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Newport congregation seeks rehearing in fight over Touro Synagogue ornaments – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on August 10, 2017

A view inside the Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island. (Wikimedia Commons)

(JTA) The congregation that worships in Americas oldest synagogue building will ask for a rehearing of the case that gave control of its pricey artifacts to the buildings historic trustees.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in Bostonlast week ruledin favor of Manhattans Shearith Israel, the oldest Jewish congregation in the country, giving it control of the 250-year-old Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island, the religious home of Congregation Jeshuat Israel.

The decision also gave the Manhattan synagogue ownership of $7.4 million silver Torah ornaments called rimonim that the congregation in Newport had hoped to sell to build an endowment.

Retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter, who occasionally sits in on cases in the First Circuit and wrote last weeks decision, this week gave the Newport congregation an extension until Sept. 5 to file a rehearing petition at the congregations request, the Associated Press reported.

The case concerns the continued vitality of the congregation that has prayed in that synagogue for well over a hundred years, read the Jeshuat Israel filing, according to the AP.

The historic Touro Synagogue was founded in the 18th century by a Sephardic Jewish community whose numbers declined over the years. Shearith Israel, a Sephardic congregation that was established in 1654 and has worshipped at various sites in Manhattan, has served as trustee of the Touro Synagogue since the early 19thcentury. Jeshuat Israel, founded in 1881 as Ashkenazi immigrants began flooding America from Eastern Europe, has worshipped at Touro for more than a century.

The current dispute began in 2012, when Jeshuat, which still holds regular services at Touro, attempted to sell the silver ornaments to establish an endowment to maintain a rabbi and care for the building, which was designated a national historic site in 1946. Shearith Israel sued to stop the sale and attempted to evict the 120-family congregation from the building.

The rimonim have been on loan from the Touro Synagogue to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, which had made an offer to purchase them. The museum has since rescinded its offer.

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Newport congregation seeks rehearing in fight over Touro Synagogue ornaments - Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Who owns America’s oldest shul? – The Jewish Star

Posted By on August 10, 2017

By Ben Sales, JTA

The story of Americas oldest synagogue, as told by retired Supreme Court Justice David Souter, is the story of American Jewish history.

Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island, Souter wrote, was built in the 1700s by Sephardic merchants whose community then declined. In the late 1800s, Eastern European Jews arrived in the area, occupied the building and have used it to this day. Since then, heirs of the older Sephardic community have tried to maintain a foothold in the historic synagogue that they consider theirs.

Last Wednesday, Souter awarded a victory to the Sephardim.

Writing an appeals court ruling on a lawsuit over who owns Touro Synagogue, Souter wrote that the building and its centuries-old ritual objects all belong to Congregation Shearith Israel, the historic Sephardic shul on the Upper West Side of Manhattan that is also known as the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue.

The decision reversed an earlier district court decision that gave ownership of the building and the multimillion-dollar artifacts to the group that worships there: the Ashkenazi Congregation Jeshuat Israel.

Its an odd and oddly enduring dispute being played out in an American courtroom. Souters ruling is a primer on nearly 400 years of American Jewish history, and a dispute that touches on historical tensions between Sephardic Jews with roots in Spain, Portugal, North Africa and the Middle East, and Ashkenazi Jews with roots in Eastern Europe.

Touro, built in 1763, has loomed large in American Jewish history. Along with its claim to being the first Jewish building in the country, it also received George Washingtons 1790 letter guaranteeing that the United States gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance.

Shearith Israel, hundreds of miles away, has held title to Touro since the early 1800s, when the shrinking Newport community asked the New York City shul to steward the building and its ritual objects.

Its a fitting relationship: Shearith Israel has a sense of its history as well. Founded in 1654, it bills itself as Americas First Jewish Congregation. (Its current building is its fifth home.) Old-time members still wear top hats, and it still worships in the distinctive Sephardic style passed down from its founders, complete with a cantor in robes and choir. Some Shearith Israel members are descended from the original families that started the congregation four centuries ago.

Jeshuat Israel, founded in 1881 as Ashkenazi immigrants began flooding America from Eastern Europe, has worshipped at Touro for more than a century. For a time, according to Souters ruling, its members occupied the synagogue illegally, praying there even as Shearith Israel sought to keep it closed. Only in 1903, following a court battle, did the two groups sign a contract establishing Shearith Israel as the owner and giving Jeshuat Israel a lease on the building.

According to the terms of the contract, Jeshuat Israel must pray in the Sephardic style despite its Ashkenazi identity.

