North Jersey Jewish News, Sept. 26, 2014
North Jersey Jewish News, Sept. 26, 2014
North Jersey Jewish News, Sept. 26, 2014
NORTH JERSEY
83
2014
JSTANDARD.COM
Give it a rest
Hazons Nigel Savage
explores the spiritual
meaing of this sabbatical
year and local experts
discuss its halachic aspects
Page 26
Page 3
Where no Yiddish
word has gone before
l As of Sunday, a maven has been or-
biting Mars.
The Mars Atmosphere and Volatile
Evolution (MAVEN is the official
NASA acronym) space probe aims
to determine what happened to the
Martian atmosphere, which once was
They blew it
l Did you hear it?
Picture this
l To national reporters in-
CONTENTS
NOSHES....................................................4
OPINION................................................ 22
COVER STORY 26
GALLERY 43
HOLIDAY GREETINGS44
TORAH COMMENTARY 57
CROSSWORD PUZZLE 58
ARTS & CULTURE 59
CALENDAR60
OBITUARIES 62
CLASSIFIEDS64
REAL ESTATE66
Noshes
Paul Pillar, writing in The National Interest. Earlier in the essay, he defined
kumquats to mean Israels widely suspected nuclear weapons.
STEPPING LIVELY:
Fancy footwork
on, off the field
The new season
of ABCs Dancing with the
Stars began on September 15. Two of the celeb
dancers have Jewish ties
actor and fashion model Antonio Sabato, Jr., 44,
and actress Lea Thompson, 53. Sabato, who
wasnt raised Jewish, had
one Jewish grandparent:
a Czech Jewish maternal grandmother who
was the only member of
her immediate family to
survive the Holocaust.
Sabatos maternal grandparents eventually settled
in Italy, and thats where
Sabatos mother met and
married his Italian father.
His maternal grandmother, like many Holocaust
survivors with a nonJewish spouse, chose not
to tell her children that
she was Jewish until they
were adults.
Thompsons roles
include playing Michael
J. Foxs young mother
in Back to the Future,
playing Caroline in the
90s sitcom, Caroline
in the City, and playing Kathryn Kennish in
the ABC Family series
Switched at Birth. Her
husband of 25 years
is film and TV director HOWARD DEUTCH,
64. (They met when
he directed her in the
1987 film, Some Kind of
Wonderful.) Their two
daughters, ZOEY, 19, and
MADELYN, 23, both are
actresses with a number
of quality credits. They
Gabe Carimi
Erik Lorig
Taylor Mays
Marc Trestman
Ben Feldman
NFL.
By the way, he is from
Saint Louis Park, a Twin
Cities suburb that has
long been a very Jewish town. Trestman is a
graduate of Saint Louis
Park high school. Also
graduating from this high
school were filmmakers
JOEL and ETHAN COEN,
N.Y. Times columnist TOM
FRIEDMAN, and U.S.
Senator AL FRANKEN
of Minnesota. (Thanks
to Jewish Sports Review
magazine for its help.)
N.B.
powered by
audimeadowlands.net
coming in April
4 JEWISH
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Talking positively about Israel
Middle East expert hopes to motivate young people during Paramus appearance
JOANNE PALMER
Dr. Eric Mandel, center, talks with IDF soldiers during Operation PIllar of Defense in 2012. Inset: Dr. Eric Mandel.
as someone who can explain why the American relationship with Israel is so important.
Why is it so hard for young Jews to care for
Israel the way their elders do? Our kids
secular young people have been taught universal principles, he said. Particularism and
tribalism are frowned upon. A Jewish state,
seen that way, seems almost racist to them, so
without knowing the full facts, they are able
to put the template of apartheid South Africa
on Israel.
They are clueless about the facts. They
want to know, but mainly its about being
ill-informed.
They have grown up in a place where
whoever is perceived as the weaker party
is always seen as the victim. The victim is
always in the right, and the powerful one
the occupier is always in the wrong.
The anti-Israel movement has many
faces, but a lot of it has morphed into true
anti-Semitism. The best way I know to define
anti-Semitism is to use the European definition of xenophobia and racism. Using that
definition, if you treat Israel different than
any other country in the world, or say that it
The anti-Israel
movement has
many faces,
but a lot of it has
morphed into true
anti-Semitism.
echo chambers. To be a good consumer of
news, you have to read multiple sources.
Dr. Mandels own education in Middle Eastern affairs was largely self-taught, at least at
first, he said. He always had been interested
in politics; in 1983, he worked for the presidential campaign of Alan Cranston, the California Democrat who made a brief stab at
the nomination. Thats when his education
began. Politicians had to be able to rely on
sources to fill them in on the many subjects
that demanded their attention but whose
intricacies they did not have the time to
Local
master. Dr. Mandels area became the Middle
East. But his honorific, doctor, does not
come from an advanced degree in political
science. Dr. Mandel is a physician he is a
corneal micro-surgeon who has pioneered
laser vision-correction surgery.
He is also a master multitasker. In his life
outside medicine, he is active in Jewish organizations that work on U.S.-Israel relations;
he chaired an AIPAC committee for eight
years and has just finished creating the Five
Synagogues of White Plains, an Israel advocacy group that brings together Orthodox,
Conservative, Reform, and Reconstructionist shuls to advocate for Israel.
As his expertise grew, Dr. Mandel branched
out from the secondary sources that gave him
his initial education to meet actors on the
Middle East stage. I have met Israeli leadership, interviewed Hamas and Muslim Brotherhood members, and been at Syrian refugee
camps, he said.
He also has talked to Rachel Fraenkel,
whose 16-year-old son, Naftali, was one of
the three Israeli teenagers whose murders
led to Israels war with Gaza this summer.
At her sons funeral, she said that there are
two Jews, three opinions and one heart,
Dr. Mandel said. There is no such thing as an
unaffiliated Jew at least on that inchoate,
preconscious level.
And there are so many ways to be proIsrael, he continued. We should take
pride in our 3,000-year history. It is one
of the unique civilizations in the world.
People often dont realize the modern
miracle of this country, which after 2,000
years came back into existence. It should
be one of the great success stories of the
20th century. To turn that into something
horrible is obscene.
I could write three long volumes of whats
wrong with Israel. But I could write 10,000
volumes on whats right with it. Its army is
not perfect but it has the most moral army
in the world. I know that from the many interviews I have done. I wish that my own army
was that moral. This is something that people
should be proud of but they have learned to
demonize it, which is mind-boggling.
People say that if there wasnt an Israel,
there would be a better Middle East. But
the Gordian knot is not Israel versus the
Palestinians. It is the Sunni versus the Shia.
If we could untie that one . But America
should embrace Israel, both because of
Americas own needs and because it is the
right thing to do.
So does Dr. Mandel see any hope
anywhere?
He does.
The miracle of Israel takes my breath
away, he said. It is amazing. We know about
the innovation nation. We know that like your
voicemail, your smartphone, the medical
ERIC MANDEL
www.koshercasas.com
Local
LAUREN CASSELBERRY
As we reflect on the past during the High Holy Days and welcome the New Year,
emotional challenges can arise.
JFS is here to help you and your family navigate through times of uncertainty.
To consult with one of our licensed mental health professionals please contact us at 201-837-9090.
For more information on our services or how to support JFS please visit our website at www.jfsbergen.org
8 JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014
OCT
22
7:30 PM
OPEN
HOUSE
WEDNESDAY
29TH OF TISHREI
/YavnehAcademy
@YavnehAcademy
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Engaging in prayer
Teaneck educator provides commentary to siddur for students
ABIGAIL KLEIN LEICHMAN
book, for third to fifthgraders, was fashioned to meet a whole bunch of goals,
she said.
It was time to do some updating based
on how our education techniques have
changed, she said, noting that to create
an easy transition later on, the book was
designed to resemble Mishkan Tfilah. In
addition, its more user-friendly for kids
and has beautiful illustrations, containing
original drawings by artist Mark Podwal,
based on the alef-bet.
Rabbi Feldstein said the new siddur also
has many English teaching notes.
