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Creative studio The-Artery names lead design director – Rapid TV News

Posted By on June 4, 2017

Full service creative studio The-Artery has named Liron Ashkenazi-Eldar as its lead design director.

Ashkenazi-Eldar is the winner of a 2017 ADC Silver Cube Awardfrom The One Club, in the category 2017 Design: Typography, for her project entitled Asa Wife Zine, which was submitted via New Yorks School of Visual Arts. Ashkenazi-Eldar was also recently profiled in a story entitled 15 Artists Under 30 by the prestigious PRINT magazine.

Ashkenazi-Eldar will spearhead the formation of the new department within The-Artery that will focus on design and branding. She is developing in-house design capabilities to support the company's visual effects, experiential and virtual reality/augmented reality content, as well as website development. Looking to the future, Ashekanzi-Eldar and her team are also looking for innovative and design-based clients who are interested in working with The-Artery on creating unique projects revolving around branding, motion and art.

Liron is a truly gifted and highly talented artist whose addition to the company helps steer us in a new direction, said Deborah Sullivan, MD for The-Artery. Having her on board gives us more creative opportunities - and we are better positioned to work with clients who are specifically looking for branding and design-focused strategies. Liron will oversee this new department, also providing motion graphics, print and social campaigns.

Ashkenazi-Eldar added: I am very excited to be offering The-Arterys existing and future client base something new - the design side of things. While weve been well established for many years in the areas of production and VFX, our design team can now bring a new dimension to our company. We are seeking brand clients with strong identities so that we can offer them exciting, new, and even weird creative solutions that are not part of the traditional branding process. Thats not how were going to do that here! We will be taking a completely new approach to branding providing imagery that is more emotional and more personal, instead of just following an existing protocol. Our goal is to provide a highly immersive experience for our new brand clients.

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Creative studio The-Artery names lead design director - Rapid TV News

Anti-Defamation League Welcomes EU Support for Self-Regulation of Online Hate Speech – eNews Park Forest

Posted By on June 4, 2017

New York, NY(ENEWSPF)June 2, 2017. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) welcomes EU Commissioner for Justice, Vera Jourovas statements in support of a self-regulatory approach to online hate speech. Following yesterdays release of an EU evaluation of industry responses to online hate speech, Commissioner Jourova called the self-regulatory approach a success. The evaluation and her statements came a year after the EU and major internet companies announced a voluntary Code of Conduct.

Jonathan Greenblatt, ADL CEO, released the following statement:

Back in 2014 ADL developed cyber hate best practices with the companies that worked with the EU and its our view that self-regulation, involving industry and civil society, is the best approach to combatting online hate speech. Optimizing the removal of hate speech while protecting freedom of speech requires continuous improvements in technology and education of platform providers and users. Legislation and lawsuits will only hold back the work of companies and civil society working together in good faith.

We welcome Commissioner Jourovas comments that the EU evaluation shows that a self-regulatory approach can work, if all actors do their part. She rightly emphasized that the self-regulatory approach of the voluntary Code of Conduct agreement between the EU and Facebook, Google, Twitter, and Microsoft brought much quicker results than a legislative approach, which could take many years, and that the self-regulatory approach, which involves the companies and civil society, emphasizes the rejection of hate speech by all of society, not just governments.

We hope the Justice Ministers of the EU member states will support Commissioner Jourovas recommendations when they meet next week to discuss online hate speech.

ADL has repeatedly championed the self-regulatory approach, including in our Best Practices for Responding to Cyberhate, which ADL produced in 2014 after discussions with Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Twitter to help prevent the spread of online hate speech. These companies and others publicly endorsed the document. The best practices document was an outgrowth of a working group on cyberhate that ADL has convened for years with tech companies, academics, and other leaders who evaluate current practices and develop new strategies for responding to hate online.

ADL recently announced plans to open a state-of-the-art center in Silicon Valley that will combine cutting-edge analysis, education, and new strategies and partnerships to combat online hate and protect civil rights.

Source: http://adl.org

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Anti-Defamation League Welcomes EU Support for Self-Regulation of Online Hate Speech - eNews Park Forest

Zionism: Socialist Zionism – Jewish Virtual Library

Posted By on June 2, 2017

Socialist Zionism (or Labor Zionism) strove to achieve Jewish national and social redemption by fusing Zionism with Socialism. Its founder was Nachman Syrkin, who promulgated this view shortly before the third Zionist Congress (1899).