Seeking to form an endowment, Jeshuat Israel arranged in 2011 to sell a pair of handcrafted, 18th-century silver bulbs, which are used to adorn Torah scrolls, to the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, where they were on loan. But Shearith Israel objected to the $7 million sale, both because Shearith Israel said it owned the ornaments and it claimed the sale violated Jewish law. Jeshuat Israel then sued Shearith Israel, and Shearith Israel countersued both of them seeking legal ownership of the bulbs.

Because the bulbs are meant to rest upon a Torah scroll, Shearith Israel asserted, selling them to a secular institution constitutes an unacceptable decline in holiness.

The district court had ruled in Jeshuat Israels favor on the grounds that it occupies the building and that Shearith Israel had failed in its trustee obligations. But Souter reversed the ruling, partially based on the 1903 contract, writing that Shearith Israel is fee owner of the Touro Synagogue building, appurtenances, fixtures, and associated land.

Now, says Gary Naftalis, Jeshuat Israels lawyer, the congregation is reviewing our legal options going forward. Jeshuat Israel could ask the appeals courts full panel of judges to review the ruling, and may petition to have the case heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Shearith Israel President Louis Solomon said in a statement that the congregation is gratified by the courts decision and, as a result, has been restored to the position it has held for centuries. The statement added that the congregation hopes to move forward from the court ruling, which enables two great Jewish congregations to regain the harmony that existed between them before this unfortunate episode began five years ago.

But even as Shearith Israel has retained ownership of Americas oldest synagogue, it no longer reflects the community that American Jews have become. The families who founded Americas first Jewish congregations exiles from Spain and Portugal via Amsterdam, London, Brazil and the Caribbean likely would not identify with the largely Ashkenazi American Jewish community of 350 years later.

Even Shearith Israel has gone with the flow, hiring a rabbi from a renowned Ashkenazi rabbinical dynasty, Meir Soloveichik, in 2013.

Still, part of the New York congregations appeal is its anachronism led by a cantor and choir in an era of lay leadership, formal in an era of casual dress, Sephardic in an Ashkenazi-led community. And now, even if it no longer owns the American Jewish present, it can say that it still holds title to the American Jewish past.

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Who owns America's oldest shul? - The Jewish Star

‘French Jews in Hebron best answer to UNESCO’ – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on August 10, 2017

PARTICIPANTS IN the annual Hebron march show the flag, with the Tomb of the Patriarchs in the background yesterday. (photo credit:TOVAH LAZAROFF)

As a new immigrant, Yigal Naouri first marched through the streets of Hebron in 1987 with some 500 French Jews in a show of solidarity with the fledgling Jewish community.

Thirty years later, the 49-year-old Jerusalem resident again paraded through Hebron, this time with more than 1,000 French Jews under the hot August sun on Wednesday, and to the beat of loud religious music.

This is the type of event that only the French know how to do, he said, adding that he is proud to have participated with his two teenage children.

The annual parades 30th anniversary took place in the 50th year since the Six Day War, which placed the city under Israeli control.

This year it was organized by a newly created Israeli-French organization called Israel is Forever.

The marchers turned the event into a protest statement against last months World Heritage Committee vote to inscribe the Tomb of the Patriarchs, and Hebrons Old Town surrounding it, to the State of Palestine.

They also wanted to show solidarity with 15 families who illegally moved into a three-story structure called Beit Hamachpela last month.

The families are in the midst of attempting to register their purchase claim with the Civil Administration for Judea and Samaria.

They have asked the government to allow them to remain until they have authenticated the sale and registered the property.

Shlomo Levinger, a spokesman for the 15 families from Beit Hamachpela, recalled how in 1968 his father, Rabbi Moshe Levinger, first tried to bring Jews back to the city they fled in August 1929, after Arab rioters killed 67 people.

We bought Beit Hamachpela, and we will continue to redeem other properties in Hebron, he said.

Coalition chairman David Bitan (Likud), who has thrown his support behind Beit Hamachpela, spoke to the group after the march.

The contemptible decision of UNESCO completely ignored the Jewish peoples historical connection to the city where our forefathers are buried, Bitan said. It reinforces the need and importance of your presence here. There is no more symbolic moment than now to appeal to those of you who have not yet immigrated to Israel, that now is the time to return home, to the only true home of all the Jews.

Yaakov Hagoel, vice chairman of the World Zionist Organization and chairman of World Likud, told The Jerusalem Post that he had come from Netanya to join the group.

These are people who could have been at the beach or in air-conditioned rooms with their iPads, and instead they are marching here with Israeli flags in the midst of Hebron, where it all began for the Jewish people, he said.

In the evening, near the checkpoint by the Tomb of the Patriarchs, border police officers arrested a Palestinian man, 25, who held a knife and whom they feared was about to stab them.