We really wanted that for the kids, and
to educate parents, she said, pointing out
that the siddur includes a combined Shabbat evening and morning service for families. It also contains a weekday evening and
morning service for schools, along with a
Torah service. Rounding it out is a song section as well as readings for special holidays
and community events.
I want kids to be asking questions and
engaging in prayer by thinking a lot about
Local
think people crave the latter in their religious lives in
general, and so need a portal to finding those within
the siddur as well.
Rabbi Goldmintz said he tried to make the commentaries and appendices both educational (Where are
these prayers from, how do they fit together, what do
they mean?) and meaningful (What does it mean to me
in my life today, this morning or afternoon? How do I
incorporate this into my being and my day?).
The first part was an enormous amount of work and
research, but the latter part was the most challenging,
he said, adding that the former chief rabbi of Britains
translation makes the English rendering very smooth
and elegant and accessible, though he was mindful
in his commentary to provide alternative meanings
because translation is always an interpretation.
Did the project enhance his personal tfilah
experience?
I run workshops for teachers now, and I tell them
that you cannot teach tfilah unless you are striving to
be a better pray-er yourself, he replied.
The same is true for parents. Our kids generally follow our lead and our passion, or lack thereof. I may
know a lot more about the words and the structure of
the siddur than I did before I got started, and probably
know more than the average person, but in the end, as
Rabbeinu Bachye said, the words are but the shell or
peel; it is the fruit that one brings to prayer with ones
heart.
In that sense, my struggle is no different than that of
the average high school student or senior citizen.
The Koren Ani Tfilah Siddur is part of the Koren Magerman Educational Siddur Series launched in February
2014. The series will consist of four developmentally
appropriate prayer books. Ani Tfilah and the illustrated Koren Childrens Siddur, geared to kindergartners through second-graders, are available now.
10% OFF
LShana Tova
Lisa Prawer
Convenient Bergen County Location 201-321-4995
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2014
READERS
CHOICE
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David Adom, Israels emergency medical response and blood-banking agency, save
lives in Israel every day. As we enter the new year hoping for peace, we must continue
to prepare for routine and terror-related emergencies, replenishing supplies depleted
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secure the nations health and safety for the coming year, theres no better way than
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JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014 11
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Joshua Levy of Teaneck is a member of the Golani Rifle & Pistol Club.
Local
gun regulation, said Nathan Diament,
executive director for Public Policy for
the OU.
On a topic like this, theres a diversity
of opinion among rabbis, Mr. Diament
said, but he noted that there hasnt been
any other response to the resolution.
The next OU convention will take place
this December in Westchester, he said,
and the process for submitting resolutions is open.
The RCAs halachic rulings, such as
declaring the ordination of women a violation of Jewish law and tradition, carry
much greater weight than the organizations political statements, Rabbi Pruzansky said. Still, he would rather the
RCA support the liberalization of firearm carry laws for self-defense and as
a crime deterrent than issue a blanket
condemnation.
Given the realities of Jewish life even
today, that would have added the weight
of the RCAs opinion in the debate in a
One of the
wonderful things
about our
organization is
we have
members from
a wide area of
the Orthodox
movement with
various opinions.
Members
disagree.
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JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014 13
Local
vacation?
Last week Yeshiva Ben Porat Yosef in
Paramus brought in a group of Israeli college students to discuss this summers war
with Gaza to its junior high school students.
The Israelis are participants in Generations of Israel, a program that trains Israeli
students to serve as ambassadors abroad.
They are really the elite of the elite,
said the schools principal, Rabbi Tomer
Ronen, who noted that there were 1,300
applicants for the 120 slots in Generations
of Israel.
The trip abroad follows a year of weekly
seminars on Zionism and Judaism.
The group visiting America prepared
nine presentations. Rabbi Ronen selected
two of them for his students: Jewish unity
for the fifth-graders, and Operation Preventive Edge for the older middle-school
students.
Middle schoolers at Yehivat Ben Porat Yosef in Paramus are briefed by Israeli
college students participating in the Generation of Israel program.
than what was on the news.
Rabbi Ronen said he has one more presentation planned on the war for his students. This will concern his own summer
and youth fitness centers, tried out sample classes, and met with JCC staff to learn
about the programs the JCC offers.
Adding to the fun were Music School and
School of Performing Arts showcases, entertainment for children, including a moon
bounce, face painting, balloonologists, and
health- and fitness-related activities.
The JCC maintains state-of-the-art facilities and offers a wide range of programs
and services, including an outdoor water
park and pools, year-round indoor pools,
CPR-trained swim instructors and lessons for all ages, state-of-the-art adult fitness center, a luxurious spa, more than
70 free group-exercise classes, fitness
Whether strumming a guitar, enjoying a face painting, learning to play the violin, or wielding a balloon sword, kids had fun at the Kaplen JCC on the Palisades.
Its great to have the family together for the High Holidays,
but is mom or dad still doing well enough to live alone?
Are they taking their meds? Eating right?
Socializing and engaging in daily activities?
Wouldnt it be a comfort to have them just minutes away?
We invite you to come see what our wonderful senior
community has to offer.
HELLER
www.jchcorp.org
Owned and Managed by the Jewish Community Housing Corporation of Metropolitan New Jersey
JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014 15
Local
Please Consider these Kindle Editions at Amazon by Rabbi Dr. Tzvee Zahavy
Please Consider these Kindle Editions at Amazon by Rabbi Dr. Tzvee Zahavy
Available at
Rabbi Yizchok and Bina Lerman stand with their two older children.
Our commitment to the communities we serve in New York and New Jersey means offering
financial services to enrich the lives of all our neighbors businesses and individual needs.
Member FDIC
Like us on Facebook.
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16 JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014
LOIS GOLDRICH
babysitting
programming in
renowned nursery school, day camps; music, drama & dance schools.
kaplen
JCC on the Palisades tauB campus | 411 e clinton ave, tenafly, nJ 07670 | 201.569.7900 | jccotp.org
JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014 17
Local
Max and Hilda Prager went on to celebrate 69 years of marriage. He was 17 and she was a year younger
when they met.
Panel Discussion
Kristallnacht Commemoration
Film Screening:
The Search for the White Rose
Keynote Speaker:
shanatova
t
a
a
t
d
k
n
f
.
Local
Pinocchio, Finding Nemo, and the Book of Yonah - Life Lessons From the Belly of the Fish to God
Local
Jewish Home Family appoints
Carol Elliott as president/CEO
Carol Silver Elliott will
intention to retire, we
become the president and
formed a search committee, chaired by our
CEO of the Jewish Home
former board chair,
Family effective November 3. Eli Ungar, who is
Ary Freilich, to identify a visionary leader
chairman of JHFs board,
capable of leading our
announced her appointment. Ms. Elliott comes
organization forward
to the JHF after serving
with the same commitment to innovation
seven years as president
and excellence that
and CEO of Cedar Village
Carol Silver Elliott
has marked the past
Retirement Community in
44 years. I can think of no
Mason, Ohio.
greater tribute to Chucks legacy and
Ms. Elliott holds a masters degree
no greater evidence of our longstanding
in health care administration and is a
commitment to the seniors of our comlicensed nursing home administrator
munity than the hiring of Carol Silver
and a certified aging service professional. She is the national chair of the
Elliott as our CEO. As CEO of Cedar Village in Mason, Ohio, and as national
Association of Jewish Aging Services,
board chair of the AJAS, Carol brings
the association of nonprofit communitya wealth of experience, energy and
based senior living homes and organizations throughout the United States and
accomplishment to our community.
Canada, and she sits on the board of
The Jewish Home Family and its member entities, the Jewish Home at RockLeading Age, a national elder care organization comprised of over 6,000 nonleigh, Jewish Home Assisted Living, Jewprofit eldercare groups. Ms. Elliott has
ish Home at Home, and the Jewish Home
spent 35 years in the health care field,
Foundation, are not-for-profit organizations, providing long-term and subacute
largely focused on elder care.
care, outreach programs, and outpatient
In making the announcement, Mr.
services for the elderly and their families
Ungar said, For the past 44 years
in Bergen, North Hudson, and Rockland
the Jewish Home has benefited from
counties. For more information, go to
the exemplary leadership of Chuck
www.jewishhomefamily.org.
