefit Conscious Alliance, a nonprofit feeding the hungry via food drives at concerts and the sale of music-themed art and memorabilia.

Tuesday, December 31A new year, a new slate of boozified and potentially appropriated "holidays" to celebrate: New Year's Eve, St. Patrick's Day, Cinco de Mayo. But of all the drunken ways to end 2019, you could do way, way worse than Lost in Japan at Colorado Sake Co.The taproom at 3559 Larimer Street is hosting a party that pays homage to the Land of the Rising Sun with bottomless sake, sushi, traditional Japanese New Year activities, games and a midnight cherry blossom drop. The bash runs from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m., and tickets, $70, are available now on Eventbrite.

Sunday, January 5Your New Year's Eve hangover has gone the way of 2019, and now it's time to make good on your resolution to learn a new hobby. And while YouTube is great for makeup tutorials and movie trailers, it leaves something to be desired when you're trying to learn to make fried Brussels sprouts and the pot of oil on your stove suddenly boils over and catches fire. What next? Will your entire apartment go up in flames before you can Google "How to put out an oil fire"? That's why Cook Street, 43 West Ninth Avenue, offers its Classic Techniques Essentials I class with real, live instructors who are able to give you a hand beforeyou chop your finger off trying to execute a chiffonade. The series of four classes begins Sunday, January 5, from 6 to 9:30 p.m., then runs weekly through Sunday, January 26. Tuition is $476 on Cook Street's website, where you can also find future class dates if you're still regrowing that finger you lost in a Thanksgiving cooking mishap.

Saturday, January 11Is it too early to start planning your New Year's resolutions? Not if yours is to eat more oatmeal. On Saturday, January 11, the City of Lafayette is holding its 24th annual oatmeal festival. That's right: In the realm of quirky agricultural festivals around Colorado, this one celebrates neither peaches nor Pueblo chiles, but porridge. A massive breakfast of 200 gallons of oatmeal with 100 different toppings, 4,000 oatmeal pancakes and 1,200 oatmeal muffins will be served from 7:30 a.m. to noon, At 9:30 a.m., you can take to the streets in a 5K run (and walk, if you're not looking to exceed the speed of an ocean of oatmeal oozing down the course). Breakfast runs $8, or $20 with race registration; find out more on the Lafayette Chamber of Commerce website.

Sunday, February 9Acciopint glass! On Sunday, February 9, all you have to do is swish your wand about to summon good times and cheer at the generically named Wizard's Beer Festival (the wizarding world has become significantly more litigious, it seems). Diebolt Brewing Co., 3855 Mariposa Street, is the site of the shenanigans, with four two-hour sessions throughout the day, beginning at 11 a.m. and 1:30, 4 and 6:30 p.m. There will be tarot card readers, DJs and wand-making classes; your $45 ticket will get you a welcome beer and tickets for five further potions. Just remember: You can't evanesco your hangover the next day. Pick up your tickets at Eventbrite before those sneaky Slytherins find a way to steal them all.

If you know of a date that should be on this calendar, send information to cafe@westword.com.

Amy Antonation knows that street tacos are infinitely superior to tacos that come covered in squiggles of crema, and she will stab you with her knitting needles if you try to convince her otherwise.

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Best Denver Food and Drink Things to Do This Weekend - Westword

Title: Introduction to the Talmud – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on December 27, 2019

Photo Credit: ArtScroll

Title: Introduction to the TalmudPublisher: ArtScroll

ArtScroll has done it again!

The ArtScroll Schottenstein Talmud revolutionized Gemara learning throughout the world. Now, with Introduction to the Talmud, ArtScroll has provided answers to questions we have all asked ourselves:

Who were the authors of the Talmud? When did they live? Where can I find a clear explanation of the 13 hermeneutic rules of Rabbi Yishmael that we say every morning before Pesukei DZimra? Where were the great yeshivos in Bavel located? Why was the Talmud Bavli more popular than the Talmud Yerushalmi?

