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Self-Expressionism: Lee Krasner’s Jewish Heritage in Art (U.S – National Park Service

Posted By on May 11, 2024

"Map of Western Russia Showing the Jewish Pale of Settlement." The Krassners' hometown was located in Podolia Governorate.

Public domain, Wikimedia Commons.

The Krassners were one family among thousands of Eastern European Jews who immigrated to the United States during this era. Economic options in the Pale of Settlement were limited, and many Jewish families left out of financial necessity. Others fled antisemitic violence. Krasner (who later went by the name Lenore, and then Lee) was the first Krassner child to be born in the United States.

Krasner attended Hebrew school as a child. Since she was a girl, she wasnt expected or allowed to attend an Orthodox cheder (school), which taught a more extensive Hebrew and theological curriculum to male students. Gender segregation in synagogues and patriarchal overtones in Orthodox Jewish practice provoked Krasner. She later commented that the daily prayer she learned to recite as a child was beautiful in every sense except for the closing of it if you are a male you say, Thank you, O Lord, for creating me in Your image; and if you are a woman you say, Thank you, O Lord, for creating me as You saw fit.2

Chane and Joseph Krassner were devout Jews, but they didnt insist that their children be equally orthodox. Krasner remembered that although she regularly attended synagogue services, her sister had decided not to, indicating that the Krassner children were given permission to decide how or whether they wanted to practice Judaism.

Krasner knew by age fourteen that she wanted to be an artist. By 1928, she became a student at the National Academy of Design. While there, Krasner learned how to paint what she saw in a directly representational way.

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Self-Expressionism: Lee Krasner's Jewish Heritage in Art (U.S - National Park Service

City To Unveil Art Installation in Honor of Jewish American Heritage Month – Beverly Hills Courier

Posted By on May 11, 2024

The city of Beverly Hills in collaboration with the Community Services Departments Arts & Culture Division, Recreation and Parks Division, as well as the Beverly Hills Public Library, will reveal Unfolded Narratives, a 100-foot-long tapestry art installation at the Beverly Hills Public Library on May 4. Theinstallation, in honor of Jewish American Heritage Month, will be on display throughout the month of May.

The tapestry is the work of artist Jenny Yurshansky, who led community workshops at Roxbury Park Community Center in February and March of this year. The sessions encouraged participants to explore their family origin stories through the creation of paper fortunes. These unique fortunes were then transformed into fabric quilt squares for inclusion in the tapestry. More than 60 of the 500 stories featured in the work were produced by Beverly Hills residents during the community workshops.

Additionally, the exhibit will feature The Fugitive Archive, a lightbox illuminating an image resembling an airport X-ray of a suitcase that holds sacred objects. These objects are also described in audio interviews with participants from previous community workshops. The resulting listening station, Generation Loss, will provide visitors an opportunity to listen to these stories on vinyl records.

Numerous other events will take place in the city to honor Jewish American Heritage Month. Activities include:

Rugelach Baking Contest, Beverly Hills Farmers Market, May 5, 8 a.m.-12:30 p.m.

Shalom Stories (Storytime), Beverly Hills Public Library, May 5, 1 p.m.

Jewish Tales, Tunes and Tastes (Storytime), Beverly Hills Public Library, May 19, 1 p.m.

Movie at Greystone, Prince of Egypt, Greystone Theatre, May 19, 6:30 p.m.

Two Jews, Talking (Staged Reading), Greystone Theatre, May 22, 6:30 p.m.

Critical Conversations Speaker Series: Celebrating Jewish Culture & the Importance of Allyship, City Hall Municipal Gallery, May 28, 6:30 p.m.

For more information about the events and to register for ticketed events, visit beverlyhills.org/JAHM.

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City To Unveil Art Installation in Honor of Jewish American Heritage Month - Beverly Hills Courier

Yo-Ho-Hum: "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest," "The Devil Wears Prada," and "An Inconvenient Truth" – River…

Posted By on May 11, 2024

PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST

I know a bunch of you bought tickets for it this past weekend, so allow me to ask: Did anyone else find Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest a little, you know, incoherent? A degree of senselessness, of course, has to come with the territory, but while I'm positive that I didn't nod off during Gore Verbinski's opus - the booming soundtrack and relentless, CGI-enhanced action won't let you - I'm not sure I ever quite understood it. There seemed to be a whole lot of plot in Dead Man's Chest but none of it meant anything or was revealed with an urgency that might make it mean anything; at some point, I simply gave up trying to figure the damned thing out, and just waited for Davy Jones and the rest of his barnacled baddies to show up again.