Berkowitz. When Chuck announced his
Tzivy Reiter
Ziporah Torbiner
upcoming aT
Kaplen
JCC University
adults
drama
film
Casting Call
Kaplen
JCC on the Palisades Taub campus | 411 e clinTon ave, Tenafly, nJ 07670 | 201.569.7900 | jccotp.org
JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014 21
Editorial
This time, there is only one side
Jewish
Standard
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22 JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014
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Israeli Representative
What a
difference a
day makes
ere we go again.
Three weeks out of the next four,
including this week, a two-day
observance is actually three days,
for all practical purposes. That is because Rosh
Hashanah, the first two days of Sukkot, and
the two days of Shmini Atzeret (erroneously
referred to as the last two days of Sukkot) all fall
out on Thursday and Friday, with Shabbat following immediately after.
This places an excessive burden on the halachically observant Orthodox or Conservative Jews.
It also leads the non-observant to mock Jewish law
as silly and irrelevant.
Take cooking, for example. While it is biblically
permitted to cook foods on the first two days of
Sukkot to be eaten on
those two days, it is not
biblically permitted to
cook on those days for
the day after the festival, unless the next day
is Shabbat.
The sages of blessed
m e m o r y, h o w e v e r,
feared that people
Shammai
would get the wrong
Engelmayer
idea. If the second day
of Sukkot was a Friday
and they were allowed
to cook on that day for Shabbat, then next year
they might cook on the second day of Sukkot, a
Tuesday, for Wednesday. So they banned cooking
on the second (or last) day of a festival even if the
next day is a Shabbat.
Having forbidden the practice, they had to come
up with a way to allow it nonetheless, because
Shabbat has three required festive meals. So
the sages conjured up a bit of legal legerdemain
known as an eruv tavshilin. This is done by individuals and, often, by rabbis for their communities. I make one to cover the members of my community, for example.
To the non-observant, this is one huge reason
why they are non-observant. Not only are some
Shammai Engelmayer is rabbi of Temple Israel
Community Center | Congregation Heichal Yisrael
in Cliffside Park and Temple Beth El of North
Bergen.
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Jerry Szubin
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of the rules burdensome (What do you mean I cannot carry a handkerchief in my pocket on Shabbat?),
but the ways to get around these rules seem way too
silly to them (You mean I can carry a handkerchief
if someone ties a string to all the telephone poles in
town?).
Cooking, of course, is the least of the problems created by three-day festivals. So many observant Jews
(again, both Orthodox and Conservative) are involved
in businesses and professions where the extra day
imposes serious hardships. It is not uncommon to hear
someone say, after havdalah on the Saturday night following the two days of Shmini Atzeret, Thank God
thats over with. That is the wrong attitude, but an
understandable one.
The three-day conundrum, when it occurs at this
time of year, also has a corollary on Pesach, because
it means the first day of that festival will be a Shabbat.
Because the second seder should not begin before the
end of Shabbat, that means that in our area, people
will have to wait until sometime around 8:10 p.m. to
sit down to the seder table.
What makes this even more confusing to many, and
off-putting, is that there does not have to be a second
seder, and there does not have to be a three-day marathon observance because there is no second day,
either at the start or the end of a festival. That second
day is rabbinically ordained, not Torah-mandated. It
was created in the days before there was a fixed calendar. Since we could not be certain exactly when a
month began, the extra day was added to assure that
festivals were observed at their proper time.
Our calendar is fixed today. We know to the millisecond when a new month begins. In many synagogues,
the time is publicly proclaimed on the previous Shabbat. (The new month will be born at 7:27 p.m. on
Tuesday.) Rather than invent loopholes that both the
observant and non-observant mock, why not get rid of
the extra day entirely?
Even if there was a more valid reason for it than we
have been doing it this way for 2,000 years, halachah
allows dropping the day if it brings people closer to the
Torah and to God.
Maimonides states this concept clearly. In Mishneh
Torah Mamrim (2:4), he says of the rabbis: If they
should conclude that it is necessary to suspend a positive commandment or nullify a negative one in order
to restore the people to the faith, or to save many Jews
from otherwise becoming lax in matters [of observance], they may act as the needs of the time require.
Elsewhere (MT Sanhedrin 24:4), he pointedly adds
this note of caution: In all matters, he writes, the
rabbis acting as decisors shall act for the sake of
Heaven and not take lightly [the effect an action
or ruling may have on] human dignity, for consideration of human dignity may require setting aside
rabbinic injunctions.
There even is a principle in halachah that gives the
public the ability to annul burdensome laws. It is stated
in various ways in various talmudic tractates (see, for
example, the Babylonian Talmud tractate Bava Batra
60b, BT Avodah Zara 36a, and the Jerusalem Talmud
tractate Avodah Zara 2:8). Maimonides brings it all
together in his Mishneh Torah (MT Mamrim 2:5-7):
[If ] the people resist it and a majority in fact refuses
to adhere to it, [a positive or negative decree] is invalid
and it is not permitted to force the people to follow it.
A qualification: Rosh Hashanah should remain a
two-day observance. The why of that will await a
future column.
May we all be inscribed in the book of life, health,
and happiness for 5775.
emilitarized Zone, South Korea Standing on a hilltop and peering into the most
repressive regime on earth, the Stalinist
prison camp that is North Korea, got me
thinking about Israel.
How is that the Middle Easts only democracy comes
out only a hair better in world opinion polls? How could
Benjamin Netanyahu, Israels freely elected leader, be
as disliked as the young monster dictator Kim Jong-Un
of Pyongyang?
Might the small number of Jews in the world be a
consideration?
In Israel recently I was amazed to see how many pregnant women there were. Everywhere. On planes, at the
beach, and at the parks, there were children galore.
Israel loves kids, and the Jewish state has one of the
highest rates of births per family in the Western industrialized world, averaging close to 3 per family.
Not so in the U.S. Jewish community. On the Upper
West Side of Manhattan, youll see some pregnant
moms. But youll see 10 Jewish singles for each of them.
The American Jewish singles scene is a crisis that well
leave for another time. For now well focus on how few
Jews it produces.
The world Jewish community has been shaken to its
core by the tsunami of antiSemitism that has broken out
in the wake of Israels third
Gaza war. World media has
condemned the Middle Easts
only democracy for the simple
act of defending itself against
terror rockets and tunnels.
Rabbi
In London and Berlin theyre
Shmuley
Boteach
chanting, Hitler should have
finished off the Jews and
Ham-As rhymes with poison
gas. Weve seen pogroms in synagogues in Paris. Most
of all, we have wondered how a civilized world with liberal values could choose the women-honor-killing, gaymurdering, free-speech-suppressing Hamas terrorist
death cult over democratic Israel.
Heres one of the reasons its happening. Theres a
heck of a lot more of them than us.
The greatest challenge facing the world Jewish community is its puny size. The number of Jews in the world
has fallen below a critical mass, and our paucity suggests
unpleasant consequences. Foremost among them is our
inability to fully defend the State of Israel. Will governments choose to side with 14 million Jews over half a
billion Arabs?
In America, where there are nearly 6 million Jews, our
large and well-organized communities are able to create an effective political lobby that has yielded positive
results in American support for Israel. Compare that to
the 230,000 Jews of Britain, who live in a population
of 64 million. Such a paltry number has virtually condemned the supporters of Israel to being completely
overwhelmed by Britains growing Muslim community.
We Jews, whose biblical mandate is to be a light unto
the nations, are meant to leave a mark on the world.
Real influence, to be sure, comes from quality and not
quantity.
Yet numbers still matter greatly.
Kicking up Jewish numbers isnt going to be easy, and
vastly increasing the Jewish birthrate, as well as reversing assimilation, is key. But it is high time we addressed
the issue that Jews have traditionally shied away from:
Editorial
Opinion
Debbie and Rabbi Shmuley Boteach stand at a wall overlooking North Korea.