Introduction to the Talmud provides answers to all these questions, and so much more. This 640-page tome is a natural addition to the Schottenstein 72-volume Talmud set and is brilliantly designed by the noted graphic artist R Sheah Brander to blend in beautifully as the 73rd volume as it matches perfectly in size, color, and graphics.

For whom was this work written? There have been other attempts to introduce the Talmud to beginners, but none of them appeal across the board as does Introduction to the Talmud. This volume should be required reading in every yeshiva, Bais Yaakov, and, lehavdil, university. It examines post-Churban Bayis Rishon life in Israel and Babylonia and how the Talmud developed and even thrived in both of these countries despite threats to the very lives of those learning, and especially teaching, Talmud.

This volume is divided into six sections with a clear Table of Contents.

Section one concerns Torah SheBeal Peh and the 13 hermeneutic rules of Rabbi Yishmael, as well as the Aggadata portions and how they are to be studied with the Talmuds legal sections.

The second section addresses the history of the Talmud, from Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi who separated the Talmud into six parts, to Soncino and Bomberg, who created the look of the Talmud page.

The third section is a guide to the Talmud page of both the Vilna and Schottenstein editions.

The fourth section I found to be most enlightening. It records the history of the Jews and their yeshivos in Eretz Yisrael and Babylonia with geographic descriptions, accompanied with a user-friendly map of Babylonia that enable the Talmudic student to visualize the references to places mentioned in the Talmud.

The fifth section provides the profiles, time lines, and biographical sketches of the most well-known and recognizable Taanaim and Amoraim along with those of their wives and families.

The sixth section may be the most original to be found in an introduction to the Talmud. It includes the Rambams introduction to both the Mishnah and Yad Chazaka, the Iggeres of Rav Sherira Gaon, and an explanation of the dating system used by Rav Sherira Gaon.

The work also contains excellent and informative introductions by Rav Nosson Scherman and R Gedaliah Zlotowitz the worthy successor of his father, the unforgettable R Meir Zlotowitz.

In short, this volume has something for anyone interested in the Talmud, from beginner and on. I highly recommend it.

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Title: Introduction to the Talmud - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

White Plains Father-Son Duo Wins Top Honors at Talmud Israeli Chinuch Olami – Jewish Link of Bronx, Westchester and Connecticut

Posted By on December 27, 2019

Dr. Jordan Rosenstock and son, Eytan, of White Plains, after being crowned the parent-child Diaspora Winners.

Rabbi Joshua Lookstein, WDS head of school, with winner Eytan Rosenstock and his younger siblings, Ilan and Talia.

On Sunday morning, December 15, the Jerusalem Theater reverberated with the exciting sounds of Torah as it hosted the Premier Chidon Olami, the worldwide contest of Talmud Israeli (TI).

The gathering included family and friends of the 15 finalist duos as well as hundreds of excited classmates, educators and TI followers. The contestants who made it to the climactic finals were parents and children who had prepared for the worldwide chidon for years. Of the 15, three pairs were from the New York area and two had Teaneck connections.

Opening the event was an uplifting rendition of Am Yisrael Chai performed by the IDF Chief Chazzan Shai Abramson and his troupe. Rabbi Avi Rath, educational director and editor of Talmud Olami, served as master of ceremonies. Rabbi Rath encapsulated the mission of Talmud Israeli as bringing togetherness to Am Yisrael, Yachad lev blev, as well as Yachad horim vyeladim, togetherness with parents and their children.

Talmud Israeli originated over a decade ago as a program to bring together individuals, parents and children, schools and synagogues in the study of Jewish wisdom through Halacha, Aggadah, thought, and midrash from the 1,000-year-old Talmud. Its seven volumes, individual masechtot and sugiyot books, weekly publications and video clips are all available in English and Hebrew. The myriad of materials provide sources of learning Talmud with Torah, modern Jewish history and Israel.

In Israel, Talmud Israeli is implemented in more than 200 schools in over 100 communities across the nation. The weekly publication in

Hebrew includes the daf for each day of the week and Israeli and Zionist ideas and values, including important characters and events. It serves as enrichment for Jewish studies and as a means to connect to the entire community in Israel. To date in the U.S., Talmud Israeli is used in Jewish day schools including HALB, HAFTR, SAR, JEC, Ramaz, Westchester Day School and Yavneh Academy. The materials are gaining popularity across the globe and are studied worldwide in countries including Canada, Germany, Turkey and China.