Its philosophy was based on the assumption that the problem of Diaspora Jewry would remain unsolved even after the Socialist revolution, and that the solution to the anomaly of Jewish existence was the emigration of Jews to, and their concentration in, a territorial base. Dov Ber Borochov, a prominent advocate of Socialist Zionism, argued that the development of capitalism would inevitably prompt Jews to immigrate to Palestine, and that only there could the economic structure of the Jewish people be reconstituted as a base for the class struggle of the Jewish proletariat. Zionism, he asserted, is a historic-economic necessity for the Jewish people and the historic role of spearheading the Jewish national liberation process is reserved for the Jewish proletariat.

Disagreements about the conceptual and philosophical foundations of Socialist Zionism, the methods to use in achieving it in Palestine and relations with Socialist organizations and parties in other countries, led to the formation of many and sundry Socialist Zionist parties. Some of these entities eschewed Marxist terminology and refrained from explicitly terming themselves Socialist. Others, considering themselves more Socialist and less Zionist, forswore membership in the Zionist Organization at various times.

The Socialist Zionist idea gave rise to many pioneering youth movements, such as Hashomer Hatz'air and Hehalutz. The leaders of Socialist Zionist parties were among the most prominent in the pre-independence Palestine community and the State of Israel; David Ben-Gurion, Yitzhak Ben-Zvi and Berl Katznelson are but three examples. Socialist Zionism is the progenitor of most of Israel's settlement movements and the Israel Labor Party, one of Israel's two main political parties.

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Zionism: Socialist Zionism - Jewish Virtual Library

Prime Minister Trudeau does not Conflate Anti-Zionism and Anti-Semitism – Center for Research on Globalization

Posted By on June 2, 2017

Earlier this month, Israel and its friends around the world celebrated the 69th anniversary of Israels unilateral declaration of independence. Among them was our Prime Minister who issued the following statement: while we celebrate Israels independence, we also reaffirm our commitment to fight anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism. The fact that anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism were mentioned separately is significant because they are very different phenomena, which many mistakenly conflate. Such a conflation would be historically incorrect and politically dangerous.

Anti-Semitism, like all racial hatred, is prohibited in Canada. Originally, anti-Semitism was as a reaction to social, cultural and economic integration of Jews in the wake of the Emancipation. It then spread around the world, including Canada. Jews used to be routinely discriminated against in many spheres of public life. In Germany, anti-Semitism produced an ideology that ended in the systematic murder of millions of Jewish civilians during the Second World War.

Another consequence of anti-Semitism was the emergence, in the late 19th century, of Jewish nationalism, a political movement known as Zionism. It aimed at forging out of the Jews a nation in the European sense of the word, getting these nationalized Jews to settle in Palestine and ensuring the Zionists political and military control over the country, which was inhabited by diverse ethnic and confessional groups.

Zionism was a revolution in Jewish life, and its founders were proud of it. To quote Shlomo Avineri, a prominent political scientist and historian who also served as Director General of Israels Foreign Office,

Zionism was the most fundamental revolution in Jewish life. It substituted a secular self-identity of the Jews as a nation for the traditional and Orthodox self-identity in religious terms.

In his words, Zionism was

a clear break with the quietism of the religious belief in messianic redemption that should occur only through divine intercession in the mundane cycles of world history.

Avineri also believes that it would be banal, conformist and apologetic to link Zionism to the traditional Jewish longing for the Land of Israel.

No wonder Zionism provoked massive opposition among the worlds Jewish population. However surprising this may seem today, many Jews accused Zionists of anti-Semitism. Edwin Montague, a prominent British statesman and a Jew, vigorously protested the Balfour declaration that promised in 1917 to support the Zionist project in Palestine. He titled his public rebuke Memorandum on the anti-Semitism of the Present government. In fact, Balfour himself severely limited the immigration of Jews fleeing pogroms in the Russian Empire in 1905 while favouring their settlement in Palestine.

Indeed, Zionists argued and continue to argue that Jews constitute an alien body within non-Jewish nations, and that they really belong to Israel. This is precisely what anti-Semites believed, and what many continue to believe. This confluence of ideas and interests did not escape the intrepid founder of political Zionism, Theodor Herzl (image on the right). In his diary, Herzl acknowledged that the anti-Semites would be instrumental in helping carry out the Zionist program.