Shmuley
FROM PAGE 23
Becoming a
Judaizer would
entail a sevenstep program
of living.
the non-Jews who embraced Christianity were first exposed to the Jewish scriptures and Judaism through
their association with the urban
diaspora synagogues in the Roman
Empire.
Could this be revived?
Becoming a Judaizer would entail a
seven-step program of living:
1. Observe Friday night as family night by tuning out all electronic
interference and focusing on children, friends, and community.
2. Eat kosher food (20 percent of
Americans already look for kosher
symbols as a symbol of cleanliness
and purity) and separate milk from
meat as a symbol of the affirmation
of life and its negation from all forms
of corrosion and death.
3. Celebrate the themes of the Jewish festivals. Passover seders, emphasizing the human capacity to rise
above material enslavement (President Obama already hosts his own
annual seder at the White House),
dismissing material comforts by
returning to the essentials of nature
on Sukkot, lighting lamps on Chanukah as a symbol of the human capacity to illuminate a dark earth and heal
a painful life, and so on.
4. Studying Judaisms great texts,
from the Torah portion of the week
to selections of the Talmud to the
epistles of Maimonides to mystical
and kabbalistic works.
5. Observing the marriage laws,
including the monthly erotic barrier
of sexual separation, thereby enhancing desire and lust.
6. Appreciation of, and respect for,
the feminine, including codes of alluring modesty for women and domesticity of marital commitment for men
7. A commitment to acts of communal kindness, like regular visits to hospitals and homes for the elderly and
giving 10 percent of your income to
charity.
Then there is the need to offer Judaism as a religion to those who wish to
become full-fledged Jews. If we could
agree on moderate yet essential halachic norms of conversion that focus
on observance of the Sabbath and festivals, a kosher home, and the laws of
niddah (mikveh and sexual purity),
we could add millions to the Jewish
people and strongly redress depleted
Jewish numbers.
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach of Englewood
is founder of This World: The Values
Network and has just published
Kosher Lust: Love is Not the
Answer. Follow him on Twitter @
RabbiShmuley
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Opinion
LShana Tova!
ZOA-NJ wishes a year of strength and blessings to the
Mort Klein!
National President, ZOA
Laura Fein!
Executive Director, ZOA-NJ
Since 1897, the Zionist Organization of America has been the nations strongest advocate
for a safe, secure Israel. Principled and unapologetic in our support for all Israel, including
residents of Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria, ZOA condemns moral equivalency between
Israel and her enemies and insists Arabs cease violence and accept Israel as a Jewish
state. In Congress and in the courts, on campus and in communities around the US and
Israel, the ZOA works to strengthen U.S.-Israel relations and educate elected officials, the
media, students and the public about the truth of the ongoing Arab war against Israel.
Cover Story
Shmitta
time
is here
again
When you come into the land which I give you, then shall
the land keep a sabbath unto God. Six years you shall sow
your field, and six years you shall prune your vineyard,
and gather in its produce. But in the seventh year shall be a
sabbath of solemn rest for the land, a sabbath unto God;
Top and throughout, the harvest at Adamah Farms. Above, Nigel Savage holds a
basket of newly picked onions.
26 JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014
you shall neither sow your field, nor prune your vineyard.
Leviticus 25:2-4
a
e
e
n
all
ow
d,
ea
od;
rd.
:2-4
Cover Story
Jewish time
A new vision of shmitta
JOANNE PALMER
more sustainable world for all. It sponsors retreats and bike rides in the United
States and Israel and works with Adamah,
a working Jewish farm, among many other
programs.
Before he got to the content of shmitta,
Mr. Savage talked about its form about
how it fits into Jewish time. Jewish life
runs on Jewish time, he said. Each holiday, major and minor, has its own themes,
feelings, melodies, and season Rosh
Hashanah cannot be mistaken for Pesach
or Shavuot, or, for that matter, for Chanukah or Purim. And every shul across
the spectrum, from ultra-liberal to ultraOrthodox, will recognize Rosh Hashanah,
he said. The only piece of the Jewish calendar we dont recognize is shmitta.
Of course, he acknowledged, part of that
lack of recognition is that the observance
of shmitta is limited to produce coming
from the land of Israel, so if we were to
look at it only literally, most of us here
would be entirely unaffected by it most of
the time.
But we are Jews. We do not limit ourselves to the literal. We find meaning, metaphor, wisdom, and depth in unexpected
places.
So, Mr. Savage said, let us look at the
shmitta year and see what there is in it for
us. If we do, we will see great opportunity.
Cover Story
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Seven years is
interesting. Its not pie
in the sky its not 50
years from now, or even
20 but it is a slightly
longer time frame than
were used to.
Undergraduate school and high school are four years.
Seven years is interesting. Its not pie in the sky its not
50 years from now, or even 20 but it is a slightly longer
time frame than were used to.
The thing for organizations to do might be to take
staff, some board members, and other key people to a
retreat where you think about those questions. That is a
gift of the shmitta year.
Then Mr. Savage began to talk about the content
what the shmitta year actually demands, and what that
might mean.
The primary texts about shmittah in the Torah are
slightly contradictory, he said. Some of them are about
letting the land lie fallow. Its not totally clear why, but
in at least one of the texts, the larger reason seems to be
not for sake of the land, but for people who are poor.
It really seems to be about reducing the difference
Cover Story
6/17/10
2:40 PM
Page 1
eninah Feldman of Teaneck spent the summer toiling in the scholarship of vineyards.
The budding agronomist has graduated
from Cornells College of Agriculture and Life
Sciences and is applying for graduate school to study
pest control. She recently spent a month studying at the
Yeshivat Chovevei Torah in Riverdale.
This year, the Orthodox rabbinical seminary focused
its summer program of intense study on the upcoming
shmitta year, and opened it to non-rabbinical students.
It was a really wonderful experience, Ms. Feldman
said. Im really glad I was able to take a month off from
my life and just do it.
Ms. Feldman graduated from the Maayanot Yeshiva
High School for Girls, and studied in yeshiva in Israel for
a year before Cornell. She said that it was wonderful
to be part of the Chovevei community and the teamwork
of the summer program.
The program began with
the group studying the
Mishnaic tractate of Sheviit,
which deals with the sabbatical year. After that, the
students mostly studied on
their own, delving into the
thickets of topics that interested them particularly.
For Ms. Feldman, that
topic was the question of
pruning vineyards during
the shmitta year. Pruning
is one of the agricultural
activities that halacha bars
during the sabbatical year.
In the modern era, this has
become a much bigger issue
than it was, because the grape vines we have now are
so vigorous that they have to pruned every year, she
explained.
Grapes grow only on newly sprouted tendrils. The
next year, the tendrils turn to wood, which sends out
new tendrils that will yield new grapes. If they are not
pruned, the vines will produce too many shoots. That
means too many grapes, which turn out small and
mushy and mealy and dont get any of the flavors that
would make good wine, Ms. Feldman said.
That wouldnt affect only the sabbatical years harvest, but the following years as well.
Pruning the vines before the sabbatical year begins on
Rosh Hashanah only would make the problem worse.
You get an explosive rate of growth from the vine, she
said. It wants to grow more. Thats why pruning takes
place, at least in Israel, in February, when the vines are
dormant.
In her study of Jewish law about pruning during
shmitta, Ms. Feldman discovered that the topic was
long dormant. The Mishnah and the Jerusalem Talmud
discussed the topic in the first few hundred years of the
common era, while Jews still lived in the Land of Israel.
After that, commentators on the Talmud discussed that
discussion, but with virtually no Jewish agricultural
presence in the Land of Israel for 14 centuries, the questions were abstract. That changed with the return to the
land in the 19th century.
LShanah Tova
LSHANA
TOVAH
A mOmeNT Of refLecTiON,
A New yeAr fiLLed wiTH
HeALTH, HAppiNeSS ANd peAce
9/3/14 2:17 PM
Cover Story
Jewish Time
FROM PAGE 28
Pruning
FROM PAGE 29
RCBC
Cover Story
What is shmitta?