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'French Jews in Hebron best answer to UNESCO' - The Jerusalem Post

Ultra-Orthodox Matchmakers Will Get $4000 For Pairing ‘Damaged Goods’ Over 21 – Forward

Posted By on August 10, 2017

Getty

A bride and her grandfather dance at an ultra-Orthodox wedding in Jerusalem in 2012.

The grand rabbi, or rebbe, of the Boyan sect of ultra-Orthodox Jews is offering $4,000 to anyone who suggests a successful match between older singles in their community, the Israeli news site Arutz Sheva reported Wednesday.

The older designation applies to single men over the age of 23 and single women over the age of 21 often derogatorily referred to as damaged goods.

The rebbe of the Belz Hasidic sect, which numbers over 7,000 families across the world, recently adopted a $1,000 finders fee for matches of older singles as well. The Skver sect, in the U.S., gives $3,000 for similar matches.

The Boyan rebbe, Rabbi Nachum Dov Brayer, announced the new fee at a meeting with the communitys matchmakers in Jerusalem on Monday.

Contact Ari Feldman at feldman@forward.com or on Twitter @aefeldman.

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Ultra-Orthodox Matchmakers Will Get $4000 For Pairing 'Damaged Goods' Over 21 - Forward

PokerStars owner turns a new leaf with Q2 profit jump – CalvinAyre.com

Posted By on August 10, 2017

The owner of PokerStars, which recently decided to rebrand itself, is writing a new chapter of the companys history with a more than 200 percent increase in its second quarter net income.

The former Amaya Inc., now called the Stars Group Inc., announced that its net income jumped 213 percent to US$70.5 million in April to June 2017 period compared to US$22.5 million it posted during the same period last year.

Stars Group has made a turnaround this year after a tumultuous 2016 when it is plagued with weak earnings and after its founder David Baazov has been dragged into the insider trading controversy.

To strip off their tainted image, the company decided to drop Amaya and change it to Stars Group, packed their bags to Toronto from Pointe-Claire, Quebec, hired new executives, and expanded its game offerings other than poker.

Rafi Ashkenazi, chief executive officer of Stars Group, pointed out that their gamble is paying-off with more than double income.

Our evolution and transformation into The Stars Group continued as we completed our name change and head office move, while our second quarter saw the strengthening of our core senior management team and continued solid revenue growth led by our real money online casino offering, Ashkenazi said in a statement.

Breaking the Stars Groups data further, it looked like their decision was right to rely less on its poker and expand its offerings. Real-money online poker revenues for the quarter were $202.9 million, or a decrease of approximately 5.9% year-over-year.

The data of its casino and sportsbooks revenues, however, tell a different story. Star Group reported that the combined real-money online casino and sportsbook revenues in the second quarter grew 50.2 percent to $89.6 million.

Total revenues for the quarter increased approximately 6.8% year-over-year. Excluding the impact of year-over-year changes in foreign exchange rates, total revenues for the quarter would have increased by approximately 7.9%.

The company also announced that it estimates 2017 revenue, reported in U.S. currency, will be at the upper-end of its previous range of between $1.2 billion and $1.26 billion.

It also has revised 2017 estimated adjusted earnings range upward to between $413 million and $437 million, from $400 million to $430 million.

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PokerStars owner turns a new leaf with Q2 profit jump - CalvinAyre.com

National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene’s AMERIKE – THE GOLDEN LAND to Close This Month – Broadway World

Posted By on August 10, 2017

The Off-Broadway musical "Amerike - The Golden Land" wraps up its seven-week run on Sunday, August 20.

Having begun performances at The Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Batttery Place, on July 4, it will have played 42 performances over seven weeks. The National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene's (NYTF) timely immigration musical opened Off-Broadway - fittingly, in the shadow of the Statue of Liberty - on July 10.

A musical journey through the American immigrant experience from the 1880s until the close of WWII, "Amerike - The Golden Land" depicts the challenges faced by the vast majority of all American immigrants - including poverty, racism and exclusion. But it also clearly illustrates the interesting give-and-take process of cultures from abroad impacting American popular culture.

During the show's run, NYTF hosted the first Immigration Arts Summit in July. Bringing together prominent New York arts organizations that present work inspired by cultures from abroad, the conference resulted in the formation of an Immigrant Arts Coalition.

"Planning is underway for New York's leading cultural arts organizations to work together under the Immigrant Arts Coalition banner," says NYTF CEO Christopher Massimine. "A network of arts organizations and individual artists, the Coalition will share advocacy, audience development and other resources, and collaborate on shared programming."

Directed by Drama Desk Award-nominee Bryna Wasserman, with movement and staging by Chita Rivera Award nominee Merete Muenter, and music direction and arrangements by Zalmen Mlotek (NYTF's artistic director), this re-conceived 2017 production of Mlotek and Moishe Rosenfeld's "Amerike - The Golden Land" (originally "The Golden Land") set out to make the open-hearted point that the Jewish immigration story stands, fundamentally, for all immigrant communities.