Visual wonders have become so commonplace in Hollywood blockbusters that, if you see enough movies, you all but give up hoping to be wowed by special effects. The personages of Davy Jones (Bill Nighy) and his monstrous crew, however, certainly rate a "wow." Jones - Dead Man's Chest's seafaring ber-villain - appears to have a squid permanently attached to his face, and its writhing tentacles and pulsating suckers are astonishing; accentuated by Nighy's insidious, hissing creepiness, Jones is a spellbinding, nauseating figure. (It's entirely possible that Jones' dialogue details the film's plot in full, but the audience is so hypnotized by his appearance that we're not listening to it.)

One of Jones' evil allies is modeled on a hammerhead shark (the actor transmogrified for the effect appears to have half a head), one resembles a blowfish, and on and on; Verbinski and company may have completely disregarded elements such as story and logic and character for their Pirates sequel, but they're by no means short on visual inspiration. The gruesome make-up, outsize effects, and random moments of comedic slapstick - the best being a three-way swordfight atop an enormous, rolling wagon wheel - show the filmmakers actually are upping the ante for this continuation, although perhaps not in a way some audiences will like.

Johnny Depp's Captain Jack provides expected amusement, but there's no surprise left in the performance, and the characters played by Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley aren't enriched in any noticeable way - it's easy to forget they're even around. Where the original Pirates was insouciant and agreeable, this sequel feels heavy-spirited and over-produced; it keeps ladling on story ideas while never giving us reason to care about them. Those effects are staggeringly good, though, and in the end, they manage to make this epic-sized Hollywood blockbuster reasonably diverting. But only just. Pirates 3 may well prove marvelous, but in order for it to be, Verbinski and company must navigate the fine line between wowing us with effects and overwhelming us with effects.

THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA

Meryl Streep is so continually excellent that discussing her greatness would be tedious if she didn't keep finding so many unexpected ways to be excellent. In The Devil Wears Prada, Streep plays fashion mogul Miranda Priestly, the definitive boss from hell - demanding, unreasonable, stingy with praise but generous with sarcasm. Miranda is one of those juicy, bitch-on-wheels roles that performers adore, and Streep delivers her vicious judgments and harangues with all the authoritative wit we'd hope for. But who could have guessed that Streep, in her genius, would make Miranda this quiet?

Through the course of the entire film, Streep barely raises her voice above a murmur. Miranda's underlings, who can't seem to complete the simple task of just doing what she asks for, aren't worth getting indignant about, and when she chides her employees - especially her new assistant, Andy (Anne Hathaway) - Miranda does it in exquisitely insinuating fashion; in low, measured tones, Miranda explains their incompetence, registers her displeasure, and turns them into weepy wrecks not by shouting, but by gently stressing how completely they've disappointed her. Yet Streep is clever enough to turn this nightmare conception into something both truthful and hysterical. People with no sense of humor are generally (and unwittingly) the funniest people alive; Streep knows this, and finds innumerable ways to make Miranda's brow-beating hatefulness a source of pure pleasure.

Would that the movie were as inspired as its star. But while Streep is magnificent, and Hathaway and Stanley Tucci, as a sardonic designer, more than hold their own, The Devil Wears Prada itself isn't much fun. The story is your standard pap about how big business corrupts and how the "little people" are the ones who truly have soul, which I would have had an easier time believing if Andy's salt-of-the-earth boyfriend, played by Adrian Grenier, weren't such a drip. The jokes are predictable and Andy's stumbling blocks even more so - a charmless Simon Baker is stuck in the pedestrian romantic-rival role - and for a movie about fashion, David Frankel's film looks remarkably ugly; the outfits on display may, indeed, be ravishing, but the dreary cinematography doesn't do them any favors. I didn't much care for The Devil Wears Prada, but with Meryl Streep on board, it would be ridiculous to argue people out of seeing it - a performance this spectacular makes complaints about Prada itself feel irrelevant.

AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH

As most audiences are aware, Davis Guggenheim's documentary An Inconvenient Truth details the effects of global warming through one of Al Gore's lectures and slide shows on the subject, yet what's fascinating about the film is how little it preaches to the converted. Unlike, say, Michael Moore, Gore doesn't assume that the viewer thinks exactly as he does - his presentation has actually been designed for those who think global warming is a hoax. As he displays his charts and graphs and warns of the Earth's impending peril, Gore (a tremendously involving speaker here) isn't seeking affirmation so much as he is legitimately trying to educate and elucidate; he could almost be asking for disagreement about the effects - and even existence - of global warming so the naysayers' opinions could be thoroughly demolished through scientific fact.

I, for one, would have preferred less of Gore's convincing. An Inconvenient Truth is a terrific achievement - brisk, informative, and scary as hell. But while the statistics and graphs shown are, indeed, terrifying, the sameness of the presentation begins to be wearying; after 40 minutes, I was ready for Gore to reveal what could be done to reverse this trend, but he continued to debunk the naysayers for another 40 minutes. (Finally, almost as an afterthought, Gore offers tips for reducing pollutants and how individuals can help minimize the global-warming crisis, and then the credits roll.) An Inconvenient Truth is smart and forceful and needs to be seen, yet I wish the "What next?" element hadn't been given such short shrift; I'm all for 90-minute movies, but this may be that rare cinematic work that demanded a running length twice as long.

