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Push to save some pieces of destroyed Norfolk St. synagogue – The Villager

Posted By on June 29, 2017


The Villager
Push to save some pieces of destroyed Norfolk St. synagogue
The Villager
BY BILL WEINBERG | The fate of the forlorn remains of the landmarked Beth HaMidrash HaGadol synagogue on Norfolk St. gutted by fire on May 14 is clearly an agonizing question for the Lower East Side's Jewish community. On June 20, the ...

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Push to save some pieces of destroyed Norfolk St. synagogue - The Villager

Paramus Sephardic Community Welcomes Rabbi David and Ariel Pardo – Jewish Link of New Jersey

Posted By on June 29, 2017

Earlier this month, the Sephardic Congregation of Paramus (SCOP), located on 140 Arnot Place, welcomed a new rabbi, David Pardo, and family into their community. SCOP, which started off as a small Sephardic minyan in Congregation Beth Tefillah, branched off last year to grow as its own shul, having purchased the building that used to house Khal Adath Jeshuruns minyanim.

A Los Angeles native, Rabbi Pardo attended UCLA and later moved to New York City to pursue semicha at Yeshiva Universitys Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. He also holds an MBA from the Heller School at Brandeis University.

Before moving to Paramus, Rabbi Pardo lived in Boston for four years, working as the OU-JLIC director at Brandeis University with his family. Connecting with young students eager to explore their Jewish identities was a self-described dream that he felt grateful to fulfill.

We really clicked with the student body, he said, noting that it was a magical four years. It was Rabbi Pardos first time being a rabbi of a community, an experience that, he said, reaffirmed his decision to go into the pulpit rabbinate.

When the rabbi and his family made the decision to move on and accept a new position in New York City as the director of Birthright Follow Up at the Orthodox Union, it was important to him to continue growing as a rav and educator. He heard from a friend that the Sephardic community in Paramus was looking for a rabbi for Shabbat.

It felt very warm, he said of his first impression of the shul when he came to visit earlier this year. [Its] like one big extended family, he added.

The Pardos are excited about their transition to the Paramus Jewish community. Their three young daughters will have other children their age to play with, and the rabbi is excited to work with a more diverse congregation. The rabbi himself is half-Sephardic; his father is Turkish.

The excitement is a mutual feeling. Both the shuls gabbi, Faraj Benji, and vice president, Kirk Levy, are happy with the direction the developing community is taking. Benji told The Jewish Link that he felt the community had hit the jackpot when the Pardos arrived. He admires the rabbis personable character. Our community is lucky to have him, he said.

Levy hopes that Rabbi Pardos outgoing personality and his experience connecting with younger people will help draw other families to Paramus. I think having a young, educated and well-connected rabbi will be very attractive to others, he said, noting that he hopes to see the shul grow even more.

Both Rabbi Pardo and his wife, Ariel, are already brainstorming ways they can help improve the community. Rebbetzin Pardo, who met her husband when they were both students at UCLA, is spearheading the shuls effort to make a website for and publicize their ladies mikvah. She said she felt welcomed right away and loves the cohesiveness of the community.

The rabbi plans to develop forums to encourage communication amongst the congregation. People can voice their concerns going forward in the hopes that a joint vision for the community will soon become a reality. Everythings open, he said. The community is poised for a lot of growth, and were very excited to be part of it.

By Elizabeth Zakaim

Elizabeth Zakaim is a rising junior journalism and psychology double major at The College of New Jersey. She is also a summer intern at The Jewish Link. Feel free to email her at [emailprotected] with any questions or comments.

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Paramus Sephardic Community Welcomes Rabbi David and Ariel Pardo - Jewish Link of New Jersey

How Jewish women have shaped our nation – Canadian Jewish News

Posted By on June 29, 2017

In 1913, when anti-Semitism in Canada and around the world was rife and unabashed, and Jewish doctors were banned from practising in established hospitals, a group, including four Jewish women, set out to fund a hospital in the city of Toronto.

They were determined to provide Jewish patients with a place to go in times of need, while also giving unemployed Jewish doctors a place to practise. By 1923, Slova Greenberg, Dorothy Dworkin, Ida Siegel, E.F. Singer and Simon Fines, had raised enough money to purchase a building and establish a maternity and convalescent hospital on Torontos Yorkville Avenue. Today, we know it as Mount Sinai Hospital. The vast contributions that Mount Sinai has made to both medical science and community care are immeasurable. It is worth remembering that this legacy would not be possible without the pioneering spirit of the women who founded it.

Indeed, the happy history of the success of Canadas vibrant Jewish community is, in so many ways, the story of strong women.

READ: THE CJNS SPECIAL COVERAGE OF CANADAS SESQUICENTENNIAL

While Jewish-Canadian history is not without its dark chapters, Canadian Jews have persevered through adversity, overcome challenges and played a major role in shaping our great nation. For Canadas Jewish women, that story has been the same.

Soon after Canadas founding, Jewish women assumed roles of leadership in organizations dedicated to womens engagement, such as Haddasah-Wizo, founded by Ottawa resident Lillian Freiman, as well as Naamat and the National Council of Jewish Women. In fact, the womens division of United Jewish Appeal of Greater Toronto was formalized way back in 1937. These organizations provided opportunities for women to raise money, socialize and make an impact on the community and beyond.