Spanning popular songs from the 1880s to the mid-20th century, "Amerike - The Golden Land" recreates the sights and sounds of New York City as it welcomed waves of Jewish immigrants. The production is presented in an authentic American immigrant Yiddish (that often mixed both languages), supported by English and Russian supertitles.

"Amerike - The Golden Land's" cast of 12 features Glenn Seven Allen; Alexandra Frohlinger; the international klezmer star Daniel Kahn; Dani Marcus; Stephanie Lynne Mason and David Perlman. The show's ensemble includes Maya Jacobson, Alexander Kosmowski, Raquel Nobile, Isabel Nesti, Grant Richards, and Bobby Underwood. Jessica Rose Futran and Christopher Tefft are the designated principal understudies.

The show's popular klezmer band features "Zisl" Slepovitch on reeds; Jordan Hirsch -- trumpet; Katsumi Ferguson -- violin; Dmitry Ishenko -- bass; Daniel Linden -- trombone; Sean Perham -- percussion; Zalmen Mlotek -- piano. Andrew Wheeler is the associate music director. The production design team includes Yael Lubetzky (lighting); Izzy Fields (costumes); Jason Courson (scenic and projection design); Patrick Calhoun (sound design), and Colleen Lynch (props). The production stage manager is Eileen Haggerty.

The Drama Desk-winning NYTF -- now in its 103rd consecutive season (and its third at its new permanent home at the Museum of Jewish Heritage) -- brings a rich cultural heritage to life on stage-one that was nearly destroyed some 75 years ago. NYTF was the associate producer of Broadway's "Indecent," winner of two Tony Awards including direction, which closed on August 6.

Tickets, which are $35 to $60, are on sale now at http://www.nytf.org and by phone at 866-811-4111. For more information call the National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene at 212/213-2120, ext. 206, or visit http://www.nytf.org.

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National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene's AMERIKE - THE GOLDEN LAND to Close This Month - Broadway World

Witnessing the Rebirth of Jewish Life in Russia: Rabbi Aaron and Mrs. Rakeffet Speak in Teaneck About Shvut Ami – Jewish Link of New Jersey

Posted By on August 10, 2017

Rabbi Aaron and Rebbetzin Malkah Rakeffet meet with Rebbetzin Dara Goldschmidt, who heads the Eitz Chayim School in Moscow. Rebbetzin Goldschmidt is the wife of the Chief Rabbi of Moscow.

The Rakeffets enjoy the Torah Mitzion graduation cruise, which was attended by 130 male and female university students in Russia.

Rabbi Aaron Rakeffet and his wife Malkah are no strangers to kiruv in Russia. In fact, in the 1980s, while the Iron Curtain was up, they made multiple trips there on behalf of the Mossad, posing as Americans from Queens and traveling with American passports, even though they had made aliyah many years before, from the Bronx! They, and the 200 others they trained over 10 years, worked to keep the spark of Jewish life alive in synagogues and homes during Communist rule, when Jewish study and observing the mitzvot were strictly prohibited.

Shvut Ami was founded in the aftermath of the fall of the Iron Curtain, to help bring Jewish life back to the country. The Rakeffets were founding board members of the organization and they have been involved ever since. Rabbi Rakeffet is also known by the last name Rakeffett-Rothkoff, after Hebraizing his name upon his aliyah, and is Professor of Rabbinic Literature at Yeshiva Universitys Caroline and Joseph S. Gruss Institute in Jerusalem. He is an extraordinarily well-known scholar, author, biographer and teacher. He was also a student of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik during the Ravs prime teaching years, and is considered to have been the Ravs first biographer, having written the two-volume series The Rav: The World of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, among many other books and collections. Rabbi Rakeffets extremely accessible talks and shiurim are among the most downloaded on YUTorah.org.

In the 25 years since the curtain came down, Shvut Ami, and its worldwide fundraising partners, which include American Friends of Shvut Ami, headed by Bergenfields Rabbi Dovid Cofnas, have worked intensively to bring Jewish vibrancy and resources back to the former Soviet Union (FSU). While there are many hundreds of thousands of Jews in the FSU, the vast majority of whom are still unaffiliated, the Rakeffets bore witness in their trip last month to what they called a miraculous resurgence of Jewish life in Moscow, a city they last visited in the 1980s. Kosher bakeries, butchers and restaurants are now abundant, Jewish life and learning is progressing for both children and adults. The community is growing and alive with Jewish schools, Jewish weddings, brittot and other Jewish lifecycle events. Today there are 16 shuls in the city of Moscow alone.