History proved Herzl right. The Zionist movement found grace in the eyes of anti-Semites during over one century of its history. Not only did they believe that Jews constitute a foreign element in their countries, they also wanted them out. This is how Zionist training camps were allowed to operate between the world wars in several countries of Europe, including Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany, which also facilitated the transfer of thousands of German Jews and their capital to Palestine.

It is now clear that conflating anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism is historically incorrect. It is also politically dangerous to confuse the two, since legitimate opposition to Jewish nationalism may be branded anti-Semitic. This would go against Canadas commitment to free expression by lumping criticism, boycott, sanctions and other forms of peaceful protest with anti-Jewish bigotry. As any Canadian, Prime Minister Trudeau is free to support or oppose Zionism. And as the highest elected official in the country, he deserves credit for distinguishing between political opinion and racial hatred.

The author is professor of history at the Universit de Montral. His recent book is What is Modern Israel? (University of Chicago Press, 2016). His previous book A Threat from within: a Century of Jewish Opposition to Zionism has been translated into over a dozen of languages and shortlisted for the Governor General Award.

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Prime Minister Trudeau does not Conflate Anti-Zionism and Anti-Semitism - Center for Research on Globalization

The responsibility of non-Zionist Jews during the ‘year of Zionist anniversaries’ – Mondoweiss

Posted By on June 2, 2017

New York times report on the Biltmore Conference, May 12, 1942 . (Image: New York Times)

As Palestinians prepared to observe Nakba day, the American Zionist Movement(AZM), the American component of the World Zionist Organization(WZO), in early May sent an announcement to its mailing list celebrating the 75th Anniversary of the Biltmore Conference, launching the observance of what it calls a Year of Zionist Anniversaries.

From May 2017 until May 2018 AZM will mark a series of important milestones in Zionism and help inform Jewish communities and the general public about the history, relevance and importance of Zionism and its connection to the independence and vibrant democracy of the State of Israel.

AZMs Year of Zionist Anniversaries includes the conquest/reunification of Jerusalem (50 years), First Zionist Congress in Basel, Switzerland (120 years), Balfour Declaration (100 years), UN General Assembly Partition Resolution (70 years), and declaration/founding of the state of Israel (70 years).

Through this upcoming Year of Zionist Anniversaries AZM will conduct programs and events across the country about Zionism in partnership with its 25 constituent agencies and in cooperation with the broad spectrum of Jewish communal agencies. There will be programs related to Zionism held with public officials, schools, synagogues, summer camps and with many community institutions and organizations.

Theyre very proud. I understand that pride, having absorbed enough of that perspective. It makes a bulwark against feelings of vulnerability and ambiguity for most of us, who are cultural mischlingen (what Nazis termed children of Jewish-gentile unions), living lives much as our countrymen rather than distinctively Jewish.

In a 1940 essay, social psychologist Kurt Lewin may have hinted at the royal road out of uncertainty that Zionism may serve for Jews, and explained the tenacious grip of otherwise indifferent Jews to the concept of having a country.

For the modern Jew there exists an additional factor to increase his uncertainty. He is frequently uncertain about the way he belongs to the Jewish group, and to what degree. Especially since religion has become a less important social matter, it is rather difficult to describe positively the character of the Jewish group as a whole. A religious group with many atheists? A Jewish race with a great diversity of racial qualities among its members? A nation without a state or a territory of its own containing the majority of its people? A group combined by one culture and tradition but actually having in most respects the different values and ideals of the nations in which it lives? There are, I think, few chores more bewildering than that of determining positively the character of the Jewish group. No wonder many Jews are uncertain about what it means to belong to the Jewish group

I grew up in a US Jewish milieu where pride in Zionist achievement was not unknown (but not universal). It was only years later that I discovered that when one lost the Zionist sensibility, much data became visible that was not before once Arabs were not the enemy of a self-evident right of Jewish sovereignty.

Ex-Zionist Baltimore Rabbi Morris S. Lazaron was scathing in his view of the Zionization of Judaism:

Every sacred feeling of the Jew, every instinct of humanity, every deep-rooted anxiety for family, every cherished memory became an instrument to be used for the promotion of the Zionist cause.

I thought of pride I had absorbed, of Zionist achievement, when I read Bilin village Palestinian rights organizer Iyad Burnats bitter comment after a settler shot one youth to death, and injured a Palestinian journalist:

Jews of the world must take responsibility for the crimes of the occupation against the Palestinians. Because the crimes are carried out in the name of the Jews.