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Yo-Ho-Hum: "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest," "The Devil Wears Prada," and "An Inconvenient Truth" - River...

Here’s what happened when a group of U.S. rabbis tried to take food to Gaza | Opinion – The Philadelphia Inquirer

Posted By on May 11, 2024

As a rabbi in Philadelphia whose family moved to Palestine from Lithuania in 1809 before immigrating to the U.S., I was horrified when, in the days following the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant announced an order for Gazas complete siege.

He declared that no electricity, food, fuel or water will be delivered. We are fighting barbarians and will respond accordingly. Reading these words, my heart sank, and I instantly felt nauseous.

I knew he meant it, I knew Israel had every intention to starve Palestinians, and I knew this was a complete abdication of Jewish values.

When my family came to Palestine from Lithuania, they first settled in the Old City of Jerusalem, and later became one of the seven families to settle outside of the Old Citys walls in the Nahalat Shiva neighborhood of Jerusalem.

I am part of the Rivlin family, whose descendants have gone on to serve as president of Israel, outspoken anti-occupation activists, and everything in between. Growing up, on family trips to Israel, we would take pictures under the Rivlin Street sign in the Jerusalem neighborhood my ancestors settled.

It was meant to be a source of pride in our family that we were Jewish settlers. And it was for me until I went to study abroad at Hebrew University in Jerusalem during my junior year of college and learned about the Nakba, the catastrophic mass displacement of Palestinians in 1948 when Israel was founded, the ongoing military occupation of Palestinian lands, and the gruesome reality for Palestinians living under the Israeli state.

My pride transformed into commitment as I turned to dedicate my life to standing in solidarity with Palestinians and building a Jewish future worthy of the coming generations.

My family left Palestine during the First World War because my great-grandfather was seeking to avoid being drafted into the Ottoman army. A wealthy American Jew, Hershel Manischewitz, who was studying in his yeshiva in Jerusalem, helped him immigrate to the U.S. and set him up with work distributing his familys kosher food products in Cincinnati.

My great-grandfathers business continued for decades, with my father and uncles taking the helm. I grew up surrounded by food, taking joy rides on the pallet movers in the warehouse, bartering with local Jews for goods and services, and, of course, ritualized meals at my Bubbes table for Shabbat and holidays. There was always a random guest at the table, someone my grandparents met in the community. There was always an open seat at the table.

At Passover, when we read from the Passover Haggadah Let all who are hungry come and eat we would take comfort in knowing we were doing our part as a family.

My familys history shaped my reaction, and ultimately how I moved out of despair. Fast-forward to October. In the days after Hamas attacked Israel and Israel invaded Gaza, I called together a group of rabbis to speak out for a cease-fire to save lives. That holy circle of faith leaders, Rabbis for Ceasefire, is now over 325 strong.

When it came time to mark Passover this year, we knew we had to address the Israeli governments utilization of starvation as a weapon of war against 2.3 million Palestinian people in the occupied Gaza Strip. This manufactured famine follows decades of forced displacement, military occupation, and communal subjugation by the Israeli government. So we planned to travel to the Gaza border to bring food into Gaza, arm-in-arm with Jewish Israeli comrades.

We have been watching for months as right-wing Jewish settlers have been given free rein at the southern border between Israel and Gaza, successfully blocking the entry of hundreds of aid trucks into Gaza.

We wanted to do the opposite to bring food in, to shepherd in aid, to demand a cease-fire, to show the people of Gaza they are not alone. As human rights experts warn that Gaza is now at catastrophic levels of famine, the urgency of our action was clear.

On Friday, April 26, a delegation from Rabbis for Ceasefire from the U.S. joined Israeli rabbis and Jews in a public attempt to deliver food aid to the people of Gaza through the Erez border crossing. As we marched toward the crossing with bags of rice and flour, we chanted the words of the Passover Haggadah: Kol dichfin yeitei vyeichol let all who are hungry come and eat.

While food aid is essential, it is not sufficient. To save the lives of Palestinians on the verge of death by Israels policy of forced starvation and siege, there must be significant infrastructure in place to supply and distribute food, with medical advice and supervision. This is not possible without a cease-fire and lifting the siege.

I was held for nearly 10 hours at the Ashkelon police station.

Unlike the right-wing settlers blocking aid from entering, we were immediately stopped, and myself and six others were arrested. The rest of the group retreated and brought the aid we had sought to bring to the starving people of Gaza to the West Bank, where Palestinians are the targets of vigilante settler violence, land theft, and military intimidation.