Rabbi Rakeffet explained that there are three major kiruv communities working in Moscow: Chabad, under the auspices of Chabad Chief Rabbi Beryl Lazar (working with 60 percent of the affiliated Jews); 10 organizations under the auspices of non-Chabad Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt that are assisted by Shvut Ami (approximately 30 to 35 percent); and the Bronnaya Synagogue Center under the auspices of Rabbi Yitzchak Kogan (5 to 10 percent).

Shvut Ami trains and places permanent rabbinic staff all over the FSU, and also trains and sends 25 shlichim (emissaries) annually who travel back and forth from Israel. Both groups act as teachers, rabbis and community leaders in whatever capacity required. The organization also provides schools with curricula, answers shailot, provides support to alumni and non-alumni alike and runs teacher-training seminars. We are very proud to be able to say that almost 70 percent of the Russian staff of these 10 organizations were trained by Shvut Ami, said Rabbi Cofnas.

To highlight just two of the 10 organizations: Shvut Amis teachers run Torah study sessions for Torah Mitzions Stars program, which if you look at the picture [on a slide Rabbi Rakeffet was showing], you will see that the students look like every other Jewish boy in any American yeshiva, Rabbi Rakeffet said. He added that many of them have had to go through brit milah as young adults due to the various issues with lineage and the glaring lack of ketubot that Russian Jews have experienced the result of, due to the Iron Curtains restrictions. Shvut Ami also runs a Yeshiva Birthright program to Israel that is designed to inspire future Jewish leaders in the FSU and to encourage aliyah.

Shvut Ami also provides staffing, support and advice to the Eitz Chaim School in Moscow, which has 600 students in K-12. The senior staff includes a non-Jew who makes sure that the schools secular program is up to standard with the Russian secular school system. She has such ahavas yehudi (love for the Jews), you wouldnt believe it, Rabbi Rakeffet said.

Rabbi Rakeffet explained that Shvut Amis efforts are only beginning, and there is an immense need to expand and continue the work. In Moscow alone, where there are 250,000 Jews, only 15,000 to 20,000 Jews are being inspired and educated by all three communities together, accounting for a maximum of eight percent of the population, said Malkah Rakeffet. Now we can start to understand and appreciate why there is a close to 90 percent intermarriage rate. We have to do more. We are running out of time, she said.

Even though the Jews of the FSU are out of sight and out of mind, said Rabbi Cofnas, we have to remember that these are some of the most urgent and critical outreach efforts in the world right now. Ninety-five percent of the Jews that our teachers are educating have intermarried parents, but they have a spark of interest that, with Gods help, we have been able to nurture very successfully.

People sometimes ask me why I spend all my time fighting assimilation and intermarriage in the FSU when there are so many people on our home turf that need help, said Rabbi Cofnas. But the answer is simple. The Jews of the FSU had their heritage ripped away from them and now they want it back. They never had a choice so now we have a responsibility to help them.

Rabbi Rakeffet asked the community to support Shvut Ami with donations so they can continue the critical work that is going on to bring back Jewish souls. For more information or to donate online, click here for Paypal (https://tinyurl.com/yctyk3eg) or please email [emailprotected] or call 201-575-9080.

By Elizabeth Kratz

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Witnessing the Rebirth of Jewish Life in Russia: Rabbi Aaron and Mrs. Rakeffet Speak in Teaneck About Shvut Ami - Jewish Link of New Jersey

Cooking with Color: New recipe book samples Judaism’s many flavors – Jewish United Fund

Posted By on August 10, 2017

Berbere Beet and Carrot Latkes. Scallion Pancake Challah. Pineapple Tart Ruggelach. These recipes are part Jewish and part-something else. Just like the remarkable women who made them.

Tzevayim , Hebrew for "colors," is the new "recipe booklet" by Alana Chandler. For it, she interviewed several Chicago-area women who are all chefs, and all Jews of color. Chandler is a student at Walter Payton College Prep, and a participant in JUF's Research Training Internship (RTI), a 10-month paid internship in which high-school-aged girls do original research that advises JUF/Jewish Federation's work.

This year's cohort, RTI's third, was tasked with completing Independent Action Projects, designed to engage the Jewish community in social justice issues that matter to them most. "The nature of these projects were completely up to the intern, and they all went in some really fascinating directions," explained Stephanie Goldfarb, JUF's Director of Youth Philanthropy & Leadership, and a chef in her own right. Alana's booklet, she said, "inspires deep thought about the experiences of Jews of color in the larger Jewish community. The idea of using food as a bridge for these conversations is ingenious, creative, and totally compelling."

The chefs Chandler profiled for the booklet, which is also peppered with Talmudic quotes about food, include Molly Yeh and Janie Wolf, who plumbed their Chinese heritage for their Scallion Pancake Challah and Brisket Steam Buns recipes. Tamar Fasjah, from Mexico, serves up Chipotle Adobo Salmon.

