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Noted author to speak at the Jewish center

Posted By on August 31, 2014

Published: Sun, August 31, 2014 @ 12:00 a.m.

Noted author to speak at the Jewish center

YOUNGSTOWN

The Schwartz Judaica Library at the Jewish Community Center of Youngstown will present author Maggie Anton from noon to 1:30 p.m. Oct. 30 in the multipurpose room.

Anton is the award-winning author of historical fiction series Rashis Daughters and Rav Hisdas Daughter. She is a Talmud scholar, with expertise in Jewish womens history.

Anton will discuss the research behind her new historical novel, Enchantress: A Novel of Rav Hisdas Daughter. The novel weaves together Talmudic lore, ancient Jewish magic and a timeless love story set in fourth-century Babylonia.

Based on five years of research and populated with characters from the Talmud, Enchantress brings a pivotal era of Jewish and Christian history to life from the perspective of a courageous and passionate woman.

The advance cost to attend is $8 per member and $10 per nonmember. The cost after Oct. 2 will be $12. Lunch will be served.

To register for this program, contact the bursars office at 330-746-3250 ext. 195.

Spiritual Book Club open to new members

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Noted author to speak at the Jewish center

Prominent Montreal philanthropist dies at 78

Posted By on August 31, 2014

By Joel Goldenberg, August 27th, 2014

Prominent Montreal philanthropist and businessman Irwin Beutel died Tuesday Aug. 19 in his 78th year after a brief illness. Mr. Beutel, whose funeral was held this past Friday at Paperman & Sons, was held in great esteem in the community not only for his philanthropy, but for his community leadership and dedicated pro-Israel stance. Mr. Beutel was president of the Montreal National Office and Eastern Region of Canadian Friends of Tel Aviv University (CFTAU) , and was also Montreal president of the Jewish National Fund; national president of Canadian Friends of Magen David Adom; national chair of the Canadian Institute of Jewish Research (CIJR); long serving board member of Ville St-Laurents United Talmud Torah, whose campus was named after Beutels parents, and past president of Kiwanis Montreal, St. George Club. Tributes poured in for Mr. Beutel. Tel Aviv University lauded him as a longstanding friend and generous supporter who will be greatly missed. The Canadian Friends of Tel Aviv University stated that in his gentle and elegant way, Irwin touched the lives of many. He loved children, youth and young adults, and they gravitated to him. His meaningful contributions to Jewish and university education were both legendary and transformative. His passion for Israel was unequalled. Irwin will be profoundly missed by his CFTAU family, and his many friends in Montreal and Israel. Mr. Beutel was an executive member of CFTAU and became president in 2011. His most recent gift enabled the full renovation of the entrance hall to the universitys Sackler Faculty of Medicine, a world renowned faculty. Mr. Beutel was also a member of Prime Minister Stephen Harpers delegation to Israel in January. A message from CIJRs Prof. Frederick Krantz, Baruch Cohen and Jack Kincler said: The generous and resourceful head of our board for well over a decade, Irwin was a key force in helping to build CIJR into the world-class pro-Israel academic think-tank which it is today. Irwin was a truly good man and an unfailing friend,a real Mensch in the deepest and best sense of the term. Chabad of Westmont posted a message that Mr. Beutels passing leaves a void in our hearts and our community. He was dedicated to Jewish education and continuity, and supported a myriad of Jewish schools and outreach projects, including the acclaimed Chabad of Westmount Irwin Beutel Lecture Series. Mr. Beutel is survived by brother Austin and sister in law Nani, sister Harriet, brother Morty and sister-in-law Judy, and many nieces, nephews, grand-nieces and grand-nephews.n

Click here to see the full newspaper. Updated on August 27, 2014

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Prominent Montreal philanthropist dies at 78

Potomac family travels to Poland to honor a hero — Gazette.Net

Posted By on August 31, 2014

Greg Dohler/The Gazette

This is the story of two families who were connected 70 years ago and are now reconnected, says Nira Berry of Potomac, with a photo of her mother and grandmother, who were saved from the Holocaust by a sheriff in Poland.

When Nira Berry was a girl, her mother often said Grzegorz Czyzyk was a hero, but it wasnt until she was an adult that Berry understood why.

Czyzyk saved Berrys mother and grandmother from near-certain death in a concentration camp by hiding them on his property for two years during World War II.

This month, Berry, her husband and two children, along with a group of friends and relatives, traveled to Warsaw, Poland, to honor Czyzyk, who was posthumously awarded a Righteous Among the Nations medal for helping save Jews during the war. Czyzyk was one of four Poles who received the medal Aug. 12, given by Jerusalems Yad Vashem Institute.

He who saves a life, saves the world its a famous saying from the Talmud, Berry said. It is on the medal and its true. Without this man I wouldnt be alive and my children wouldnt be alive.