Local Conservative rabbi explains
JOANNE PALMER
on issues.
That is particularly useful for a discussion of shmitta, a biblically mandated
but not detailed agricultural practice
that affects produce grown in the land
of Israel.
There is much that is not clear about
the original mandate, found in Leviticus
25, verses 1 though 7, but what is clear
is that it applies only to the land of Israel,
so that once the Temple is destroyed and
most of the Jews no longer live there, it
wasnt being observed, Rabbi Rabinowitz said. And it became onerous for the
few Jews still farming to take the year
off and actually it was more like two
years, because there would have been
neither reaping nor sowing during the
shmitta year.
So Judah HaNasi, who died at the
beginning of the third century, started
limiting the laws of shmitta for those Jews
who still lived there, because if they didnt
have the money to pay their taxes to the
Romans, theyd be putting themselves
in trouble. So already, at the end of the
second century, there was a tendency to
limit shmitta. The borders around the
area affected by shmitta were tightened,
people who were suspected of nonobservance were forgiven, and there was some
Once Jews
started to return
to the land
in signicant
numbers, and to
cultivate it, they
had to start
dealing with the
laws of shmitta.
shmitta, Rabbi Rabinowitz said. It was a
major issue the first pioneers came to
found kibbutzim, which were agricultural in nature.
But the economy had changed since
pre-exilic times. It would have threatened
the economy. And what was true a century or so ago is even more true today.
Even though many of the kibbutzim and
moshavim have diversified, or given up
agriculture entirely, still you have all
sorts of agricultural companies producing
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JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014 31
Cover Story
What is shmitta?
FROM PAGE 31
all sorts of exports and serving the people of Israel. If the laws
of shmitta were followed strictly, the entire economy would
be in trouble.
There have been a number of ingenious solutions to the
problem. The Chazon Ish, a charedi scholar who died in
1953, and whose opinions are highly influential in that world,
said to sow winter crops early, so they are done before
the shmitta year begins. Other solutions include growing
g
o
,
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Cover Story
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As in previous years, the poll also found that Israelis have bridged a once-stark religious-secular divide.
Among the 800 total respondents, 49 percent identified as secular, 17 percent as traditional-not-so-religious, 13 percent as traditional-religious, 12 percent
as religious, and 9 percent as charedi.
According to the survey, 42 percent of Israelis
observe the Sabbath in some way, whether according to traditional Jewish law or through such customs
as lighting candles and blessing wine.
Simplistic divisions are really missing the point,
Regev said. Respect for Shabbat is not only the
domain of those who define themselves as religious.
There are varying degrees of personal respect and
observance that Israelis follow.
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MORTGAGES AS LOW AS
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Jewish World
settlements helped scuttle the talks.
It was a kind of a situation in which the
prime minister was very determined to try
and reach a deal and he had ministers in his
Cabinet who didnt believe in it, Indyk said.
Theres something structural about Israeli
politics because of the nature of having to
build coalitions its very difficult for a prime
minister to move forward.
Another non-starter, Indyk said, was Israels insistence that it maintain a permanent
military presence in the West Bank.
I do not underestimate the Israeli security
climate in the wake of this summers Gaza
war and the Islamist insurgency in Iraq and
Syria, but Israeli troops staying in place is a
perpetuation of the occupation. Its not possible to work that out in the area thats supposed to be the Palestinian state.
Indyk praised the pro-Israel community,
and he singled out the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee. His team maintained outreach through a full-time State Department
staffer, Laura Blumenfeld, and through Robert Wexler, the former Democratic congressman who now helms the Center for Middle
East Peace.
We put a lot of effort in trying to get them
to understand what we were trying to do,
Theres something
structural about
Israeli politics
because of
the nature of
having to build
coalitions its
very difficult for a
prime minister to
move forward.
He said the war may have presented opportunities to boost Abbas and contain Hamas
influence. As Abu Mazen said, hes not going
to be a fez on the scarecrow, hes not going to
be a beard for Hamas, Indyk said. Supporting him with funding is essential.
Before he launched his career as a diplomat during the Clinton administration,
Indyk worked for AIPAC and founded the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy,
The case is significant in that financial institutions can be held responsible for the actions
of their clients. A similar case was thrown out
over this issue by a U.S. District Court in 2012.
Hamas is not the defendant, the judge, Jack
Weinstein, wrote in explanation at the time.
JTA WIRE SERVICE
A New York jury found Arab Bank liable for this Hamas suicide bombing
in Jerusalem on June 11, 2003, which killed 16 people, because the bank
knowingly processed martyr payments to the families of suicide bombers.
QUIQUE KIERSZENBAUM/GETTY IMAGES
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National Front leader Marine Le Pen speaking after the presidential election
in April. Her party finished third.
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38 JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014
Jewish World
a euphemism for impotence. She repeatedly
has condemned anti-Semitism and punished
a party official who made anti-Semitic statements. In 2011, Le Pen dispatched her life partner, National Front Vice President Louis Alliot,
on a bridge-building mission to Israel.
The fact that Marine Le Pen took the party
in a more moderate direction is a major factor
for many Jews, said Gilles Goldnadel, a prominent attorney and a former member of the
executive board of CRIF, the umbrella group of
French Jewish communities. Today in France,
there is a greater danger from Islamo-leftism
than the danger posed by the far right. Its not
surprising some Jews, like non-Jews, vote for
the far right as a reaction to this threat.
Under Marine Le Pen, for the first time
party officials began courting Jewish votes by
addressing letters to their communities. One
such letter was sent this month by Julien Leonardelli, a party regional secretary from the
Toulouse area, to a local Jewish community
center that assailants attacked with firebombs
earlier this year.
Leonardelli wrote of his grave concern at
the increase of anti-Semitic attacks in France,
which he said were the result of irresponsible
immigration policies by the Socialist Party
and the UMP party of former President Nicolas Sarkozy.
As a National Front representative and
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magine taking the 6-year-old nongovernmental organization United Against Nuclear Iran and swapping out
the word Iran with violent extremists.
That pretty much sums up the Counter Extremism
Project, an NGO launched Monday that aims to expose the
financial, ideological, and recruitment architecture that
supports violent Islamic extremists.
The new project will be led by many of the same people
behind the anti-Iran organization, one of several pressure
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Gallery
1
n 6 Fran Aronesty and her grandchildren, Hailey and Matthew, are pictured
at a recent multigenerational Sunday
Special at the JCC of Paramus/Congregation Beth Tikvah. Children, parents, and grandparents made honey
82
Local
2013
JSTANDARD.COM
Genes, judges,
and Jews
Supreme Court
DNA decision
analyzed page 20
Larry yudeLson
David Cheifetz: It is
easier to punish the
victim than it is to punish
the perpetrator.
Council of America.
How is it possible? he asked the 50
rabbis who attended the session, the first
of the convention.
It staggers the mind, really, that the
principal of MTA would be hosting the
most notorious pedophile in the history
of modern Orthodoxy, Cheifetz told the
Jewish Standard. This was even more true,
he said, in wake of the revelations, first
published in the Forward last December,
Larry yudeLson
David Cheifetz is not the first victim of
childhood sexual abuse in the Orthodox
community to come forward.
But he may be the first who also is
an executive at McKinsey & Company,
the New York-based high-profile
management consulting company.
He sees the problem of sexual abuse
as reflecting the failure of the institutions
that allowed it to happen.
And he is working to build his own
institution, with the tentative name of
Mi Li Who Is For Me?
This is not intended as a one-man
shop, he said. There are many activists
who have done fantastic work on a
limited budget. This is meant to address
it on some degree of scale.
Activists have had a profound
impact on helping victims, he said. In
Lakewood, he said, Rabbi Yosef Kolko
eventually pleaded guilty of abusing a
doubt to victims.
So far, Cheifetz has begun recruiting
members for two boards: a governing
board that would handle the financial
side, and an advisory board. He has
incorporated the organization and has
begun the paperwork of setting it up.
And he is holding lots of meetings.