Sahai Redleaf was born Christian in Ethiopia but was raised by Jewish adoptive parents; her contribution is Berbere Beet and Carrot Latkes. Lauren Monaco is from Singapore, and she wants everyone to try her Pineapple Tart Ruggelach Cookies.

Finding the chefs took some help. "Cantor Liz Berke from [Chicago's] Anshe Emet Synagogue greatly aided my search. Just to clarify, she helped me find Jews of color in the Chicagoland area, some of whom coincidentally happened to have their own food blogs!" Chandler said. "Stephanie Goldfarb also connected me with one of her acquaintances. And one of the participants was my relative."

"My motivation in creating this cookbook was not only immersing others around me to the topic of Jews of color," Chandler said, "but also educating myself about other Jews of color. I was interested in seeing how different types of Jews practice their Judaism, which turned out to be very apparent in the ways many of the participants cook; an intersection between cuisine and identity strongly exists. One question, or perhaps concern, that still exists is making sure that all types of Jews feel welcome. The Jewish community of Chicago is very liberal and accepting, but it is not enough to have only our local community meet these standards."

Chandler includes two sweet recipes of her own: Green Tea Coconut Macaroons and Halvah Ice Cream. Her project became a true family endeavor, with her mother providing kitchen assistance, her sister providing transcription services, and her father taking the mouthwatering photographs.

"I think an underlying reason cooking became such a big hobby for me was the fact that both of my grandmothers, Jewish and Japanese respectively, are terrific home cooks," she said. "When I visited my family in Japan a few summers ago, my mom and I brought matzah-ball soup mix, which we shared with my Japanese family. It was a huge hit, and through this simple dish we were able to introduce them to a symbolic Jewish tradition and the story of Passover."

Along with the recipes come insights into each chef's experiences with both Jewish and other cuisines-and living in that merged space between American Jewish, and another, culture. Some share stories of acceptance, or its opposite, but are quick to note when untoward comments come from hostility or simple ignorance. Plus, each chef shares her favorite Chicago restaurant; even those who like to cook don't want to do it all the time!

"I made this cookbook because I think that the multifacetedness of our Jewish community can sometimes be overlooked, but should instead be celebrated. In regards to this goal, a recipe book was what I saw as most fitting because I hoped to engage readers hands-on rather than have them simply skim over a page of words," Chandler said. "A reader can internalize the metaphor that the combination of Jewish traditional foods with various ethnic foods presents: Jews are not defined by one 'look' or identity, but rather a plethora of cultures and stories that converge at the spiritual center of our religion."

Here is Alana Chandler's own recipe for no-churn Halvah Ice Cream. "The Israeli flavors of pistachio, halvah, and pomegranate combined with a creamy dessert," she said, "echoing memories from Chicago summers."

Ingredients:

1. Pour cold heavy cream and vanilla into a large bowl, and beat with an electric mixer on high speed until stiff peaks form. (Do not over-beat, or butter will form!) 2. Fold condensed milk into whipped cream with a spatula, followed by the tahini. Add more tahini or honey to taste (tahini flavor in ice cream usually diminishes when frozen). Mix in chopped pistachios. 3. Transfer the creamy mixture into a dish, cover, and freeze until hardened, about 3 hours. 4. For the drizzle topping, boil the pomegranate juice in a pot over high heat, stirring occasionally to prevent burning. Reduce the juice until it becomes viscous. 5. Quickly pour the pomegranate reduction into a bowl and pour in honey, stirring constantly (they must be mixed immediately, or the reduction will solidify due to high sugar content). 6. Scoop ice cream, drizzle with pomegranate honey, and sprinkle with chopped pistachios.

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Cooking with Color: New recipe book samples Judaism's many flavors - Jewish United Fund

Losing side wants review in fight over oldest US synagogue – The Seattle Times

Posted By on August 9, 2017

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) Worshippers at the nations oldest synagogue plan to ask for a rehearing following an appeals court decision that gave ownership of their Rhode Island house of worship and bells worth millions of dollars to a New York congregation, according to a filing this week with the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

A three-judge panel ruled last week that the Touro Synagogue in Newport rightfully belongs to Congregation Shearith Israel, the nations oldest Jewish congregation, in Manhattan.

A lawyer for the congregation that worships at Touro said on Wednesday that retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter, who occasionally sits in on cases in the 1st Circuit and wrote last weeks decision, entered an order for an extension to Sept. 5 to file a rehearing petition.

The case concerns the continued vitality of the congregation that has prayed in that synagogue for well over a hundred years, according to the filing by lawyers for the Newport congregation, Jeshuat Israel. In it, they ask for more time to request a rehearing by the panel or by the entire 1st Circuit.