Berrys mother, born Sara Peretz in 1936, was growing up in Chelm in eastern Poland when the Nazis occupied the country. Peretzs father and an uncle tried to escape, thinking that the Nazis planned to kill only Jewish men, not all Jews. When they learned the truth, they tried to return to Chelm. They were shot and killed on the way, Berry said.

Berrys grandmother Bela Peretz was left with her young daughter in an increasingly difficult time.

Before the war, Jews made up about 50 percent of the population of Chelm, Berry said. All the people got along, but when the Nazis came, they started killing the Jews.

In 1940 all the Jews of Chelm were moved to a ghetto and, at one point in 1941 Bela Peretz was jailed for illegal trading in flour.

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Potomac family travels to Poland to honor a hero -- Gazette.Net

Save the Synagogue: ELI on Air with Rabbi Jeremy Fine – Video

Posted By on August 31, 2014


Save the Synagogue: ELI on Air with Rabbi Jeremy Fine
Mark your calendars, details to come!

By: ELI Talks

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Save the Synagogue: ELI on Air with Rabbi Jeremy Fine - Video

Synagogue Background & Overview | Jewish Virtual Library

Posted By on August 31, 2014

The synagogue is the Jewish equivalent of a church, more or less. It is the center of the Jewish religious community: a place of prayer, study and education, social and charitable work, as well as a social center.

Throughout this site, I have used the word "synagogue," but there are actually several different terms for a Jewish "church," and you can tell a lot about people by the terms they use.

The Hebrew term is beit k'nesset (literally, House of Assembly), although you will rarely hear this term used in conversation in English.

The Orthodox and Chasidim typically use the word "shul," which is Yiddish. The word is derived from a German word meaning "school," and emphasizes the synagogue's role as a place of study.

Conservative Jews usually use the word "synagogue," which is actually a Greek translation of Beit K'nesset and means "place of assembly" (it's related to the word "synod").

Reform Jews use the word "temple," because they consider every one of their meeting places to be equivalent to, or a replacement for, The Temple.

The use of the word "temple" to describe modern houses of prayer offends some traditional Jews, because it trivializes the importance of The Temple. The word "shul," on the other hand, is unfamiliar to many modern Jews. When in doubt, the word "synagogue" is the best bet, because everyone knows what it means, and I've never known anyone to be offended by it.

At a minimum, a synagogue is a beit tefilah, a house of prayer. It is the place where Jews come together for community prayer services. Jews can satisfy the obligations of daily prayer by praying anywhere; however, there are certain prayers that can only be said in the presence of a minyan (a quorum of 10 adult men), and tradition teaches that there is more merit to praying with a group than there is in praying alone. The sanctity of the synagogue for this purpose is second only to The Temple. In fact, in rabbinical literature, the synagogue is sometimes referred to as the "little Temple."

A synagogue is usually also a beit midrash, a house of study. Contrary to popular belief, Jewish education does not end at the age of bar mitzvah. For the observant Jew, the study of sacred texts is a life-long task. Thus, a synagogue normally has a well-stocked library of sacred Jewish texts for members of the community to study. It is also the place where children receive their basic religious education.

Most synagogues also have a social hall for religious and non-religious activities. The synagogue often functions as a sort of town hall where matters of importance to the community can be discussed.

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Synagogue Background & Overview | Jewish Virtual Library

Lakeland Synagogue Welcomes New Spiritual Leader

Posted By on August 31, 2014

Rabbi Bertram Kieffer has relocated to Lakeland to lead the Jewish congregation at Temple Emanuel. "I'm trying to use what's contemporary, a sense of modernity, to find a way our traditions can be internalized by the next generation," Kieffer said

In the movie "The Jazz Singer," a rabbi's son disregards his father's wish that he become a cantor, who sings the prayers in a synagogue. Instead, the son turns to the stage and becomes an entertainer, only at the end to return to the synagogue to sing for God rather than for popularity.

It's a story that Rabbi Bertram Kieffer knows personally. He, too, was a rabbi's son who pursued a career as a popular singer and actor, only to return to the synagogue. Now he has turned his talents and experience to lead the oldest synagogue in Polk County.

In August, Kieffer became the new rabbi at Temple Emanuel in Lakeland, and the former entertainer promises to inject a bit of liveliness into Shabbat services.

"As rabbi, I get to use all my experiences. I've created pop services where the words are in Hebrew but the music is popular. I have a Beatles service, I have a Sinatra service, I have a Feelin' Groovy' Shabbat, with music from the '60s. It's quite joyful, with music we enjoy," he said.

Such creative license is all in the interest of passing on Jewish traditions by making them relevant, said Kieffer, who says he is "this side of 60," without saying which side.