I was held for nearly 10 hours at the Ashkelon police station. The Israeli police officer who interrogated me after my arrest said, You are being detained because you tried to bring bags of rice and flour into Gaza. Ultimately, we were released after agreeing to stay away from the Gaza border for 15 days.

Our success was not, of course, from bringing food into Gaza. The Israeli police prevented that. Rather, our nonviolent action succeeded in shining a light on Palestinians on the verge of death by starvation, offering them our solidarity, and reminding Jews of our responsibility to live our lives in accordance with the most sacred value of our beautiful tradition: We are each made in the image of the divine.

Rabbi Alissa Wise lives in West Philadelphia and is the founder and lead organizer of Rabbis for Ceasefire. She was ordained at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College in Wyncote in 2009.

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Here's what happened when a group of U.S. rabbis tried to take food to Gaza | Opinion - The Philadelphia Inquirer

The ‘patriot rabbi’ of Columbia University who ensured Jews were welcome – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 11, 2024

In his recent visit to the Columbia University campus, Mike Johnson, speaker of the US House of Representatives, before lambasting the antisemitic Hamas-supporting mobs, paid tribute to the universitys noble heritage. Johnson cited two of Columbias alumni greats Alexander Hamilton, first US secretary of the Treasury and first chairman of the university Board of Trustees; and John Jay, first chief justice of the Supreme Court.

Possibly to assuage the pain and intimidation suffered by Columbias Jewish students, Johnson added to his list Rev. Gershom Mendes Seixas (1745-1816). Though not himself an alumnus, Seixas also holds a list of historic firsts relating both to Columbia and the emerging American Jewish community.

Seixas was among the incorporators of Columbia and served for 30 years as a regent of the institution. He was the only Jew and probably the sole non-Episcopalian to hold these prominent positions. In the Jewish sphere, Seixas compiled his own list of firsts.

For example, he was the first American-born hazan (cantor) of the first synagogue in North America, Shearith Israel. (As there were no rabbis in the small American Jewish community, the cantor served as the synagogues main religious functionary.)

Seixas was taught by some of his cantorial predecessors. Seixas began his synagogue career in 1768 when he was only 23. At the time, New York City had a population of 25,000, which included 250 Jews. Although Shearith Israel, New Yorks only synagogue, was founded by Sephardi Jews, the membership was becoming increasingly Ashkenazi due to new immigration patterns. Nonetheless, the synagogue during Seixass tenure continued following the Sephardi ritual, but the rare sermon and announcements were delivered mainly in English rather than Spanish or Portuguese.

Most of his predecessors held their posts for relatively short periods, unlike Seixas, who served for 40 years. The Sephardi congregation in London helped its New York compatriot find candidates for a cantor. A typical request from New York to London read as follows:

A young man of good morals and strictly religious, with the advantage of an agreeable voice and capacity for teaching of Hebrew and translating it into English, as well as Spanish.

Seixas in his political outlook and actions differed fundamentally from that of todays mob occupying Columbias campus. According to David and Tamar De Sola Pools An Old Faith in the New World. A Portrait of Shearith Israel 1664-1964, Seixass sermons reflect the exhilaration of spirit that belonged to the era of the American Revolution, and the fervent patriotism which created a free nation. He believed that because he was a Jew, a greater measure of gratitude should be his for the proclamation and the realization of the self-evident truth that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness, and that to secure these rights governments are instituted among man

In celebrating Thanksgiving Day with the other inhabitants of this city, he said, I conceive we are more called upon to return thanks to benign Goodness in placing us in such a country where we are free to act, according to the dictates of our conscience, and where no exception is taken from following principles of our religion.

In fact, when Seixass patriotism was put to the test, the cantor fled New York City and his beloved congregation, fearing the imminent British capture during the Revolutionary War. Seixas absconded with several Torah scrolls, also leaving some important Loyalists behind. In Philadelphia, where in 1780 Seixas became hazan of Congregation Mikveh Israel, he praised George Washingtons leadership. This action might explain why the general invited Seixas to be one of 14 speakers at his inauguration.

A final example of Seixass patriotism was his prompt response to president Washingtons request for Thanksgiving Day (November 26, 1789) discourses. Seixass discourse drew such favorable recognition that an advertisement in The New York Daily Gazette on December 23, 1789, selling copies of the sermon, noted that it was the first of its kind ever preached in English [and] is highly deserving the attention of every pious reader whether Jew or Christian, as it breathes nothing but pure morality and devotion.

As a result of such devotion to this new country, Seixas was admiringly called the Patriot Rabbi of the Revolution.