In the century that followed, it became common to find women in leadership positions within the community. In 1983, Dodo Heppner was elected as the first woman to lead Montreals CJA. Four years later, Montreal resident Dorothy Reitman became the first woman to lead a national Jewish organization, with her election as president of the Canadian Jewish Congress. In 1973, Rose Wolfe became the first woman president of the Toronto Jewish Congress, the predecessor organization to the Jewish Federation of Greater Toronto. In 1991, she was appointed chancellor of the University of Toronto.

Today, we see Jewish women in leadership roles in every sphere of national life, including the fields of medicine, art, law, academia, politics and human rights.

Among the more notable examples is Supreme Court Justice Rosalie Abella, who was born in a displaced persons camp in Germany in 1946 to two Holocaust survivors. At 29, Justice Abella was the youngest person in Canada to ever become a judge and was also the first Jewish woman appointed to the bench. In 2004, she became the first Jewish woman appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada. Among her many human rights accomplishments, Justice Abella drafted a study on access to legal services by disabled persons and served as commissioner of the Royal Commission on Equality in Employment, which helped change the way Canadians think about employment equity between men and women.

Recently, Justice Abella was named global jurist of the year by a Chicago law school. While her accomplishments are most certainly her own, she continues to shape Canadian society as a proud member of the Jewish community. She is a woman who is deeply rooted in tradition and she recognizes the impact that her Jewish heritage has played on her life and her understanding of justice.

In her recent commencement speech at Brandeis University, Abella explained:

My life started in a country where there had been no democracy, no rights, no justice and all because we were Jewish. No one with this history does not feel lucky to be alive and free. No one with this history takes anything for granted. And no one with this history does not feel that we have a particular duty to wear our identities with pride and to promise our children that we will do everything humanly possible to keep the world safer for them than it was for their grandparents.

Judy Feld Carr is another example of an inspirational Canadian Jewish woman who has made an indelible impact on the community. Through her commitment and passion for human rights and her determination to help in the deadly situation faced by Syrian Jews between 1975 and 2000, Feld Carr helped thousands of Jewish people leave Syria. She has worked tirelessly, often in dangerous situations, to ensure the safety of people who were being persecuted for being Jewish.

I hope it is not immodest to add mention of the role that my late mother, Barbara Frum, played as a feminist pioneer in Canadian broadcast journalism. It was Barbara who normalized the idea of an intelligent woman and a Jewish one at that! appearing on television on a nightly basis.

In politics, Jewish women have held office in Canada since 1974, when Simma Holt was elected as the member of Parliament for Vancouver-Kingsway, a riding with a small Jewish population. Many Jewish women have served, and still do serve, as members of Parliament, members of provincial legislatures, provincial and federal cabinet ministers, lieutenant governors and, indeed, senators.

A few months ago, I had the privilege of sponsoring Senate Bill S-232, an Act Respecting Canadian Jewish Heritage Month, which will formalize into law an annual celebration of the contributions of Canadas Jewish community. The bill received unanimous consent in the Senate and will now pass to the House of Commons for approval. This bill has proved especially salient at a time when we are witnessing a rise in the number of anti-Semitic incidents in Canada. But Canadian Jewish Heritage Month, once its formally established, will also serve as an important tool to educate our fellow citizens about the myriad of ways in which Canadian Jews have helped to make Canada the great nation it is today. Telling the stories of the remarkable women in our community will be an essential part of this initiative.

So, on Canadas 150th birthday, to our Jewish foremothers, let us say: thank you. You are remembered and appreciated.

Linda Frum is a Conservative senator from Ontario.

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How Jewish women have shaped our nation - Canadian Jewish News

Palestinians Hope to List Hebron As UNESCO World Heritage Site – The Media Line

Posted By on June 29, 2017

Israel Pushing For Secret Ballot

As part of its efforts to garner international support for an independent Palestinian state in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, Palestinians have appealed to the UNs Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to protect the Old City of Hebron from Israel by making it a Palestinian world heritage site. UNESCO is due to vote on the issue next week, and Israel, which sharply opposes the move, is pushing for a secret ballot.

Earlier this month, Israel blocked a UNESCO team from visiting the city, where about 800 Jewish settlers live among 100,000 Palestinians. At the center of the old city is the traditional burial place of Abraham, which Palestinians call the Ibrahimi mosque, and Jews, the Tomb of the Patriarchs. Hebron in general, and the religious site in particular, has long been a flashpoint for Israeli-Palestinian violence.

Israel is pushing UNESCO to hold a secret ballot rather than the traditional open vote, as it believes that in an open vote, the 21 states will vote in favor of the Palestinian request. Although Palestine has not been recognized by the UN as an official state, it has a special status as a non-state observer and can join UN bodies such as UNESCO.

Palestine has been a member of UNESCO since 2011 and it is a normal thing for us to apply to UNESCO to list our valuable locations as Palestinian sites in the World Heritage sites. Omar Abdallah, the head of the United Nations department at the Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs told The Media Line.

Abdallah explained that this is not the first time Israel has prevented international missions from entering Palestinian territories.

Israel aims to prevent them from seeing the Israeli violations against the Palestinian heritage and culture, but this time is special and unique, he said.