Im currently focused on growing a
network of rabbis who are committed
to the core principles, engaging with
psychologists, psychiatrists, and social
workers, and others with relevant
insights and experience, he said. Im
also engaging with members of other
faith groups. In general, the proposal has
been greeted with enthusiasm.
Major efforts are underway to build
funding and other support, and I am
delighted to speak to people who want
to help create an institutional solution
to this terrible problem, which has been
largely ignored and hushed up by our
community for far too long, he said.
Major efforts
are underway to
build funding and
other support
JS-14*
THE ROLE MODEL LAUTENBERG NEVER KNEW page 6
ETHICS AFTER AUSCHWITZ page 10
HERES TO YOU, MRS. ROOSEVELT page 44
Local
JSTANDARD.COM
Praying
in color
82
Review Writing
FIRST PLACE
Praying in color: Michael Haruni
illuminates the liturgy with new siddur
Joanne Palmer
2013
Michael Haruni
illuminates the liturgy
with new siddur
page 20
Tracee Chimo, Philip Ettinger, Molly Ranson, and Michael Zegen carry the tensions of Bad Jews.
JOaN maRcuS
REPORTERS NOTEBOOK
IN THIS
ISSUE
About Our
Children
Readers
Choice
loud night. Their grandfather was buried that day, and shivah will begin in the
morning, in an apartment down the hall.
One of the brothers Liam, a smart,
articulate, often unpleasant graduate
student has moved far beyond what
he sees as the irrational, outmoded
demands of old-fashioned Jewish life. The
Birthright-intoxicated cousin a funny,
frequently savage, larger-than-life Vassar senior with huge frizzy hair that she
tosses and wraps and that seems almost
to have its own life wants to make aliyah and join the IDF as soon as she graduates. Her Jewishness defines her; she
prefers being called Daphna, her Hebrew
name, rather than her birth name, Diana.
The younger, Jonah, brother just wants
Review Writing
SECOND PLACE
Playing to the Pew
Joanne Palmer
82
Local
2013
JSTANDARD.COM
JULY 5, 2013
VOL. LXXXII NO. 42 $1.00
David Cheifetz: It is
easier to punish the
victim than it is to punish
the perpetrator.
Council of America.
How is it possible? he asked the 50
rabbis who attended the session, the first
of the convention.
It staggers the mind, really, that the
principal of MTA would be hosting the
most notorious pedophile in the history
of modern Orthodoxy, Cheifetz told the
Jewish Standard. This was even more true,
he said, in wake of the revelations, first
published in the Forward last December,
or at Zichron Mordechai.
Two of those witnesses, who prefer not
to be identified, are Orthodox rabbis who
work at YUs Washington Heights campus.
The third, Jordan Hirsch, is a member of a
nearby Orthodox congregation that met in
Zichron Mordechai while its own building
was under renovation.
Cheifetz said that after he posted a copy
of his RCA talk on Facebook, and then later
on a blog, the Jewish Community Watch,
Taubes called him. Although Taubes
downplayed the significance of Lanners
visits, Cheifetz said, He did not deny that
Baruch Lanner was at his shul.
page 16
Major efforts
are underway to
build funding and
other support
doubt to victims.
So far, Cheifetz has begun recruiting
members for two boards: a governing
board that would handle the financial
side, and an advisory board. He has
incorporated the organization and has
begun the paperwork of setting it up.
And he is holding lots of meetings.
Im currently focused on growing a
network of rabbis who are committed
to the core principles, engaging with
psychologists, psychiatrists, and social
workers, and others with relevant
insights and experience, he said. Im
also engaging with members of other
faith groups. In general, the proposal has
been greeted with enthusiasm.
Major efforts are underway to build
funding and other support, and I am
delighted to speak to people who want
to help create an institutional solution
to this terrible problem, which has been
largely ignored and hushed up by our
community for far too long, he said.
83
2013
JSTANDARD.COM
Screening
Israel
82
2013
JSTANDARD.COM
E
! OIC
TE CH
VORS GE 34
E
D E PA
A SE
RE
82
FREEDOM SONG
MUSICAL ABOUT RECOVERY STAGED IN TEANECK page 10
FEDS CRACK DOWN ON ISRAELI KIOSK WORKERS page 27
SPORTS: IN THE BIG INNING page 31
2013
JSTANDARD.COM
Reflections
on the Rav
Thanksgivukkah!
Our
OurChildren
About
IN THIS ISSUE:
ABOUT OUR
CHILDREN
Winter Fun
All the Worlds a Stage
Vitamins for Kids
Supplement to The Jewish Standard and Rockland Jewish
page 22
Local rabbis
remember
Rabbi
Soloveitchik
Dvar Torah
Haazinu: Heaven, earth, and hope
BRIEFS
Cantor to be deposed
in Bank of China case
WASHINGTON The plaintiffs in a terrorism money-laundering case against the Bank of China can subpoena former
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, a federal court ruled.
Cantor, who resigned from Congress in August shortly after
his defeat in a Republican primary election in Virginia, will
be deposed Sept. 30, as ordered by the U.S. District Court in
the Southern District of New York, the New York Observer
reported Monday.
Nitsana Darshan Leitner, a lawyer for one of the plaintiffs,
told the Observer that she wanted Cantors testimony because
Cantor had discussed Israels refusal to allow a former Israeli
intelligence official to testify in the case with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in 2013.
According to reports, in 2005, the former intelligence official, Uzi Shaya, alerted Chinese security officials to suspicious
transactions, including transfers of money to terrorist organizations such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Israel says if Shaya is
forced to testify, he could reveal state secrets.
Daniel Wultz, an American teenager killed in a 2006
suicide bombing in Tel Aviv, was Cantors cousin. The Wultzes are one of 23 families filing lawsuits accusing the Bank
of China of funding terrorist organizations through U.S.
accounts. Darshan Leitner is representing the family of
JTA WIRE SERVICE
another victim, Emil Almaliakh.
Obama, Netanyahu
to meet Oct. 1 in D.C.
WASHINGTON President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu will meet next week at the White House.
The Oct. 1 meeting, which was announced Monday, will
follow a series of meetings that Obama is having with world
leaders in New York at the United Nations General Assembly.
There, he is focusing on the U.S.-led effort to crush the Islamic
State, or ISIS, a jihadist group grabbing swaths of land in Syria
and Iraq.
Netanyahu is focused, however, on nuclear talks between
the major powers and Iran. He and other top Israeli officials
have said repeatedly that a nuclear Iran poses a greater threat
to the Middle East than ISIS.
WE OFFER REPAIRS
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Jewish World
BRIEFS
Israeli cabinet
approves Gateway
to Jerusalem
mega-project
Israeli cabinet has approved the Gateway to Jerusalem project, which seeks to
transform the western part of the city into
a world-class business, cultural, and residential destination.
The approximately $410 million project
includes the construction of 12 high-rise
buildings on more than 200 acres of land
that will be used as offices, hotels, residential areas, and cultural and tourism centers. It will also upgrade the nearby International Convention Center.
This is an exciting and important decision that will make the old entrance to the
capital of Israel modern, accessible and
convenient creating the perfect connection between the present and past that
represents the Eternal City, Israeli Minister of Housing and Construction Uri Ariel
said, the Jerusalem Post reported
JNS.ORG
Israel approves
Intel plan to invest
in Jewish state
The Israeli finance and economy ministries on Monday approved a plan by Intel
to invest $6 billion in upgrading its chipmanufacturing plant in Israel, marking
the largest-ever single international investment in the Jewish state.
Intels investment is a strategic asset
for Israels industry, Finance Minister Yair
Lapid said, Reuters reported. This is the
biggest investment by a foreign company
ever in Israel and is further proof that
Israel is at the forefront of technology.
According to the investment plan, the
U.S.-based chip maker plans to hire nearly
1,000 more workers at its plant in Kiryat
Gat. Intel will also receive a $300 million
grant from the Israeli government and a
corporate tax rate of 5 percent.