Despite Seixass love of his native land, he was strongly committed to the age-old prophecy of the restoration of Zion. He would be aghast at todays Columbia protesters opposition to Jewish sovereignty in their God-given home. According to the De Sola Pool account, Seixas prayed for the people of Israel that God should restore us to our own land wherein we may dwell in peace and happiness according to the words of our sacred Prophets... Let us beseech Him to fulfill His divine promise of restoring us to our land, as declared in the prophecy and that His sanctuary may again be built where we may perform our daily obligations.

Hazan Seixas, in addition to his love for the people of Israel and in the promise of America, was the foremost interfaith citizen among the nations Jews, frequently invited to be a guest preacher in various churches. Unlike the authoritarian mob that had taken over Columbias campus, the mild-mannered Seixas was open to all ranges of views, though they might be different from his.

Organizationally, not only was he involved in the development of Columbia, but he was a member of the Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York and served as a trustee of the Humane Society.

Attesting to his prominence were obituary notices for the venerable Pastor of the Hebrew congregation (New York Evening Post, July 2, 1816).

The demise of this Israelite indeed, has made a great breach in the primitive church... his life was consecrated to learning, piety and benevolence... he was an oracle of consultation to all sects and denominations. No Minister ever lived more respected, nor died more universally lamented... He closed a long life in full confidence of the abounding mercy of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob (Columbian Centinel, August 17, 1816).

Seixas came to the fore in an era when the American Jew quietly and steadily increased his rights and privileges ecclesiastical medievalism, as the historians put it, was giving way to a more pluralistic society. At a time when the great universities of Europe refused to admit Jews, the Charter of Kings College (now Columbia University) with which Seixas was associated made it clear that Jews were welcome. Though Kings College was an avowedly Christian institution, the charter granted it by the monarchy enjoined the trustees not to exclude any person of any religious denomination whatsoever from equal liberty and advantage of education... on account of his particular tenets in matters of religion.

It is our role as the ideological heirs of Seixas to protect the inspirational heritage of this Patriot Rabbi, ensuring freedom of thought rather than antisemitic mob rule on the American campus.

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The 'patriot rabbi' of Columbia University who ensured Jews were welcome - The Jerusalem Post

Ziv Kipper, Murdered in Egypt, Had a ‘Big Jewish Heart’ – CrownHeights.info

Posted By on May 11, 2024

After welcoming the visiting rabbis, Kipper put on tefillin and spoke to them for hours about his life and how he lives in Egypt as a Jew. Credit: Mendel Goldman

by Mordechai Lightstone chabad.org

When news broke of Israeli-Canadian Ziv Kippers murder in Alexandria, Egypt, on May 7, a widely shared photo showed him smiling widely, wearingtefillin,with twoChabadrabbinical students at his side. It was taken in the Alexandria home of the frozen fruit and vegetable exporter in the fall of 2023.

Born in Soviet Ukraine, Kippers life journey had taken a circuitous routeemigrating with his family toIsraelwhen he was a child; followed by time in Canada, where he attended college; and then running various businesses that brought him back to Ukraine, and ultimately, to Egypt.

Rabbis Mendel Goldman and Mendy Konikov visited Alexandria in September to leadRosh Hashanahservices at the magnificentEliyahuHanavi Synagogue in the heart of the Egyptian port city. During Roman times, as much as 35 percent of Alexandrias population was made up of Jews, andit remained home to tens of thousands of Jewsuntil they were expelled after 1948.

We went to Alexandria before Rosh Hashanah to visit the local community, Goldman says. As he and Konikov walked down the street near their hotel on Friday afternoon beforeShabbat, a car pulled up in front of them. The driver rolled down the window and gave us this huge ShabbatShalom!

The driver left quickly, but later sent a message via mutual contacts that the visiting students should probably swap out theirblack hats and jacketsfor something less conspicuous when out on the street.

Goldman and Konikov spent the time beforeRosh Hashanahvisiting the tiny expat Jewish community, and when the pair went to visit Ziv Kipperone of their main contacts in the communitythey were pleased to see that he was the driver whod wished them a Shabbat Shalom.

He was very welcoming, Konikov recalls. He put ontefillin, and we spent a few hours speaking. Later, Kipper drove them around, showing them the sites of the beautiful city once known as the Bride of the Mediterranean.

Kipper was shot and killed by unknown assailants on Tuesday in Alexandria. Reports state he was not robbed in the attack, and a previously unknown Islamic terrorist group took credit for the murder. Egyptian security sources told Reuters that the murder was being investigated as a criminal matter and security services said on Wednesday that theyd taken a suspect into custody. On the same day a graphic video purporting to be of Kippers murder began circulating online. In the video, shot with a go-pro camera, the attacker can be heard saying shalom before shooting, and then shalom from the children of Gaza.

The Soviet-born Kippers status as a global wanderer meant that over the years, hed forged many warm relationships withChabad-Lubavitchemissaries.

Ziv used to tell me that when he retires, he would be a rabbis assistant, says Rabbi Yisroel Silberstein,Chabademissary toChernigov, Ukraine. He was just this incredibly warm and gregarious person.