The filing describes Touro Synagogue as the cradle of religious liberty in the United States and says they plan to argue that the panels decision raises important constitutional issues and runs contrary to Rhode Island law.

Lou Solomon, who represents the New York congregation and heads its board of trustees, said he agreed to a two-week extension for the other side to petition for a rehearing as a professional courtesy.

Shearith Israel believes any more protraction of this meritless litigation would be unfortunate, Solomon said, adding that its now time for the sides to cooperate.

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Losing side wants review in fight over oldest US synagogue - The Seattle Times

How these young Jews found spirituality outside the synagogue – Jewish Telegraphic Agency

Posted By on August 9, 2017

Shir HaMaalot participants after Friday night services in Brooklyn, July 14, 2017. (Josefin Dolsten)

This is the third article in a series examining Jewish groups engaging young professionals.

NEW YORK (JTA) Michelle Reyf isnt really a synagogue-goer. Until recently, the 28-year-old, who works for a Jewish nonprofit, was perfectly happy to get her spiritual fulfillment at Buddhist prayer services and meditation retreats.

Synagogue did not appeal to her for a variety of reasons she found the crowd to be older and the atmosphere to be impersonal. And as someone who identifies as queer, she felt distanced from the traditional values she encountered in many Jewish spaces.

But in January, a friend invited her to attend Shir HaMaalot, an independent minyan, or prayer community, in Brooklyn. There, Reyf found a place that had some of the very same qualities as the Buddhist community she was a part of and that she had not found in traditional Jewish settings.

It feels like finding a home, and it feels like Im not a bad Jew for wanting different things than were being offered in most synagogues and Jewish communities, said Reyf, a senior digital organizer for the Jewish social justice organization Bend the Arc.

I thought maybe Judaism isnt for me or maybe Im just not doing it right or maybe Im different or theres something wrong with me that I dont feel like I fit in wherever I go. And then I came to Shir HaMaalot and I was like, These are my people,' she told JTA.

Shir HaMaalot a volunteer-led, nondenominational minyan that defines itself as a traditional-egalitarian havurah meets once a month in Prospect Heights and Crown Heights in Brooklyn, often in space rented and subsidized by a local Reform synagogue, Union Temple of Brooklyn. Following a musical Shabbat service, participants join together for a vegetarian potluck meal. There is no rabbi, and community members take turns leading the services.

Reyf is part of a cohort of millennial Jews finding spiritual fulfillment at independent minyanim rather than in the traditional synagogue. Though the groups vary in prayer style, customs and demographics, many are egalitarian or support increased womens participation in services. They tend to draw a younger crowd than the average synagogue.

Independent minyanim appeal to people looking for a type of religious experience, said Rabbi Elie Kaunfer, the author of a book on independent minyanim and president of Mechon Hadar, a co-educational, egalitarian institution of Jewish learning based in New York.

In my experience the people who are not going to synagogue its not because theyre anti-synagogue its more that theyre looking for something and if the synagogue has it theyll go there, and if the synagogue doesnt they wont. And I think thats where Shir HaMaalot comes in, Kaunfer said.

Kaunfer said Shir HaMaalot, which was founded in 2011, has a reputation for its use of music. In addition, I think also a place gets its own reputation just by who starts going there, so when people think about Where am I going to go on Friday night? now they know they have an option thats appealing to people in their age demographic, and that can also build on itself.

There are over 100 independent minyanim across the country, and they are especially accessible to millennials who often have yet to make commitments to Jewish institutions, Kaunfer said.

What it boils down to in large part is people in their 20s and early 30s have more flexibility in terms of their social groups and commitments, he said.

The young crowd at Shir HaMaalot was a draw for Gabriela Geselowitz, a 26-year-old journalist and part time Hebrew school teacher. Geselowitz knew she wanted to be involved in a Jewish community after college but had assumed she would be the only young person there.

When I moved to Brooklyn, I said I wanted to be near a Conservative shul, because that is generally traditional egalitarian, and I was sort of prepared to be the only young person at things. I did go to local synagogue a couple of times, and I was the only young person, said Geselowitz, who started attending Shir HaMaalot three and a half years ago.

At Shir HaMaalot, Geselowitz found both an age-appropriate crowd and an atmosphere that she enjoys.

This was even better than Hillel in college in terms of enthusiasm and volume of people and what Im looking for. I didnt really expect to find a space that would hit all of my buttons in the way that Shir HaMaalot does, said Geselowitz, who lives in Brooklyn.

The mood described by Geselowitz was evident at a recent Friday evening service, which she attended with her husband Michael Spitzer-Rubenstein, a 27-year-old working to launch a media startup.