While Intel has not yet made an
announcement on the plan, the Israeli
finance ministry believes the investment
by Intel will be used to manufacture its
new advanced 10-nanometer chips.
Intel has been operating in Israel for
nearly four decades, investing more than
$10.8 billion there and employing 10,000
JNS.ORG
people.
Across
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The solution to last weeks puzzle
Plenty of free parking.
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is on page 65.
June12th
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Down
1. With Sachs, a Jewish disease
2. Sharansky became one in 1986
3. Actress Kunis, whose significant other
is Ashton Kutcher
4. Kind of day mentioned 11 times in the
Torah
5. George Burns and John Denver film
of 1977
6. Inconceivable?
7. The Warsaw Ghettos was a very
cramped 1.3 square miles
8. More than one of the weapon used in
2012 to rob Justice Breyer
9. Ravina or Rav Ashi
10. David removed Goliaths own sword
from it before beheading him
11. The holy One, blessed be He
12. Wiesel who told a U.S. President that
Bitburg is not your place
13. Third word in Do-Re-Mi
21. Wave in Spielbergs Deep Impact
22. Uri Gellers <cough> ability
25. Make a sacrifice at the Temple
26. Haim of Hollywood
27. Halachic prenups are a growing one
29. Harvey Fierstein and John Travolta
were prominent ones in Hairspray
31. Kind of Conservative Jew who is willing,
learning, and striving
32. Payis program for Israeli gamblers
33. Beshtimmt!
35. Loc. of one of the northermost synagogues in the world
37. Mosess turned into a snake
40. Allan Blooms milieu
41. The late great Joan Rivers, e.g.
42. Y, H, W, and H are Gods
47. Pharisee rival
48. ___ Speedwagon (rock band co-founded by Alan Gratzer)
50. Kallen of cultural pluralism
53. Way to win a game of British
Haganah
55. Fruit with seeds Israelis enjoy
56. Jack of all trades: author, radio star, TV
comedian, and talk show host
57. First Jewish Bachelorette Dorfman
58. Sound at a brit milah
59. The movie star, and the ___ (early
version of a Sherwood Schwartz TV
theme song)
60. The Elders of Zion supposedly had one
61. Mean Biblical character who made a
mean lentil stew
65. Like Neil Simons couple
CURT LEVIANT
acob Dinezon (1856-1919), was a Yiddish novelist and short story writer,
as famous during his lifetime as were
his contemporaries, the three pillars
of late 19th and early 20th century Yiddish
literature, Mendele Mocher Sforim, Y.L.
Peretz, and Sholom Aleichem. All of these
masters knew and were impressed with
Dinezons work.
During his period of literary activity in
the latter half of the 19th century, Dinezon at times even outshadowed the three
founding fathers, because his books, which
touched thousands of readers, were more
widely sold. In fact, one of his novels sold
more than 200,000 copies, an unheardof success in Yiddish literature. Dinezon
achieved fame at 20 with the publication of
his first novel, and remained famous until
the day he died. He was so well known and
beloved that every major figure of Yiddish
literature came to his funeral in 1919.
Even encylopedias in English recognized
him. The early 20th century Jewish Encyclopedia lists Dinezon as an important
Yiddish writer (like other classical Yiddish
writers, he also established a reputation as
a Hebrew author), praise that is echoed in
the contemporary Encylopedia Judaica.
Sometimes mazel plays a role in literary
fame. But in Dinezons case it seemed to
express itself in income and not in posthumous regard. And now that the worldwide
Yiddish-reading community is vanishing, a
writers lot can be determined by translation, which can bring fame, and to discovery, which in turn can prompt translation.
If a writer doesnt find his translator/editor
in another language, he suffers the misfortune of neglect, which is what happened
with Dinezon. If you ask any knowledgeable reader familiar with Sholom Aleichem
and other famous Yiddish writers if he has
ever heard of Jacob Dinezon the answer
probably would be no.
Memories and Scenes: Shtetl, Childhood, Writers by Jacob Dinezon,
translated from the Yiddish by Tina
Lunson, edited and with an Introduction by Scott H. Davis.
languishes during the winter when he cannot work, but who at Purim time becomes
the leader of a band of Purim players.
When the troupe is arrested by the new
Russian police chief, an unlikely Esther
comes to their rescue.
Another story, Yosl Algebrenik and
His Student, achieves the psychological
depth of a Dostoevsky tale. It tells the story
of Yosl, an outstanding Talmud scholar, a
genius some said, destined to become a
great rabbi, who has a singular passion
for mathematics. But at 30, for reasons no
one remembers, he tosses away the Talmud and its commentaries for the study
of algebra and algebraic logic. From then
on he spends all his time studying algebra,
except for the few hours a week he devotes
to tutoring children to eke out a living.
Another moving and profound story
is called Borekh, after the name of the
hero, a poor orphan living in the yeshiva.
He doesnt do too well in talmudic studies but he has a talent for wood carving,
making dreidls, Purim groggers, and toy
animals for the children of the town. One
day he decides to leave the yeshiva and
start a new life, with the hope of making
a great Holy Ark, one that people have
Calendar
Monday
SEPTEMBER 29
Hadassah meets:
Licensed New York City
tour guide Marty Schneit
presents an illustrated
talk, The History of
NYCs Lower East Side,
for Fair Lawn Hadassah
at the Fair Lawn Jewish
Center/Congregation
Bnai Israel, 7:45 p.m.
10-10 Norma Ave. (201)
791-0327.
Tuesday
SEPTEMBER 30
Music and poetry in
Teaneck: The Teaneck
OCT.
Friday
SEPTEMBER 26
Rosh Hashanah in
Emerson: Congregation
Bnai Israel holds a
community service, 9
a.m.; junior congregation
services for 6- to 11-yearolds are at 10. Guest
tickets available. 53
Palisade Ave. (201) 2652272.
Rosh Hashanah in
Teaneck: The Jewish
Learning Experience
offers free services at
Maayanot Yeshiva High
School for Girls, 10 a.m.,
followed by a kiddush.
Services also for Yom
Kippur. 1650 Palisade
Ave. (201) 966-4498 or
www.jle.org.
Rosh Hashanah in
Closter: Temple
Beth El in Closter has
community services;
SEPTEMBER 28
Eric Mandel
Discussing Israels
challenges in Paramus:
MICHAEL LAVES
Shabbat in Teaneck:
Rabbi Lawrence Zierler
offers a Shabbat Shuvah
talk on The Bold,
Brave and Courageous,
Chiddush and
Hitchaddshut: Mastering
Change and Novelty, a
Manual from Tradition,
following services
that begin at 9 a.m. at
the Jewish Center of
Teaneck. Kiddush served.
70 Sterling Place. (201)
833-0515.
OCTOBER 1
Saturday
OCTOBER 4
Yom Kippur in Teaneck:
The Jewish Learning
Experience offers free
services at Maayanot
Yeshiva High School
for Girls, 10 a.m. 1650
Palisade Ave. (201) 9664498 or www.jle.org.
Yom Kippur in
Montebello:
Congregation Shaarey
Israel offers a community
Yizkor, 11:45 a.m. 18
Montebello Road,
Montebello, N.Y. (845)
369-0300.
8 Independence Ave.,
Orangeburg, N.Y. (845)
359-5920 or office@
theojc.org.
Yom Kippur in
Paramus: The Jewish
Community Center of
Paramus/Congregation
Beth Tikvah offers a
community Yizkor
service, 4 p.m. East 304
Midland Ave. (201) 2627691 or www.jccparamus.
org.
Yom Kippur in
Mahwah: Beth Haverim
Shir Shalom offers a
community Yizkor, 5:30
p.m. 280 Ramapo Valley
Road. (201) 512-1983.
Sunday
OCTOBER 5
Games in New City:
The West Clarkstown
Jewish Center hosts
Military Mah Jongg,
where players move from
table to table, at noon.
Event includes lunch,
refreshments, and prizes.
195 West Clarkstown
Road. (845) 352-0017.