Silberstein recalls meeting Kipper shortly after the rabbi and his familymoved to Chernigovin 2010.

Even when he traveled Ziv always made a point of being back home in Chernigov for the holidays, Silberstein recalls. There, he would assist the rabbi during thePassoverSeder, translating portions of theHaggadahfrom Hebrew to Russian, or bringingnew fruitfrom Egypt in honor of Rosh Hashanah. A generous person, Kipper would bring suitcases of toys he manufactured for needy children in the Ukrainian cities he lived in. For a while he operated a limousine service in Chernigov, and would treat children from the Chernigov community to a limo drive during the Jewish communitys annualLag BaOmerparade.

Whenwar broke out in Ukrainein February of 2022, Kipper made Alexandria his home base. Even while in Egypt, he remained in touch with Silberstein. You know, Im almost like a Chabad rabbi here, Kipper would tell him.

The two would text regularly, as recently as this past Sunday, when Kipper sent the last of the Shabbat Shalom GIFs and memes he was known to share via WhatsApp with the many people he knew.

Goldman and Konikov likewise kept in touch with Kipper after they left Egypt.

There was a depth in the bond we formed with Ziv, Goldman says. In many ways, we felt like perhaps the whole trip had been for us to connect with him. He had such a warm, Jewish heart.

Kipper told the young rabbis that he never hid the fact that he was Jewish from his employees or neighbors. After the Oct. 7 terror attacks in southern Israel, both Silberstein and Goldman asked Kipper if his plans had changed.

When we spoke in March, Ziv was very clear that he felt safe in Alexandria, says Silberstein. He had a sense of purpose about where he was.

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Ziv Kipper, Murdered in Egypt, Had a 'Big Jewish Heart' - CrownHeights.info

Rabbinic couple who turned around a shul are stepping down after 40 years – The Jewish Chronicle

Posted By on May 11, 2024

One of the communitys longest-serving rabbinic couples, Rabbi Shlomo and Rebbetzin Dr Lynndy Levin, are to step down from the helm ofSouth Hampstead Synagogueat the end of the year after 40 years of service to the United Synagogue congregation.

The couple, who are originally from South Africa, turned around a synagogue which the United Synagogue had considered closing before their arrival.

Instead, their leadership style and unflagging energy galvanizedthe north-west Londoncommunity, which has gone on to become one of the strongest in the United Synagogue constellation, with 2,500 members.

In a letter to congregants, joint chairs of the synagogue Joy Cohen and Danny Kay said:Their commitment, wisdom, and compassion have been the guiding light for us all over these past years and their impact will be felt for generations to come. Their primary reason for making this decision nowis to ensure a smooth and orderly transition to new leadership, so the community they love will continue to flourish.

The Levins have provisionally set their retirement for December, subject to successors being appointed and will assume Emeritus roles, which will enable them to continue to be present in the community in a flexible way, whilst allowing space for new leadership to emerge.

Rabbi Levin received an MBE last year for his interfaith work and service to the Jewish community. Unusually, for many years, his ministry was nominally part-time and he combined it with a business career during the week.

The chairs said:It is through their inspiration and leadership that South Hampstead has grown to become one of the flagship communities within the United Synagogue, but more importantly one that is warm, informal and non-judgmental that embraces all members of the community.

Their influence will continue to guide us in the years to come and we look forward to welcoming new leadership.

A couple of years after they arrived and had begun rejuvenating the community, one congregant said:The place used to be empty, even at the main festivals. Now you cant get a seat on Rosh Hashanah orYom Kippur. Even the caretaker cant believe the difference.

Five years ago, the community moved into a smart, purpose-built new building, where the Levins son Rabbi Eli and daughter-in-law Rebbetzin Lauren also serve as a rabbinic couple.

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Rabbinic couple who turned around a shul are stepping down after 40 years - The Jewish Chronicle

Rabbi Sasso, Cheltenham grad and first woman to be ordained in Reconstructionist Judaism, to hold weekend … – Glenside Local

Posted By on May 11, 2024

Rabbis Dennis and Sandy Eisenberg Sasso, married in Philadelphia in 1970 and the first rabbinical in Judaisms 4,000 year history, are visiting Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel (KI) in Elkins Park on May 17 and 18, according to the Jewish Exponent.

Eisenberg Sasso is a 1965 graduate of Cheltenham High School and grew up attending the synagogue. She became the first female rabbi in the Reconstructionist movement and met Dennis at the Philadelphia school (now in Wyncote) before serving Congregation Beth-El Zedeck in Indianapolis for 36 years together. They have both since retired.

The weekend residency will feature a preschool tot Shabbat, a Shabbat evening service and a reflection from Eisenberg Sasso on Friday night on her years at KI and her ordination. On Saturday, they will host a morning Torah study and an evening Havdalah, according to the Exponent.