The sole purpose of recognizing the old city of Hebron as a Palestinian site is to protect the city and mark its historical value worldwide. Regardless of any partys affiliation to the old city of Hebron, it is located in a Palestinian territory and should be listed accordingly; it has global value and it will be reachable for everyone. Abdallah added.

In the Book of Genesis Hebron is listed as the place where Abraham the founder of monotheism and the forefather of both Judaism and Islam purchased the Cave of Machpela as a special burial site for his beloved wife Sarah.

Hebron is the root of the Jews national history, it important to give honor and respect to the parent of the Jewish people who were buried there three thousand years ago, Yishai Fleischer, the spokesman of the Jewish Community in Hebron, told The Media Line.

Fleischer considers UNESCO as biased against Israel, and says that listing the site as Palestinian is tantamount to destroying Jewish heritage. Last month, UNESCO passed a resolution that said that Israel has no claims to Jerusalem a move that angered Jews worldwide.

Fleischer says that Hebron is a mixed Arab-Jewish city.

The Palestinian authority is around here partially, but also there a Jewish city right next to it; I wouldnt call the old city a Palestinian area, he said.

Palestinians say that Hebron has long been an important Muslim site.

Since the Islamic opening to these lands, the Ibrahimi Mosque is considered the fourth holy site to Muslims after Mecca, the Al-aqsa mosque (in Jerusalem) and the Al-Nabwi mosque (in Medina in Saudi Arabia), Ismael Abu Alhalaweh, the General Manager of Hebrons Endowments told The Media Line.

Muslims travel to Hebron from around the world to pray, he said, and Israeli moves have been endangering that right.

Israel has been surrounding the old city with check-points and barriers, he said. People must pray under the supervision of Israeli armed security forces, and each Palestinian has to be security checked on the way in and out.

In 1994, during the holy month of Ramadan a month of fasting to honor the first revelation of the Quran to Muhammad according to Islamic belief, a Jewish settler gunned down 29 Muslim worshippers inside the mosque while praying. After that, Israel divided the holy site into two areas half mosque and half synagogue with separate entrances.

A formal arrangement to share the site was reached in 1997 with Jews and Muslims each getting sole access to the site on religious holiday.

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Palestinians Hope to List Hebron As UNESCO World Heritage Site - The Media Line

A trove of Nazi-era objects in Argentina stuns investigators – thejewishchronicle.net

Posted By on June 29, 2017

Among other objects, police found medical devices marked with swastikas. (Photos by Leonardo Kremenchuzky/DAIA)

The objects, discovered earlier this month in a hidden room of a house in the northern part of the city, included equipment used for Nazi medical experiments during the Holocaust. They were analyzed a week ago at Interpol headquarters in Lyon, France, Federal Police Commissioner Marcelo El Haibe said on June 19.

The police found a bust relief of Adolf Hitler, medical devices marked with swastikas used to measure head and body size, Nazi puzzles for children and knives, among other objects.

Among the objects discovered was a magnifying glass attached to a photo of Hitler using the magnifying glass.

We checked some marks and characteristics, and it is the same object that Hitler holds in his hands in the photo, El Haibe, a member of Interpol who accompanied the pieces to Lyon, said. Interpol colleagues from Germany, Israel and United States were surprised by the globally unprecedented discovery. No one has a record of this magnitude a discovery of original Nazi objects, and we have started a collaborative process to search the route of the objects to Argentina.

According to El Haibe, who also serves as the chief of the Protection of Cultural Heritage department of the federal police, only a very high level of Nazi officer had access to this quality and quantity of objects, and apparently tried to save the objects when the Nazi regime was failing.

Last week, the Argentine Jewish political umbrella DAIA displayed some of the objects at its headquarters in the AMIA Jewish center here. The AMIA building was destroyed in a 1994 terrorist bombing and rebuilt in 1999.

DAIA President Ariel Cohen Sabban praised the police for their work in making the discovery.

From this building we spoke several times about the lack of security in this country, but today its time to recognize the good work done by the police and the Security Ministry, he said. These objects are an irrefutable testimony to the Nazi horror and that Argentina was a refuge for the Nazis.

Before receiving an award from DAIA, Security Minister Patricia Bullrich spoke to over 200 attendees crowded in a small room where a sample of the objects was on display. She said her ministry has asked the judge in charge of investigating the discovery that all of the objects be donated to the Holocaust Museum of Buenos Aires, so that all Argentinians and also visitors who come to Buenos Aires can see this shocking collection.

Among the attendees were Germany Embassy officials, judges, intellectuals and businessmen, as well as the Jewish philanthropists Eduardo Elsztain and Marcelo Mindlin, who was named recently the president of the Holocaust Museum of Buenos Aires.

This collection is a great responsibility; we will prepare our site to receive this contribution, Mindlin said. There will be a lot of fanatics that will want to enter, there will be people trying to steal objects, he added, noting that huge security issues must be worked out.

In June 2016, a collector from Argentina paid $680,000 for a pair of Nazi-owned underpants and other memorabilia.

Its impossible that one collector would have this invaluable amount of original Nazi objects, DAIA vice president Alberto Indij said. These [objects] likely belonged directly to Hitler or Joseph Mengele. Someone escaped with all this objects. There isnt a person that bought all this. No, these were Nazi officers trying to hide and save these objects.