"I'm trying to use what's contemporary, a sense of modernity, to find a way our traditions can be internalized by the next generation. How can we continue the work of past generations? We redefine it so it's user-friendly," he said.

Kieffer has arrived just prior to the High Holy Days, and despite his penchant for innovation, he stresses that the services for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are solemn occasions that will be conducted in the traditional way. He promises, "There will be beautiful music," some of it sung by himself and some as duets with congregation members.

"The holidays are about introspection. We want to make changes in our lives. The secular New Year is about parties and frivolity. Ours is about our relationship with God," he said.

It took Kieffer awhile to combine the two worlds he knows the ancient Jewish tradition in which he was raised and that of pop culture. He was the middle of three sons, whose father was a rabbi in Westbury, N.Y., on Long Island. Both his brothers became rabbis as well, but in his 20s, Kieffer's dream was to become a star.

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Lakeland Synagogue Welcomes New Spiritual Leader

Manure thrown on synagogue

Posted By on August 31, 2014

What appears to be excrement was thrown on a loading dock door on the side of Ahavath Torah Congregation building overnight Monday.

Rabbi Jonathan Hausman said they believe the substance, which was splattered all over the brown metal door, was cow dung, The Brockton Enterprise reported Friday.

Stoughton Police Deputy Chief Robert Devine said no arrests have been made.

And the rabbi doesn't have any suspects.

Who knows who did it? Hausman said. Who knows why they did it?

The last person left the synagogue around 9 p.m. Monday, and the first person returned 12 hours later to a terrible smell.

Synagogue staff found the source and called police. Devine said vandalism at religious institutions are handled differently because of hate crime laws.

When we have things related to someone's religion, race or sexual orientation it comes with the possibility of a hate crime charge, said Devine.

To press hate crime, or any charges, police need witnesses.

Anyone with information about the incident is asked to contact the Stoughton Police Department at 781-344-2424.

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Manure thrown on synagogue

JAVI DRUMS 2 Improvisacion “Sephardic” – Video

Posted By on August 31, 2014


JAVI DRUMS 2 Improvisacion "Sephardic"

By: javidrums23

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JAVI DRUMS 2 Improvisacion "Sephardic" - Video

No neutrality between extremism and democracy: Kenney

Posted By on August 31, 2014

By Joel Goldenberg, August 27th, 2014

Federal Employment Minister Jason Kenney received a warm welcome Saturday morning at Cte St. Lucs Or Hahayim Synagogue, where he spoke about his governments principled support of Israel. On hand at the Sephardic community synagogue were Israeli Consul Avi Lev-Louis, DArcy McGee MNA David Birnbaum, Cte St. Luc mayor Anthony Housefather and councillors Dida Berku and Mitchell Brownstein. Rabbi Moise Ohana started the proceedings by praising Prime Minister Stephen Harpers Israel stance and denouncing the global incitement against Israel and Jews around the world in general. Kenney, who delivered his speech entirely in French, said his government adopted its position on Mideast affairs not for political or domestic electoral reasons. We took these positions, often against our political interests here in Canada, he told the congregation. Our critics have said we changed Canadas traditional position radically, and thats true. We have gained the attention of certain forces around the world that do not share our civilizational values of peace. Kenney added that there are those who want Canada to have a moderate and balanced position between Israel and its neighbours, a position of honest broker. An honest broker, between what? the minster said. Balanced between terrorism and anti-terrorism? Balanced between extremists, and democracy and civilization represented by Israel? An honest broker between Hezbollah, Hamas , Al Qaeda and ISIS in one corner and the only Jewish nation in the history of the world in the other corner, a democratic country that profoundly respects human rights? With a country that respects civilizational values, the dignity of the person, and the sanctity of human life, how can Canada be neutral between these two forces? Kenney said Canada understands that the terrorist group Hamas, which is in control of Gaza and engaged in conflict with Israel, has no interest in a peace process, negotiations, respect for a Jewish state or a two-state solution between Israel and the Palestinians. Canada, under the leadership of Stephen Harper, understands that the enemies of Israel are interested in just one goal, the destruction of the Jewish state and, even more, the destruction of the Jewish people, he added. Thats why we have taken our position. Kenney was also guest of honour at a kiddush lunch sponsored by Alex Bouhadana and Elliot Lifson. n

Click here to see the full newspaper. Updated on August 27, 2014

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No neutrality between extremism and democracy: Kenney

Hasidic Jones August 10, 2014 – Video

Posted By on August 31, 2014


Hasidic Jones August 10, 2014
Staged Reading of Philip W. Weiss #39; Hasidic Jones on August 10, 2014 at Pearl Studios, New York, NY.

By: Melanie Peterson

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Hasidic Jones August 10, 2014 - Video


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