Gabriela Geselowitz, fourth from right, and Michael Spitzer-Rubenstein, third from right, at their wedding with friends they met through Shir HaMaalot. (Courtesy of Spitzer-Rubenstein)

Around 75 people, mostly young professionals with a few older people and young families sprinkled in, sat in chairs set up in concentric circles around the prayer leader, who alternated between singing slow, soulful melodies and faster, more upbeat ones. At various points throughout the service, when the tempo quickened, a young man started playing a djembe drum and people clapped along to the beat. Afterward they gathered around tables in an adjacent room as they ate the buffet-style potluck and talked.

The majority of Shir HaMaalot attendees are young, said Russ Agdern, one of the minyans founders and a member of its organizing team.

It skews towards 20s and 30s, but its certainly not exclusively that, and thats certainly not our intention, said Agdern, 39, who works as director of recruitment and outreach for the Jewish social justice group Avodah.

Before the minyan was founded in 2011, there were not really any egalitarian spaces with full Hebrew liturgy in this part of Brooklyn, said Agdern, adding that the founders wanted to create a community-driven davening space.

The founders were active participants in the National Havurah Committee, a network of nondenominational grassroots Jewish communities. The organization has its roots in the havurah, or fellowship, movement, of the late 1960s and 1970s, when an earlier wave of young people sought to create Jewish prayer experiences outside of traditional synagogue settings.

Tobin Belzer, a sociologist of American Jewry at the University of Southern California, believes that the difference between the havurah movement and the independent minyanim is their attitude toward the Jewish mainstream. Because it was purposely positioned outside of mainstream institutions, the havurah phenomenon was often referred to as the Jewish counterculture. Participants published books and articles criticizing American Judaism, she wrote in a study of the two movements.

By contrast, minyanim represent a subculture, not a counterculture. Independent minyanim are not outside of the Jewish mainstream; they are on the margins of it, writes Belzer. In fact, many independent minyanim have strong ties with Jewish institutions. Some receive funding from Jewish foundations, others gather in borrowed spaces in synagogues, and still others use Torahscrolls loaned from area congregations.

Though communities affiliated with the havurah movement vary in terms of practice and affiliation, they are united in the fact that they are egalitarian, mostly volunteer-run and promote wide participation by community members.

Spitzer-Rubinstein likened Shir HaMaalots atmosphere to that of services at Jewish summer camps.

I went to Reform summer camp in California, and it was a similar sort of joy and celebration in praying, he said. I feel like there are a lot of Jewish spaces where praying isnt seen as something that should be fun, and one of the things that I really like about Shir HaMaalot is that people care about and make it something significant.

For Geselowitz, Shir HaMaalots energy reminded me a little bit of teenage Jewish youth group.

The participatory aspect of the minyan appeals to Andrea Birnbaum, a 27-year-old medical student who has been attending Shir HaMaalot for four years.

Its not performative in the sense that sometimes you go to synagogue and theres someone on the bimah [podium] who has the most energy, and theyre trying to get the crowd moving but the crowd has a low energy, said Birnbaum. Its not like that. This is participatory we rotate every time someone leads the davening, the prayer.

For now, Geselowitz and Spitzer-Rubenstein, who attend other independent minyanim in Brooklyn when Shir HaMaalot doesnt meet, dont feel like they are missing anything by not belonging to a synagogue.

Shir Hamaalot is free were happy to donate to it, but there arent synagogue dues. At this point in my life I actually like having a lay-led community rather than a single rabbinic authority, Geselowitz said.

Andrea Birnbaum enjoys the energetic atmosphere at Shir HaMaalot. (Courtesy of Birnbaum)

Participants are also attracted to Shir HaMaalots progressive values.

What also was really cool was that there were a lot of different gender expression, people who werent necessary [conforming to the gender] binary, and for me as a queer person that was really important to see that it isnt a heteronormative place where the gender binary was being enforced, Reyf said.

On its website, Shir HaMaalot encourages people to add your preferred pronouns to your name tag.

Pluralism is an important goal for the minyan, said Gregory Frumin, a 35-year-old social worker who serves on the minyans organizing team.

One of Shir HaMaalots core values is inclusive pluralism. We want to create an accessible and welcoming space for people of diverse backgrounds, identities, accessibility needs, he said.

At the potluck dinner after services, food is served on three different tables vegetarian, vegan and vegetarian cooked in a strictly kosher kitchen. Participants are also asked to list allergens on a spreadsheet prior to services.

I think its also important that Shir HaMaalot takes their religious observance seriously while still being welcoming to basically everyone, said Spitzer-Rubinstein.

Continued here:

How these young Jews found spirituality outside the synagogue - Jewish Telegraphic Agency


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