The magnifying glass and accompanying photo of Hitler were not put on public display, but Indij saw them at Interpol headquarters and confirmed their existence.

Mengele, a doctor who performed experiments on Jewish prisoners, lived in Argentina for a decade after the war in the same area of Buenos Aires where the Nazi medical tools were discovered. El Haibe said there could be some link between Mengele and the recently discovered tools.

There are strong coincidences of tools, practices, locations; we are investigating this hypothesis right now, he said. But for sure this did not belong to a low-level Nazi follower. This belongs to a very high-level Nazi official who brought them to Argentina.

Argentina was a refuge for Nazis like Mengele after World War II. Adolf Eichmann was captured in the northern area of Buenos Aires in 1960, and another war criminal, Erich Priebke, also lived there.

A video about the Interpol evaluation, dubbed Operation Near East since many objects of Asian historical significance also were discovered during the raids earlier this month, was released Monday by the Argentine Federal Police.

The objects were found following a nine-month police investigation. They are in the custody of the justice who is tasked with investigating the find, who has put a gag order on most aspects of the case.

One suspect identified by the police is not in Argentina. There are Argentine and non-Argentine suspects being investigated, but no further details have been provided. Argentina has had an anti-discrimination law on the books since 1988 that covers the possession and sale of such objects.

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A trove of Nazi-era objects in Argentina stuns investigators - thejewishchronicle.net

What’s Goin On July | SD JEWISH JOURNAL – San Diego Jewish Journal

Posted By on June 29, 2017

San Diego Symphony

The San Diego Symphony kicked off its Bayside Summer Nights season with Star Spangled Pops Concert, a tribute to the music of America including Broadway tunes and patriotic favorites. This first concert under the stars will complete its weekend run onJuly 2. Wynonna Judd returns to Bayside Summer Nights onJuly 4with a celebration of the nations birthday, featuring her new band.

Herb Alpert and Lani Hall perform a romantic evening onJuly 6, followed onJuly 7-8by Leslie Odom Jr. (of Hamilton fame). Tony Bennett is on tap forJuly 12, and Air Supply bring their classic hits to the EmbarcaderoJuly 14-15. A free community day concert is slated forJuly 16.

New Orleans Jazz series kicks off its second year at the EmbarcaderoJuly 27, followed onJuly 28by Hooray for Hollywood, a salute to movie music. Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets is slated forJuly 29. The orchestra will accompany the movie. All these alfresco concerts will include a fireworks display at the end.

La Jolla Playhouse

The La Jolla Playhouse extended its popular world premiere production of Escape to Margaritaville until July 9. If you can snare a ticket, this music-based show is eventually headed for Broadway. The Playhouse will unwrap an intimate contemporary play onJuly 5. At the Old Place, by Rachel Bonds, deals with a search for the roads not taken. This thoughtful piece will inhabit the Mandell Weiss Forum throughJuly 30.

Broadway-San Diego

Broadway-San Diego is bringing back the popular satirical musical, The Book of Mormon for a week-long run at the Civic TheatreJuly 25-30. This 9-time Tony Award-winning musical has become an international phenomenon, so it should sell out fast even the second time around!

Cygnet Theatre

Cygnet Theatre has a rare treat in store for local theater-goers of all ages. Animal Crackers, a show adapted from the Marx Brothers classic hit, will shake things up at Cygnets Old Town TheatreJuly 5 through Aug. 13. The madcap musical comedy is a barrel of fun with puns, physical comedy, and non-stop hilarity.

Lambs Players

The Lambs Players reeled in Big Fish (a movie-based musical) for a run at its Coronado home. This new musical a reminder of the importance of imagination and storytelling was directed by Deborah Gilmour Smyth. It will continue throughJuly 30.

North Coast Repertory Theatre

North Coast Repertory Theatre will present the San Diego premiere of At This Evenings Performance, a farce about a Bohemian theater troupe performing in an Eastern European police state. With romantic entanglements, political intrigue, and plenty of laughs, the show has all the ingredients for an entertaining evening of theater. You have fromJuly 12 to Aug. 6to get in on the fun.

Old Globe Theatre

The Old Globes summer season on the outdoor Festival Stage continues with Shakespeares King Richard II. This moving and insightful portrait of the way a nations political landscape can be affected by the forces of history is one of the Bards greatest historical plays and one of the most challenging to stage.Count on director Erica Schmidt to get it right. The dramatic work will be performed throughJuly 15.

The Globes Main Stage production of Guys and Dolls will make its debut onJuly 2, where it will delight audiences throughAug. 13. This masterpiece of Americana (based on the tales of Damon Runyon and propelled by Frank Loessers marvelous music) is chock full of memorable songs and dance numbers.

The Globes White Theatre extended its world premiere adaptation of Molieres The Imaginary Invalid toJuly 2. The farcical bauble, Robin Hood, by the ever-amusing Ken Ludwig, will move into the White Theatre onJuly 22, where it will keep audiences rolling in the aisles throughAug. 27.If you enjoyed last years Baskerville (also penned by Ludwig), you wont want to miss this clever comedy.

San Diego Musical Theatre

San Diego Musical Theatres Off Broadway Series at the Horton Grand continues onJuly 28with Pump Up the Volume. The musical (described as a 90s palooza) will stay put throughSept. 11.