She wanted to celebrate the anniversary of her ordination at the place where she was first was introduced to Jewish life, said Rabbi Benjamin David of Sandy Sasso. I think her visit gives us a chance to hear stories about breaking down barriers and enacting change in the world. Her very existence speaks to undoing what had for centuries been the fact of an exclusively male rabbinate.

For more on the Sassos, you can read the rest of the article here.

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Rabbi Sasso, Cheltenham grad and first woman to be ordained in Reconstructionist Judaism, to hold weekend ... - Glenside Local

Parody rabbi X account tricked UN Rapporteur Albanese on invite to speak on ‘morality of infada’ – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 11, 2024

A known parody X account by the name of "Rabbi Linda Goldstein," who is described in her bio as the "Chief Rabbi of Gaza," invited Francesca Albanese, to speak on the "morality of intifada" at Columbia University at Goldstein's invitation - with a "small "honorarium available."

Albanese serves in the role of the UNs Special Rapporteur on the Palestinian territories. Goldstein said on X that the UN official initially agreed to speak on campus "but when the encampments were broken up and the honorarium dried up, she backed out."

Like Albanese, Goldstein has fooled in the past UNRWA Communications Director Juliette Touma and US Democratic Congressman Jamaal Bowman. It should be mentioned that there actually is no such position as the "Chief Rabbi of Gaza," as there are currently no Jews in the enclave apart from the hostages that are still held captive by Hamas. The lack of presence of Jews is due to Israel's disengagement from Gaza in 2005.

Albanese was hence tricked by Goldstein's invitation, and the conservative media outlet The Daily Wire obtained email correspondences where Albanese was open to delivering an address on Columbia's campus. According to The Wire and the screenshots of emails it shared, Albaneses research assistant responded to Goldstein's inquiry, saying that the UN official "would like to know some more details on her intervention," to which then Goldstein responded that Columbia's students would want to hear about the "morality of intifada" from Albanese.

Intifada, which refers to the two that Israel had that killed many Israeli civilians, is a word that Goldstein ironically writes in the email that "Zionists have co-opted it and turned it into a dirty word."

The Wire describes Goldstein to be a fictional rabbi "known for using progressive anti-Israel talking points to mock them."

Albanese's assistant, Eleonora De Martin, said that Albanese could not give a talk and that the honorarium but that it be "transferred to the Fellowship of her volunteer which supports her mandate work." De Martin stopped responding, according to The Wire, after Goldstein asked if the honorarium could be transferred to UNRWA, as Goldstein humorously claims that she was "displaced from Gaza as Chief Rabbi after October 7."

Albanese has a history of being critical of Israel, which resulted her being barred from the state after pushing back that Hamas's October 7 massacre wasn't influenced by antisemitism but "launched as a way to break the occupation against apartheid.

I want her to teach the world that Intifadas can at times be peaceful, Goldstein said. Globalizing the intifada will make Zionists uncomfortable everywhere, not just in occupied Palestine.

The parody account also made other satirical jokes, such as claiming she's a sex worker in the enclave and made posts that users would consider to be ironically praising the Jewish state. She tweeted on Wednesday: "Israel isnt the most LGBT-friendly country in the Middle East. Dont forget there was a country called Transjordan.

She also wrote, directly targeting the UN official, saying "please consider making a small donation to her favorite charity, 'FIDF,', also known as F*** the IDF, in @FranceskAlbss honor. I know Francesca will really appreciate it."

The following Thursday, Albanese blocked Goldstein on X, with the parody account posting "Ok now @FranceskAlbsfinally blocked me. Even though her assistant claims 'The reason why there has been no further correspondence is because we blocked Linda Goldsteins account following the discovery that it was not a reliable account.'

Read more here:

Parody rabbi X account tricked UN Rapporteur Albanese on invite to speak on 'morality of infada' - The Jerusalem Post

Rabbi Yosef Zvi Rimon: Influencing the fate of millions with muscular dystrophy – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on May 11, 2024

One Saturday night while Rabbi Yosef Zvi Rimon was teaching a group of seminary students at his house in Alon Shvut, there was a knock at the door. Tentatively, he opened it and was greeted with dozens of faces looking at him expectantly. He apologized and said that he was busy teaching a class, but they pleaded that theirs was a case of pikuach nefesh saving a Jewish life. In his role as the rabbinic representative on the pharmaceutical committee, that is a phrase he has heard very often. And something about this group struck him.

On his doorstep was a group of parents whose children have Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). These parents brought their children to lobby Rabbi Rimon to approve an experimental medicine. The disease the most common hereditary neuromuscular condition usually manifests around the age of five with ALS-like symptoms. Children with DMD gradually lose the use of their hands, their ability to walk and even to drink. The most optimistic prognosis is that people with this disease may live to age 30.