It is established in international law, that collective punishment shall not be exacted on a population for crimes they have not individually committed. The question, to me, is the different question of responsibility, which is what Burnat presents to Jews and which is, writ large, the entire Zionist question.

AZM, the federation of Zionist organizations in the United States, tells us,

There will be programs related to Zionism held with public officials, schools, synagogues, summer camps and with many community institutions and organizations

inviting us to share in Jewish achievements in Palestine. Does to take pride mean take responsibility as well?

In Iyad Burnats utterance of frustration,

Jews of the world

Addressed, I believe, to diasporic Jews who answer to the identity Jew. (Controversialist Gilad Atzmon proposes reacting to Jewish nationalism by dropping the identity.)

must take responsibility

Collectively, as a group? or individual Jews who hear him?

for the crimes of the occupation against the Palestinians.

Explicit acknowledgment of injuries inflicted on Palestinian Arabs, intrinsic to the Zionist program, rather than the fiction of an inexplicable inability of Jews and Arabs to get along.

Because the crimes are carried out in the name of the Jews.

The central objection of British cabinet secretary Edwin Samuel Montagu to the Balfour Jewish Homeland declaration of 1917 was that it would lead to the idea that he, a citizen of the United Kingdom, was represented by another nation. A corollary of that hazard was the liability of being held responsible for actions of that nation.

Jewish American activists (some who had been part of the Arab-Jewish Sumud Freedom Camp in the occupied West Bank) held a sit-in May 24, at Jerusalems Damascus Gate to block an annual triumphalist Zionist March of the Flags through the Muslim Quarter of the Old City.

Jews resisting Jewish supremacy can put the lie to the idea that oppressing Palestinians is a Jewish interest; with their bodies, make the statement that Israels 70-year war on Arabs is not their war.

The nature of their violent removal by police may indicate that Peter Beinarts 2014 call for American Jews to engage in a Freedom Summer protest in Israel was prescient. To challenge an oppressive system, even symbolically, provokes more than symbolic resistance.

Its time for American Jews who support Israel but oppose the occupation to commit to large-scale, direct action of our own, Beinart wrote, in an article written from the standpoint of a Zionist who sees the two-state solution as the only solution to Israels predicament.

To a non-nationalist Jew, the heart of the predicament is the efforts to shape reality in Palestine around the idea of a Jewish nation-state.

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The responsibility of non-Zionist Jews during the 'year of Zionist anniversaries' - Mondoweiss

Letter: Confusing the real meaning of Zionism – Santa Cruz Sentinel

Posted By on June 2, 2017

Letter writer Sheila Carrillo is misinformed about the meaning of Zionism. There are 56 Muslim countries in the world today and just one Jewish country the size of New Jersey. Its not right that the only country in the world which is being maligned on college campuses is Israel. The Jewish people are indigenous to this contested land. Jews put Jerusalem on the map in the first place. As Professor Judea Pearl once said, If we examine anti-Zionist ideology closely, we see that its aims are: to uproot one people, the Jewish people, from its homeland, to take away its ability to defend itself in sovereignty, and to delegitimize its historical identity. It is racist and fundamentally eliminationist.

Sheree Roth, Palo Alto

The Sentinel welcomes your letters to the editor. Letters should be short, no more than 150 words. We do not accept anonymous letters. Letter-writers should include their full name as well as a street address and telephone number. We dont publish those details in the newspaper, but need the information for verification purposes. Occasionally, we reject letters simply because weve had so many on the same subject. Submit your letters online at santacruzsentinel.com/submit-letters.

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Letter: Confusing the real meaning of Zionism - Santa Cruz Sentinel

Zionist pioneer Ze’ev Jabotinsky’s passport goes up for auction – Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Posted By on June 2, 2017

Photo courtesy of J. Greenstein & Company

Zionist pioneer Zeev Jabotinskys passport will be up for auction next month.

Posted: Thursday, June 1, 2017 8:30 pm

Zionist pioneer Zeev Jabotinskys passport goes up for auction JNS.org Jewish News |

How much would you pay for a Zionist icons passport? The question will be answered next month when J. Greenstein & Company, an auction house specializing in antique Judaica items, takes bids for the passport of Zeev Jabotinsky.

Born in Russia, Jabotinsky (1880-1940) founded a movement known as Revisionist Zionism and the Irgun, the Jewish underground militia in British Mandatory Palestine. His passport will be auctioned off June 13 in Cedarhurst, N.Y.