Museum of Contemporary Art

The Museum of Contemporary Art in La Jolla is closed for renovation and expansion, but theres a lot going on in the downtown facility. It is showing off Jennifer Steinkamp: Madame Curie a digital video animation inspired bythe artists research into atomic energy throughAug. 27. Dimensions of Black: A Collaboration with the San Diego African American Museum of Art is on view downtown through next January.

Andrea Chung: You broke the ocean in half (an immersive installation on colonialism and migration) is on tap throughAug. 20, as are some selections from the museums collection.

Also this month, the Museum of Contemporary Art takes its collection to North County for California Connections at the California Center for the Arts. Members of the two museums will receive reciprocal free admission for the duration of the exhibition, which runs July 8-Aug. 27.

Fleet Science Center

The Fleet is unveiling its latest exhibition Game Masters. Showcasing the work of the worlds best video game designers, from the arcade era to todays console and online games. The work of more than 30 designers is on display in this unique exhibition that tracks the growth of this huge industry.

San Diego Museum of Art

The San Diego Museum of Art is opening its vaults to show off a treasure trove of artwork usually kept under lock and key. Visible Vaults, a collection of 300 pieces, including works by Andy Warhol, Rodin, Toulouse-Lautrec and other great artists, will be on view throughNov. 12of next year.

Also on display at the Art Museum are Richard Deacon: What You See is What You Get (on view through July 25) and Modern Japan: Prints from the Taisho Era (ensconced throughAug. 13). The Deacon show is the first major survey of the artists work, and includes 40 pieces. The Japanese exhibit encompasses pieces from 1912-26 and includes some very rare prints.

The newest exhibition at the museum opensJuly 1and runs throughJan. 7, 2018. Titled Brenda Biondo: Play, it features 25 photographs (circa 1920-1970).

Mingei International Museum

Mingei International Museum is showcasingKanban: Traditional Shop Signs of Japan, an exhibition that features a variety of forms and mediums, throughOct. 8. Joining that show is Homage to the Horse and Other Steeds, an exhibition of objects celebrating the nobility and power of horses from all over the world. This new exhibition is slated to stay on throughNov. 12.

Timken Museum

The Timken Museum has two new exhibitions. Private Devotions: Italian Paintings and Sculptures from San Diego Collections features more than a dozen masterpieces. It will be on exhibit throughAug. 20. The Modernist Presents Bianca Luini: Meeting of the Arts, is an installation that includes fashion images and permanent artworks. That exhibition is slated to remain throughAug. 27. Also featured is an exhibition of notable Russian Icons. Among them are 12 never before exhibited.

San Diego History Center

The San Diego History Center is celebrating The History and Heritage of the San Diego Jewish Community in its new exhibition, which has been extended through winter 2018. Also on display is Irving Gill: New Architecture for a Great Country, and closing this month is Art and Heritage: Maurice Braun, Belle Baranceanu, and Harry Sternberg.

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What's Goin On July | SD JEWISH JOURNAL - San Diego Jewish Journal

Summer of song and dance – Jewish Chronicle

Posted By on June 29, 2017


Jewish Chronicle
Summer of song and dance
Jewish Chronicle
The summer school, held at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) centres on Ashkenazi culture, with intensive Yiddish classes, a dance school named Tants Tants Tants and courses on Yiddish song and klezmer. This year, for the first time, ...

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Summer of song and dance - Jewish Chronicle

Jean Therapy: Getting the word out about a disease all too common in the Jewish community – Jewish United Fund

Posted By on June 29, 2017

With her infectious energy, you would never know Emily Kramer-Golinkoff is battling Cystic fibrosis.

Kramer-Golinkoff will speak this fall at JUF's Norton & Elaine Sarnoff Center for Jewish Genetics' "Jean Therapy" event in Chicago. The event raises awareness about genetic disorders that disproportionately affect Jewish and interfaith families.

Cystic fibrosis, or CF, causes life-threatening infections, lung damage, and, overtime, respiratory failure, according to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. For the 70,000 people like Kramer-Golinkoff battling CF worldwide, mucus builds up in their lungs, pancreas, and other organs, clogging their airways and trapping dangerous bacteria, as well as preventing the release of digestive enzymes that enable their bodies to break down food and absorb essential nutrients.

"There are no days off and no breaks and no vacations," Kramer-Golinkoff said in regards to her treatment that takes three to four hours to do each day-when she's healthy. Her treatment consists of various inhaled breathing therapies of antibiotics, bronchodilators, and mucociliary clearance, and strapping on a vest that inflates and forcefully shakes her chest to dislodge mucus that builds up in her lungs and airways. On top of that, she takes 30 pills each day and pokes herself with four to five insulin injections to treat her CF-related diabetes, which, according to Kramer-Golinkoff, affects nearly half of the CF population over the age of 18.

At just 6 weeks old, Kramer-Golinkoff was diagnosed with CF. Today, at age 32, she has about 35 percent lung function and advanced-stage CF. The next stage is end-stage. At that point, her only treatment option is a lung transplant. "Our desperation and urgency is to try and save Emily and others like her," said Liza Kramer, Kramer-Golinkoff's mother.