Scientists have developed a new medicine that might delay the diseases onset for up to three years. Meaning that a child will perhaps begin showing symptoms at age eight instead of five. The medicine is helpful but is not a cure. In Israel, a single injection for a five-year-old patient costs NIS 15 million. If there are 15 children who would be eligible for that treatment each year, that translates to a cost of NIS 225 million.

Rabbi Rimon is the rabbinic head of the Jerusalem College of Technology (JCT) and a member of Israels pharmaceutical committee. He said that although the committee wants to help these families and lessen the suffering of young children in unimaginable distress, the members must keep a bigger picture in mind.

In this case, it seems that there are better medicines on the horizon; if children take this current treatment, it is not clear if they will then be able to be treated with a future medication. Ultimately, the committee rejected the use of this particular drug.

It was a very complicated decision, Rimon said, and one that was based on numerous discussions about the efficacy of the treatment. If it had presented a cure for the condition rather than a delay in its onset, it might have been given a green light even at one-third of our [total] budget.

This is just one example of how difficult and at times distressing the work of the pharmaceutical committee can be. We have a budget of NIS 650 million, the rabbi explained. They received more requests than can possibly be granted. While we would say Yes to everything if we could, sometimes we simply have to say No.

Nineteen people mostly doctors make up the pharmaceutical committee. It meets approximately every six weeks, and there are usually two full days of consultation among the committee members, where they discuss each medicine for potential funding. The work is intense; each medication comes with approximately 100 pages of notes, meaning that the required reading stretches to some 6,000 pages for each two-day session.

We give every medicine a rank, Rimon explained. If it receives less than an eight, we reject it and move on. If a prospective medicine receives an eight or nine, we are likely to view it more favorably in the next round of deliberations. The discussions we have are respectful, although highly animated. We talk everything through and try to convince the others of our positions.

Anyone can ask the Health Ministry to subsidize a medicine whether a doctor, a private physician, or a pharmaceutical company but the committee never learns the source of the request. While the individual committee members may have biases in favor of medicines targeting certain diseases or conditions, they must explain how they arrived at a particular position. There are rules about how we come to a decision, Rimon said. Principally, we need to understand how the medicine [under review] is better than a treatment currently in use.

The doctors on the committee are obviously the medical experts, Rimon acknowledged, but they are also very respectful of me and want to hear my opinions about things like Jewish law that are outside of their expertise and on which I am more knowledgeable than them. They view having someone with a different perspective as important for the committee and the nation. We dont have sources for everything in the Gemara, Rimon explained, but there are lessons in our traditional sources ways of thinking according to Jewish law. When we extrapolate from them and apply them in making decisions, we can help shape the medical ethics of the Jewish State of Israel today.

There was an example of a successful and effective cancer drug that can give people approximately three months more to live. One of the doctors said that the cost/benefit ratio of the drug was unacceptable. I told him that there was a famous discussion in the Talmud, in Bava Metzia 62a, about two people traveling in a desert and one of them had in his possession a flask of water. If both drank from it, they would both die. However, if only one of them drank, he would be able to make it out alive. The Gemara says that they have to divide the water because both will die. There is an interesting disagreement between Rabbi Akiva and Ben Petura. Rabbi Akiva argues that the one who has the water should drink, even though his friend will die, because you should put your life before those of others [in this situation]. Ben Petura takes the opposing view. Sometimes you dont have a choice. Their disagreement is about which is more important the probable saving of one life, against the elongation of one life vs. the shortening of another.An extra month or two is important. Every day is important. Even a few hours more is meaningful. I said that we have to show sick people that we will try to do everything, even for a few extra hours, Rimon said. The committee found this approach very valuable, and they wanted more halachic perspectives.

In addition to his work with the pharmaceutical committee, Rimon is also head of the Jerusalem College of Technologys yeshiva. He is not the only JCT faculty member who has been selected for this important role.

JCT is privileged to have the Selma Jelinek School of Nursing. I have taught nursing students for years. I have always been drawn to the medical world. At the Jerusalem College of Technology, I always have the thought of combining the two worlds Torah and science, Rimon said. Indeed, from a young age I wanted to be a doctor. I started studying in yeshiva and for the first four years, both my father and I thought that pursuing medicine was the correct path for me.

However, a conversation with the former rosh yeshiva at Yeshivat Har Etzion, Rabbi Aharon Lichtenstein, changed all of that. He told me that medicine is an act of chessed [loving kindness], but he urged me to continue along the path of Torah. This is your mission in life, he said. I changed my direction, but those warm feelings toward medicine remain to this day, Rabbi Rimon concluded.

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Rabbi Yosef Zvi Rimon: Influencing the fate of millions with muscular dystrophy - The Jerusalem Post


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