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Posted in Arts & Features, Arts & Culture on Thursday, June 1, 2017 8:30 pm.

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Zionist pioneer Ze'ev Jabotinsky's passport goes up for auction - Jewish News of Greater Phoenix

Grants available to help local nonprofits – Times Union – Albany Times Union

Posted By on June 2, 2017

Grants available to help local nonprofits

Albany

The Community Foundation for the Greater Capital Region is always trying to extend its reach.

A resource for all things nonprofit, the Community Foundation joined forces with the B'nai B'rith Gideon Foundation last year to offer grant funding to organizations that serve low-income seniors, people with disabilities and low-income residents living in Capital Region rental properties.

The foundations are more than halfway through the 2017 competitive grant awards, but there are a number of grants with rolling application deadlines and several funds accepting applications over the summer and into the fall.

"Grants from the Community Foundation fund a wide-range of programs, from basic needs like shelter and food, to cutting-edge medical research and innovative cultural programs," said John G. Eberle, Community Foundation for the Greater Capital Region president and CEO. "We're always on the lookout for effective nonprofit organizations and programs that can make our region stronger, make people and families healthier, and make life better for residents and visitors."

So far, $300,000 in grant funding has been awarded, including $25,000 to the connectivity project at Daughters of Sarah.

Foundation extends its reach

For more about grants awarded through the Community Foundation for the Greater Capital Region, go to https://www.cfgcr.org/upcominggrantdeadlines.php.

The senior community received funds to install Wi-Fi, which allowed it to move to an electronic medical record system, as well as buy and install large-screen televisions for digital communication with residents. The Albany campus also upgraded its existing sound system so hard-of-hearing residents can better hear announcements.

Potential awards range from $1,000 for mini-grants from the Standish Family Fund and the Niskayuna Community Foundation, to $30,000 from the Arnold Cogswell Health Care Fund.

Competitive funding opportunities are also available through the Times Union Hope Fund, the Albany County Convention and Visitors Bureau Hospitality Fund, the Bender Family Foundation, the John D. Picotte Family Foundation and the Bethlehem Central Community Foundation.

Last year, the Community Foundation for the Greater Capital Region awarded more than $4.2 million in grants to nonprofits and scholarships to local students.

Since its creation in 1968, the nonprofit has distributed more than $60 million in funding, which isn't limited to competitive grant applications.

The foundation manages nearly $70 million in assets through 400-plus separate charitable funds and works closely with fund holders and donors to determine how money should be allocated.

Additional grant opportunities are in the works, and the foundation is also building a web-based grant/scholarship application system, to provide grant seekers with a new and more user-friendly online experience next year.

"Many of our competitive grant funds were established by generous individuals and families who wanted to establish long-term, sustainable funding for the programs and services the region and its residents need to grow and thrive," Eberle said. "We're so pleased to be able to honor the intent and legacies of these generous people through our grant awards."

jpatterson@timesunion.com @JenSPatterson 518-454-5340

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Grants available to help local nonprofits - Times Union - Albany Times Union

‘People of the Book’ returns for fifth summer – Heritage Florida Jewish News

Posted By on June 2, 2017

Read any good books lately? Each summer for the past four years, Congregation Ohev Shalom has sponsored "People of the Book: One Book, One Community, One Summer," a chance to read and discuss a book of significant Jewish content. "People of the Book" returns for its fifth cycle on June 10, featuring best-selling author Maggie Anton's "Rav Hisda's Daughter-Book I: Apprentice."

Rav Hisda is considered one of the greatest minds among the Sages of the Talmud. He lived in the late 3rd and early 4th century, bridging the time when the Roman emperor, Constantine, embraced Christianity and culminating in restrictive decrees against the Jews. Rabbinic sources record that his children, including his daughters, were all scholars in their own right.

Maggie Anton is best known for her series of historical novels based on the lives of the daughters of Rabbi Shimon Yitzhaki, the 11th century French commentator better known as Rashi. Since Rashi had no sons, tradition has it that he educated his daughters in Bible, Talmud, and Halakhah. It has even been speculated that they put on t'fillin and may have advised their husbands, who were famous commentators themselves.

Rav Hisda's Daughter takes a very different turn, though. Anton gives the main character the Persian name Hisdadukh ("daughter of Hisda") and imagines that, while her father and his colleagues raced to develop a Judaism that could survive the increasing upheaval, she decides to pursue another path, training to become an enchantress.