There are over 1,700 known mutations of CF, but Kramer-Golinkoff has what's called a nonsense mutation, a rare and untreatable mutation of CF. Her mutation, specifically, is known as the Ashkenazi (Jewish) mutation, which affects only some 2 percent of the CF community.

While recent medical advances have helped people with CF live past their average life expectancy of 41, there were no organizations focused on finding treatments and cures for people with Kramer-Golinkoff's nonsense mutations. So back in 2011, she and her family and friends launched Emily's Entourage. The non-profit organization has raised over $2.5 million to fast-track research and drug development for nonsense mutations of CF with a focus on the Ashkenazi mutation. And, this summer, the organization is giving out approximately $500,000 in research grants to a group of researchers all around the world.

Finding a breakthrough for CF won't only help Kramer-Golinkoff and people like her, according to Kramer, but could potentially help 12 percent of people with genetic diseases caused by nonsense mutations, which adds up to about 30 million people.

Kramer-Golinkoff remains optimistic. "We are laser-focused on accelerating breakthroughs that can reach patients in the next five years," she said. "Our sincere hope is that those breakthroughs will allow us to sustain people, so that they can live longer and better than ever before."

But she wants to get the word out to the Jewish community. "It's imperative for the Jewish community to know that there are these game-changing breakthroughs that are happening in the treatment of Cystic Fibrosis, but our Ashkenazi mutation of CF is being left behind. It's really up to us to light the fire to change that."

With one in 25 to 27 Ashkenazi Jews being carriers of the Ashkenazi mutation of CF and CF being the most common fatal Jewish genetic disease, Kramer-Golinkoff hopes that Jewish people comes to realize that "this is our shared disease and the time to act is now."

The Norton & Elaine Sarnoff Center for Jewish Genetics is working with Emily and her Entourage to spread the word about Jewish genetic health at their Jean Therapy event, taking place on Nov. 1 at the Chicago Athletic Association in downtown Chicago. The Center is a community resource for education, access to expertise, and a comprehensive carrier screening program.

For more information about the Jean Therapy event on Nov. 1, contact Sarah Goldberg at sarahgoldberg@juf.org or (312) 357-4718. For more information about Emily's Entourage, visit EmilysEntourage.org.

The Norton & Elaine Sarnoff Center for Jewish Genetics is a supporting foundation of the Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago, and is supported in part by the Michael Reese Health Trust.

Carly Gerber is a freelance writer living in Chicago.

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Jean Therapy: Getting the word out about a disease all too common in the Jewish community - Jewish United Fund

Amaya Prepares for a Fresh Reboot in a New Location – Online Casino Reports (press release)

Posted By on June 29, 2017

Published June 29, 2017 by Lee R

Shareholders have approved relocation and restructuring to launch the new Amaya era.

Amaya has a new look, and a new venue within its home country of Canada as it looks to the future.

Rebranding

Amayas new plans for a rebrand as The Stars Group Inc. were finalised at its last annual general meeting in Montreal on Wednesday as shareholders approved the new name to reflect the dominance of the groups flagship PokerStars brand.

Moving On

With the switch officially scheduled for August, the rebrand will also put further distance between the unsightly association with David Baazov. The companys former CEO is currently under indictment for insider trading in Amayas 2014 acquisition of PokerStars parent company Rational Group, charges for which he will be tried in November.

Toronto Tabbed

Toronto was chosen over Quebec as the spot where Amaya could more effectively manage its business and affairs.

The first stage of Amayas new office implementation includes the placing of 20 key staff in the office in downtown Toronto in July, with another 300 Amaya technology staffers currently working in the northern Toronto suburb of Richmond Hill.

Amaya will leave a minimal 15-person finance team in Montreals Griffintown.

Expansion Plans

At the shareholder meeting, CEO Rafi Ashkenazi, who replaced Baazov, also alluded to a poker deal with the emerging market of India in the works, calling India quite an exciting market based on the scale of its billion plus population of 1.3b souls and high smartphone penetration. Ashkenazi further projected Indias online poker market to be worth as much as $150m in a few years.

Ashkenazi also has his eyes set on Asia and the United States.

Restructuring

Amaya has also brought on former Playtech and Scientific Games veteran Jerry Bowskill as the companys new chief technology officer.

While some other senior level new hires are expected in the transition, the general personnel structure will remains stable, with senior executives Divyesh Gadhia, Harlan Goodson, Alfred Hurley Jr., David Lazzarto, Peter Murphy and Mary Turner all retaining their roles as directors within the company.

Gadhia will continue as chairman of the board; Lazzarto will chair the Audit Committee, and Hurley the Corporate Governance, Nominating and Compensation Committee.

CEO Sets Course

Via conference call, Ashkenazi said of the moves:

"As we undergo this transformation, we look to embrace the future of our business while also recognizing the incredible consumer goodwill and loyalty associated with our primary brand."

As for that primary brand, since its founding in 2004, Amaya has risen to become the largest publicly listed online poker brand in the world after purchasing PokerStars parent for US $4.9 billion.

Outlook

Amaya seems to be doing what it takes to move on from the Baazov incident, and investors and industry insiders keeping an open mind may yet see a true Phoenix rise from the ashes for one of iGamings earliest stars and pioneers.