In New York
Sunday
SEPTEMBER 28
SEPTEMBER 27
Wednesday
Sunday
Saturday
Rosh Hashanah in
Teaneck: Temple Emeth
Friday
OCTOBER 3
Yom Kippur in Teaneck:
The Jewish Learning
Experience offers free
services at Maayanot
Yeshiva High School for
Girls, 6 p.m. Also October
4 at 10 a.m. 1650 Palisade
Ave. (201) 966-4498 or
www.jle.org.
Yom Kippur in
Orangeburg: The
Orangetown Jewish
Center has family
services, 3 p.m., and
Yizkor at the same time.
Mama Doni
ROBERTA GINSBURG
Wednesday
OCTOBER 1
Film screening: The
Museum of Jewish
Heritage A Living
Memorial to the
Holocaust screens the
restored print of the 1939
Yiddish film, Kol Nidre
in Yiddish with English
subtitles 7 p.m. 36
Battery Place. (646) 4374202 or www.mjhnyc.org.
Calendar
Friday
OCTOBER 3
Yom Kippur: The East
Side Synagogue offers
free community Kol
Nidre services at All
Souls Sanctuary in
Manhattan, 8:55 p.m., and
on Yom Kippur, 10 a.m.,
with afternoon services
at 2:45 p.m., Yizkor at
4:45, and ending with
Havdalah, singing, and
dancing. 1157 Lexington
Ave., between 79th and
80th streets. Participants
must call the information
line, (212) 560-2222.
Singles
Sunday
OCTOBER 12
Senior singles meet in
West Nyack: Singles
65+ meets for brunch
bagels and lox at the
JCC Rockland, 11 a.m.
450 West Nyack Road.
$8. Gene Arkin, (845)
356-5525.
Sunday
OCTOBER 19
Singles meet in
Caldwell: New Jersey
Jewish Singles 45+ meets
for lunch, Pictionary,
prizes, and mingling at
Congregation Agudath
Israel, 12:45 p.m. $10. 20
Academy Road. (973)
226-3600, ext. 145,
singles@agudath.org, or
slg@bellatlantic.net.
Expert to explore
Dead Sea Scrolls
Dr. Adolfo Roitman, curator of the Dead Sea Scrolls
at the Israel Museum in
Jerusalem, will discuss
The Meaning of the Dead
Sea Scrolls for Judaism:
Myth and Reality, on Sunday, October 12, at 11 a.m.
at the Glen Rock Jewish
Center. Temple Beth Sholom of Fair Lawn is cosponsoring the talk.
The Shrine of the Book
Dr. Adolfo Roitman
houses the Dead Sea Scroll
collection at the Israel
Museum, which is one of the worlds leading archaeological museums. Dr. Roitman is curator of Envisioning the
Temple Scrolls, Stones and Symbols, on display there.
The GRJC is at 682 Harristown Road. Registration is
requested by October 8. Call (201) 797-9321, ext. 415.
yyss
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Jewish World
Obituaries
Lillian Davis
Stanley Domb
Bruce Erlebacher
917-324-2193
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Hilda Rubinson
Established 1902
Headstones, Duplicate Markers and Cemetery Lettering
With Personalized and Top Quality Service
Please call 1-800-675-5624
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Conveniently Located
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201.843.9090
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Wishing Everyone
A Happy, Healthy
New Year
LShana Tova
The Board of Directors
www.mountmoriahcemeteryofnewjersey.org
201-791-0015
800-525-3834
For generations,
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to Everyone
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ALAN L. MUSICANT
Since Biblical times the value of kavod hameit, respect for the dead has been part of Jewish tradition.
RIVERSIDE MEMORIALTHAPEL
OF NEW JERSEY
201-947-3336
www.jstandard.com
JEWISH STANDARD SEPTEMBER 26, 2014 63
BY APPOINTMENT
Weichert
Circle of Excellence 2003-2013
201 310-2255/201 541-1449 x192
wendydess@aol.com
Advanced Medical Imaging (AMI) of Englewood Hospital and Medical Center will offer free vein screenings on October 1, 3, and 7 to
men and women with visible, abnormal leg veins such as bulging
varicose veins or spider veins. Those who experience leg pain or
have a history of blood clots are encouraged to attend.
Patients should know the early warning signs for vein disease
to help prevent potential complications. Symptoms include aching, throbbing or swelling in the legs, ankles or feet.
The screening will be held at AMI of Englewood Hospital and
Medical Center, 452 Old Hook Road, Suite 301, Emerson, and
includes a physical examination and a thorough review of medical history. If further evaluation is needed, a follow-up appointment for noninvasive testing can be scheduled.
Board-certified vein specialists and physicians from the Center for Vein Disease at Englewood Hospital and Medical Center
will provide free screenings to men and women of all ages.
The screenings will be held Wednesday, October 1, from 2 to
5 p.m.; Friday, October 3, from 9 a.m. to noon, and Tuesday,
October 7, from 4 to 7 p.m.
Pre-registration is required. Call (866) 980-3462 or visit www.
englewoodhospital.com and click the Classes and Support
Groups tab.
Fern Malka
LD
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41 Markham Circle, Englewood
S AF O R
LE
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RealEstate&Business
Happy
New Year
from all of us at
Volpe
Real Estate
BARBARA OSTROTH
Coldwell Banker Residential RE
201-965-3105 Cell
www.BarbaraOstroth.com
BANK-OWNED PROPERTIES
High-Return
Investment Opportunities
GARDEN STATE HOMES
25 Broadway, Elmwood Park, NJ
JUST SOLD
1409 Milford Terrace, Teaneck
23 Hampton Court, Bergenfield
www.vera-nechama.com
201-692-3700
anniegetsitsold@msn.com
EQUAL
HOUSING
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
OPPORTUNITY
Shanah Tovah!
LShanah Tovah
to all our Friends
and Clients
5775
780 Salem St.
768-6868
666-0777
568-1818
CRESSKILL
$279,900
894-1234 871-0800
DaNieL M. ShLufMaN
Managing directOr
LadcLassic@aOL.cOM
dshLufMan@cLassicLLc.cOM
MLO #58058
MLO #6706
Like us on Facebook.
facebook.com/jewishstandard
Linda P. Hoffman
has joined our firm
as Salesperson.
201-394-7844 direct
201-568-3300
www.anhaltrealty.com
$419,900
FIRST PLACE
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
(201) 837-8800
RealEstate&Business
Nina Eizikovitz joins Links Residential Real Estate
Nina Eizikovitz recently joined Links Residential Real Estate of Teaneck. Originally from
Fair Lawn, she has lived in Bergen County
her entire life and currently resides in Bergenfield with her husband and four children.
Ms. Eizikovitz has spent more than a
decade working with nonprofit organizations
in both professional and volunteer capacities.
With a background in marketing, she prides
herself on her patience and listening skills, as
well as being the person friends, colleagues,
and clients turn to for advice. Her attention
to detail and creativity brings a commitment
Wishing you
a Happy
New Year
from all
of us at
Anhalt Realty
59 Friend Terr.
Harrington Park
$799,000
Open House
1-4 p.m.
201-568-3300
info@anhaltrealty.com
www.anhaltrealty.com
Like us
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201-894-1234
Cell: 201-615-5353
2014 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.
An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned and Operated by NRT LLC.
Coldwell Banker Real Estate Corp. an equal opportunity company, equal housing opportunity, owned and operated by NRT Inc.
Our warmest wishes to you and all your loved ones for
A Very Happy, Healthy, Sweet and Peaceful New Year!
NJ:
NY:
Jeffrey Schleider
Broker/Owner
Miron Properties NY
201.266.8555
T: 212.888.6250
T:
201.906.6024
M: 917.576.0776
M:
ENGLEWOOD SHOWCASE
Ruth Miron-Schleider
Broker/Owner
Miron Properties NJ
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
94 GLENWOOD RD $995,000
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
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ENGLEWOOD
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ENGLEWOOD
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57 FRANKLIN STREET
ENGLEWOOD
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98 HILLSIDE AVENUE
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
ENGLEWOOD
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10 LEXINGTON COURT
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35 KING STREET
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OF ST
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