"Maggie Anton never expected to be a historical novelist," noted Rabbi David Kay, who along with Janet Friedman will co-facilitate "People of the Book" this summer. "Then she took an introduction to Talmud class, and it changed the direction of her life."

Drawing from primary sources, Anton weaves together Talmud, Midrash, and history, creating an authentic and compelling glimpse into a crucial moment in Jewish history. The subtitle of the book says it all: "A Novel of Love, the Talmud, and Sorcery."

"People of the Book" will meet every other Shabbat, immediately following services, at Congregation Ohev Shalom, 613 Concourse Parkway South, Maitland. The dates are June 10 and 24, July 8 and 22, and August 5 and 19. The program is open to the public, and people are welcome to join the discussions at any time during the summer. "Even if you haven't read the book," Rabbi Kay adds.

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'People of the Book' returns for fifth summer - Heritage Florida Jewish News

Telshe Yeshiva to honor Cohen, Drazins, Scheinerman, class of 1966 – Cleveland Jewish News

Posted By on June 2, 2017

HaRav Yankel Cohen has been involved with Telshe Yeshiva in Wickliffe since he enrolled there as a student in 1951.

In honor of his many years of service to the rabbinical college, Cohen will receive the Harbotzas Torah tribute at Telshe Yeshivas 75th annual dinner, which starts at 6:30 p.m. June 5 at Young Israel of Greater Cleveland in Beachwood.

Also honored will be Rabbi and Mrs. Hillel Drazin, distinguished parents of the year; Rabbi and Mrs. Yitzchak Scheinerman, who will be wished farewell as they move out of state; and the graduating class of 1966, celebrating a yovel (50 years) of service to Klal Yisroel (all of Israel).

There will also be a tribute to HaRav Yaakov Horowitz and the Telshe Yeshiva Alumni Bais Midrash in Brooklyn, N.Y., which is closing after 46 years of service.

The event will feature an address by Rabbi Aharon Dovid Goldberg, rosh yeshiva of Telshe Yeshiva.

Cohen, 79, is a graduate of Telshe Yeshiva and has been involved with the yeshiva as a facilitator in the study of Talmud for more than 50 years, said Rabbi Dovid Greenwald, the colleges director of development.

Hes brilliant, a genius, Greenwald said. His analytical mind is able to dissect a piece of Talmud and really break it down so students can understand it and get a grasp of the concept. Having someone like Rabbi Cohen brings that level of study to a new plateau; its more elevated.

Through the Harbotzas Torah tribute, were recognizing all of his dissemination of Torah, his Torah knowledge and Talmud knowledge, and honoring him for so many years. Hes literally someone who lives and breathes his Talmud study all day long.

Cohen and his wife, Ruth, live in Cleveland Heights.

The Drazins are also Cleveland Heights residents.

The Scheinermans, of Wickliffe, have been longtime neighbors of Telshe Yeshiva, Greenwald said. They recently moved to Lakewood, N.J.

Rabbi Scheinerman joined Telshe as a student in 1943, and he spent his his life by the yeshiva, Greenwald said.

Horowitz was a rabbi at Telshe Yeshiva and has served alumni at the Bais Midrash in Brooklyn for many years.

It was started by our alumni in New York in 1971 who wanted to retain their connection, Greenwald said. They sold the building, so were saying thank you to the rabbi (Horowitz) and the general members in Brooklyn for all their years of service.

Greenwald said the primary goals of the dinner are to update the community on happenings at the yeshiva and to allow it to celebrate in all of our achievements. He expects about 450 people to attend.

Its a really big milestone, he said of the yeshiva which opened in Cleveland in November 1941 and is celebrating its 75th year. Telshe has been at the forefront of Jewish education in Cleveland. The landscape of Jewish Cleveland would not look the way it does without Telshe Yeshiva.

Greenwald said the yeshiva not only has hundreds of alumni living in the Cleveland area, but also alumni who reside in 25 states and 15 countries around the world.

We currently have students from 12 states, as well as from Israel, Switzerland, Mexico, Canada, Venezuela and Ukraine, he said.

The yeshivas current enrollment is about 170, Greenwald said.

Ed Wittenberg is a freelance writer from Cleveland Heights.

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Telshe Yeshiva to honor Cohen, Drazins, Scheinerman, class of 1966 - Cleveland Jewish News


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