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Amaya Prepares for a Fresh Reboot in a New Location - Online Casino Reports (press release)

Amerike singing – The Jewish Standard

Posted By on June 29, 2017

Its extraordinary, when you think about it, this country of ours.

Thats always a loaded statement to make these days; tempers are so high, political divisions are so deep, mistrust is so pervasive.

But still.

We are celebrating the Fourth of July this week, the time when the founders of this country, along with the less powerful people they represented, risked everything we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our Sacred Honor, they said, the exuberance of their capitalization underscoring the depth of their resolve to create a new kind of state in the New World.

It was, of course, not an untarnished state the founders created human beings were enslaved but it was the start of a brave new experiment. It remains very far from perfect, but on the Fourth of July we still explode fireworks of hope and joy.

Some of those fireworks soar and crest and rain colored fire on the Statue of Liberty.

Although there were Jews in the 13 colonies that became the first United States, none were represented among the entirely white male Christian founders. We extrapolate the promises those men made to themselves to cover all of us as well.

Overwhelmingly, most of us are immigrants or the descendants of immigrants. It is no accident that the Statute of Liberty, one of the great symbols of the freedom that this country offers, holds her torch up to immigrants. This country grew from immigrants, was built by immigrants, welcomes immigrants, enriches and is enriched by immigrants.

Like this country itself, though, immigration was not all glorious. It was hard, painful, dark, impoverishing, at times fatal. It could divide families, maim hope, kill love. The only way truly to acknowledge the great gifts immigrants have given us is to honor their sacrifices and their despair as well as their joy and success.

So what does this have to do with the National Yiddish Theater Folksbiene?

Everything!

The Folksbiene, under the direction of its artistic director, Zalmen Mlotek of Teaneck, is producing Amerike The Golden Land, a show about Jewish immigration whose month-long run at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in downtown Manhattan is set to begin on July 4, in the shadow cast by the torch of the Statue of Liberty.

Amerike is less a plotted musical than a series of songs sung by characters whose stories viewers can follow, or at least piece together. The songs all are authentic; most of them were unearthed by Mr. Mlotek and his mother, the great Yiddish musicologist Eleanor Gordon Mlotek, and by Mr. Mloteks cousin, Moishe Rosenfeld.

Zalmen Mlotek of Teaneck is the Folksbienes artistic director.

The beginning of Amerike goes back to 1982, when Moishe and I were asked to create a pageant for the Workmens Circle celebrating the 65th anniversary of the Forward, Mr. Mlotek said. Some explanations Mr. Rosenfeld and Mr. Mlotek are not only first cousins but also frequent collaborators. The Forward, the newspaper that began as a daily Yiddish publication and now publishes in Yiddish, Russian, and English, almost entirely on line, was closely linked with the Workmans Circle, the Yiddishist, socially progressive organization that helped fresh-off-the-boat immigrants adjust to their bewildering new home. The Folksbiene began as a branch of the Workmens Circle. Mr. Mloteks father, Joseph, another prominent and beloved Yiddishist, was the Workmens Circles education director. Everything connects, and everyone is connected.

In 1982, Zalmen Mlotek did not work for the Folksbiene; I was involved only tangentially with Yiddish theater, he said. I developed my own career as a musician. But when he and Mr. Rosenfeld were asked to put together a theatrical piece about immigration, they said yes.

Bryna Wasserman, a luminary of Yiddish theater, directs Amerika.

They researched the period beginning in the late 1880s and going through the next few decades of the twentieth century. Research involved listening to recordings of Yiddish theater and looking at music that had never been published before, Mr. Mlotek said. We wanted to find material that was an honest portrayal of the immigrant experience, from the immigrants themselves.

What excited us was the power of the songs and the lyrics we discovered. We were able to be transported dramatically and emotionally to the generation of immigrants who experienced this country for the first time.

Uncovering this music took detective skills, including not only the ability to follow barely-hinted-at trails and allusions, but also to decipher fading scrawled handwriting and to have the patience to sit still for the huge chunks of time that deciphering demanded.

There were problems specific to reading music conventionally read from left to right set to lyrics in Yiddish conventionally read from right to left often transliterated into Roman letters conventionally read from left to right. It was complicated and time-consuming, Mr. Mlotek understated. So hed do triage. Id look at the music, and if it interested me I would take the time to decipher it. Sometimes hed find what he calls jewels.

It was like being on an archaeological dig, he said.

This crumbling handwritten page has music and transliteration for Lost Arayn, which means let them in. Its a heartwrenching plea to immigration officials.

Some of the jewels were songs like Vatch Your Step. In that song, Mr. Mlotek said, were exciting phrases that the immigrants heard all the time and turned into English. Or at least into Yinglish; the rest of the lyrics were in Yiddish. Other songs would talk about upward mobility, about no longer living in the tenements but moving uptown, to much nicer places in Harlem or the Bronx.

Its always key for us that the experience be told honestly, he added. These experiences were from the immigrants pens and minds and spirits.

When Mr. Mlotek and Mr. Rosenfeld first wrote Amerike, it was mainly in Yiddish, although there was enough English and Yinglish for non-Yiddish speakers not to feel entirely lost.

Watch Your Step thats Vatch in Yiddish is among the songs in the show.