The 15 finalist parent-child contestants consisted of fathers and mothers with sons and daughters from across Israel, including Petach Tikvah, Beit El, Mitzpeh Rimon, Beit El, Lod and Yad Binyamin. The parentsdoctors, lawyers, engineers and educatorsset time aside to study Torah with their children, who ranged in age from 9 years old to pre-bnei mitzvah.

Three of the parent-child teams were from the local area. Dr. Jordan Rosenstock, a nephrologist, and his son Eytan hail from White Plains. Eytan, who will become a bar mitzvah this week, is an eighth grader at Westchester Day School, his fathers alma mater. Eytan is one of four children. Brother Yonah is a freshman at Yeshivat Frisch, and two younger siblings, Ilan and Talia, are fifth and fourth graders at Westchester Day School. In addition to his love of learning Torah at school and with his father, Eytan loves to read and is an avid floor hockey player. For his upcoming bar mitzvah, in addition to leining Parshat Miketz and the Chanukah and Rosh Chodesh leining on Shabbat at the Hebrew Institute of White Plains, Eytan will be davening Shacharit including Hallel. At the Sunday celebration, Eytan will be delivering a siyum on Masechet Rosh Hashanah that he learned with his father. Inspired by receiving the top Diaspora Award at the Talmud Israeli Chidon, Eitan is looking forward to participating in the upcoming Chidon HaTanach.

Jordana Osband Glazer and her son, Jonah, reside in Riverdale. Osband Glazer is a pediatrician who lectures widely on Torah topics; Jonah is a seventh grader at SAR. In addition to learning Torah with his mother, he plays soccer, studies guitar and bakes weekly Shabbat challahs. Jonahs father, David Glazer, an instructor at SAR, is the musical director at Camp Moshava.

Prior to the concluding rounds of questions, the contestants responded to a rigorous and lengthy written exam for which they were awarded points that were added to those accrued in the final oral contest. The illustrious panel of judges consisted of Rav Bar Levi of Israels Department of Education; Rav Doron Peretz, director of World Mizrachi; IDF Chief Rabbi Eyal Krin; Chidon Tanach Grand Champion Pinchas Neria; Tzilit Jacobsohn, head of the Bat Melech organization; Miriam Peretz, recipient of Pras Yisrael; and Shosh Nagar, head of the Chemed Educational Network. President Reuven Rivlin posed the last question of the chidon.

Mayor Moshe Leon of Jerusalem, who himself sets aside time for Torah learning, addressed the program, praising the choice of Jerusalem for the premier chidon as the city that unites and promotes togetherness. Talmud Israeli founder and editor-in-chief Meir Jacobsohn, who also serves as the CEO of Medison Pharmaceuticals, which supports the project, shared a passionate introductory message. Quoting the heroic world-renowned educator Janusz Korczak, who perished escorting his students to their deaths during the Holocaust, he said, He who is concerned about days will plant wheat. He who is concerned about years will plant trees. But he who is concerned about the generations of the future will educate children.

Top winners of the premier Chidon Tanach Israeli were Beit El residents Yosef Shriki and his son Nissim Noam. A special tribute was paid to Diaspora winners Dr. Jordan and Eytan Rosenstock and a thunderous mazal tov was wished to Eytan upon his upcoming bar mitzvah celebration.

According to Yael Schulman, director of Talmud Israeli Daf Yomi for Us, the 13th cycle of Daf Yomi is coming to a close with a mega siyum on January 5, after which the 14th cycle will immediately begin. To receive the weekly materials for the 14th cycle, visit http://www.talmudisraeli.org or contact Yael Schulman at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or (914)413-3128.

By Pearl Markovitz

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White Plains Father-Son Duo Wins Top Honors at Talmud Israeli Chinuch Olami - Jewish Link of Bronx, Westchester and Connecticut


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