The production was a great success, Mr. Mlotek said. Dick Shepard of the New York Times gave it a five-column rave review, with our pictures, and for a week our phones rang nonstop. We were in a little office in the old Workmans Circle building, and the phones just kept ringing. It was an incredible experience. It just exploded. People from the theater world started to come down and see it.

The show evolved. As it got more popular, a producer came to us and said that he wanted to do it Off Broadway, but wed have to put more English into it. That meant translating some of the songs that had very little English in them.

It worked. The show continued to attract and charm audiences. After Off Broadway, it toured, and Leonard Bernstein recommended that we go to Italy with it, Mr. Mlotek reported. We went to Palermo and to Venice. The experience in Palermo was incredible. One time, the audience was all high school kids. They were rowdy, regular high school kids and then when we talked about sweatshops and unionizing workers, they all hushed.

It was as if they were seeing something holy. That resonated for them. The rest of it well, they were rowdy high school kids.

Amerike was revived again, soon after September 11 the need for some hope was obvious and again in 2012; that version played well until Superstorm Sandy knocked out most of lower Manhattan, including Baruch College, where it was playing. And then when we came here to the museum, to our new home, last year, we were wrestling between Amerike and The Golden Bride as the first piece to present here. The Golden Bride won. Its representative of Second Avenue material, and we opted for that, to give people a taste of actual Yiddish theater, Mr. Mlotek said. The musical had a brief but critically acclaimed run at the museum.

Now, though, we decided that because immigration has become such an important issue today, and because we are constantly inspired by our location it doesnt escape us that the Statue of Liberty is right outside our windows we felt that it was time to bring the show back.

Theyve made a change, though. Theyve stripped the English they added. There is English throughout, Mr. Mlotek said. Its the story of immigration, so as the immigrants assimilated their Yiddish became peppered with English. But now much of the material is back to the original authentic Yiddish sources that we picked. Also, the production includes supertitles so even the most Yiddish-challenged of audience members will know whats going on.

The cast rehearses for the Folksbienes new production of Amerike.

Now, he said, a challenge they face is how to pick a cast that can sing Yiddish honestly, authentically, and dramatically and also look good and of course also sound good.

We auditioned more than 300 people in New York, and we came up with a terrific ensemble of 12 people, he said. Some have experience in Yiddish, and some learned it. And then there is one major standout. Daniel Kahn, who we brought from Berlin.

Daniel Kahn came back to the United States from Berlin to be in Amerike.

Daniel Kahn is the young Detroit native who has lived in Berlin for the last decade; he broke into Americas consciousness last fall, soon after the singer/songwriter/poet Leonard Cohen died, by translating Mr. Cohens brilliant, popular, and hauntingly and undeniably Jewish song Halleluyah into Yiddish, and singing it on YouTube right into the camera, looking right at the viewer as he sang in a language that the song hadnt been written in but seemed as if it should have been.

That Daniel Kahn.

We are not making a political point with this show, Mr. Mlotek said. This is a nation of immigrants. The Yiddish theater in America became American theater, and it came from immigrants. We are celebrating that tie.

To that end, the Folksbiene also is hosting the first immigration arts summit, set for Monday and Tuesday, July 17 and 18. The summit, which will include a keynote address by John Leguizamo, will bring together the Pan Asian Repertory, the Repertorio Espaol, the Irish Repertory Theatre, the Kairo Italy Theater, the Irish Arts Center, and the Turkish American Repertory Theatre, as well as Israels Office of Cultural Affairs in the USA, the Romanian Cultural Institute, and the Cumbe Center for African and diaspora Dance. The point is to talk about shared experiences, brainstorm shared ideas for paths forward, and share performances and audiences with each other. (See box for more details.)

To go back to the American Jewish experience, there are many lighthearted lyrics in the show. Its not at all a depressing experience it is in fact the opposite, and Vatch Your Step is in it but there still are moments of deep sadness. It is hard to leave behind all that you know, and it is hard to learn to adapt to something new. And it is also hard, very hard, more than hard, it is soul-rending, to come to a new country, stand hopefully at its gates, and then be turned away.

Lost Arayn Let Them In is a song written at the turn of the century, Mr. Mlotek said; of course, that turn is not the most recent one but from the 19th to the 20th centuries. We found it in a recording by Aaron Lebedev. My mother transcribed it. We used the first verse but not the second one. It was in one of Ms. Mloteks books about Yiddish music; for the purposes of her argument, one verse was enough.

My mother passed away three years ago, and I found this in her papers, Mr. Mlotek said. She never published this verse, and it is the killer verse.

Its the story of a young family:

A young father with bent shoulders is on Ellis Island.

He raised two small children by himself.

They lost their mother, and came here with great difficulty.

The gates are locked before them.

Their father is kept away from them.

Hearts are broken here at the door.

It ends, in a universal plea that is as relevant today as it was then then to Jews, today to others:

Dont have hearts of stone.

Open the gates to the Golden Land.

You see people falling, reach out your hand.

Let them in, let them in.

Dont break any more hearts.

The whole world will bless you for it.

Open the gates and let them in.

Zalmen Mlotek hopes that everyone will come to see the story of Amerike, down in southern Manhattan, facing the Statue of Liberty and the torch that lit the way for so many of our families, and to keep Yiddish theater alive as they do so.

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Amerike singing - The Jewish Standard


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